SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  23
FACTORING IN
BRAZIL
- AABHAS KSHETARPAL, ROLL NO.: 856, V SEMESTER,
B.B.A. LL.B. (HONS.), NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, JODHPUR
FINANCING ACTIVITY IN BRAZIL – IN TERMS
OF NUMBER OF COMPANIES
Finance
Companies, 39.00
Leasing
Companies, 71.00
Factoring
Companies, 717.00
0.00
100.00
200.00
300.00
400.00
500.00
600.00
700.00
800.00
FINANCE COMPANIES LEASING COMPANIES FACTORING COMPANIES
FINANCING ACTIVITY IN BRAZIL – IN TERMS
OF NUMBER OF TOTAL LOANS (BILLIONS)
Finance
Companies, 4.60
Leasing
Companies, 11.60
Factoring
Companies, 27.40
0.00
5.00
10.00
15.00
20.00
25.00
30.00
FINANCE COMPANIES
LEASING COMPANIESFACTORING COMPANIES
EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT
 Factoring, known in Brazil as ‘fomento mercantil,’ is a
service activity that includes ongoing advisory work on
credit, risk, accounting, inventory, and working capital
management, in tandem with the irrevocable purchase
of credit rights, in the form of receivables that arise from
the sale of goods or services with a typical maturity of 30
to 60 days.
 There are an estimated 717 known factoring companies
in Brazil, which provide services to more than 65,000 small
and medium enterprises.
 Eighty percent of these enterprises belong to the industrial
sector, with a monthly turnover of around US$1 billion.
 Brazilian enterprises obtained about US$10 billion (R$27
billion) as creditor rights resulting from mercantile
sales, representing 6 percent of all domestic sources of
financing.
 This figure constitutes an impressive increase of around 50
percent over 1998 (US$7 billion, R$19 billion).
 Brazil’s factoring companies are located mainly in the
Southeast (51 percent), South (21 percent), and Northeast
(17 percent), with more than 250 in the state of São Paulo
alone.
SECTORS ACCOUNTING FOR FACTORING
ACTIVITY IN BRAZIL
Metallurgic
Industries, 22.00%
Services, 15.00%
Printing
Industry, 14.00%
Sugar-Alcohol
Industries, 3%
Other
Industries, 15.00%
Commerce, 6.00%
Chemical
Industries, 1%
Textile Industries, 2%
Transportation, 34%
PRICING INTEREST RATES AND THE
PURCHASE FACTOR
 The cost of a factoring operation has two components:
 a fee for the provision of services and
 the price, or the ‘purchase factor,’ for the purchase of receivables.
 The fee for the provision of services is fixed ad valorem.
 The purchase factor is the price paid for the sale of a
credit right.
 Factoring companies use as a base the ‘factor ANFAC’
(Associação Nacional das Sociedades de Fomento
Mercantil; Brazilian Factoring Association) to quote the
price of factoring services in Brazil.
 The factor is published daily and varies with the
money market or certificado de depósito bancário
(bank certificate of deposit; CDB).
 The components of the factor ANFAC include the
opportunity costs of resources, assessed in terms of
the CDB rate, operational costs, taxes, and
expected profits.
 The purchase factor varies with industry conditions
and the creditworthiness of the customer.
AN ILLUSTRATION
 The purchase factor was more than twice the interbank lending rate in
February 2003, at 4.4 percent per month (67.7 percent per year
equivalent), compared to the prevailing CDB interest rate of 1.83
percent (25.7 percent per year equivalent).
 As expected, this was also higher than the prevailing average bank
discount rate for commercial invoices, which was 58.5 percent per year
at the same time.
 Factoring companies point out, however, that this rate is effective and
final, while banks’ effective interest rates are higher, as other bank
charges are added to the rate, such as a credit issuance fee, a price
for receivables, overheads, retention of a percentage of the loan’s
value, product sales, and so forth.
 However, many of the factor’s clients may not be able to obtain lower
rates through bank discounts or any other formal financing.
FACTORING VERSUS BANK SERVICES —
CONTRAST AND COMPLEMENTARITY
Financial
Intermediation
Factoring
Credit operations No credit operations, but purchase
of credit rights (receivables)
Obtains funds from the public to
invest in credit operations by means
of financial intermediation.
Only operates with resources not
collected from the public; no
financial intermediation.
Remuneration consists of interest
rates for the use of capital during a
period of time.
Remuneration does not have an
interest rate or discount rate but the
payment of a price for the sale of
services and the purchase of credit
rights.
Financial
Intermediation
Factoring
Needs authorization from the Central
Bank (Law No. 4595/64) to operate.
Is not a financial intermediary; a
commercial activity that only operates
with legal persons; does not require
authorization from the Central Bank.
Operates with legal persons and
individuals.
Only operates with legal persons or
professionals that are considered to
be legal economic entities.
Profits are generated by means of a
spread between financing and credit
interest rates.
Price includes all cost items (market
interest rate, operational costs, taxes)
and the expected profit and risks.
 Factoring normally uses the negative credit information
systems of the two principal private credit bureaus of
Brazil, SCI (Segurança ao Crédito e Informações; Credit
and Information Security) and SERASA. Factoring
companies are both users and producers of information.
 As a result of these differences, factoring has several
benefits over funding from bank loans
 First, funding can be obtained more rapidly.
 Second, for the provider of credit, the exposure is limited
to the amount of invoices issued to the seller, and the
creditworthiness of the seller is less important.
 Third, this allows for companies in legal difficulty to borrow from
