Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium


COFACE WEST AFRICA BENIN
47-48 Quartier Guinkomey
7565 Cotonou 01

Tel./Fax: + 229 21 31 65 89
e-mail: commercial_bn@coface.com

Benin
Brazil
Bulgaria

COFACE WEST AFRICA BURKINA FASO 
Secteur 05, 1268, avenue Kwamé N'Krumah
01 BP 3240 Ouagadougou
Tel./Fax: +226 50 33 01 13

Cell.: +226 70 28 30 68
e-mail: coface_westafrica@coface.com
Office manager: djeneba_ouedraogo@coface.com
Managing director: philippe_hoeblich@coface.com
Burkina Faso


COFACE SERVICES WEST AFRICA CAMEROON

Imm. BICEC - 4ème étage
Avenue de Gaulle Bonanjo
BP 18342 Douala
Tel.: +237 33 42 51 53
Fax.: +237 33 42 00 96

Cameroon
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Ecuador
Egypt
Estonia
France



COFACE GABON SERVICES
Immeuble DIAMANT
2è étage
BP 1070
Libreville
Tel. : + 241 05 03 69 05
Fax : + 241 76 13 50
Email : coface_westafrica@coface.com

Gabon
Germany



COFACE GHANA

Ghana
Hong Kong
Hungary
India
Ireland
Israel
Italy

COFACE SICR COTE D'IVOIRE
2 Cocody Plateaux
Lot n°85 Ilot 9
18 Abidjan
Tel.:+ 225 22 41 49 68
Fax.:+ 225 22 41 48 49
Ivory Coast
Japan
Latvia
Lithuania
Luxembourg

COFACE SERVICES MALAYSIA SDN BHD
CP 17, Suite 1304 13th Floor,
Central Plaza, 34 Jalan Sultan Ismail
50250 Kuala Lumpur
Tel.:+60 (3)  2141 3380
Fax.:+60 (3) 2141 3381
e-mail:
enquiries@coface.com.my
Malaysia



COFACE WEST AFRICA MALI
Imm. Dramane Kouma
Av Cheick Zahed
BP E 4770 Bamako
Tel./Fax : +22 32 29 26 45

Mali
Mexico
Morocco
Netherlands

COFACE NORWAY
Postboks 2006 Vika
0125 Oslo

Norway
Peru
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russian Fed.


COFACE SICR SENEGAL

43, rue Albert Sarraut
Immeuble AGS Parchappe
BP 12454 Dakar
Tel: +221 33 823 69 92
Fax.: +221 33 842 08 87

Senegal
Serbia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa


COFACE SERVICES KOREA CO LTD
Kyobo Life Insurance Bldg. 9F
1 Jongno 1-ga, Jongno-gu
Seoul 110-714
Tel.:+82 (0)2 2088 7401 
Fax.:+82 (0)2 2088 7474
e-mail: jinhak_ryu@coface.com

South Korea
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan


COFACE HOLDING (THAILAND) CO LTD
622 Emporium Tower, 22th Floor
Sukhumvit 24, 
Klongtoey
10110 Bangkok
Tel.: +66 (02) 664 89 89
Fax.: +66 (02) 664 89 98
e-mail: marketing_thailand@coface.com

Thailand


COFACE WEST AFRICA TOGO
22, Boulevard de la Paix
Immeuble ERAD
Quartier Super TACO
BP 899 Lomé
Tel./Fax: +228 220 89 58

Togo
Turkey
UAE
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States

COFACE VIETNAM SERVICES

Suite 1719, 17th floor, Gemadept Tower,
N°6, Le Thanh Ton Street, 1st District
Ho Chi Minh City
Tel: +84 8 62 556 928
Fax: +84 8 62 556 801
e-mail: coface_vietnam@coface.com 

Vietnam
img-haut.gif

€1,571 million

of Turnover

Direct presence in 66 countries

35,000 clients
in credit insurance

4,400 employees
 

Media contact: 
For any media related questions contact:

Maria Krellenstein
presse@coface.com

News


Companies’ payment behaviour in China : Stabilized overall financial situation for Chinese companies, despite difficulties in accessing credit
Thu, May 31 2012
Bookmark and share


. Download this press release



For its ninth study intended to provide a better understanding of domestic payment behaviour of Chinese companies, Coface interviewed over 1,300 companies in various sectors and with different legal profiles between October and December 2011.


