Josef Bergt
2023
Introduction
Factoring, an increasingly vital financial service, encompasses the continuous purchase of receivables from deliveries or services of the factoring client (known as "associated customers" or "sellers") by the factor ("buyer"), according to a framework contract. The nature of this contractual relationship can be multifaceted, extending to complete delegation of accounts receivable management, including collections, dunning, and legal enforcement of claims. Factoring serves multiple functions, depending on the contractual setup:
The framework contract may stipulate that the associated customer is obliged to offer all receivables to the factor for purchase, meeting specific criteria. The contract governs the conditions under which the factor can reject a purchase offer. The associated customer guarantees the veracity, or legal validity, of each sold receivable.
In "true factoring" (non-recourse factoring), the factor irrevocably purchases the customer's receivables, assuming the debtor's insolvency risk upon contract conclusion (delcredere function). The customer retains the paid value for the purchased receivables without the possibility of a chargeback. This arrangement allows the customer to satisfy their suppliers as if they had collected the receivables themselves. The customer is only liable for the veracity of the claim. True factoring adheres to the typical risk distribution of sales law, hence, legally considered a sales contract. As the counterparty risk is taken over, there is no financing business and true factoring therefore also does not constitute a lending business reserved for credit institutions.
The delcredere function distinguishes true factoring from loan agreements, thereby excluding it from the credit transaction definition. This applies even with limited service functions, such as when the debtor accounting, including collection and dunning processes, remains with the associated company (known as self-service or in-house factoring, in contrast to standard factoring).
In "recourse factoring", the factor reserves the right to recharge the receivable to the customer in case of the debtor's insolvency. Legally, the receivable is transferred to the factor only on a provisional basis, and such contracts are deemed loans rather than sales. Due to the financing function, they may constitute a lending business reserved for licensed banks.
Legal Definition of Factoring
The financial service "factoring" requires:
Purchase of Receivables
“Continuously, Based on Framework Contracts"
Financing Function
Only in the non-recourse purchase of due receivables, legally a sales contract, is the financing function absent, justifying its exclusion from the proximity of banking transactions.
Delineation Issues and Relationship with Credit Business
The "purchase" of receivables without assuming delcredere risk (recourse factoring) is typically a loan under civil law and thus primarily classified as a credit transaction under supervisory law which is reserved for regulated credit institution, i.e., banks.
Banking services are considered commercially operated if intended for a certain duration and aimed at profit-making, regardless of whether the scope of these activities objectively requires a commercially organized business operation.
Source: BaFin Factsheet on Factoring
Executive Summary:
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