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Chapter - 31: Working Capital Finance

This document discusses various short-term sources of finance for working capital, including trade credit, accrued expenses, bank borrowings, factoring of receivables, commercial paper, and more. It provides details on each type of financing such as definitions, terms, advantages, disadvantages, and recommendations from committees on their regulation and use.

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Akash saxena
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
152 views

Chapter - 31: Working Capital Finance

This document discusses various short-term sources of finance for working capital, including trade credit, accrued expenses, bank borrowings, factoring of receivables, commercial paper, and more. It provides details on each type of financing such as definitions, terms, advantages, disadvantages, and recommendations from committees on their regulation and use.

Uploaded by

Akash saxena
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter - 31

Working Capital Finance


Short-term Sources of Finance
 Trade Credit
 Accrued Expenses and Deferred Income
 Bank Borrowings
 Factoring of receivables
 Commercial Paper

BY Akash Saxena
Trade Credit
 Customer gets from supplier of goods in
normal course of business.
 An informal arrangement, granted on an open
account basis, not formally acknowledge as a
debt.
 Trade credit may also take the form of bills
payable.
 Credit Terms refers to the conditions of due
date and cash discount.

BY Akash Saxena
Pros and Cons
 Advantages
1. Easy Availability.
2. Flexibility.
3. Informality.
 Disadvantages
1. Implicit Cost.
2. Stretching A/P can prove to be very costly.

BY Akash Saxena
Accrued Expenses and Differed Income
 Accrued Expenses
1. Accrued Wages and Salaries.
2. Accrued taxes and Interest.
 Deferred Income
1. Advance Payments.

BY Akash Saxena
Bank Finance for Working Capital
 Overdraft
 Cash Credit
 Purchase or Discounting of Bills
 Letter of Credit
 Working Capital Loan

BY Akash Saxena
Security for Bank Finance
 Hypothecation
 Pledge
 Mortgage
 Lien

BY Akash Saxena
Regulation of Bank Finance
 Dehejia Committee (1968)
 Tandon Committee (1974)
 Chore Committee (1979)
In the deregulated economic environment in
India recently, banks have considerably
relaxed their criteria of lending. In fact, each
bank can develop its own criteria for the
working capital finance.

BY Akash Saxena
Dehejia Committee–Existing
Deficiencies
 It is the borrower who decides how much he would
borrow; the banker does not decide how much he
would lend and is, therefore not in a position to do
credit planning.
 The bank credit is treated as first source of finance
and not as supplementary to other source of finance.
 The amount of credit extended is based on the
amount of security available, not on the level of
operations of borrower.
 Security does not by itself ensure safety of bank
funds since all bad and sticky advances are secured
advances; safety essentially lies in the efficient
follow-up of the industrial operations of the borrower.

BY Akash Saxena
The Tandon Committee
Recommendations
 Operating Plan
 Production Based Financing
 Partial Bank Financing
 Maximum Permissible Bank Finance
1. First Method
2. Second Method
3. Third Method

BY Akash Saxena
The Chore Committee
Recommendations
 Reduced Dependence on Bank Credit.
 Credit limit to be separated into “peak level”
and “normal peak level” limits.
 Existing Lending System to Continue.
 Information System.

BY Akash Saxena
Commercial Paper
 Unsecured promissory notes issued by firms to
raise short-term funds.
 In India introduced in 1989 on recommendation
of the “Vaghul Working Group”.
 Commercial papers sell at a discount from face
value.
 FaceValue – Sale Price   360 
Implied Yield    
 Sale Price   Days of Maturity 

BY Akash Saxena
Merits and Demerits
 Merits
1. Alternative Source of Finance.
2. High Liquidity in Money Market.
3. Low Cost of C.P.
4. Investors – Investment of Surplus funds.
 Demerits
1. Impersonal Method of financing.
2. Only available to financially sound companies.
3. Can not be redeemed until maturity.
4. Limited to the amount of excess liquidity of
purchasers.

BY Akash Saxena

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