factors, because factoring depends on the creditworthiness of
the seller’s customers.
 On the contrary, banks do not have an incentive to lend to firms
in financial distress, as this could imply a higher risk classification of
the loan and would mean higher capital requirements.
 Under the prevailing bankruptcy law, unlike factors, banks have
not been permitted to operate with companies in receivership.
 Fourth, it is clear that factoring will have considerably higher
implied rates of interest than bank loans, but this can be
explained largely by the composite nature of services
provided, the need for much closer client scrutiny and
knowledge, and the limited sources of finance available to the
factor, who must rely largely on internal resources.
REGULATION
 Challenges to the legitimacy of factoring are
compounded by suspected illicit activities of some
firms, which have been known in particular to offer services
outside their legal scope.
 For example, deposit taking or loan provision.
 One of the main objectives of ANFAC, the factoring
company trade association, is to delimit factoring from
other activities, sometimes illegal, of financial
intermediation, without the required approval of the
Central Bank, or grant loans at usurious interest rates under
the name of ‘factoring.’
 ANFAC has agreed on a model of factoring contract
(contrato de fomento mercantil) to be used by its
associates, has issued a Code of Ethics (Código de Ética
e Auto-Regulação), has approved a set of General Rules
for Factoring Operations (Regulamento Geral das
Operações de Fomento Mercantil)
 In 1999, reached a Technical Cooperation Agreement
(Acordo de Cooperação Técnica) with the Economic
Law Secretariat of the Ministry of Justice (Secretaria de
Direito Econômico do Ministério da Justiça).
 The agreement has three basic objectives:
 (1) to recognize and preserve factoring as a means of
supporting productive activities,
 (2) to protect affiliated companies by means of a
‘qualification and quality’ certification, and
 (3) to establish a system of technical cooperation with
the Federal public administration to prevent the
emergence of illegal activities under the guise of
factoring. ANFAC has been petitioning strongly for a
specific factoring law to help eliminate illegitimate
activities and protect its members.
TAX REGIME
 First, factoring companies, unlike banks, do not pay interest, as there
are restrictions against their access to funds from third parties in the
market. Thus, they cannot deduct from their income any interest
expense, and taxes affect them more heavily. This tax burden is
passed to clients as the additional costs of factoring services.
 Second, as they undertake commercial transactions to purchase
receivables, the tax note, invoice, and duplicata (credit right)
associated with such sales must be issued.
 The commercial transaction is subject to the Imposto de Circulação
de Mercadorias. Law No. 5474/68 (Article 20) allows service
providers to issue invoices and commericial invoices representative
of their rights.
 Next, the service provider is subject to a tax on
services, the Imposto sobre Serviços (Tax on Services;
ISS), which is locally collected with a tax rate varying from
0.7 percent to 5 percent, depending on location.
 Sometimes, factoring companies are asked to collect the
ISS on overall revenue (service provision plus revenues
from purchase of receivables). An additional charge, the
COFINS (Contribution for the Financing of Social Security)
tax, does not take into account the dual nature of
factoring activities, and the tax base includes both the
revenues for service provision and the revenue for
receivables purchase.
 Third, factors are taxed in the same way as banks in terms of financial
transaction taxes.
 Another indirect tax, the Imposto sobre Operações Financeiras (Tax
on Financial Operations; IOF) on financial transactions, which was
established by Law No. 9532/97 for credit operations of financial
intermediaries, includes factoring companies in its scope (Article
58), although factoring companies are not financial intermediaries.
 Moreover, factors complain that they should be exempted from the
IOF tax.
 On the other hand, credit transfers (cessão de créditos) between
financial intermediaries or between financial intermediaries and
leasing companies are not subject to the IOF (Decree 2219/97, Article
8, VII), and factors do not benefit from this. These appear to be
contrary to principles of equality of tax treatment.
INTERNATIONAL FACTORING
 International factoring in Brazil is undeveloped, especially
relative to the large size of the domestic factoring sector.
 The most significant obstacle to the development of
international factoring is that factoring companies in Brazil
are not allowed to hold foreign-currency accounts.
 Thus, they are not able to make advances to the exporter
in the currency of their invoices, which introduces
exchange rate risk. It would thus be difficult to serve the
export community without involving commercial banks.
 If conditions for permitting international factoring
could be eased, export companies could reduce
their risks. Italy and the United Kingdom have
extensively used factoring to involve SMEs in
export activity.
 In Latin America, countries such as Mexico have
also begun to engage in international factoring.
 In contrast, in Brazil, exports are carried out by big
companies with more access to financial services
from conventional financial intermediaries.
TURNOVER FROM FACTORING IN THE
AMERICAS AND THE WORLD
ARGENTINA
BRAZIL
CHILE
MEXICO
UNITED STATES
REST OF THE WORLD
0.00
100000.00
200000.00
300000.00
400000.00
500000.00
Argentina, 1715.00
Brazil, 12012.00 Chile, 2650.00
Mexico, 5030.00
United
States, 120000.00
Rest of the
World, 497323.00
THANK YOU.
ANY QUESTIONS?

