16.5 Additional Varieties of Short-Term Financing
511
assumes all risks of collection. This is a form of credit insurance. Second, factoring eliminates
expenses, including bookkeeping costs, the maintenance of a credit department, and the col-
lection of delinquent accounts. A further advantage, but of a less tangible nature, is that factor-
ing frees the management of a business from concern with fi nancial matters and permits it to
concentrate on production and distribution. Factoring has become increasingly important in
supporting export sales. A fi rm that is unfamiliar with the problems of fi nancing international
shipments of goods is relieved of such details by factoring foreign receivables.
Although factoring services are regarded highly by some businesses, others object to
their use. The two reasons cited most frequently are the cost and the implication of fi nancial
weakness. The cost of factoring is higher than the cost of borrowing from a bank under the
terms of an unsecured loan. However, concluding that the net cost of factoring is higher is
diffi
cult. The elimination of overhead costs that would otherwise be necessary plus the reality
that management need not concern itself with fi nancial matters may off set the additional cost
involved in factoring.
Few industries are aff ected by factors as much as retailing. Factors guarantee payment to
suppliers of many large retail fi rms. With such guarantees, suppliers ship goods to the retail-
ers, confi dent they will get paid. Should factors refuse to guarantee payments to suppliers
because the factors believe a retailer to be on shaky fi nancial ground, a retailing fi rm can fi nd it
has no merchandise to sell. Thus, predictions about poor fi nances can become a self-fulfi lling
prophecy. Once one factor hesitates to stand behind a retailer’s credit, they all turn their backs
on the retailer since no factor wants to be alone supporting a fi nancially troubled fi rm. Factors
act as an early warning signal of a retailer’s real or imagined fi nancial deterioration. In 1995,
Bradlees, a discount retailer, fi led for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection after factors refused to
guarantee Bradlees’ receivables to its suppliers. A few months later Caldor, another discount
retailer, fi led for bankruptcy protection for the same reason: the factors would not support it.
When factors refuse to accept a retailer’s credit, the retailer’s suppliers must decide whether
to continue shipping and take the risk of nonpayment by the fi nancially troubled retailer or to
stop shipping and possibly lose a client. With the bankruptcy fi lings, over time, of retail stores
such as Federated Department Stores, Allied Stores, Macy’s, Jamesway, Bradlees, and Caldor,
the suppliers may be listening to the factors.
16
It is not always retail outlets that close due to the inability to obtain factor fi nancing. In the
Great Recession of 2007–2009, a lender and a factor were the victim of the slow economy; CIT
Group fi led for bankruptcy protection in 2009. Prior to that, it was a large factor to many small
businesses, franchisees, and participated in SBA lending.
17
Fortunately, the fi rm did recover
from its bankruptcy fi ling and continues to fi nance businesses with loans and factoring services.
Pledging and factoring have many similarities. To help diff erentiate them,
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