Amsterdam, 17 October 2017 –Asia Pacific: late payments from B2B customers cause suppliers to protect cash flow
9 in 10 suppliers surveyed in Asia Pacific experienced late payment of invoices from their B2B customers over the past year. To protect their businesses from late payments, 33.3% of the suppliers surveyed reported having taken specific measures to correct cash flow. Despite this, concern over an increase in DSO appears to have grown significantly among suppliers surveyed in the region.
Despite the ongoing deceleration and rebalancing of the Chinese economy, GDP in Asia is forecast to grow 5.8% this year. Strong growth is not being experienced universally throughout the region with countries like Indonesia and Singapore showing some vulnerability to regional economic developments. India, however, appears to have taken over the role of global growth leader.
Most of the suppliers interviewed for the October 2017 edition of the Atradius Payment Practices Barometer for Asia Pacific reported that they had to protect their business by taking specific measures to correct cash flow. 9 in 10 suppliers surveyed in the region reported having experienced late payment of invoices from their B2B customers. This translates into an average of 45.4% of the total value of B2B invoices being unpaid at due date. Late payment from domestic B2B customers occurred most often due to insufficient availability of funds (as reported by 43.8% of respondents in the region). Foreign B2B customers, instead, delayed invoice payment most often due to the complexity of the payment procedure. On average, survey respondents reported that they wrote off 2.1% of B2B receivables as uncollectable. This was mainly because the customer went bankrupt or out of business (47.4% of respondents), the debt was too old (36.2%) and the inability to locate the customer (35.4%).
In 2018, global GDP growth is expected to expand 3.0%. Despite this positive outlook for the global economy, it is essential to highlight that rising protectionism, monetary tightening, and the ongoing slowdown and rebalancing of China’s economy may increase the uncertainty that businesses face. This could further cloud the global insolvency outlook, weakening business confidence, investment and consumer spending. With this in mind, the main focus of any business should be on protection of cash flow.
Eric den Boogert, Director of Atradius Asia commented “Despite the challenging insolvency outlook for Asia, Atradius is actively working with its clients to address any cashflow concerns and together with our partner Atradius Collections we feel confident to provide a holistic solution even in an event of payment default.”
The Atradius Payment Practices Barometer for Asia Pacific gives insights into the key factors for customer payment delay, the challenges to business profitability, and the respondents’ opinion on payment practice trends by industry in the next 12 months.
The complete report highlighting the survey findings of the 2017 Atradius Payment Practices Barometer for Asia Pacific can be found in the Reports & advice section of the www.atradius.com website.