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Int drug rings
Int drug ringsInt drug rings
Int drug rings
Kalebtoews
 
Ch.01 private and public international law
Ch.01 private and public international lawCh.01 private and public international law
Ch.01 private and public international law
Asmatullah Kakar
 
Intellectual property rights (2)
Intellectual property rights (2)Intellectual property rights (2)
Intellectual property rights (2)
StudsPlanet.com
 
Issues in World Order
Issues in World OrderIssues in World Order
Issues in World Order
Mr Shipp
 

Tendances (20)

NERVOUS SHOCK
NERVOUS SHOCKNERVOUS SHOCK
NERVOUS SHOCK
 
Int drug rings
Int drug ringsInt drug rings
Int drug rings
 
Bail in India
Bail in IndiaBail in India
Bail in India
 
Ch.01 private and public international law
Ch.01 private and public international lawCh.01 private and public international law
Ch.01 private and public international law
 
Theories of female criminality
Theories of female criminalityTheories of female criminality
Theories of female criminality
 
Prisoners Rights - Legal Aid & Prison Reforms
Prisoners Rights - Legal Aid & Prison ReformsPrisoners Rights - Legal Aid & Prison Reforms
Prisoners Rights - Legal Aid & Prison Reforms
 
OECD
OECDOECD
OECD
 
Code of civil procedure 1908 pleading plaint written statement
Code of civil procedure 1908 pleading plaint written statementCode of civil procedure 1908 pleading plaint written statement
Code of civil procedure 1908 pleading plaint written statement
 
Victimology-ppt.ppt
Victimology-ppt.pptVictimology-ppt.ppt
Victimology-ppt.ppt
 
Jurisdiction Under Private International Law.pdf
Jurisdiction Under Private International Law.pdfJurisdiction Under Private International Law.pdf
Jurisdiction Under Private International Law.pdf
 
