Accounts Receivable Financing - How to Use Other People's Money to Finance
Your Growth
Many people grew up reading
Superman comics for fun. Ask yourself, would it be wonderful (think of
this as a metaphor) if your B2B business was “faster than a speeding
bullet, more powerful than a locomotive and able to leap tall buildings in
a single bound?” Would your business benefit if you could always have the
cash from your invoices when you needed it? Would your business benefit if
cash available for growth was virtually unlimited? Would your business
benefit if you could “leap over” your cash flow problems to provide more
products or services to you customers? In general, the larger your
customers are, the slower they pay your invoices. It’s like the old joke,
Question: “Where does a gorilla sit?” Answer: “Anywhere it wants to.” For
example, a small sound engineering company was engaged to provide sound
effects for a major motion picture production studio. When asked to
comment on their experience working with such a prestigious client, the
owner said: “fear the ears”.
It simply is a universal
trend that your largest customers may be the slowest to pay you. Do you
have to wait 60 to 90 days to be paid by your largest commercial or
government customers? If so, accounts receivable financing may be the
answer to your cash flow problems.
There are several
advantages to accounts receivable financing compared to regular bank
financing. Your current credit score, or your company’s credit, is not an
issue because the financing entity relies on the creditworthiness of your
customer. In fact, some companies that are in the “Special Assets”
division of a bank (which is a euphemism for being asked to leave the
Bank” are prime candidates for accounts receivable financing. At another
extreme, some companies that are in a Chapter 11 Bankruptcy proceeding,
(called Debtor’s in Possession) can obtain accounts receivable financing
with the express permission of the Bankruptcy court.
Accounts receivable
financing will grow in terms of your credit limit as your company grows.
So if you are with the right commercial finance company, your growth is
potentially unlimited. Compare this with regular bank financing which
looks at your current situation and your past two years operating history.
Many entrepreneurs are
optimistic, energetic and very positive in their predictions about their
future. Bank analysts are trained to look at worst case scenarios. Every
Bank has to undergo a periodic “Safety and Soundness Examination”. Part of
this process is a team of federal regulators second guessing every loan
decision where the bank has granted credit.
There’s a lot of truth to
the old adage that bank’s will only lend money to people who don’t need
it. Banks do not want to suffer the penalties that may be imposed by the
federal regulators if they found to have made a “bad” loan. So the
standards and perspectives of Banks and Commercial Finance Companies are
very different.
Accounts receivable
financing can provide you with the cash you need within a day or two of
your invoicing your customer. Some commercial finance companies have very
sophisticated internet based submission systems. You submit the invoice
electronically; it is reviewed and verified; and the agreed upon cash
advance is wired to you the very same day. Other companies use a paper fax
based system but the results are very similar.
Accounts receivable
financing terminology can be confusing. The following words have
essentially the same meaning: accounts receivable financing, factoring,
receivables factoring, factor invoices, discount factoring, asset based
lending (usually associated with very large transactions). The bottom
line: if your customers are paying you too slowly, and this is limiting
your business growth potential or profits, you should consider accounts
receivable financing.
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Mr. Elberg is a
licensed attorney and licensed real estate broker. Gregg Financial
Services is a full service brokerage for commercial finance companies
and banks that fund B2B businesses. Mr. Elberg arranges funding from
$25,000 to $50 million per month at competitive pricing, and works to
reduce your financing costs as your company grows. For more
information about GFS, please visit our website:http://www.greggfinancialservices.com
Copyright 2007 ©
Gregg Financial Services
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