• HOME
  • PRODUCTS
    logo

    ENTERPRISE logo

    logo

    SME logo

    logo

    GLOBAL TRADE logo

    logo

    INVESTORS logo

    Reverse Factoring
    Collections Automation
    PO-to-Pay Automation
    Dynamic Discounting
    Import Financing
    Export Financing
    Order-to-Cash
    B2B Payments
    Factoring
    Order-to-Cash Automation
    Dynamic Discounting
    PO-to-Pay Automation
    Export Financing
    Import Financing
    Trade Finance Automation
    Receivables Automation
    TReDS (DTX)
  • PARTNER WITH US

    Business Partner Program

    Accelerate your client’s business growth and get attractive payouts on time

    KNOW MORE

    Financial Advisor Program

    Grow your credibility and clients’ investment portfolio

    KNOW MORE
  • KNOWLEDGE CENTER

    FAQs

    Blog

    Webinars

    Reports

    WhitePapers

    Podcasts

  • COMPANY
  • LOGIN / SIGNUP
 Role of Supply Chain Finance in Disaster Recovery ( TReDs)
Supply chain management

Role of Supply Chain Finance in Disaster Recovery ( TReDs)

by Manish Kumar December 23, 2024

A disaster can be natural or artificial and can cause severe havoc on businesses and their supply chains. Ranging from hurricanes to floods, pandemics to political instability, interruptions like these stall the production chain, slow down the shipment, and sow financial stress in the lives of businesses – irrespective of their size. Effective cash management is crucial in such situations. SCF offers essential liquidity, easing financial strain and enabling smooth business operations.

This blog talks about how supply chain finance aids business houses to recover from the disaster, focusing on cash flow management and what kind of tools TReDS provides during the recovery.

Supply chain finance is a suite of financial solutions to maximise cash flows through advance payments on behalf of suppliers against approved invoices. The financing conditions are usually determined by the buyer’s creditworthiness rather than the supplier’s. Both the buyer and the supplier manage working capital better.

Access to cash is critical after a disaster, as suppliers may face production disruptions and buyers experience delivery delays. SCF could help businesses access funds when and where they need them, especially to keep operations up and running when there is disruption in their supply chain’s financial flow and to pay their suppliers on schedule so that the entire chain does not collapse.

Cash Flow Management During Disaster Recovery:

Cash flow is the lifeline of any business, but during crisis times, it takes precedence. At the time of any disruption in supply chains, a business has to wait for payments from their customers or bear higher operational costs and completely stop production altogether. All these elements can quickly become insolvency if not managed through proper cash flow management.

SCF answers these questions by allowing the involved companies to receive liquidity even during disruptions from outside factors, due to which their traditional, regular revenue streams are affected. Here is how SCF can improve cash flow management at the time of disaster:

Prompt Access to Working Capital: Generally, disasters catch businesses short of cash in hand. In SCF, suppliers have access to early payments on their invoices, so they have to rely less on credits or high-interest loans from third parties.

Minimizing Dependence on Traditional Funding: Credit markets may contract during disasters, and banks may lose enthusiasm for lending out loans. SCF acts as an alternative for accessing the strength of suppliers’ finances rather than just depending on traditional funding.

Mitigation of Risk of Non-Payment:

Buyers may suffer from delayed revenue realization or encounter the inability to pay the amount. SCF thus ensures that the suppliers get paid at the right time, even if the buyer is going insolvent, and reduces the risks of non-payment.

Supplier relationships are usually the ones bearing the most costs during disruptions. Cash constraints stress them out, while SCF ensures that prompt payments keep supplier relationships healthy – a prerequisite for any smooth recovery.

Supply Chain Finance. TReDs the most effective tool. 

TReDS (Trade Receivables Discounting System)is one of the most effective operating platforms in India for enabling supply chain finance. It’s an important digital platform that enables financiers to help unlock the working capital tied up in unpaid invoices through a digital platform. It ensures that MSMEs get timely funding, which, during a disaster situation, become among the most vulnerable.

