Short term Financing can suffice for Delayed payments from large corporate buyers and public undertakings present a major challenge for Indian MSMEs. Although the MSME Development Act mandates payments within 45 days, the actual cash conversion cycle often stretches to 65–120 days, trapping valuable working capital on the balance sheet. Utilizing short-term financing and receivables monetization is a highly effective way to unlock cash and support growth without taking on additional long-term debt.
Various Options available
- The Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) Ecosystem
To address payment delays, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) introduced the Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS). TReDS is a regulated online transaction platform that connects MSME sellers, corporate or government buyers, and institutional financiers (banks and NBFCs).
Platforms such as the Receivables Exchange of India (RXIL), M1xchange, and Invoicemart allow MSMEs to upload approved invoices for competitive bidding. Financiers place interest rate bids based on the corporate buyer’s credit profile rather than the MSME’s financials, driving borrowing costs down to competitive rates. Once a bid is accepted, up to 95% of the invoice value is disbursed to the MSME’s account within 24 to 48 hours, providing predictable and fast cash flow.
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Receivables Monetization Flow │
└───────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────┘
▼
┌───────────────────────┼────────────────────────┐
▼ ▼ ▼
[Invoice Factoring]
– RXIL, M1xchange, – Confidential option – Debt collection is
& Invoicemart [3] – Retain control of assigned to the
– Competitive bidding sales ledger [37] factor
– Non-Recourse – May be Recourse
Risk Allocation: Recourse vs. Non-Recourse Structuring
When evaluating receivables financing, businesses must understand how default risk is allocated :
- Non-Recourse Factoring: On RBI-approved TReDS platforms, transactions are structured strictly on a non-recourse basis. If the corporate buyer defaults on the due date, the financier cannot demand the funds back from the MSME seller; the financier absorbs the loss.
- Recourse Factoring: Outside of regulated exchanges, private fintechs and NBFC factors often structure facilities on a recourse basis. If the buyer fails to settle the invoice within the agreed credit cycle, the factor retains the right to recover the advance directly from the seller.
Structural Comparison of Short-Term Financing Instruments
Different short-term financing structures carry distinct operational and balance sheet implications :
Feature | Regulated TReDS Platforms | Private Fintech Factoring | Traditional Bill Discounting |
Collateral Requirements | No collateral required; backed solely by validated invoices | Unsecured; relies on the corporate buyer’s credit profile | May require hard collateral or utilize existing bank limits |
Balance Sheet Impact | Off-balance sheet financing; does not add to liabilities | Typically off-balance sheet or classified as trade advance | Classified as a current liability on the balance sheet |
Confidentiality | Non-confidential; buyer must validate invoices online | Non-confidential; buyer is notified of assignment | Confidential or non-confidential depending on bank policy |
Typical Cost of Funds | Highly competitive (7.5% – 10.5% p.a. based on buyer bids) | Underwritten by fintech (typically 11% – 16% p.a.) | Tied to lender base rate or MCLR plus risk premium |
Processing Time | Within 24 hours of buyer’s digital invoice acceptance | 24 to 48 hours for verified digital invoices | Several days to weeks for manual document verification |
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.