Categories: Tips

Managing Trade Risk When Importing from China: What Most Businesses Get Wrong

Many businesses struggle with trade risk.  Some importers pay large deposits. Others use costly letters of credit. These methods tie up cash and create stress. A better solution exists. It comes from a Chinese government-backed institution. This institution helps foreign buyers and Chinese suppliers trade safely. It is called Sinosure.

It insures export transactions. For you as an importer, this changes everything. You can negotiate better payment terms. A Chinese supplier may offer open account terms or lower deposits. They do this because Sinosure reduces their risk.

Unlocking Better Financing Terms with Sinosure

Banks in China accept Sinosure policies as collateral. A supplier can show a Sinosure-insured order to their bank. The bank then provides working capital to produce your goods. This means your supplier has cash to buy materials and run production. Delays become less likely.

For you, this means smoother order fulfillment. Your supplier does not struggle to finance your production. You also gain access to buyer credit. Some international banks offer loans or payment extensions when Sinosure is involved. This improves your own cash flow.

Supplier Credit vs. Buyer Credit: Know the Difference

Supplier credit means the Chinese manufacturer gives you extra time to pay. For example, you pay a 20% deposit and the rest 60 days after shipment. Sinosure makes this possible. The supplier knows they are protected.

Buyer credit is different. Here a bank lends money directly to you, the importer. You use that money to pay the supplier. Sinosure approval helps secure this credit. Banks trust Sinosure because it lowers transaction risk. Following a step-by-step process for securing a Sinosure credit limit can open both supplier credit and buyer credit options.

Benefits for Importers and Exporters

Sinosure benefits both sides of a trade deal. Here is how.

For exporters (Chinese suppliers):

  • They get paid even if the foreign buyer defaults.
  • They can offer competitive payment terms to win more orders.
  • They access bank financing using Sinosure-backed invoices.

For importers (you):

  • You avoid paying large upfront deposits.
  • You get more time to pay for goods after shipment.
  • You build trust with new suppliers faster.

How Sinosure Approval Unlocks Competitive Payment Terms

Chinese suppliers usually ask for a 30% to 50% deposit. This protects them if you cancel or delay payment. But with Sinosure approval, they often accept 10% to 20% deposit. Some even offer 0% deposit and full payment 90 days after shipment.

These better terms give you real advantages. You keep cash longer. You can inspect goods before final payment. You reduce the risk of losing money to a bad supplier. Many procurement professionals say Sinosure approval is a game changer for China sourcing.

Step-by-step process for securing a Sinosure credit limit

You can then use a step-by-step process for securing a Sinosure credit limit again for other suppliers.

Here is a step-by-step process for securing a Sinosure credit limit:

1. Submit your buyer application

Provide the full name, country, and background of your overseas buyer to Sinosure for screening.

2. Share supporting trade documents

Attach recent contracts, invoices, or past payment records to prove genuine business activity.

3. Wait for internal credit review

Sinosure checks the buyer’s financial health, payment history, and country risk level.

4. Review the proposed limit amount

Sinosure gives a maximum credit limit and payment term (e.g., 90 days) based on their assessment.

5. Accept and start insuring shipments

Sign the limit confirmation, pay the premium, then ship safely within the approved limit.

Conclusion

Start talking to your Chinese suppliers about Sinosure. Ask if they already have a Sinosure policy. Many large manufacturers do. If not, explain that you will help with the credit limit application. Once you have approval, test the new payment terms on a small order. See how the process works. Then scale up.  Others think the supplier must apply. That is also wrong. You as the importer can initiate the process.

Sameer
Sameer is a writer, entrepreneur and investor. He is passionate about inspiring entrepreneurs and women in business, telling great startup stories, providing readers with actionable insights on startup fundraising, startup marketing and startup non-obviousnesses and generally ranting on things that he thinks should be ranting about all while hoping to impress upon them to bet on themselves (as entrepreneurs) and bet on others (as investors or potential board members or executives or managers) who are really betting on themselves but need the motivation of someone else’s endorsement to get there.

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