Answer
AnswerAnswer
Answer
 
Introductory of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
Introductory of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908Introductory of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
Introductory of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
 
Intellectual property rights (2)
Intellectual property rights (2)Intellectual property rights (2)
Intellectual property rights (2)
 
Bankruptcy Fraud
Bankruptcy FraudBankruptcy Fraud
Bankruptcy Fraud
 
Insolvency, liquidity and winding up
Insolvency, liquidity and winding upInsolvency, liquidity and winding up
Insolvency, liquidity and winding up
 
Issues in World Order
Issues in World OrderIssues in World Order
Issues in World Order
 
Victim compensation in India ppt
Victim compensation in India  pptVictim compensation in India  ppt
Victim compensation in India ppt
 
Italian School.pptx
Italian School.pptxItalian School.pptx
Italian School.pptx
 
State Jurisdiction under International Criminal Law
State Jurisdiction under International Criminal LawState Jurisdiction under International Criminal Law
State Jurisdiction under International Criminal Law
 
Settlement of international disputes
Settlement of international disputesSettlement of international disputes
Settlement of international disputes
 

Similaire à Factoring in Brazil

The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360
The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360
The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360
John Barnes
 
Shiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaiting
Shiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaitingShiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaiting
Shiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaiting
Barotlaxman
 
Factoring in poland
Factoring in polandFactoring in poland
Factoring in poland
Pankaj Rathi
 
credit management
credit managementcredit management
credit management
FaFa Ieda
 
A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)
A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)
A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)
Dan Frechtling
 

Similaire à Factoring in Brazil (20)

The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360
The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360
The New Paradigm In Vendor Management Under CFPB - Law360
 
Client Alert: CFPB
Client Alert: CFPBClient Alert: CFPB
Client Alert: CFPB
 
Factoring
FactoringFactoring
Factoring
 
NBFC Registration,NBFC License,NBFC License procedure
NBFC Registration,NBFC License,NBFC License procedureNBFC Registration,NBFC License,NBFC License procedure
NBFC Registration,NBFC License,NBFC License procedure
 
BSA AML OFAC training preview
BSA AML OFAC training previewBSA AML OFAC training preview
BSA AML OFAC training preview
 
Shiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaiting
Shiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaitingShiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaiting
Shiva sir factoring,discounting& forfaiting
 
STUDY NOTES FACTORING.pdf
STUDY NOTES FACTORING.pdfSTUDY NOTES FACTORING.pdf
STUDY NOTES FACTORING.pdf
 
What is Microfinance Company Registration.docx
What is Microfinance Company Registration.docxWhat is Microfinance Company Registration.docx
What is Microfinance Company Registration.docx
 
Factoring in greece
Factoring in greeceFactoring in greece
Factoring in greece
 
Factoring in poland
Factoring in polandFactoring in poland
Factoring in poland
 
Unlocking the Power of Invoice Financing: How Small Businesses Can Access Cap...
Unlocking the Power of Invoice Financing: How Small Businesses Can Access Cap...Unlocking the Power of Invoice Financing: How Small Businesses Can Access Cap...
Unlocking the Power of Invoice Financing: How Small Businesses Can Access Cap...
 
Mf0017 assignment
Mf0017  assignmentMf0017  assignment
Mf0017 assignment
 
Factoring regulation act, 2011
Factoring regulation act, 2011Factoring regulation act, 2011
Factoring regulation act, 2011
 
credit management
credit managementcredit management
credit management
 
How to Use Reverse Factoring to Get a Loan.pptx
How to Use Reverse Factoring to Get a Loan.pptxHow to Use Reverse Factoring to Get a Loan.pptx
How to Use Reverse Factoring to Get a Loan.pptx
 
A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)
A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)
A_Complete_Approach_to_KYC_With_Business_Customer_Intelligence (1)
 
The Ultimate Guide to Invoice Financing: Everything You Need to Know
The Ultimate Guide to Invoice Financing: Everything You Need to KnowThe Ultimate Guide to Invoice Financing: Everything You Need to Know
The Ultimate Guide to Invoice Financing: Everything You Need to Know
 
