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Weaknesses in US factoring programmes exposed by First Brands fraud allegations

invoice

Allegations linked to First Brands are raising fresh concerns about how risk is managed across receivables finance structures, particularly in the US factoring market.

At the core of the issue is the reliability of underlying invoices. Factoring depends on receivables being genuine, enforceable and not duplicated across multiple facilities. When those assumptions are tested, exposure can build quickly and spread across lenders, investors and funding platforms.

The case is prompting closer scrutiny of how programmes are structured and monitored. Weaknesses in invoice verification, limited transparency and fragmented reporting can create gaps that are difficult to identify until problems emerge.

This matters at a time when receivables finance is expanding. Private credit and non-bank lenders are increasing their presence, attracted by the asset-backed nature of the product and demand for flexible working capital solutions.

As the market grows, so does the need for stronger controls. Lenders are already tightening due diligence, placing more emphasis on data quality and strengthening audit processes.

The episode highlights a broader reality. In receivables finance, risk is rarely visible at the surface. It sits within the structure, making robust oversight essential to maintaining confidence in the asset class.

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