Trade receivables insurance – effective protection against contractor insolvency?

Granting trade credit (issuing an invoice with a deferred payment term) always carries risk – especially when the recipient is a contractor with whom your company has only recently begun working. Instead of wondering whether it is worth issuing an invoice with a deferred payment term, you can… protect yourself appropriately. Get to know trade receivables insurance.
Table of contents:

What is trade receivables insurance?


Receivables insurance is a risk management tool that will allow you to maintain the profitability and financial liquidity of your company regardless of how your customer behaves.

Benefits of trade receivables insurance


Simple answers: peace of mind and money in case of problems, have long ceased to be sufficient – and rightly so. Here are the specific benefits you can count on thanks to insurance.

Protection against contractor problems

In theory, the financial difficulties of contractors should not be your concern. In reality, however, they can significantly affect the situation (not only financial) of your company.

Receivables insurance, provided you tailor it appropriately to your needs, will protect your company against unexpected contractor difficulties. Ordinary delays or non-payment, bankruptcy, or company restructuring – insurance can protect against each of these situations.

Assured financial liquidity

Contractors who are late with payments are a straightforward path to losing financial liquidity. When you are fulfilling orders for high amounts, even a single unpaid invoice can seriously harm the stability of your company.

Another risk may be excessive dependence on a single contractor. In a situation where your company carries out orders for a major player, it is easy to believe that they constitute a guarantee of continuity of orders and timely payments. However, when the contractor finds a cheaper supplier, your company may suffer seriously as a result.

The long-term solution is to expand the customer base, but if for some reason this is not possible or does not serve your brand’s interests, trade receivables insurance may be an appropriate way to ensure financial liquidity for your business.

Receivables monitoring

Protection against an unstable market and political situation

The credibility of your business

How to choose the best insurance offer?


What is the exact scope of coverage? What about political risk?

What limit amounts does the insurance company offer?

What are the compensation payment deadlines?

What additional services does the insurer offer?

What compensation amounts can you count on?

What insurance costs will your company incur? What beyond the premium amount?

  • Type of business activity – the more risky the activity, the higher the premiums. Do not hesitate to ask a representative of the insurance company which branches of the economy are considered high-risk industries, as the situation may change over time.
  • The credit limit amount – the more expensive the receivables you want to insure, the more you will pay for the policy.
  • Financial analysis of contractors – the more stable the financial situation of your contractors, the lower the insurance fees awaiting your company. During the risk assessment, insurers analyze not only the credit history or current financial situation, but also the mood in the industry or on a given market.

How does trade receivables insurance work step by step?


An entrepreneur who wants to insure trade receivables must conclude a contract with an insurer that offers such a service. Before this happens, however, it is worth preparing appropriately.

Step 0: draw up a list of contractors

Before the first contact with the insurance company, prepare a list of companies with which you already cooperate or intend to enter into cooperation. You can, of course, insure all trade receivables – if, however, you conduct business on a large scale and have many contractors, the costs of such a service may prove very burdensome for the company’s budget.

In such a situation, a better solution may be to divide contractors into at least two categories:

  • trusted recipients who have not had solvency problems so far,
  • new or unverified contractors whose receivables you want to insure.

Present this second list to the insurer during the first contact.

Important!

Step 1: choosing an insurer and submitting the list of contractors

Step 2: obtaining a limit and signing the contract

Step 3: issuing invoices with deferred payment terms

Step 4: receivables monitoring

Step 5: reporting delays

Step 6: payment of compensation

Summary


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