Under a factoring arrangement, a finance company agrees to take over a company’s accounts receivable collections and keep the money from those collections in exchange for an immediate cash payment to the company. This process typically involves having customers mail their payments to a lockbox that appears to be operated by the company, but which is actually controlled by the finance company. Under a true factoring arrangement, the finance company takes over the risk of loss on any bad debts, though it will have the right to pick which types of receivables it will accept in order to reduce its risk of loss. A finance company is more interested in this type of deal when the size of each receivable is fairly large, since this reduces its per-transaction cost of collection. If each receivable is quite small, the finance company may still be interested in a factoring arrangement, but it will charge the company extra for its increased processing work. The lender will charge an interest rate (at least 2% higher than the prime rate), as well as a transaction fee for processing each invoice as it is received. There may also be a minimum total fee charged, in order to cover the origination fee for the factoring arrangement in the event that few receivables are actually handed to the lender. A company working under this arrangement can be paid by the factor at once, or can wait until the invoice due date before payment is sent. The later arrangement reduces the interest expense that a company would have to pay the factor, but tends to go against the reason why the factoring arrangement was established, which is to get money back to the company as rapidly as possible. An added advantage is that no collections staff is required, since the lender handles this chore.
A similar arrangement is accounts receivable financing, under which a lender uses the accounts receivable as collateral for a loan, and takes direct receipt of payments from customers, rather than waiting for periodic loan payments from the company. A lender will typically only loan a maximum of 80% of the accounts receivable balance to a company, and only against those accounts that are less than 90 days old. Also, if an invoice against which a loan has been made is not paid within the required 90-day time period, then the lender will require the company to pay back the loan associated with that invoice.
Though both variations on the factoring concept will accelerate a company’s cash flow dramatically, it is an expensive financing option, and so is not considered a viable long-term approach to funding a company’s operations. It is better for short-term growth situations where money is in short supply to fund a sudden need for working capital. Also, a company’s business partners may look askance at such an arrangement, since it is an approach associated with organizations that have severe cash flow problems.
