ECGC Revives Export-Factoring Business
In
a bid to boost exports, India’s export credit guarantee agency ECGC has revived
its export-factoring business. This move comes amidst a slump in the country’s
export growth due to slowing trade across advanced and emerging economies.
Factoring
is a financial transaction whereby a seller (for example, an exporter) gets his
accounts receivable (invoice) discounted with a ‘factor’ (such as ECGC). The
discounting leads to release of funds (almost 90 per cent of outstanding
invoice value) for the seller. The factor, in turn, collects the payment on the
invoice from the buyer (for example, an importer) on the due date.
Geetha Muralidhar, Chairperson and Managing Director, ECGC
(formerly Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India Ltd), said leading
exporting countries would not have been able to make a mark in global trade
without export factoring.
“We
now want to consciously work on our factoring product for micro, small and
medium enterprises. We had been doing full-fledged factoring for some time. It
was going on very well until we got stuck with the gem and jewellery
industry…We got hit (in the early part of this decade).”
“So
immediately there was a knee-jerk reaction. The whole establishment decided not
to touch it as it was very risky and we pulled back. I would say that was not a
right decision,” said Muralidhar.
The
ECGC chief said a sum of Rs. 60 crore has been set
aside for growing the factoring business, currently a departmental activity,
and could be hived off as a subsidiary at a later stage when the business gains
critical mass.
“We
have everything in place: clearance from the insurance regulator as well as the
banking regulator, wherewithal in terms of trained people, membership of
Factors Chain International (the global body for the open account receivables
finance industry) and Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) to conduct the
business.”
Giving
a boost
To
make factoring attractive for exporters, ECGC, among others, has brought down
its pricing, cut down on margins and bundled it with export insurance. At
present, the corporation is working on approving about half-a-dozen
export-factoring proposals.