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Asia’s Payment Woes: Ultra-Long Delays Surge to 40% The share of companies reporting ultra-long payment delays (ULPDs) has skyrocketed to 40%, a dramatic increase from 23% in 2023 This is a red flag, as ULPDs often signal severe financial distress
Asia 2025: rising payment risks amid growing uncertainty | Coface The average payment delay was unchanged at 65 days in 2024 but the share of companies experiencing payment delays dropped to 49% The share of companies reporting ultra-long payment delays (ULPDs 1) exceeding 2% of annual turnover rose to a new high at 40%, up from 23% in 2023
B2B payment practices trends in Asia 2025 - atradius. us Concern about cash flow and profits in fragmented payment risk landscape B2B payment risk varies across Asia, with businesses evenly split between stable, improved, and deteriorating customer payment behaviour Overdue invoices currently affect an average 44% of all B2B credit sales across the region, highlighting a degree of strain on corporate cash flows The key drivers of these delays are
payment-practices-barometer-asia-2025-en - atradius. be Overdue invoices currently affect an average 44% of all B2B credit sales across the region, highlighting a degree of strain on corporate cash flows The key drivers of these delays are customer liquidity challenges and inefficiencies in internal payment processes
Atradius Warns Insolvencies Ahead Amid Asia Payment Delays Half of all B2B invoice payments in Asia are overdue, as shown by the latest edition ofthe Atradius Payment Practices Barometer for Asia, which polled 1,200 businessesacross China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Singapore, Taiwan and the United Arab Emiratesduring Q2 this year
APAC companies brace for more “ultra long payment delays” in 2025 Companies in the Asia Pacific have sounded the alarm for “ultra long payment delays” (ULPDs), which rose to a new high of 40%, according to data from Coface ULPDs refer to payments delayed by over 180 days and exceeding 2% of a company’s annual revenue
Asia: companies experience fewer payment delays | Coface Nevertheless the duration of payment delays across Asia-Pacific increased markedly, as businesses were more restrictive with credit terms amid aggressive rate increases, tighter financial conditions and higher inflation The average payment delay lengthened from 54 days in 2021 to 67 days
Atradius warns insolvencies ahead amid Asia payment delays Despite an increasingly buoyant outlook for trade in Asia, the risk of insolvency is increasing, as late payments and the withdrawal of government support packages test the ability of companies in the region to maintain adequate cash flow
Coface Asia Corporate Payment Survey 2025 | Coface The average payment delay was unchanged at 65 days in 2024 but the share of companies experiencing payment delays dropped to 49% The share of companies reporting ultra-long payment delays (ULPDs ) exceeding 2% of annual turnover rose to a new high at 40%, up from 23% in 2023