Axis Partners · Export Supplier Credit · SIMEST L. 295/73
AXIS PARTNERS Financial Advisory · Export Finance

Six key points of Supplier Credit.

How it works, who uses it, why it pays off — the SIMEST L. 295/73 framework distilled.

01
Export support instrument

The Export Contribution is a subsidy granted by SIMEST under the 295/73 Fund to support the discount of credit instruments issued by the Foreign Debtor against a payment deferral granted to the Buyer.

02
Eligible transactions

Non-recourse or with-recourse discount entered into between the Italian Exporter and the Discounting Bank, on export contracts for machinery, plants, studies, design, works and services (IT/EU/non-EU origin within OECD Consensus limits).

03
Deferral 24 months → max Consensus

Minimum deferral tenor 24 months; maximum in line with the OECD Arrangement (Consensus) according to country category and sector. Deferrable portion up to 85% of contract value + local costs + brokerage (≤ 5%).

04
Calculation: Δ discount rate − CIRR

Contribution = bank discount rate − exporter deferral rate, only if positive, within the matrix cap (SMALL / MID / LARGE). Exporter deferral rate not lower than the CIRR at signing date.

05
Matrix cap by exporter size

Maximum contribution levels (period 15.12.2024–14.6.2025): SMALL up to CIRR +1.1543% (EUR); MID +0.6863%; LARGE +0.0333%. Absolute statutory cap: 5%.

06
Beneficiary = Exporter

The Contribution is disbursed to the Italian Exporter within 30 days of a complete request, net of 4% withholding tax where applicable. Application is fully digital via the SIMEST Portal.

Four parties, six flows.

The Foreign Buyer coincides with the Debtor and issues the Promissory Notes. SIMEST disburses the Contribution directly to the Italian Exporter.

Party 1
SIMEST · 295/73 Fund
Subsidy Committee · resolution & disbursement
Party 2
Italian Exporter
Beneficiary of the Contribution
Party 3
Buyer / Debtor
GCC SME or large corporate · issues the Promissory Notes
Party 4
Discounting Bank
Italian or foreign · authorised
For the GCC Buyer: CIRR rate ≪ market rate · Promissory Notes recorded as Trade Payable, off Net Financial Position.

The three-component formula.

Difference — only if positive — between the discount rate and the deferral rate, within the matrix cap.

Export Contribution = Discount Rate − Deferral Rate
(only if positive, within the maximum eligible level of the contribution matrix)
01
Discount Rate

Rate charged by the Discounting Bank for the non-recourse / with-recourse assignment of the Exporter's credit instruments.

02
Deferral Rate

Rate charged by the Exporter to the Foreign Buyer / Debtor, net of SACE guarantee costs and bank fees. Cannot be lower than the CIRR in force at the contract signing date.

03
Matrix Cap

Maximum Contribution level set by the Subsidy Committee based on the Exporter's size (SMALL / MID / LARGE). Absolute cap in any case ≤ 5% (art. 9 c.5, D.M. 199/2000).

The CIRR rate applied to the UAE / GCC Buyer is typically materially below the market rate it would obtain from its own banks. The debt is booked as Trade Payable (D.8), outside the NFP.

Why it benefits the Buyer.

Six structural reasons why SIMEST Supplier Credit beats traditional bank financing.

01
CIRR rate ≪ market rate

The OECD Commercial Interest Reference Rate applied to the deferral is typically far below the rate the Buyer would obtain from local banks. Fixed, locked at contract signing.

02
Trade payable · off NFP

Promissory Notes are booked as Trade Payable (D.8 / IAS 1.54k), not as Bank Debt. Banking covenants, rating and debt capacity are preserved.

03
Long deferral up to max Consensus

From a minimum of 24 months up to 8–10 years in line with the OECD Arrangement, depending on country category and sector. Aligned with the payback cycle of the capital good.

04
Access to Italian technology

Italian-origin machinery, plants and technology — European manufacturing excellence — through a financing mechanism that is competitive against local financing.

05
No local collateral required

The non-recourse discount transfers credit risk to the discounting bank. The Buyer does not post collateral or additional local bank guarantees.

06
Cash flow aligned with investment

Consecutive semi-annual instalments, the first within 6 months of SPOC. The Buyer pays as the asset generates returns, avoiding concentrated outflows.

Why it benefits the Italian Exporter.

Six reasons why the Italian Exporter monetises a deferred-payment sale better than a traditional cash sale.

01
Cash effect · effective cash sale

Non-recourse discount of the PNs turns a deferred sale into immediate cash on delivery. The Exporter monetises contract value net of the discount, without waiting for maturities.

02
SIMEST Contribution · direct

The Export Contribution is disbursed directly to the Exporter, equal to the difference between discount rate and CIRR (within the matrix cap). It drastically reduces the cost of the discount.

03
Credit risk transferred

With non-recourse discount, credit risk on the Foreign Buyer passes to the discounting bank. The Exporter exits both counterparty and country exposure.

04
Assignable SACE policy

Any SACE policy can be assigned to the discounting bank, facilitating discounting at competitive rates and mitigating country risk for bank pricing purposes.

05
Competitive tool · new markets

Offering a 5–8 year deferral at CIRR is a decisive commercial advantage versus bids from countries with their own export credit agencies.

06
Cash flow aligned with milestones

The discount is split across PNs issued at SAL milestones: cash inflows are spread along industrial progress, not concentrated at acceptance.

For the Italian Seller: effective cash sale + transferred risk + direct SIMEST Contribution → commercial margin preserved and cash accelerated.

Technical features of eligible operations.

Which contracts qualify, which deferral terms, which credit instruments and up to what amount.

Type of operations

Non-recourse / with-recourse discount contracts between the Discounting Bank and the Exporter, covering export contracts for machinery, plants, studies, design work, works and services.

Origin of goods

Goods and services of Italian, EU and non-EU origin. OECD thresholds for EU sub-supplies: 40% below EUR 7.5 m; EUR 3 m between 7.5–10 m; 30% above 10 m. Excess amounts eligible only if SACE-backed.

Deferral tenor

Minimum 24 months. Maximum in line with the OECD Consensus based on country category and sector of the exported goods, plus any applicable sectoral agreements.

Deferrable portion

Up to 85% of the value of goods and services. Above that threshold: local costs up to the Consensus ceiling + brokerage / agency fees up to 5% of contract value.

Repayment

Up to the Consensus maximum, in consecutive equal semi-annual instalments. The first instalment falls due within 6 months of the SPOC (Starting Point of Credit).

Eligible credit instruments

Promissory Notes, bills of exchange, irrevocable letters of credit, irrevocable and autonomous letters of guarantee, irrevocable stand-by letters of credit.

From a commercial contract to disbursement.

See the end-to-end process — from preliminary notice to SIMEST Portal application, Subsidy Committee resolution and disbursement of the Contribution.

See the Process