According to www.gtreview.com, post-maturity financing — a new supply chain finance structure pioneered in Germany and gaining traction across Europe and beyond — enables corporates to improve working capital without early supplier payments or debt classification on the balance sheet.
How It Differs From Traditional Supply Chain Finance
Unlike reverse factoring, where suppliers receive early payment (often at a discount), post-maturity financing pays suppliers on the original invoice due date and for the full amount. A licensed payment service provider (PSP) — not a bank — makes the payment to the supplier. The PSP then issues a new receivable to the buyer, repayable at an agreed future date.
This PSP-mediated structure is central to its accounting treatment: auditors generally classify the resulting obligation as a trade payable or other liability, not debt — preserving key balance sheet metrics like debt-to-equity ratio.
Lufthansa’s Rapid Adoption Signals Market Momentum
Lufthansa implemented a post-maturity financing facility in just six to eight weeks, reaching €258 million in liabilities under the programme by year-end — compared to €583 million across its traditional supply chain finance programme, which took six years to scale. The initiative was delivered by German fintech cflox, whose solution is branded cfloxpay.
cflox launched in 2020 after securing a payment institution licence from the German financial regulator. According to the source, it executed the equivalent of €15 billion in supplier payments over the last 12 months, operates in 14 EU countries, and expects around 150 active programmes by year-end.
Bank and Funder Engagement Is Deepening
Although PSPs sit at the front end, banks remain critical behind the scenes as funders — drawn by speed-to-deployment and return potential. Participating institutions include Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank, Rabobank, UniCredit, and Raiffeisen Bank International, per platform websites cited in the source. Funding models vary: some funders purchase receivables from the PSP; others support refinancing of the PSP’s exposure to the corporate client. Funds and family offices also participate.
Cautions From Providers and Funders
Despite its agility, providers urge restraint. Both CRX Markets and Orbian position post-maturity financing as an add-on, not a standalone instrument. Alexei Zabudkin, chief financial officer of CRX Markets, states:
“We consider this an add-on. We don’t consider this as a product that should be the only instrument in your working capital toolbox.” — Alexei Zabudkin, CFO, CRX Markets
The caution stems from stability and accounting risk: supplier-consented reverse factoring remains more durable, and ratings agencies may scrutinise heavy reliance on such structures. As one anonymous funder told GTR: their institution is cautious “not to rely too heavily on” these programmes due to the risk that auditors could revise their current favourable view of the accounting classification.
Global Expansion Underway
Demand is growing beyond German-speaking markets, with interest reported from companies in the UK, France, and Italy. Supply chain finance platforms including Orbian are rolling out programmes in Singapore and the US, with individual programme sizes ranging from US$20 million to the hundreds of millions. According to cflox’s Ralf Kesten:
“There are different ways – supply chain finance, digital bills of exchange, innovative supply chain finance programmes – which help corporates [meet] their KPIs in very uncertain times.” — Ralf Kesten, Head of Multinationals and Partner Management, cflox
Source: www.gtreview.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










