According to en.wikipedia.org, supply chain finance (SCF), also known as supplier finance or reverse factoring, comprises financial solutions designed to optimize working capital and liquidity across buyer–supplier relationships. These arrangements are typically initiated by a buyer—often a large corporation—to enable suppliers to access early payment for approved invoices at interest rates tied to the buyer’s credit rating, which is generally more favorable than the supplier’s own cost of capital.
How Reverse Factoring Works
The reverse factoring method involves three parties: the ordering party (buyer), the supplier, and the factor (financier). Unlike traditional factoring—where the supplier independently seeks financing for receivables—reverse factoring is buyer-initiated. The buyer selects which invoices may be accelerated for payment; the supplier then chooses which of those eligible invoices to finance. Because liability rests with the creditworthy buyer, the financing cost is lower. As the source states, “the interest applied for the deduction is less than the one the supplier would have been given had they done it on their own.”
Comparative Mechanics
- Eligibility: Only validated invoices (not all invoices) qualify for reverse factoring
- Initiative: Comes from the ordering party—not the supplier
- Sum financed: Typically a portion of the invoice—not 100%
- Interest rate: Based on the ordering party’s creditworthiness—not the supplier’s
- Payment timing: Suppliers may receive funds within 10 days versus standard 30–45 day terms; buyers can extend their own payment obligations to 120–180 days
Historical Development and Market Context
The concept originated with automobile manufacturers in the 1980s, including Fiat, which used reverse factoring to improve margins across its supplier network. It later expanded into retail, where payment term negotiations are central. According to the source, reverse factoring was not widely adopted in the 1990s and early 2000s due to unfavorable economic conditions. A 2006 Aberdeen Group study emphasized the necessity of integrated technology platforms for scalable SCF implementation, while a 2007 Demica report noted comparatively higher adoption in Sweden and other Nordic countries.
Market Size and Growth
A 2015 report estimated SCF’s potential global revenue pool at $20 billion. As of 2011, the reverse factoring segment represented less than 3% of the total global factoring market, per the source. The technique has also been linked to financial controversy—including schemes contributing to the collapse of the Evergrande Group, China’s second-largest real estate company.
Practical Implications for Supply Chain Professionals
For practitioners, SCF presents a dual-edged tool: it strengthens supplier financial stability and reduces systemic risk, but demands rigorous invoice validation, cross-functional coordination (procurement, finance, treasury), and robust platform integration. Early-payment benefits for suppliers must be weighed against administrative overhead and data-sharing requirements. Given that reverse factoring depends on buyer-led program design, procurement teams increasingly serve as gatekeepers—not just for pricing and quality, but for financial resilience across tiers. The model’s scalability hinges on interoperable digital infrastructure, especially as multinational buyers seek consistent SCF rollout across regions like the EU and Southeast Asia.
Source: en.wikipedia.org
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










