Title: Managing International Credit Risk with Credit Enhancements
1Managing International Credit Risk with Credit
Enhancements
- 23rd Annual Reimer Week
- Scottsdale, Arizona
- September 12, 2006
2Lets Get Started
- Brief introduction to IRC
- Sales vs. Credit
- Credit Insurance
- Alternative Credit Enhancements
- Third Party Financing
- Credit Derivatives
- Put Options
3IRC Worldwide
IRC Headquarters Columbus, OH
IRC Offices Chicago Houston Indianapolis Miami
New York Portland San Francisco Guangzhou
PRC Hong Kong Monterrey Mexico Sao Paulo Brasil
Affiliates Amsterdam Copenhagen Dublin Frankfurt G
eneva Lisbon London Madrid Milan Paris Stockholm T
aipei
4Sales Objectives
- Increase Sales to Existing Accounts
- Penetrate new accounts
- Increase Market Share
5What do customers and sales people ask for?
- Open Account
- Longer Payment Terms
- Vendor Financing
6How Do we Control the Madness?
- Are you feeling like you should put the word
Bank after the name of your company? - Are you being pressed on cash flow and DSO goals?
- Are you know as the Sales Prevention Department?
7What are Credit and Finance Objectives?
- Support Sales team in their effort to compete
with terms financing packages offered by
competition - Mitigate political and commercial risk while
minimizing recourse to your company - Eliminate effect of longer terms on A/R
collection performance ratios, and cash flow - Position your company as the preferred supplier
that offers competitive, open account payment
terms - Recover the cost of financing in the customers
price
8Type of Credit Exposures
- Open Account Sale of Goods
- Open Account Sale of Services
- Contract Payments
- Capital Equipment Finance
- License Payments
9Traditional Credit Management Tools
- Open Account/Documentary Collection
- Maximum risk to your company
- Uses your companys balance sheet
- Affects ratios cash flow
- No risk mitigation
- Letters of Credit/Bank Guarantees
- Expensive
- Uses customers working capital lines
- Customers becoming unwilling to provide them
- Insured Open Account
- Mitigates political Commercial Risks
- Uses your companys balance sheet
- Affects ratios cash flow
10Traditional Credit Management Tools
- Third Party Financing or Sale of Receivables
- Mitigates political Commercial Risks
- Can be managed on an individual or portfolio
basis. - Growing in worldwide popularity
- Improves cash flow and ratios
- Non-recourse Discounting or Factoring of
Receivables - Mitigates political commercial risks
- Always done on a customer by customer basis
(one-off deals) - Improves cash flow and ratios
- Often difficult or impossible to obtain
- More Expensive than third party financing
11What is Credit Insurance ?
- COVERAGE
- Non-payment of Debt Obligations for Political
or Commercial Reasons - COMMERCIAL RISKS
- Default for Risks Not Otherwise Stipulated as
Political Risks - Commercial Bankruptcy or Legally Protected
Reorganization - Slow Pay/Protracted Default (In Most Types of
Coverage) - POLITICAL RISKS
- Government Acts/Political Events that Restrict
Payment - Currency Inconvertibility and Transfer Risk
- War or Civil Disorder
- Imposition of Law, Order, Decree
Embargo/License Revocation
12Why Credit Insurance?
- Risk Mitigation
- Political Commercial Risk- Export
- Commercial Risk - U.S.
- Policy assignable to the financial institution or
factorer - Allows companies to offer customers longer terms
while maintaining a captive relationship - Combined with Bank Discounting programs and
factoring programs allows off-balance sheet
financing - Ease of administration
13Advantages of Credit Insurance
- Increases credit risk information and knowledge
- Provides risk mitigation
- Can be used to develop financing for customers
- Allows for offering more competitive terms
- Can lower reserve requirements
- Variable outlay
- Limited vs. Unlimited A/R Risk
- Facilitates off-balance sheet sale of A/R
- Can be used for single risk only
- Portfolio approach reduces cost for all areas
- Flexibility to exclude customer via CIA, and
L/Cs.