NWIP_201611_ADV2a
NWIP_201611_ADV2aNWIP_201611_ADV2a
NWIP_201611_ADV2a
 
trade finance - Copy.pptx
trade finance - Copy.pptxtrade finance - Copy.pptx
trade finance - Copy.pptx
 
Regulatory framework for lending: State v. Federal perspectives
Regulatory framework for lending: State v. Federal perspectivesRegulatory framework for lending: State v. Federal perspectives
Regulatory framework for lending: State v. Federal perspectives
 

Dernier

VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...
VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...
VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...
dipikadinghjn ( Why You Choose Us? ) Escorts
 
From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...
From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...
From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...
From Luxury Escort : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangements Near yOU
 
CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...
CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...
CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...
priyasharma62062
 
Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7
9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...
VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...
VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...
dipikadinghjn ( Why You Choose Us? ) Escorts
 

Dernier (20)

(Sexy Sheela) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 👉9920725232👈 Mumbai Escorts 24x7
(Sexy Sheela) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 👉9920725232👈 Mumbai Escorts 24x7(Sexy Sheela) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 👉9920725232👈 Mumbai Escorts 24x7
(Sexy Sheela) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 👉9920725232👈 Mumbai Escorts 24x7
 
Airport Road Best Experience Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 Santacruz MOst Es...
Airport Road Best Experience Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 Santacruz MOst Es...Airport Road Best Experience Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 Santacruz MOst Es...
Airport Road Best Experience Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 Santacruz MOst Es...
 
VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...
VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...
VIP Call Girl in Mumbai Central 💧 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Get A New Crush Ever...
 
Cybersecurity Threats in Financial Services Protection.pptx
Cybersecurity Threats in  Financial Services Protection.pptxCybersecurity Threats in  Financial Services Protection.pptx
Cybersecurity Threats in Financial Services Protection.pptx
 
Technology industry / Finnish economic outlook
Technology industry / Finnish economic outlookTechnology industry / Finnish economic outlook
Technology industry / Finnish economic outlook
 
(INDIRA) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 8250077686 Mumbai Escorts 24x7
(INDIRA) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 8250077686 Mumbai Escorts 24x7(INDIRA) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 8250077686 Mumbai Escorts 24x7
(INDIRA) Call Girl Mumbai Call Now 8250077686 Mumbai Escorts 24x7
 
Vasai-Virar High Profile Model Call Girls📞9833754194-Nalasopara Satisfy Call ...
Vasai-Virar High Profile Model Call Girls📞9833754194-Nalasopara Satisfy Call ...Vasai-Virar High Profile Model Call Girls📞9833754194-Nalasopara Satisfy Call ...
Vasai-Virar High Profile Model Call Girls📞9833754194-Nalasopara Satisfy Call ...
 
8377087607, Door Step Call Girls In Kalkaji (Locanto) 24/7 Available
8377087607, Door Step Call Girls In Kalkaji (Locanto) 24/7 Available8377087607, Door Step Call Girls In Kalkaji (Locanto) 24/7 Available
8377087607, Door Step Call Girls In Kalkaji (Locanto) 24/7 Available
 
Kharghar Blowjob Housewife Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-CBD Belapur Internati...
Kharghar Blowjob Housewife Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-CBD Belapur Internati...Kharghar Blowjob Housewife Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-CBD Belapur Internati...
Kharghar Blowjob Housewife Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-CBD Belapur Internati...
 
(Vedika) Low Rate Call Girls in Pune Call Now 8250077686 Pune Escorts 24x7
(Vedika) Low Rate Call Girls in Pune Call Now 8250077686 Pune Escorts 24x7(Vedika) Low Rate Call Girls in Pune Call Now 8250077686 Pune Escorts 24x7
(Vedika) Low Rate Call Girls in Pune Call Now 8250077686 Pune Escorts 24x7
 
From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...
From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...
From Luxury Escort Service Kamathipura : 9352852248 Make on-demand Arrangemen...
 
7 tips trading Deriv Accumulator Options
7 tips trading Deriv Accumulator Options7 tips trading Deriv Accumulator Options
7 tips trading Deriv Accumulator Options
 
(INDIRA) Call Girl Srinagar Call Now 8617697112 Srinagar Escorts 24x7
(INDIRA) Call Girl Srinagar Call Now 8617697112 Srinagar Escorts 24x7(INDIRA) Call Girl Srinagar Call Now 8617697112 Srinagar Escorts 24x7
(INDIRA) Call Girl Srinagar Call Now 8617697112 Srinagar Escorts 24x7
 
CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...
CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...
CBD Belapur Expensive Housewife Call Girls Number-📞📞9833754194 No 1 Vipp HIgh...
 
Mira Road Awesome 100% Independent Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-Dahisar Inter...
Mira Road Awesome 100% Independent Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-Dahisar Inter...Mira Road Awesome 100% Independent Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-Dahisar Inter...
Mira Road Awesome 100% Independent Call Girls NUmber-9833754194-Dahisar Inter...
 
Mira Road Memorable Call Grls Number-9833754194-Bhayandar Speciallty Call Gir...
Mira Road Memorable Call Grls Number-9833754194-Bhayandar Speciallty Call Gir...Mira Road Memorable Call Grls Number-9833754194-Bhayandar Speciallty Call Gir...
Mira Road Memorable Call Grls Number-9833754194-Bhayandar Speciallty Call Gir...
 
Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7
Call Girls in New Ashok Nagar, (delhi) call me [9953056974] escort service 24X7
 
Toronto dominion bank investor presentation.pdf
Toronto dominion bank investor presentation.pdfToronto dominion bank investor presentation.pdf
Toronto dominion bank investor presentation.pdf
 
Lion One Corporate Presentation May 2024
Lion One Corporate Presentation May 2024Lion One Corporate Presentation May 2024
Lion One Corporate Presentation May 2024
 
VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...
VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...
VIP Independent Call Girls in Mumbai 🌹 9920725232 ( Call Me ) Mumbai Escorts ...
 

Factoring in Brazil

  • 1. FACTORING IN BRAZIL - AABHAS KSHETARPAL, ROLL NO.: 856, V SEMESTER, B.B.A. LL.B. (HONS.), NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, JODHPUR
  • 2. FINANCING ACTIVITY IN BRAZIL – IN TERMS OF NUMBER OF COMPANIES Finance Companies, 39.00 Leasing Companies, 71.00 Factoring Companies, 717.00 0.00 100.00 200.00 300.00 400.00 500.00 600.00 700.00 800.00 FINANCE COMPANIES LEASING COMPANIES FACTORING COMPANIES
  • 3. FINANCING ACTIVITY IN BRAZIL – IN TERMS OF NUMBER OF TOTAL LOANS (BILLIONS) Finance Companies, 4.60 Leasing Companies, 11.60 Factoring Companies, 27.40 0.00 5.00 10.00 15.00 20.00 25.00 30.00 FINANCE COMPANIES LEASING COMPANIESFACTORING COMPANIES
  • 4. EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT  Factoring, known in Brazil as ‘fomento mercantil,’ is a service activity that includes ongoing advisory work on credit, risk, accounting, inventory, and working capital management, in tandem with the irrevocable purchase of credit rights, in the form of receivables that arise from the sale of goods or services with a typical maturity of 30 to 60 days.  There are an estimated 717 known factoring companies in Brazil, which provide services to more than 65,000 small and medium enterprises.
  • 5.  Eighty percent of these enterprises belong to the industrial sector, with a monthly turnover of around US$1 billion.  Brazilian enterprises obtained about US$10 billion (R$27 billion) as creditor rights resulting from mercantile sales, representing 6 percent of all domestic sources of financing.  This figure constitutes an impressive increase of around 50 percent over 1998 (US$7 billion, R$19 billion).  Brazil’s factoring companies are located mainly in the Southeast (51 percent), South (21 percent), and Northeast (17 percent), with more than 250 in the state of São Paulo alone.
  • 6. SECTORS ACCOUNTING FOR FACTORING ACTIVITY IN BRAZIL Metallurgic Industries, 22.00% Services, 15.00% Printing Industry, 14.00% Sugar-Alcohol Industries, 3% Other Industries, 15.00% Commerce, 6.00% Chemical Industries, 1% Textile Industries, 2% Transportation, 34%
  • 7. PRICING INTEREST RATES AND THE PURCHASE FACTOR  The cost of a factoring operation has two components:  a fee for the provision of services and  the price, or the ‘purchase factor,’ for the purchase of receivables.  The fee for the provision of services is fixed ad valorem.  The purchase factor is the price paid for the sale of a credit right.  Factoring companies use as a base the ‘factor ANFAC’ (Associação Nacional das Sociedades de Fomento Mercantil; Brazilian Factoring Association) to quote the price of factoring services in Brazil.
  • 8.  The factor is published daily and varies with the money market or certificado de depósito bancário (bank certificate of deposit; CDB).  The components of the factor ANFAC include the opportunity costs of resources, assessed in terms of the CDB rate, operational costs, taxes, and expected profits.  The purchase factor varies with industry conditions and the creditworthiness of the customer.
  • 9. AN ILLUSTRATION  The purchase factor was more than twice the interbank lending rate in February 2003, at 4.4 percent per month (67.7 percent per year equivalent), compared to the prevailing CDB interest rate of 1.83 percent (25.7 percent per year equivalent).  As expected, this was also higher than the prevailing average bank discount rate for commercial invoices, which was 58.5 percent per year at the same time.  Factoring companies point out, however, that this rate is effective and final, while banks’ effective interest rates are higher, as other bank charges are added to the rate, such as a credit issuance fee, a price for receivables, overheads, retention of a percentage of the loan’s value, product sales, and so forth.  However, many of the factor’s clients may not be able to obtain lower rates through bank discounts or any other formal financing.
  • 10. FACTORING VERSUS BANK SERVICES — CONTRAST AND COMPLEMENTARITY Financial Intermediation Factoring Credit operations No credit operations, but purchase of credit rights (receivables) Obtains funds from the public to invest in credit operations by means of financial intermediation. Only operates with resources not collected from the public; no financial intermediation. Remuneration consists of interest rates for the use of capital during a period of time. Remuneration does not have an interest rate or discount rate but the payment of a price for the sale of services and the purchase of credit rights.
  • 11. Financial Intermediation Factoring Needs authorization from the Central Bank (Law No. 4595/64) to operate. Is not a financial intermediary; a commercial activity that only operates with legal persons; does not require authorization from the Central Bank. Operates with legal persons and individuals. Only operates with legal persons or professionals that are considered to be legal economic entities. Profits are generated by means of a spread between financing and credit interest rates. Price includes all cost items (market interest rate, operational costs, taxes) and the expected profit and risks.
  • 12.  Factoring normally uses the negative credit information systems of the two principal private credit bureaus of Brazil, SCI (Segurança ao Crédito e Informações; Credit and Information Security) and SERASA. Factoring companies are both users and producers of information.  As a result of these differences, factoring has several benefits over funding from bank loans  First, funding can be obtained more rapidly.  Second, for the provider of credit, the exposure is limited to the amount of invoices issued to the seller, and the creditworthiness of the seller is less important.
