Supply Chain Finance
Definition
A set of technology-based financing solutions that optimise cash flow by enabling suppliers to receive early payment of their invoices at a discount, funded by a financial institution or platform, while the buyer retains its original payment terms. Supply chain finance (also known as reverse factoring) benefits all parties: suppliers improve working capital, buyers extend payment terms without damaging supplier relationships, and financiers earn a return backed by the buyer's credit quality.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside Supply Chain Finance in practice.
A financial ecosystem built on blockchain technology that provides financial services — including lending, borrowing, trading, insurance, and asset management — without traditional intermediaries such as banks, brokerages, or exchanges. DeFi protocols use smart contracts to automate financial transactions and are typically open-source, permissionless, and composable.
The integration of financial services — such as payments, lending, insurance, or investment — directly into non-financial platforms and customer journeys. Embedded finance enables companies like e-commerce platforms, SaaS providers, and gig economy marketplaces to offer financial products without becoming licensed financial institutions, typically through Banking-as-a-Service partnerships.
A form of receivables financing in which a business sells its outstanding invoices to a third-party factor at a discount in exchange for immediate cash. The factor assumes responsibility for collecting payment from the underlying debtors and bears the credit risk in non-recourse arrangements.
A short-term financing arrangement designed to fund a company's day-to-day operational needs, bridging the timing gap between paying suppliers and receiving payment from customers. Working capital facilities typically take the form of revolving credit facilities, overdrafts, or invoice finance arrangements, and are secured against current assets such as receivables and inventory.
The legal transfer of a company's right to collect payment from its debtors to a lender or financial institution as security for a loan or as part of a receivables financing arrangement. Assignment may be by way of security (where the receivables serve as collateral) or by way of sale (as in factoring or securitisation).
A financial institution licensed by card networks (Visa, Mastercard) to process payment card transactions on behalf of merchants, also known as a merchant acquirer. The acquiring bank maintains the merchant's account, underwrites the merchant's credit risk, settles funds from card transactions, and ensures compliance with card network rules and PCI DSS security standards.
A form of receivables financing in which a business borrows against its outstanding invoices while retaining responsibility for credit control and collections. Unlike factoring, the borrower's customers are typically unaware of the financing arrangement (confidential invoice discounting).
A Latin term meaning 'on equal footing,' used in finance to indicate that two or more parties, instruments, or claims have equal rights to payment or assets. In venture capital, pari passu clauses ensure that investors in the same class receive proportional treatment during distributions or liquidation events.
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