Andersen notes that COVID-19 pandemic brought many challenges, including raw material shortages, manufacturing delays and shipping bottlenecks. On several occasions, Eurobus has used the option to add financing to its letter of credit, a short-term loan that allows the company to postpone the due date of the payment beyond the terms of the letter of credit.
While Nordea has offered such loans under different labels and in varying formats in the past, we have now launched this offering under one standardised trade term loan offering.
“Trade term loans have become increasingly relevant in the past few years, given the market turbulence and insecurity. Documentary products cover the risk while trade term loans cover the financing, giving companies the working capital to pursue the trade,” says Bjørn Arne Kloster-Jensen, a Nordea trade finance adviser in Norway.
The geopolitical picture continues to pose challenges for trade, for example with the unrest in the Suez Canal and Red Sea, a key shipping route between Europe and Asia.
“If the ship owners decide to go around Africa, the financing and time demands will increase significantly. It’s important to have the financial strength and flexibility to overcome this,” says Nina Kvendbø Frivold, finance director at Eurobus. That’s where a trade term loan can help a company meet its working capital needs.