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SME
Management (MGT-601)
VU
Lesson
20
This
lecture is dealing with the
approach guide lines for
approaching lenders. The
lecture also explains
the
expectations
of a lending institute from
borrower.
HOW
TO APPROACH LENDERS
You
have explored all means to
you to improve your
liquidity. You believe you
now need a short term
credit
from a bank to finance your trading
activities. Your next step
is to decide whom to
approach.
You
should take this decision on the basis of
financing sources available in
Pakistan, how you rate
their
effectiveness
and your own experience
and affinities with these
institutions. If cannot obtain the credit
you
need
through them, because of the
lack of resources or the weakness of the
financial sector, it may be
possible
to you to reach overseas
institutions. There are also
private institutions that
provide trade
finance.
Talk
to your banker or a financial advisor before
you start negotiating with
your customers or
suppliers.
Remember
the working capital serves to
pay for goods and
services. The type or terms of credit
you obtain
from
a bank should be closely linked to the
method of payment you use to
settle your creditor's invoices,
or
that
your customers or buyers use
to pay you.
Your
bank's motivations will not
be the same as yours. As a lender, it is
interested in obtaining a
good
return
on money lent, and it does
not want to run the risk of not being
paid. It will not went to spend
time
and
effort discussing your
needs, evaluating your company,
assessing your transactions
and advising you
without
an adequate fee for such
services.
Your
aim is to get the best
possible advice on payment
mechanisms and on the most appropriate
related
facilities;
to obtain credit on firms you afford
and to ensure that you
are covered for all
associated risks.
You
will want to look at all
options. Your bank on the other
hand, may want to solve your
problem quickly,
using
techniques that are well
known to its staff and that
involve least effort and
risk.
You
will want the bank to consider your
trade transactions on merit, be your
partner and share the
risks
with
you. The bank may prefer to avoid losing
time and may simply ask for
changes on your fixed
and
current
assets as security.
On
the other hand, your bank is in
competition with other
institutions. It will want to retain you
as a
customer
if it considers you creditworthy
and a good person or company
to deal with, and if you
offer good
growth
potential.
The
following sections in this lecture
will examine three aspects
and show how the
expectations of both the
borrower
and the lender can be
reconciled.
Bank's
Lending Criteria
There
are no standard criteria for short-term
credit. Banks tend to set
their own internal rules.
Nevertheless,
they
are bound by general
regulations and guidelines
established by the state bank of
Pakistan. There is
usually
a lending limit per
customer. Banks are required to
report any extra exposure to
a customer or a
group
of related customer beyond 30% of its
unimpaired capital. As per prudential
regulations, the bank has
to
make sure also that the the
total accommodation availed by the
borrower is not more thank
10 times of
the
total capital and reserves
(free f looses).
Another
requirement set forth in the prudential
regulations is that the debt equity ratio
of the borrower may
not
exceed 60:40 and the ration
between current liabilities and current
assets should not be less
than 1:1.
As
per prudential regulations, the bank, as
a matter of rule, should obtain copy of
accounts of borrower
related
to the business, for analysis
and record purpose. The
requirement of the account is related to
the
amount
of financing required.
Banks
may sometimes invoke their
lending criteria or statutory regulations as a
pretext for not granting
a
facility
to a borrower. There is nothing much
you can do about this and in
any case, it is unwise to
insist on
borrowing
from an unwilling lender.
Your
request for a short-term credit will
have greater chances of
success if you can satisfy
the short-term
lending
criteria set out
below.
58
SME
Management (MGT-601)
VU
Good
Cash Flow:
As
a borrower, you must show
that your performance is positive
and that operations are not
only profitable
but
also generate enough cash to
cover all your
commitments.
Adequate
Shareholder's Funds:
In
other words, you must
not be already over committed to
other lenders, but have a
reasonable proportion
of
your own capital in the
business.
Adequate
Security:
You
will not obtain credit from
a bank if all of your assets
are pledged to other
lenders.
Expertise
in Trading:
Most
institutions like to know
that you have a good
record of successful trading. It is
difficult to convince a
banker
to lend you money if you
are a complete beginner, or if you're a starting a
completely different and
new
trading activity with
untried products and unknown
customers or suppliers in countries
you have never
dealt
before.
Good
Reputation and Standing:
Your
references and credentials
must be acceptable to the lenders. They
would no doubt find it
difficult to
convince
their loan committee or board to approve an
advance to a bankrupt company or a
known crook!
But,
even assuming that your
past is without blemish, it is
helpful to have a backing of a reputable
sponsor.
This
could be a well-known person in the
business, your trade
association or even your
customer or
supplier.
