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Advice, expertise, and best practices from world class specialists.
Today, most every company faces a problem with accounts receivable risk. The risk that a company’s accounts receivable will be unpaid has become much worse in recent years, both in frequency and severity. Corporate insolvencies have risen to record numbers each of the last three years. Furthermore, as industries have consolidated, the size of the bankruptcies has skyrocketed, leaving creditors on the hook for greater amounts of money. To address this risk, many companies are turning to credit insurance and are finding out that, in addition to risk mitigation, credit insurance can provide sales support and can act as an enhancement for bank financing. WHAT IS CREDIT INSURANCE? Credit insurance is an insurance product that protects a company’s accounts receivable against a bad debt due to insolvency or protracted default. Simply put, credit insurance makes certain that valid (non-disputed) accounts receivable will be paid, either by the debtor or by the insurance company. Companies typically buy credit insurance for one or more of the following reasons:
Credit Insurance works in partnership with a company’s credit management. Beyond the actual coverage, credit insurance creates an active relationship between the underwriter and the company’s credit staff, enabling the company to benefit from the insurance company’s significant underwriting skills, information, leverage on debtors, and credit management discipline. POLICY TYPES Credit insurance policies can take many different formats. Policies can be written for domestic business only, for export business only, or for both domestic and export business combined. Under every policy type, the insured will still assume some credit risk, typically in the form of a deductible (annual and/or per occurrence), or coinsurance, which is a percentage (10% to 20%) of each loss that is borne by the insured. The two most typical policy structures are:
POLICY PRICING Policies are typically priced using a sales based model. The insured estimates sales for the upcoming 12 months to the accounts being insured, and the insurance company sets the rate based on their underwriting analysis of the insured and the insured’s customers. This rate is then multiplied against projected sales to determine premium. Premium rates depend on a number of factors such as; volume of sales being covered, industry sector, historical bad debt experience, level of credit limits needed, and policy structure. Rates are a fraction of 1% of covered sales, and can range from 0.1% to 0.4% for domestic coverage, and the same or higher for export coverage depending on the type of countries being covered. MARKET OVERVIEW The makeup of the marketplace for credit insurance in North America has changed dramatically in the last decade, as a result of the influence of the European credit insurance companies. Credit insurance is used extensively in Europe. Estimates are that approximately 70% of European companies use it, and it is ingrained into the business culture. This is attributed to the necessity for cross-border business that has always existed in Europe, where the underwriter would take over the task of evaluating financial statements in different languages, and become the expert in the various bankruptcy laws in the individual countries. Additionally, banks and insurance companies have combined their businesses in Europe for many years, and the use of credit insurance in connection with bank financing has been more commonplace. Here in the United States, while the use of credit insurance is growing, it is currently only being used by approximately 4% of US companies. The European underwriters began to make serious commitments to this market within the last ten years, mostly by acquiring US credit insurance underwriters to establish their presence here. What this means for users of the coverage is a significant increase in the capacity of service that the underwriters can now offer to insureds – greater information (one underwriter claims that it has a worldwide database of information on over 40 million companies), greater credit limit capacity through larger reinsurance treaties, and state of the art technology, including on-line interaction with insureds. The marketplace currently is made up of eight underwriters, and can be divided into two distinct underwriting philosophies - explicit underwriters and implicit underwriters:
DISTRIBUTION Historically, credit insurance has been distributed primarily by direct sales agents working for a single underwriter. With the influence of the European underwriters, however, the trend is significantly moving towards the utilization of specialty brokers to distribute the product. Specialty brokers have the advantage of bringing multiple underwriters to the client, as well as specialized knowledge of the technical aspects of the various policies as well as the strengths and weaknesses of the underwriters in the marketplace. HOW CREDIT INSURANCE CAN ENHANCE PRIVATE EQUITY TRANSACTIONS Credit insurance can benefit private equity transactions in a number of ways. From a risk mitigation standpoint, when you acquire another company, you inherit a customer list or a trade sector that you might not be familiar with. Vetting that customer list through the underwriter provides you with excellent feedback on the creditworthiness of those customers, not to mention the valuable protection that you secure at a vital time during the acquisition and beyond. If you are acquiring a company that exports using letters of credit, credit insurance can allow you to increase revenue by using the ability to offer open terms as a tool to get more business and increase the return on your investment. Perhaps the most direct benefit that credit insurance can bring to a private equity transaction is in connection with the financing of the transaction – either the acquisition itself, or to enhance the working capital financing post-acquisition by increasing the level of accounts receivable that are eligible to be financed. Credit insurance is a versatile tool that can enhance the success of a transaction in many ways. |
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