Lect_11(1)
Lect_11(1)
Short-Term
Short-Term
Financing
Financing
11.1
After Studying Lect. 11,
you should be able to:
1. Understand the sources and types of spontaneous financing.
2. Calculate the annual cost of trade credit when trade
discounts are forgone.
3. Explain what is meant by "stretching payables" and
understand its potential drawbacks.
4. Describe various types of negotiated (or external) short-term
borrowing.
5. Identify the factors that affect the cost of short-term
borrowing.
6. Calculate the effective annual interest rate on short-term
borrowing with or without a compensating balance
requirement and/or a commitment fee.
7. Understand what is meant by factoring accounts receivable.
11.2
Short-Term Financing
• Spontaneous Financing
• Negotiated Financing
• Factoring Accounts
Receivable
• Composition of Short-Term
Financing
11.3
Spontaneous Financing
Types of spontaneous
financing
• Accounts Payable
(Trade Credit from
Suppliers)
• Accrued Expenses
11.4
Spontaneous Financing
Trade Credit – credit granted from one
business to another.
Examples of trade credit are:
• Open Accounts: the seller ships goods to
the buyer with an invoice specifying goods
shipped, total amount due, and terms of the
sale.
• Notes Payable: the buyer signs a note that
11.5
evidences a debt to the seller.
Spontaneous Financing
• Trade Acceptances: the seller draws a draft on
the buyer that orders the buyer to pay the draft
at some future time period.
11.6
Terms of the Sale
• COD and CBD - No Trade Credit: the buyer
pays cash on delivery or cash before delivery.
delivery
This reduces the seller’s risk under COD to the
buyer refusing the shipment or eliminates it
completely for CBD.
• Net Period - No Cash Discount – when credit is
extended, the seller specifies the period of time
allowed for payment. “Net 30” implies full
payment in 30 days from the invoice date.
11.7
Terms of the Sale
• Net Period - Cash Discount – when credit is
extended, the seller specifies the period of time
allowed for payment and offers a cash discount if
paid in the early part of the period. “2/10, net 30”
implies full payment within 30 days from the invoice
date less a 2% discount if paid within 10 days.
• Seasonal Dating – credit terms that encourage the
buyer of seasonal products to take delivery before
the peak sales period and to defer payment until
after the peak sales period.
11.8
Trade Credit as a
Means of Financing
What happens to accounts payable if a
firm purchases $1,000/day at “net 30”?
$1,000 x 30 days = $30,000 account balance
What happens to accounts payable if a
firm purchases $1,500/day at “net 30”?
$1,500 x 30 days = $45,000 account balance
A $15,000 increase from operations!
11.9
Cost to Forgo a Discount
What is the approximate annual cost
to forgo the cash discount of “2/10,
net 30” after the first ten days?
Approximate annual interest cost =
% discount 365 days
X
(100% - % discount) (payment date -
discount period)
11.10
Cost to Forgo a Discount
What is the approximate annual cost to
forgo the cash discount of “2/10, net 30,”
and pay at the end of the credit period?
Approximate annual interest cost =
2% 365 days
X
(100% - 2%) (30 days - 10 days)
11.20
Short-Term
Business Loans
• Unsecured Loans – A form of debt for
money borrowed that is not backed by
the pledge of specific assets.
11.21
Unsecured Loans
• Line of Credit (with a bank) – An informal
arrangement between a bank and its
customer specifying the maximum amount of
credit the bank will permit the firm to owe at
any one time.
• One-year limit that is reviewed prior to renewal to
determine if conditions necessitate a change.
• Credit line is based on the bank’s assessment of
the creditworthiness and credit needs of the firm.
• “Cleanup” provision requires the firm to owe the
bank nothing for a period of time.
11.22
Unsecured Loans
Revolving Credit Agreement – A formal, legal
commitment to extend credit up to some
maximum amount over a stated period of time.
• Firm receives revolving credit by paying a
commitment fee on any unused portion of the
maximum amount of credit.
• Commitment fee – A fee charged by the lender for
agreeing to hold credit available.
• Agreements frequently extend beyond 1 year.
11.23
Unsecured Loans
• Transaction Loan – A loan agreement
that meets the short-term funds needs of
the firm for a single, specific purpose.
• Each request is handled as a separate
transaction by the bank, and project loan
determination is based on the cash-flow ability
of the borrower.
• The loan is paid off at the completion of the
project by the firm from resulting cash flows.
11.24
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Interest Rates
• Prime Rate – Short-term interest rate charged
by banks to large, creditworthy customers.
• Differential from prime depends on:
• Cash balances
• Other business with the bank
• Cost of servicing the loan
11.25
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Computing Interest Rates
• Collect Basis – interest is paid at maturity of
the note.
Example: $100,000 loan at 10%
stated interest rate for 1 year.
$10,000 in interest
= 10.00%
$100,000 in usable funds
11.26
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Computing Interest Rates
• Discount Basis – interest is deducted from
the initial loan.
