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April 2008

Supply chain management: Towards fewer, stronger chains?

by Laurence Neville

The credit crunch is inevitably limiting banks’ ability to offer supply chain finance services. But demand for these is set to keep growing, so the broader effect might be consolidation of the business into the hands of a few truly global banks. Laurence Neville reports.




Retreat from open account?

ONE OF THE hottest topics in transaction banking and trade finance over the past few years has been supply chain finance. International and regional banks have increasingly responded to corporate demands to increase efficiency in their financial supply chain in line with efficiency gains the companies themselves are achieving in their physical supply chain.

Supply chain finance is part of a broader concept of financial supply chain management that involves the management of creditor, country and foreign exchange risk and documentation that supports the supply chain. However, most important to corporates – because of its cost-cutting potential – is management of payments and funds across the supply chain process.

Supply chain finance is primarily associated with managing supply finance, including pre-shipment finance, in-transit finance, distribution and warehousing finance, and post-shipment finance. It is most frequently usually used as a synonym for reverse factoring or payables finance,...


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