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  WHAT IS FACTORING?
Factoring is a complete financial package that combines working capital financing, credit risk protection, and accounts receivable book-keeping and collection services. It is offered under an agreement between the “factor” and the seller.
_41 _FACTORING
TRAINING DIGEST
    In the case of factoring, the seller’s viability and creditworthiness, though not irrelevant, are only of secondary underwriting importance. In factoring, the underlying assets are the seller’s accounts receivable, which are purchased by the factor.
CHALLENGES MUST BE OVERCOME
Factoring only requires the legal environment to sell, or assign, accounts receivables and it doesn’t depend on good collateral laws or
efficient judicial systems as much
as traditional lending products
do. However, in Ukraine local legislation needs to be adjusted to align with international practices to allow factoring products to grow successfully.
Factoring may still be hampered by weak contract enforcement institutions and other tax, legal and regulatory impediments. Weaker governance structures
may also create additional barriers to the collection of receivables in developing countries.
There are also a number of additional taxation, legal and regulatory challenges to factoring
in many emerging markets. For instance, the tax treatment of factoring transactions often makes factoring prohibitively expensive. Some countries that allow interest payments to banks to be tax deductible do not apply the same deduction to the interest on factoring arrangements.
What is more, VAT taxes may be charged on the entire transaction
(not just the service fee), and stamp taxes may be applied to each factored receivables. Capital controls may
also prevent non-banks from holding foreign currency accounts for cross- border assignments.
The legal and judicial environment may also play a
critical role in determining the success of factoring. A key legal issue is whether a financial system’s commercial law recognises factoring as a sale and purchase.
Another legal issue is whether
a country has a Factoring Act or a reference in the law (or civil code) that legally recognises factoring as a financial service.
This recognition serves multiple purposes. First, it clarifes the
nature of the transaction itself.
For example, a Factoring Act explicitly dictates how judges must rule towards factors if sellers or customers default. And second, it legitimises the factoring industry;
a supportive legal and regulatory environment encourages the factoring industry to grow.
“In Ukraine local legislation needs to be adjusted to align with international practices to allow factoring products to grow successfully.”
A weak information infrastructure may also be problematic for factors. The general lack of data on payment performance, such as the kind of information that is collected by public or private credit bureaus or by factors themselves, can discourage factoring.
COLLABORATION CONTINUES
Factoring is, in risk terminology, a
low loss given default (LGD) solution, providing the opportunity for safe, secure funding in an increasingly risk- aware regulatory environment. It offers a unique combination of meeting user, provider and regulator stakeholder needs simultaneously and so is a real win-win in business finance.
The EBRD-led factoring working group will collaborate with colleagues in Ukraine to update legislation,
train local banks and work with the regulator, government bodies and SMEs to facilitate trade finance.
As a Bank we will continue working on new legislation in Ukraine that aims to distinguish factoring operations from collection activity and bad loan portfolio management. Legal issues, restrictive regulation and low market awareness of the product are the reasons why “pure” factoring operations are stagnating in Ukraine (less than 0.1 per cent of GDP).
Therefore, with a target of 3.5 per cent of GDP (the average for emerging markets), factoring has huge potential to generate UAH 100 billion (€34.1 million) of additional short-term funding to local trade and production firms, particularly SMEs.
With the success of this workshop in Ukraine, more training is set to be offered in due course.l
  































































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