Example: $100,000 loan at 10%
stated interest rate for 1 year.
$10,000 in interest
= 11.11%
$90,000 in usable funds
11.27
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Compensating Balances
• Demand deposits maintained by a firm to
compensate a bank for services provided, credit
lines, or loans.
Example: $1,000,000 loan at 10% stated interest rate for
1 year with a required $150,000 compensating balance.
$100,000 in interest
= 11.76%
$850,000 in usable funds
11.28
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Commitment Fees
• The fee charged by the lender for agreeing to hold
credit available is on the unused portions of credit.
Example: $1 million revolving credit at 10% stated
interest rate for 1 year; borrowing for the year was
$600,000; a required 5% compensating balance on
borrowed funds; and a .5% commitment fee on
$400,000 of unused credit.
What is the cost of borrowing?
11.29
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Interest: ($600,000) x (10%) = $ 60,000
Commitment Fee:
($400,000) x (0.5%) =$ 2,000
Compensating
Balance: ($600,000) x (5%) = $ 30,000
$60,000 in interest +
$2,000 in commitment fees
= 10.88%
$570,000 in usable funds
11.30
Detour: Cost of Borrowing
Effective Annual Rate of Interest (generally) =
Total interest paid + total fees paid 365 days .
Usable funds X # of days loan is
outstanding
Assume the same loan described on slide 11-29 except that the loan
is for 270 days and the 10% rate is on an annual basis. What is
the EAR?
• $44,384 in interest, $2,000 in commitment fees, and $570,000 in
usable funds. $44,384 interest = 10% x $600,000 x (270/365).
11.31
Secured
(or Asset-Based) Loans
• Security (collateral) – Asset (s) pledged by
a borrower to ensure repayment of a loan.
If the borrower defaults, the lender may
sell the security to pay off the loan.
Collateral value depends on:
on
• Marketability
• Life
• Riskiness
11.32
Uniform Commercial Code
• Model state legislation related to many
aspects of commercial transactions that
went into effect in Pennsylvania in 1954. It
has been adopted with limited changes by
most state legislatures.
Article 9 of the Code deals with:
with
• Security interests of the lender
• Security agreement (device)
• Filing of the security agreement
11.33
Accounts-Receivable-
Backed Loans
• One of the most liquid asset accounts.
• Loans by commercial banks or finance
companies (banks offer lower interest rates).
Loan evaluations are made on:
on
• Quality: not all individual accounts have to
be accepted (may reject on aging).
aging
• Size: small accounts may be rejected as
being too costly (per dollar of loan) to
handle by the institution.
11.34
Accounts-Receivable-
Backed Loans
Types of receivable loan arrangements:
• Nonnotification – firm customers are not
notified that their accounts have been
pledged to the lender. The firm forwards all
payments from pledged accounts to the
lender.
• Notification – firm customers are notified
that their accounts have been pledged to the
lender and remittances are made directly to
the lending institution.
11.35
Inventory-Backed Loans
• Relatively liquid asset accounts
• Loan evaluations are made on:
on
• Marketability
• Perishability
• Price stability
• Difficulty and expense of selling for loan
satisfaction
• Cash-flow ability
11.36
Types of
Inventory-Backed Loans
• Floating Lien – A general, or blanket,
lien against a group of assets, such as
inventory or receivables, without the
assets being specifically identified.
• Chattel Mortgage – A lien on
specifically identified personal
property (assets other than real estate)
backing a loan.
11.37
Types of
Inventory-Backed Loans
• Trust Receipt – A security device
acknowledging that the borrower holds
specifically identified inventory and
proceeds from its sale in trust for the
lender.
• Terminal Warehouse Receipt – A receipt
for the deposit of goods in a public
warehouse that a lender holds as
collateral for a loan.
11.38
Types of
Inventory-Backed Loans
• Field Warehouse Receipt – A
receipt for goods segregated and
stored on the borrower’s premises
(but under the control of an
independent warehousing
company) that a lender holds as
collateral for a loan.
11.39
Factoring
Accounts Receivable
Factoring – The selling of receivables to a
financial institution, the factor,
factor usually
“without recourse.”
• Factor is often a subsidiary of a bank holding
company.
• Factor maintains a credit department and performs
credit checks on accounts.
• Allows firm to eliminate their credit department
and the associated costs.
• Contracts are usually for 1 year, but are renewable.
11.40
Factoring
Accounts Receivable
Factoring Costs
• Factor receives a commission on the face value of
the receivables (typically <1% but as much as 3%).
• Cash payment is usually made on the actual or
average due date of the receivables.
• If the factor advances money to the firm, then the
firm must pay interest on the advance.
• Total cost of factoring is composed of a factoring
fee plus an interest charge on any cash advance.
• Although expensive, it provides the firm with
substantial flexibility.
11.41
Composition of
Short-Term Financing
The best mix of short-term
financing depends on:
• Cost of the financing method
• Availability of funds
• Timing
• Flexibility
• Degree to which the assets are
encumbered
11.42