Reverse Factoring Explained: Meaning, Types, Process, and Risks
Reverse factoring is a working-capital financing arrangement in which a buyer helps its suppliers get paid early, usually by a bank or finance platform, based largely on the buyer’s credit quality. It can improve supplier liquidity and make a supply chain more stable, but it also raises important questions about disclosure, debt-like risk, and how payment obligations should be viewed. If you work in lending, credit, treasury, procurement, accounting, or investing, understanding reverse factoring is highly useful.