Jodi Seah
Trade Credit Sales Leader, Asia Credit Specialties
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Singapore
Amid today’s volatile business environment, Trade Credit Insurance is not only a necessity for companies, but the right coverage must also be geared towards helping the businesses meet their strategic objectives while offering prompt support when claims arise.
A wide spectrum of coverage options are available from the global market. From covering your company’s entire trade receivables portfolio under one policy via whole turnover insurance to safeguarding exposures related to selected customers via key-buyer cover insurance, Marsh Asia’s trade credit team can help you identify the relevant solution based on your unique business strategy, risk tolerance and the current market conditions in your industry of business.
In seeking the appropriate Trade Credit Insurance coverage with competitive terms that suit your business’s unique needs, it is advisable to speak to an experienced and independent risk advisor with in-depth understanding of your local market and industry, and innovative solutions to help you formulate the right structure for your business.
Here are some key considerations to keep in mind when selecting the appropriate Trade Credit Insurance cover:
Your business strategy shapes your growth objectives, risk appetite and outlines your approach to maintaining financial stability. Trade Credit Insurance, with its full spectrum of solution offerings, can be integrated as a strategic tool to help you navigate the uncertainties of global trade while supporting your overarching business goals.
Risk tolerance plays a crucial role in determining the extent to which a business might utilise Trade Credit Insurance. The integration of Trade Credit Insurance into a business's risk management approach can be adapted to both high and low risk tolerance thresholds. Regardless of risk tolerance, Marsh’s trade credit solutions offer a way to tailor risk exposure to an acceptable level through the various scope of coverages, enabling businesses to pursue growth while safeguarding against credit risks.
Prevailing market conditions play a crucial role in determining the level and type of Trade Credit Insurance coverage you should choose. It is essential to regularly assess these conditions and work with an experienced trade credit solutions specialist to tailor your coverage to match the evolving risk landscape.
A multinational office technology solutions company has independently managed policies with no group view of terms, and faced credit limit issues across existing policies.
Marsh Asia reviewed the insurer’s capability of offering a program with local credit limit underwriting support, harmonisation of policy terms, and online systems to improve overall back-office information management on credit risk exposures, providing the client with consistent policy terms, improved credit limit cover and a reduced cost.
A leading steel manufacturer and supplier suffered a delay and subsequent halt in a buyer’s payments and made a claim. However, the client had not taken any written balance confirmation on the outstanding debt, and had made sales beyond insurers’ approved credit limit, which made their entire claim appear non-admissible initially.
Marsh Asia worked with the client and insurer to understand the situation, and recommended several methods to secure the payment. The claim was settled at 85% indemnity within the timeline stipulated by the policy as a result of Marsh Asia’s timely intervention and recommendations, reducing the losses in the client’s books.
A leading crop protection company is required to provide extended open account repayment terms (365 days) to their customers but has an existing insurance coverage with low limit approval rates.
Using Marsh Asia’s proprietary benchmarking and analytics tool MiCredit, Marsh was able to secure better terms and conditions and significantly improve the client’s limit approvals. The client obtained more durable and flexible coverage via discretionary credit limit authority — allowing them to approve customer credit limits using their own credit procedures (below a certain threshold) instead of having to rely on the insurer.
What are some misconceptions on Trade Credit Insurance? Watch our video below which debunks 3 common myths, and insights on how Trade Credit Insurance can benefit your business in several ways.
Learn more about how Marsh Trade Credit solutions can safeguard your assets and enable the success of your business.
Trade credit insurance protects a company’s account receivables by providing coverage for a business if a customer does not pay for goods or services. It supports a company’s ability to extend credit terms (typically short term, due within 12 months) to new and existing customers and improves access to additional funding against accounts receivables.
Trade credit insurance is for companies, financial institutions, and any business offering goods or services on credit terms to another business. It compensates a company for the defined financial loss suffered as a direct result of an insured event, such as insolvency, continued payment default, or a political event. It is a tool used to effectively outsource some parts of credit management, or as part of a credit management strategy that transfers credit risk to insurers.
Trade credit insurance is suitable and of benefit to all types of businesses – irrespective of size, sector, or whether trade is domestic, export, or both. Corporations, financial institutions, and any other business offering goods or services on credit terms to another business should consider obtaining trade credit insurance. It protects your company from domestic default, as well as default by international buyers. For entities that operate on a financial basis that does not necessarily include immediate payment, trade credit insurance provides protection for a company’s assets as business activity scales upward.
Business types that commonly elect trade credit insurance include manufacturing companies, commodity traders, and service providers.
International trade between countries creates and moves the global economy. The flow of goods and services, and prices, can be influenced by a number of factors, including:
Trade credit insurance provides protection against the non-payment of a valid debt by the insured company’s buyer. This coverage usually applies to certain defined events (also termed causes of loss or insured perils).
Trade credit insurers will generally cover two types of risk:
Trade credit insurance supports your ability to extend credit terms to new and existing customers, thereby helping your business grow safely where previously you may have deemed it too risky. It also protects you against the risk of exporting overseas and reduces uncertainty.
Having trade credit insurance coverage can improve access to additional funding against your accounts receivable, as banks are typically more likely to lend more capital to a business that has trade credit insurance in place. As an insured company, your balance sheet will remain protected at a predetermined reimbursement rate (often between 75-90% of debt value), whether your customer has declared bankruptcy or simply cannot (or will not) pay its accounts due. It also helps to free up capital for use elsewhere in your business and helps reduce bad debt reserves.
Typically, a company would look to insure its whole customer portfolio, which is the most common type of policy. It can, however, also be customized to include only selective or key accounts, in the case of higher-risk customers.
Trade credit insurers offer a wide range of flexible products and policies, which are designed to cater for each company’s different coverage requirements. When seeking out such coverage, you should engage with a broker who has experience and expertise with global risk issues and trade finance solutions. Our experts can assist you with assessing and developing your specific requirements and then help you select the most appropriate coverage.
Coverage can be structured in a variety of ways, including:
Whole turnover: This is the most common policy type, which covers a company’s entire trade receivables portfolio under one policy, insuring a wide range of domestic and export transactions.
Each of the policies can cover domestic sales, export sales, or a combination of both – and can be defined regionally or globally. Political risk insurance is often included.
Given all of these options, for many businesses, trade credit insurance remains affordable: coverage costs typically represent less than 1% of sales revenues.
Trade credit insurance is a dynamic product. Credit limit requirements on customers change throughout a policy period, reflecting changing business needs. Therefore, Marsh typically supports its clients in many interactions with insurers to obtain or increase credit limits.
With a global network of more than 400 dedicated and award-winning trade credit specialists spanning 52 countries, Marsh’s Specialty Trade Credit Practice experts understand the culture, language, regulations, industry practices, and economic landscape across geographies to help your company manage receivables risk with cost-effective insurance solutions. Additionally, our multinational service team provides claims management and advocacy services in compliance with local insurance laws.
Trade Credit Sales Leader, Asia Credit Specialties
Singapore
Trade Credit Practice Leader, Credit Specialties
China