The Shrewsbury Accountants Blog – Taxassist Accountants in Sundorne

August 24, 2011

Nigel from TaxAssist Accountants in Shrewsbury passes on some wise words about factoring

Factoring or Invoice Discounting- Pros and Cons

 

Thanks to Lucie and Eddie at Burton Sweet Corporate Recovery who sent me their views on problems which can arise with factoring (or similar) agreements entered into by clients.

“Businesses tend to be experiencing cash flow problems when banks encourage them to consider factoring and often the full implications are not understood. The incentive is the promise, usually accurate, of an almost immediate boost to cash flow as 70% or more of the invoice value is received within days of the invoice date.

The directors then consider, not unreasonably, that the cash flow crisis is over and change their focus away from cash flow to whatever the next priority is within the business. Furthermore they often assume that their accounting function can cope with the rather more involved record keeping required, that being something that many bookkeepers fail to do spectacularly. Given that the directors of many SMEs do not have an accounting background, this can lead to inaccurate financial reports being generated internally resulting in inappropriate decision making.

Matters then come to a head four or five months later when, because of the age of certain outstanding invoices or doubts about their collectability, invoices are “disapproved” and the anticipated cash inflow from current invoices is reduced as the factor rebalances the ledger.  Not many SMEs see this coming and so another cash flow crisis arrives.  This time there is nowhere to go other than a formal insolvency procedure.  Even these tend to become more difficult because of the charges and terms of the factoring agreement which can be onerous to say the least.

This is not a message to say that factoring is bad. The message is that SMEs should fully understand the way in which factoring agreements work and the consequences arising before signing up. It is now possible to factor a single but substantial invoice to overcome a temporary difficulty and such a course may be preferable to a commitment to a long term arrangement.

A client with cash flow difficulties may be better off seeking good advice from corporate recovery professionals with a view to correcting, if possible, the underlying problem which is of course where Burton Sweet Corporate Recovery would like to become involved.”

Brilliant and relevant advice. Here at TaxAssist Accountants, we know from experience the additional complications that factoring causes for client record-keeping. We have developed a procedure in Sage50 to keep a full record of factoring transactions. Please contact us if you think we can help.

 

Theme: Silver is the New Black. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 451 other followers

%d bloggers like this: