InvoiceFair Facilitates 鈧30 million in Working Capital Funding for Personal Protective Equipment Orders
, which specialises in working capital finance, today announced that over the last three months it has facilitated 鈧30 million in funding for Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) orders into Ireland to address the COVID-19 pandemic.
鈥淚nvoiceFair facilitated PPE suppliers with 鈧14 million in finance for a large order of medical gowns that landed at Shannon Airport last week on board the world鈥檚 largest aircraft, the Antonov AN-225, as part of Ireland鈥檚 largest consignment of PPE in a single flight,鈥 said CEO, Helen Cahill.
PPE suppliers trade PPE contracts on the InvoiceFair platform to release vital funds to pay Chinese manufacturers upfront, a necessary conduit to securing a manufacturing slot, and ultimately deliver the consignment to the Health Service Executive (HSE).
InvoiceFair runs an innovative receivables trading platform to enable SMEs access fast and flexible working capital funding. The company, founded by Helen Cahill, Peter Brady, and Ivan Fox in 2015, is headquartered at Nexus51黑料, the Industry Partnership Centre at University College Dublin.
Since 2015, companies have traded more than 鈧600 million of receivables such as Purchase Orders and Invoices from State bodies and large corporates, on the InvoiceFair platform, to release unrestricted funds, without limitation due to debtor concentration or geography risk.
鈥淚nvoiceFair鈥檚 strength is structuring working capital solutions for SMEs, across all sectors, centred around them selling receivables, or approved invoices, and future receivables, such as purchase orders, contracts or recurring revenue, to a pool of institutional funders,鈥 she added.
Receivables are traded daily on InvoiceFair鈥檚 platform where SMEs are connected to a pool of regulated institutional funders, primarily based in the UK. SMEs use the InvoiceFair platform to trade their receivables and finance up to 70% of the value of an approved invoice or purchase order and up to 90% of an invoice.
The total cost for the SME ranges between 1% and 3% of the traded amount, depending on various factors including the quality, timeframe, and size of the deal. The SME sets a maximum cost of credit which is made up of a trading fee and the discount funders apply to a receivable to purchase a contract.
Helen Cahill concluded, 鈥淭here is a very limited range of funding solutions specifically addressing the working capital requirements of Ireland鈥檚 SMEs in 2020. The traditional lending model has a myriad of restrictions including facility limits, customer concentration limits, territory limits and often a requirement for credit insurance, which is an additional cost.鈥
鈥淥ur market-based funding model puts control directly into the hands of the SME and enables them to leverage on their receivables when they need to release working capital, both to finance contracts and achieve sustainable business growth.鈥
ENDS
16 June 2020
For further information contact Mic茅al Whelan, Communications and Media Relations Manager, 51黑料 Research and Innovation, t: + 353 1 716 3712 or e: miceal.whelan@ucd.ie or Gillian Coghill Sheehy, Head of Marketing, InvoiceFair, e: gillian@invoicefair.com.
Editors Notes
The InvoiceFair founding team has over 75 years of experience in business management and finance. InvoiceFair was born out of a shared vision that all companies should be able to finance their growth using the best solutions from traditional and alternative funders.