Briefing position
The Trade Finance Risk Allocation Worksheet helps map borrower, intermediary, final beneficiary, trade flow, repayment source, cargo, receivables, currency, collateral, compliance controls and residual risk in African trade finance facilities.
For committee-facing use, pair this research with Lobito Corridor Finance and Risk Map and DRC Border Clearance and Logistics Readiness Review before turning source analysis into a decision memo.
The short answer
Use the Trade Finance Risk Allocation Worksheet to map borrower, intermediary, final beneficiary, trade flow, repayment source, cargo, receivables, currency, collateral, compliance controls and residual risk in an African trade finance facility.
Why trade finance risk allocation needs a worksheet
Trade finance descriptions often sound straightforward: a facility supports imports, exports, receivables, commodities, local banks or regional trade. The risk allocation underneath can be much less simple. The borrower may not be the final beneficiary. The repayment source may depend on cargo sale, buyer payment, receivables collection, bank balance sheet or corporate cash flow. An intermediary may absorb, pass through or obscure credit exposure.
The worksheet is designed to make those relationships visible before a memo describes the facility as low risk, guaranteed, de-risked, supported, secured or development-backed.
Who this is for
This resource is for lenders, borrowers, traders, banks, exporters, importers, sponsors, investors, advisers, credit teams and analysts reviewing direct or intermediated trade finance structures in Africa.
It is useful when a facility description references Afreximbank, a local bank, a trade finance intermediary, corridor cargo, receivables, import finance, pre-export finance, structured trade finance, guarantees or documentary controls.
When to use it
Use the worksheet when:
- A facility involves more than one borrower, intermediary or beneficiary.
- The repayment source is not obvious.
- Cargo, receivables, inventory, guarantees or insurance are part of the structure.
- The transaction crosses currencies or jurisdictions.
- A memo references a trade-finance programme or DFI support.
- Compliance, sanctions, AML or beneficial ownership issues are material.
What the worksheet includes
Party map
Identify lender, borrower, intermediary, buyer, seller, final beneficiary, guarantor, insurer, account bank, collateral agent and logistics party.
Direct versus intermediated exposure prompts
Separate risk held by the borrower from risk held by an intermediary, issuing bank, confirming bank, local bank or final client.
Repayment-source table
Map whether repayment comes from buyer payment, export proceeds, receivables, inventory sale, corporate cash flow, bank balance sheet, guarantee call or refinancing.
Trade-flow and cargo prompts
Capture origin, destination, cargo type, buyer, seller, incoterms, title transfer, delivery evidence, inspection, warehousing and shipping documents.
Currency and transfer prompts
Capture revenue currency, debt currency, conversion risk, settlement path and transfer-risk questions.
Collateral and control checklist
Review receivables, inventory, accounts, guarantees, insurance, warehouse receipts, assignment rights, legal enforceability and control mechanics.
Compliance prompt
Track sanctions, AML, anti-corruption, beneficial ownership, origin of goods, end use, politically exposed persons, restricted parties and documentation gaps.
How to use the worksheet
Step 1: Draw the transaction chain
Start with the parties and goods. Identify who borrows, who receives funds, who ships, who buys, who pays, who guarantees and who controls collateral.
Step 2: Identify the real repayment source
Do not accept facility labels as repayment evidence. Determine whether cash comes from trade proceeds, receivables, inventory conversion, bank credit, corporate cash flow or another source.
Step 3: Assign risk to each party
Map credit risk, performance risk, delivery risk, buyer risk, currency risk, transfer risk, compliance risk and documentation risk to the party that actually carries it.
Step 4: Review source language
If Afreximbank, a trade-finance programme, a TFI or a guarantee is mentioned, record exactly what the public source says. Do not imply approval, funding availability or risk coverage unless the source supports it.
Step 5: Repair memo language
Replace broad statements like “the facility is backed by trade flows” with a specific explanation of the identified repayment source and unresolved risks.
Red flags this worksheet is designed to catch
Borrower and beneficiary mismatch
The named borrower may not be the party whose business generates repayment.
Intermediary opacity
Intermediated trade finance can obscure who carries final credit risk and who controls documentation.
Cargo without control
Cargo only mitigates risk if ownership, inspection, insurance, storage and enforcement mechanics are clear.
Receivables without collection discipline
Receivables matter only if buyer quality, assignment, collection account and enforceability are understood.
Compliance underweighting
Trade finance failures often arise from documentation, sanctions, AML, beneficial ownership or origin-of-goods issues.
Programme-name overclaiming
A programme name or public product page should not be treated as approval for a specific borrower or facility.
What a strong trade finance memo should show
A strong memo should show the party chain, trade flow, repayment source, risk allocation, collateral controls, compliance posture, source support, open questions and residual risk. It should not rely only on facility labels or programme language.
What this resource does not do
This worksheet is not credit approval, legal advice, tax advice, sanctions clearance, rating work, insurance placement, brokerage, underwriting, trade-document verification or a guarantee of repayment.
It helps structure review. It does not decide whether a facility should be approved.
Recommended next step
If you have a live facility, term sheet, borrower memo or lender question, use the worksheet first. If risk allocation remains unclear, request a trade finance structure review.
Primary sources
Use these controlled entry points when the research moves from reading into committee review, source verification, or transaction screening.