Running an import-export business involves managing money that flows in and out while dealing with foreign clients and suppliers. To manage this well, you need working capital—the money used for daily operations. Choosing the right tool for financing is not easy because costs, exchange rates, and loan terms keep changing. This blog will explain the most common working capital options with simple examples and show why selecting the right one is often tricky.
The trade cycle is the time between spending money to buy goods or materials and receiving payment from customers. For example, if it takes 30 days to get goods, 15 days to manufacture, 20 days to sell, and 45 days for the customer to pay, then the total cycle is 110 days. This is how long you need financing for.
Inventory Days (30) + Production Days (15) + Receivable Days (45) – Payable Days (say 10) = 80 days of working capital requirement.
This helps you decide which product suits your timeline and cost.
Working Capital Products for Exporters
|
Product |
Description |
When to Use |
Key Benefits |
Interest% |
|
Cash Credit (CC) |
A revolving credit facility allowing funds up to a limit against collateral (e.g., inventory, receivables). |
For short-term operational expenses or fluctuating cash flow needs. |
Flexible withdrawals, supports daily operations. |
8-11% |
|
Working Capital Demand Loan (WCDL) |
A term loan for specific working capital needs, repaid in installments. |
For short- to medium-term projects or gaps. |
Structured repayments, predictable costs. |
7-8.5% |
|
PCFC |
A foreign currency loan (e.g., USD, EUR) from order confirmation to shipment. |
To fund raw material imports or leverage lower foreign interest rates, creating a natural hedge. |
Reduces currency risk, potentially lower rates. |
SOFR + (1 - 2.5%) |
|
PCINR |
A loan in Indian Rupees from order to shipment. |
When input costs are in INR or domestic rates are favorable. |
Avoids FX risk, simpler for INR-based costs. |
8-10% |
|
Export Factoring |
Selling foreign receivables to a factor at a discount for immediate cash. |
To improve cash flow, reduce credit risk, and outsource collections. |
Fast liquidity, risk mitigation with non-recourse options. |
SOFR + (4% - 6%) |
|
Bill Discounting |
Selling export receivables to a bank at a discount for immediate funds. |
To bridge liquidity gaps between shipment and payment. |
Quick cash |
1-3% discount fee |
Priority of Usage for Exporters
Post-Shipment
Working Capital Products for Importers
|
Product |
Description |
When to Use |
Key Benefits |
Interest% |
|
Buyer's Credit |
A loan from the exporter’s country to pay the supplier, facilitated by the importer’s bank. |
For unfavourable exchange rates and lower interest costs |
Access to lower foreign rates (e.g., SOFR), extended payment terms. |
SOFR + (0.5% -2%) |
|
Supplier's Credit |
Credit extended by the exporter, allowing deferred payment post-delivery. |
To secure competitive payment terms and improve cash flow. |
Simplifies financing, but assesses implicit costs in pricing. |
SOFR + (0.5 - 2%) |
|
Cash Credit (CC) |
A revolving credit facility against collateral. |
For short-term operational needs or fluctuating cash flows. |
Flexible access to funds, supports routine payments. |
8-11% |
|
Working Capital Demand Loan (WCDL) |
A term loan repaid in installments. |
For specific short- to medium-term gaps or projects. |
Predictable repayment schedule. |
7-8.5% |
|
Foreign Currency Term Loan (FCDL) |
A loan in foreign currency (e.g., USD, EUR) for long-term investments. |
For machinery, technology upgrades, or expansions with stable FX expenses. |
Leverages lower foreign rates, aligns with FX earnings. |
SOFR + 3%-5% |
Priority of Usage for Importers
You’re an importer buying goods worth $100,000 from Germany.
Option 1: Supplier’s Credit at $105,000, payable in 180 days.
Option 2: Buyer’s Credit at 6.5% on $100,000 → interest = $3,250, total = $103,250
The Buyer’s Credit is $1,750 cheaper. But only if INR stays stable. If INR weakens from 84 to 86:
Extra cost = $100,000 × ₹2 = ₹2,00,000
So even if the loan is cheaper in dollars, currency risk makes it costlier in INR unless you hedge.
Suppose you export and your input cost is in INR, but you borrow in USD using PCFC.
If USD weakens from 85 to 84, your rupee repayment rises.
Better to borrow in INR using PCINR in such cases. But if you earn in USD and input cost is also in USD, PCFC gives natural hedge.
Every financing tool has pros and cons. Exporters and importers must match tools to their cash flow cycle and currency exposure. The right choice depends on your payment timelines, cost sensitivity, and risk appetite. Always calculate the all-inclusive cost and consider currency fluctuations.