Despite the slowdown in activity in 2011 given the halt of the fiscal stimulus package, tighter monetary policy and the deceleration in external demand, Chinese companies’ payment behaviour remained globally satisfactory with sales on credit rising sharply. Nevertheless, cash asset problems, competition and more difficult access to financing for small businesses  which were the main causes of payment delays in 2011, will continue to affect corporate financial strength in 2012. Budget stimulus measures may however attenuate economic risks and support activity.




90% of Chinese companies now use credit transactions


Credit sales have become the main source of financing for companies in China since the 2008 crisis. The proportion of companies using this method rose to 90% in 2011 compared to only 65% four years ago. The phenomenon can be attributed to the need to deal with the competition (53% of companies responding to the survey) and to greater confidence between business partners (23.5% of respondents). Fewer companies are forced to offer credit terms of payment owing to cash asset problems faced by their clients (17% in 2011, compared to 25% in 2010).


Although credit sales are becoming more widespread, credit terms contracted in 2011. Nearly 75% of transactions are negotiated at 60 days (and less), which attenuates the risk, whilst transactions at 90 days (and more) are increasingly rare and concern primarily one-off contracts.



Payment delays are more frequent, but for shorter periods

One of the logical consequences of growing credit sales is that Chinese companies suffer more frequently from payment delays by local buyers. This amounts to 79% of companies, compared to 67.4% in 2010. It should be noted, however, that in 2008 over 90% of companies experienced overdue payments.

On the other hand, payment delays are for shorter periods. Only 10% exceed 90 days after the due date. 36.5% of invoices are paid within 30 days of the due date, a figure that has been improving, uninterrupted, since 2008.


Three vulnerable sectors are an exception to the overall trend: construction, steel and textiles, in which payment delays are often over 60 days. The solar power industry should also be monitored given over-capacity and over-production of new energy sources. It is in full growth despite low consumption on the domestic market following excessively high prices and the absence of any government subsidy policy. 



 

As it was the case last year, the main cause of payment delays is still clients’ difficult financial position, which was noted by 63% of companies, due to the combination of cash asset issues, competition and lack of access to external financing.

Concerns in 2012: companies and insufficient access to credit facilities


In 2012 Chinese growth could continue to slow down and could amount to 8% over the year. Coface experience in China indicates that access to bank financing is increasingly limited for private sector companies and in particular small businesses. This is also indicated by the study results: nearly one third of companies taking part in the study stated that the main danger in 2012 was insufficient access to credit facilities.


As bank financing is granted mostly to public sector companies (60% of financing allocated to state-owned companies and local authorities), small businesses must resort to alternative sources of financing such as ‘shadow banking’. This informal credit market has grown as a result of credit market distortion generated by the current organisation of the Chinese financial sector, but is very fragile. The bankruptcies that took place in Wenzhou last October spread rapidly throughout the sector and exacerbated companies’ difficulties.


 






Press contact :  ( 33 (0)1 49 02 16 29 / presse@coface.com


About Coface
 
The Coface Group, a worldwide leader in credit insurance, offers companies around the globe solutions to protect them against the risk of financial default of their clients, both on the domestic market and for export. In 2011, the Group posted a consolidated turnover of €1.6 billion. 4,600 staff in 66 countries provide a local service worldwide. Each quarter, Coface publishes its assessments of country risk for 157 countries, based on its unique knowledge of companies’ payment behaviour and on the expertise of its 250 underwriters.
In France, Coface manages export public guarantees on behalf of the French state.
Coface is a subsidiary of Natixis whose share capital (Tier 1) was € 16.4 billion end December 2011.
www.coface.com

 

 


Other press releases:

go to...Press releases 2010