  • 13.  Third, this allows for companies in legal difficulty to borrow from factors, because factoring depends on the creditworthiness of the seller’s customers.  On the contrary, banks do not have an incentive to lend to firms in financial distress, as this could imply a higher risk classification of the loan and would mean higher capital requirements.  Under the prevailing bankruptcy law, unlike factors, banks have not been permitted to operate with companies in receivership.  Fourth, it is clear that factoring will have considerably higher implied rates of interest than bank loans, but this can be explained largely by the composite nature of services provided, the need for much closer client scrutiny and knowledge, and the limited sources of finance available to the factor, who must rely largely on internal resources.
  • 14. REGULATION  Challenges to the legitimacy of factoring are compounded by suspected illicit activities of some firms, which have been known in particular to offer services outside their legal scope.  For example, deposit taking or loan provision.  One of the main objectives of ANFAC, the factoring company trade association, is to delimit factoring from other activities, sometimes illegal, of financial intermediation, without the required approval of the Central Bank, or grant loans at usurious interest rates under the name of ‘factoring.’
  • 15.  ANFAC has agreed on a model of factoring contract (contrato de fomento mercantil) to be used by its associates, has issued a Code of Ethics (Código de Ética e Auto-Regulação), has approved a set of General Rules for Factoring Operations (Regulamento Geral das Operações de Fomento Mercantil)  In 1999, reached a Technical Cooperation Agreement (Acordo de Cooperação Técnica) with the Economic Law Secretariat of the Ministry of Justice (Secretaria de Direito Econômico do Ministério da Justiça).
  • 16.  The agreement has three basic objectives:  (1) to recognize and preserve factoring as a means of supporting productive activities,  (2) to protect affiliated companies by means of a ‘qualification and quality’ certification, and  (3) to establish a system of technical cooperation with the Federal public administration to prevent the emergence of illegal activities under the guise of factoring. ANFAC has been petitioning strongly for a specific factoring law to help eliminate illegitimate activities and protect its members.
  • 17. TAX REGIME  First, factoring companies, unlike banks, do not pay interest, as there are restrictions against their access to funds from third parties in the market. Thus, they cannot deduct from their income any interest expense, and taxes affect them more heavily. This tax burden is passed to clients as the additional costs of factoring services.  Second, as they undertake commercial transactions to purchase receivables, the tax note, invoice, and duplicata (credit right) associated with such sales must be issued.  The commercial transaction is subject to the Imposto de Circulação de Mercadorias. Law No. 5474/68 (Article 20) allows service providers to issue invoices and commericial invoices representative of their rights.
  • 18.  Next, the service provider is subject to a tax on services, the Imposto sobre Serviços (Tax on Services; ISS), which is locally collected with a tax rate varying from 0.7 percent to 5 percent, depending on location.  Sometimes, factoring companies are asked to collect the ISS on overall revenue (service provision plus revenues from purchase of receivables). An additional charge, the COFINS (Contribution for the Financing of Social Security) tax, does not take into account the dual nature of factoring activities, and the tax base includes both the revenues for service provision and the revenue for receivables purchase.
  • 19.  Third, factors are taxed in the same way as banks in terms of financial transaction taxes.  Another indirect tax, the Imposto sobre Operações Financeiras (Tax on Financial Operations; IOF) on financial transactions, which was established by Law No. 9532/97 for credit operations of financial intermediaries, includes factoring companies in its scope (Article 58), although factoring companies are not financial intermediaries.  Moreover, factors complain that they should be exempted from the IOF tax.  On the other hand, credit transfers (cessão de créditos) between financial intermediaries or between financial intermediaries and leasing companies are not subject to the IOF (Decree 2219/97, Article 8, VII), and factors do not benefit from this. These appear to be contrary to principles of equality of tax treatment.
  • 20. INTERNATIONAL FACTORING  International factoring in Brazil is undeveloped, especially relative to the large size of the domestic factoring sector.  The most significant obstacle to the development of international factoring is that factoring companies in Brazil are not allowed to hold foreign-currency accounts.  Thus, they are not able to make advances to the exporter in the currency of their invoices, which introduces exchange rate risk. It would thus be difficult to serve the export community without involving commercial banks.
  • 21.  If conditions for permitting international factoring could be eased, export companies could reduce their risks. Italy and the United Kingdom have extensively used factoring to involve SMEs in export activity.  In Latin America, countries such as Mexico have also begun to engage in international factoring.  In contrast, in Brazil, exports are carried out by big companies with more access to financial services from conventional financial intermediaries.
  • 22. TURNOVER FROM FACTORING IN THE AMERICAS AND THE WORLD ARGENTINA BRAZIL CHILE MEXICO UNITED STATES REST OF THE WORLD 0.00 100000.00 200000.00 300000.00 400000.00 500000.00 Argentina, 1715.00 Brazil, 12012.00 Chile, 2650.00 Mexico, 5030.00 United States, 120000.00 Rest of the World, 497323.00

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. There is an important conceptual difference between interest rates and purchase factors, although they are closely associated. Interest is the remuneration of capital for the time during which it is used in a credit operation.The purchase factor is the price paid for the sale of a credit right.