For retail, wholesale, manufacturing and e-commerce businesses, stock is the lifeblood of the operation - but tying up capital in inventory creates real cash flow challenges. Here's how Australian small businesses use finance to manage stock smarter.

The stock finance problem

Most businesses that carry stock face a version of the same challenge: you need to pay for inventory before you can sell it and collect the revenue. The timing gap between cash out (buying stock) and cash in (selling it) is where cash flow problems begin.

This becomes acute when:

Why a business overdraft is ideal for stock finance

A business overdraft is perfectly suited to stock purchases because of its revolving nature. Here's why:

Example: A homewares retailer has a $60,000 overdraft. In October they draw $45,000 to stock up for Christmas. By late January, post-Christmas revenue has repaid the full balance. In March they draw $20,000 for Easter stock. They only paid interest during the periods funds were drawn - not for the full year.

When a business loan makes more sense for stock

If you're making a large, one-time stock purchase for a specific purpose - such as launching a new product line, or fulfilling a large contract order - a business loan may be more appropriate. You receive the full amount upfront and make fixed repayments over an agreed term.

See: Business overdraft vs business loan - which is right?

Eligibility for stock finance

To access a business overdraft for stock finance through OverdraftMe:

JP
John Pierre Saliba
Director, OverdraftMe  |  10+ Years Finance Experience  |  BCom  |  ACL 511092
John is a specialist business finance broker with over 10 years of industry experience and a Bachelor of Business Commerce. He holds a Diploma of Finance & Mortgage Broking Management and is an MFAA and AFCA member. Full profile →
MFAA Member AFCA Member ACL 511092 BCom 10+ Years Experience

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