One of the reasons businesses run out of cash – and generally go broke – is that they grow too fast.
What a paradox – the business is growing too quickly and is therefore too successful for its own good!
Not surprisingly, in situations like these you also find that the largest “creditor” of the business is the Australian Taxation Office, due to either unpaid GST, PAYG withholdings, employee super or all three. In other words, the business has used the ATO as a banker. The obvious question is – why?
The broader answer is very simple – lack of access to alternative funders.
Sources of funding for your business
A typical family-owned business usually only has two sources of funding – the owners or the bank – and the latter option is generally only available if the owners have “bricks and mortar” security (i.e. their home).
Where the business owner has little or no equity in their home and/or the funding needs of the business exceeds the amount they can borrow against their home, the options tend to be very limited. Banks may still lend something against the assets of the business (e.g. stock and debtors), but the size of this facility is often a fraction of the assets pledged as security and the facility may not increase as the cash flow needs of the business increase.
Children taking over a business from their parents may also lack the amount of capital (or property security) needed to grow the business.
Family-owned businesses are also reluctant to call in a “white knight” (a friend with cash) or venture capital provider. In any case, the latter are generally not attracted to smaller “mum and dad” family businesses. This therefore only leaves two sources of funding – business creditors and the ATO. Business creditors tend to get looked after as the business owner wants to ensure supply of raw materials to their business, which just leaves the ATO.
One often overlooked source of funding may be to “borrow” against the debtors of the business through a debtor finance arrangement (previously called factoring).
How debtor financing works
Traditionally thought of as a lender of last resort, debtor finance companies should not be overlooked as a source of funding for growing businesses, provided the business is profitable. The latter point is crucial, because it is no use accessing cash flow (from anywhere) if the business is not making money. The cash will soon run out and the business will go broke. This was also another reason provided in my previous article about why businesses don’t have cash – they don’t have a cash flow problem, they have a profitability problem. A lack of cash is the symptom, but a lack of profitability is the cause.
Assuming the business is profitable and growing, debtor finance provides an opportunity to borrow against the debtor book, particularly where it is a high quality debtor book. Generally, debtor financing companies will advance a percentage of the debtor book (e.g. 75% or 80%) for those debtors who have been outstanding for less than 90 days.
So, why don’t more family-owned businesses take up debtor financing?
This article continues on page 2. Please click the link below.
COMMENTS
SmartCompany is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while it is being reviewed, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The SmartCompany comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The SmartCompany comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.