14Advantages of Credit Insurance
- Can facilitate local currency financing
- Reduces foreign exchange exposure on A/R for
dollar functional entities - Can be transparent to the customer
- Improves collections effort on problem accounts
15Disadvantages of Credit Insurance
- Premium cost
- May create false sense of secuity
- Claim denial
- Increased administration
16Credit Insurance Costs/Pricing
- Sample Company USD 2.0 billion sales
- Four Major Divisions
- Distributor and End User Vendor Finance
- Distributor Terms of Sale 30 day-180 Days
- 30-180 days OECD 0.15
- 30-180 days Non-OECD 0.35-0.95
- End User Vendor Finance
- 180 Day-1 year OECD Countries 0.35
- 1 year- 2 year OECD Countries 1.05
- 2 year- 3 year OECD Countries 2.25
- End User Vendor Finance
- 180 Day-1 year Non-OECD Countries 1.75
- 1 year- 2 year Non-OECD Countries 2.25
- 2 year- 3 year Non-OECD Countries 3.25
17Third Party Financing Options
- Accounts Receivables Financing or Purchasing
- Factoring
- Banks, Financial Institutions and Factoring
Companies usually mitigate risk - Obtain Direct Payment for products
- Accounts Payable Financing
18Advantages of Third Party A/R Financing
- Increase Sales
- Floor planning financing for distributors
- Obtain Risk mitigation
- Balance sheet management
- Offer more competitive terms
- Individual and portfolio strategies are possible.
- Local currency repayment borrowing
- Access to lower USD and local currency interest
rates - Little or no legal or loan documentation
- Terms/financing can be passed to end-user
- Your company is viewed as proactive, flexible,
and more competitive
19A/R Financing Costs
- Sample Company USD 2.0 billion sales
- Four Major Divisions- Equipment and Services
- Distributor and End User Vendor Finance (All Cost
Include Finance and Insurance Costs) - Distributor Terms of Sale 30 day-180 Days
- Libor 6 month 1.8
- End User Vendor Finance
- 180 Day-1 year OECD Countries Libor 6 month
2.5 - 1 year- 2 year OECD Countries Libor 6 month
3.3 - 2 year- 3 year OECD Countries Libor 6 month
4.2 - End User Vendor Finance
- 180 Day-1 year Non-OECD Countries Libor 6
month 3.75 - 1 year- 2 year Non-OECD Countries Libor 6
month 4.25 - 2 year- 3 year Non-OECD Countries Libor 6
month 5.25
20Credit Derivatives
- Credit derivatives can be defined as
arrangements that allow one party to transfer
credit risk of a referenced asset, which it may
or may not own, to one or more other parties.
21Types of Credit Derivatives
- Total return swap
- The protection buyer (your company) swaps the
total return from a credit asset for a
predetermined, prefixed return. - Credit default swap
- This is a refined form of a traditional financial
guarantee, with the difference that a credit swap
need not be limited to compensation upon an
actual default but can also cover downgrading,
apprehended default etc. - Protection seller agrees, for an upfront or
continuing premium or fee, to compensate the
protection buyer (your company) upon the
happening of a specified event. Credit default
swap covers only the credit risk inherent in the
asset.
22Types of Credit Derivatives
- Credit Linked Notes
- Credit linked notes are a securitized form of
credit derivatives. The technology of
securitization here has been borrowed from the
catastrophe bonds or risk securitization
instruments - The protection buyer issues notes. The investor
who buys the notes has to suffer either a delay
in repayment or has to forego interest, if a
specified credit event, say, default or
bankruptcy, takes place. This device also
transfers merely the credit risk and not other
risks involved with the credit asset.
23Credit Derivatives
- Growing availability
- Diversification of Hedge Funds
- Variable definitions of defaults
- Variable definition of derivatives
- Regulatory issues remain.
- Credit Derivative pricing 1-24 per annum
depending on individual exposure.
24Factoring
- Many factoring options are available
- Limited risk to your company
- Retain performance risk
- Valuable to smaller companies
- Used for existing receivables
- Wide range of pricing
- 0.5-10 of invoice amount dependent upon buyer
risk.
25Put Options
- Single Risk Coverage
- Usually used for debtors with challenging credit
risks - Limited Availability
- Financial Trading Companies, Investment Bankers
and Counterparty Risk Traders - Debtors are usually publicly traded companies or
companies with commercial paper or bonds - Priced per month of risk
- Priced on credit exposure.
- Mitigates against bankruptcy only. No protracted
default. - Can mitigate existing and future credit exposure
- Options Pricing is sharply higher
- 6-25 per annum
26Managing the ToolsA Discussion
- Global Strategy
- Country Strategy
- Business Unit Strategy
- How do you locate risk mitigation tools?
- How do you determine risk versus cost?
27Contact Information
- Jeff Jankowiak
- International Risk Consultants, Inc.
- Tel 1-415-642-8781
- Email jjankowiak_at_irc-group.com