TReDS plays a crucial role in business recovery after a disaster. Here is how it does that:

It allows for Quick Invoice Discounting. In case of a disaster, MSMEs can discount their trade receivables on the TReDS platform to obtain liquidity and maintain the continuity of their businesses.

Liquidity Increase for MSMEs: During crisis times, cash flow becomes a prohibitory handicap to smaller businesses. TReDS enables them to raise finance without security and continue even when cash is tight.

Buyer and Supplier Risk Mitigation:

TReDS shall provide an apparently risk-free, transparent, and secure trading finance platform that will benefit both buyers and suppliers. This safeguards the risk of delayed payment, non-payment, or disruption of supply chains.

Digital Efficiency:

TReDS is completely a digital platform. In case of a disaster, when there is resultant disruption in physical banking and credit facilities, the digital nature of TReDS ensures that financing transactions can continue to take place without any hindrance and efficiently.

How Supply Chain Finance Fuels Recovery

While SCF and TReDS offer instant relief during the initial stages of post-disaster recovery, they also provide solid ground for long-term resilience and sustainability. Here’s how:

Restoring Business Activities:

The immediate availability of funds through SCF allows the business organization to stabilize its operations, thereby getting back into production, meeting orders, and keeping its supply chain functional. 

This is catalyzing economic recovery:

Supply chain finance supports not only the business perspective but also has a broader impact. As long as it enables businesses to access liquidity, it works toward facilitating overall economic recovery, more visibly so in sectors requiring more complex supply chains-what typically take the forms of manufacturing, retail, and agriculture.

SCF solutions help develop buyer-supplier relationships, building loyalty and collaboration among suppliers and buyers. Such collaboration results in much more robust supply chains, which are better prepared for future disruptions.

Creating Financial Flexibility:

The survival in a post-disaster scenario depends on adaptability. SCF arms the organization with the financial wherewithal to respond appropriately to any situation they happen to find themselves in-from scaling up their operations to responding appropriately to new market conditions.

Conclusion:

Supply Chain Financing, through such platforms as TReDS, is an essential tool that ensures businesses can effectively recover from disasters by maintaining the best cash flow management system. Through the provision of liquidity, SCF reduces reliance on more traditional forms of financing while also helping reduce the risk of non-payment. All these factors will help firms keep running their operations, increase supply chain resilience, and prepare them for longer-term challenges after the disaster. For businesses with recurrent unpredictable disruptions, embracing SCF is beyond being a recovery tool; it becomes a vital component toward long-term sustainability and growth.

Share This:

Author :-

Manish Kumar

Manish spent a decade in the finance and banking industry, including a successful stint at HSBC, before founding KredX in 2015. He took his expertise in accelerating capital velocity and created a platform that has become a growth catalyst for hundreds of Indian businesses, big and small. The journey has been triumphant, KredX featured among the top 100 leading global Fintech innovators in the KPMG-H2 Ventures 2017 Fintech100 list and Manish was recently awarded the Entrepreneur of The Year in Business Services at the Annual Entrepreneur India Awards. You can reach him through LinkedIn.

Previous post
Next post

Enquire now

KredX Blog KredX Blog

Salarpuria Softzone, Ground floor, Wing 'A', Tower A, Dr Puneeth Rajkumar Rd, Bellandur, Bengaluru, Karnataka 560103

+1 212-602-9641

info@example.com

Get More Location

Follow us:

Download app:

Company

Home
About Us
Careers
Contact Us
Our Offices

Resources

Blog
Reports
Whitepapers
Knowledge Base
Podcasts
Webinars

Support

FAQs
Talk To Our Advisor
Chat With Us
Sign Up
Login

Legal

Nodal Officer Name: Amrutha A / Ph: 08061799200, IVR-9 / Email: Amrutha@Kredx.Com
Terms And Conditions
Privacy Policy

Investor Products

TReDS (DTX)
KredX Assured

Business Products

TReDS (DTX)
KredX Cash Management Solutions
KredX Global Trade

Quick Links

Business Partner Program
Financial Advisor Program
Business Suite
kredx certificateskredx certificateskredx certificateskredx certificates
©2024 Minions Ventures Pvt Ltd