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Trade Credit

International and domestic trade continue to pose business challenges, which have been heightened by the COVID-19 pandemic. As the risk of insolvency and default is ever-present, trade credit insurance can assist companies in navigating these critical business exposures by providing protection and enabling trade.

Global trade has changed significantly due to the events of 2020. Now, more than ever, businesses should carefully consider the potential risk of customer insolvency or default.

During such unpredictable economic cycles, businesses need to consistently deliver on performance with security for sustainable growth across the global marketplace. With the backing of trade credit insurance, companies can effectively protect their balance sheets.

Our global Trade Credit team provides a wide range of trade finance solutions that can help you manage your receivables risk. As a leading advisor on trade credit risk and insurance arrangements against potential loss caused by the non-payment of accounts receivables, we nurture strong relationships with major insurers to negotiate cost-effective coverage for your trade credit risk. Our specialist local and multinational service teams also deliver a consistent and compliant service across your trade credit program.

Credit Specialties Market Update: H1 2024

Our latest Market Update provides insights to support risk allocation and management strategies to enable business growth. It considers the changing risk landscape and the insurance market response across trade credit, surety, structured credit, and political risk.

Featured insights

Business director talking to colleague looking at a laptop

Article

09/04/2024

How economic factors impact trade credit risks and opportunities

Trade credit insurance could provide an attractive option for growing securely and mitigating credit risk when faced with economic disruption.

Placeholder Image

Podcast

03/04/2024

The trade credit claims landscape

Our latest episode on the Trade Credit podcast which looks at the claims environment in 2023 and 2024.

Smiling mature businessman looking at laptop at business meeting with two women

Video

13/03/2024

Optimising your working capital

Watch the replay now and explore the economic impact of 2023, the importance of cash flow management, and strategies to optimise your working capital.

US$900+

million in premium placed globally

400

Global network of nearly 400 trade credit specialists in 52 countries

FAQs

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:

  • Global events: The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has slowed, curtailed, and even halted the production and delivery of many goods and services.
  • Currency exchange rates: This is a key influence on net importers, who benefit from strong currencies, and net exporters, who benefit from weak currencies.
  • Trade barriers: This can include, for example, import quotas and tariffs imposed by governments to protect domestic industries from foreign competition.
  • Geopolitical stability and political unrest: Internal and cross-border conflict and war can disrupt trade routes and transport.
  • Transport costs: This can be influenced by many factors, most notably the price of oil.

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:

  • Commercial risk: The risk that your customers are unable to pay outstanding invoices because of financial reasons (for example, declared insolvency or protracted default).
  • Political risk: Non-payment as a result of events outside of your or your customers’ control. These can include political events (wars, revolutions), disasters (earthquakes, hurricanes), or economic difficulties, such as a currency shortage restricting the ability to transfer money owed from one country to another.

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 customised 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.

  • Key accounts: This policy is designed to insure a company’s largest customers or another defined band of coverage where the greatest risk exists (i.e., selective cover).
  • Single risk: This policy is designed to insure exposures related to one customer.
  • Excess of loss: This policy is designed to cover catastrophic or exceptional losses of the largest customers above the normal level of bad debt, by setting a suitable deductible level.

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.

Global leadership

Smith

Tim Smith

Global Practice Leader, Trade Credit, Marsh

  • United Kingdom