
handle: 10446/132596
Trade credit is extensively used in both domestic and international com- mercial transactions. Although it clearly supports growth, its significance is even greater for developed countries, where the market has recovered remarkably since the global financial crisis. The number and heterogene- ity of motivations to trade credit justify the variability observed in the data on global trading, and the role of trade credit has become crucial in supply chain coordination. A range of diverse trade credit finance solu- tions are available and include products and services offered by financial intermediaries and market products, highlighting a very interesting set of intermediate solutions that have emerged as a result of new technologies utilized in financial services. For financiers trade credit is an attractive option, but an in-depth evaluation of the possibility of losses forms the basis of a deep understating of numerous sources that can create credit risk (default and dilution risk). This book offers managers a complete an- alysis of the various facets of commercial credit and presents an analysis of the various types of markets, instruments, and risks associated with trade credit in supply chains across the globe.
Asset-based lending; capital requirements; concentration; corporate distress; credit risk; credit risk management; financial market; financing solution; international trade; relationship lending; supply chain; trade credit
Asset-based lending; capital requirements; concentration; corporate distress; credit risk; credit risk management; financial market; financing solution; international trade; relationship lending; supply chain; trade credit
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