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Floor Planning
Floor planning is when a lender directly pays for large assets that are being procured by a distributor or retailer (such as kitchen appliances or automobiles) and be paid back when the assets are sold to a consumer. In order to protect itself, the lender may require that the price of all assets sold be no lower than the price the lender originally paid for it on behalf of the distributor or retailer. Since the lender’s basis for lending is strictly on the underlying collateral (as opposed to its faith in a business plan or general corporate cash flows), it will undertake frequent re-counts of the assets, and compare them to its list of assets originally purchased for the distributor or retailer. If there is a shortfall in the expected number of assets, the lender will require payment for the missing items. The lender may also require liquidation of the loan after a specific time period, especially if the underlying assets run the risk of becoming outdated in the near term.
The floor planning financing option is a good one for smaller or under-funded distributors or retailers, since the interest rate is not excessive (due to the presence of collateral).
Related Topics
Factoring
Field warehouse financing
Receivables securitization
How do I account for a factoring arrangement?
What is invoice discounting?