Specific
Purpose:
Although
some lenders will be
prepared to grant overdraft facilities on the
basis of the security you
offer,
most
institutions prefer to see their loans
linked to specific transactions. In
these cases, the transaction
must
be
explained in full detail and shown to be
profitable and self
liquidating (the money borrowed
will be
repaid
from the proceeds of the transactions to
be financed).
Presenting
Your Request for a
Short-Term Loan
The
way you approach a bank or
other lending institution is
all-important. Here are a few tips.
Most are
simply
common sense ideas, and should
always be guided by the elementary rules
of the courtesy openness.
KNOW
WHOM YOU ARE DEALING
WITH:
Unless
you are already institutions
customers and know it well,
find out all you
can about the institution
beforehand.
Ask those who know it
about their experience with
the institution. Seek advice
from your trade
association,
chamber of commerce, or association of
industry. Try to obtain a
copy of the institutions
annual
report and see what its
affiliations are, and who
its shareholders and
directors are. Brochures
and
annual
reports, are normally freely
available in the banks and
other institutions, tell you
a great deal about
their
structure, organization and services.
Banks should also indicate their
lending rates and should give
you
their
schedule of their charge and
fees for services.
Give
Prior Notice of Your
Intentions
Always
call up beforehand for an appointment or
sometimes better still write a
letter or a fax setting
out
briefly
who you are and what
you do (if the lender doesn't
know you well), how much
need to borrow and
why.
Although you can conduct
your transactions by correspondence, it
is usually preferable to meet the
person
in charge of short-term commercial
lending or trade finance. If the
institution is far away or
abroad,
this
will obviously be not
possible, in which case you
should be particularly careful about how
to introduce
yourself
and what information you
provide.
59
SME
Management (MGT-601)
VU
Be
Well Prepared
Your
banker is a busy person and
you should come quickly to the
point. State who you
are, what you do,
how
much money you need
and what you need it for. Be
prepared to handover a copy of your
annual
report
or your financial statements (balance
sheet, profit and loss
account, budget etc.) as well as a
brochure
on
your company's activities or products.
Always make a point of
stating clearly of what you
intend to do
with
the funds you want to borrow. If your
intention is to finance the purchase of
goods or services
essential
for manufacturing products for export,
tell your banker the whole
story; whom your are
buying
from,
whom you are selling
to, how you intend to
pay and get paid. It is
always wise to speak to our
bank
about
these matters before you
sign contracts or agreements
with your suppliers or
customers or make
payment
arrangements.
Seek
Advice:
Experienced
bankers can guide you
and advise you on the risks
and dangers of various
payment methods,
on
the most suitable way to
finance your transactions
and on the security you should
provide as a guarantee
for
your borrowings. You should also
remember to ask about hedging possibilities to
cover or reduce risks
of
currency and price
fluctuations.
But
Be Cautious:
Resist
borrowing more than you
need, or for too long, or at
a too high interest rate.
Banks sometimes
propose
kinds of credits or payment methods
that they are most familiar
with, or that are the most
to
themselves
or that present the least risk to
them. Ask about the costs.
Remember there are costs,
fees, and
charges
in addition to the interest rate.
What about front-end fees?
(These are payments deduced
from the
loan
at disbursement to cover the lender's
cost of evaluating your request,
assessing the risk or opening the
loan
account). What are the back-office
fees? On each disbursement,
for instance? If the bank to
purchase
foreign
exchange or to open a documentary credit
applies the advance, how
much will it cost?
Most
institutions have standard or sliding
scale rates for their
services. Never hesitate to
ask for a copy
and
seek
guidance on how these rates
will effect your transactions. If
there are to be legal costs,
such as lawyer's
fees
for drafting a loan contract or
registering a charge on assets or a
debenture, you should
obtain
clarification
on these matters before committing
yourself to any obligation.
While
Avoiding "shopping around"
Bankers
will not like the idea of
your shopping around for the best
deal, visiting several
institutions and
making
comparisons between them. If
you tell them that you
have found a better deal
elsewhere after they
have
spent hours with you, drawn up
documentation and obtained clearance from
their loan committee,
senior
management or board, they will feel that
you have wasted their
time.
There
is in fact nothing wrong in
trying to get to know the
banking sector and wanting the
best deal. But
you
should avoid giving the impression
that you are also
talking to others after negotiations have
reached
the
stage where the agreement is
virtually finalized and awaiting
management or board approval. The
success
of a good borrower-lender is built
largely on trust. Trust is developed over
time and is a result of a
positive
experience. The banker will
often prefer to try out a
prospective customer by offering
small, well
secured
loans on a very short-term basis to see
how it works. S transactions
are successfully repeated,
the
customer's
standing rises and his or
her credit improves. When
you approach an institution
for the first
time,
bear this in mind. The
cheapest lender may not in the
long run, rove the
best.
Book
Recommended
How
to approach Banks By
ITC/SMEDA
60
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