Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Finance platform aims at $2.5trn trade funding hole

Between 80 and 90 percent of global trade relies on trade finance, which is mostly short-term Reuters
Between 80 and 90 percent of global trade relies on trade finance, which is mostly short-term
  • Blockchain and crypto token process
  • Returns of up to 9% a year
  • 50% boost in business expected

A blockchain-based platform that lets institutions and wealthy individuals provide finance to importers and exporters for returns of up to 9 percent a year could help fill a multi-trillion-dollar hole in international trade, it says.

In trade finance, the involvement of third-party financial companies removes payment and supply risks for sellers and buyers respectively. 

Historically, institutions such as banks, insurers and state export credit agencies have given payment guarantees, usually in return for a fee or commission.



However, today, “banks aren’t providing liquidity as they did before,” said Jean-Charles Devin, co-founder and director of LC Lite, which is regulated in Singapore and has an operational office in Dubai.

“The cost of cash and the cost of liquidity is super high now. There is a need for alternative financing solutions.”

Devin compared the returns in trade finance to fixed-term bank deposits, where customers can typically earn about 5 percent annual interest in dollars, based on current interest rates, if they do not withdraw their money for a certain length of time, often 12 months.

In contrast, trade finance can provide returns of around 9 percent annually with an average maturity of 90 to 100 days, the typical length of time for which customers’ money is committed, Devin said.

Risks related to international trade include currency fluctuations, the credit-worthiness of the parties involved, political instability and potential non-payment.

The World Trade Organization estimates 80 to 90 percent of global trade relies on trade finance, which is mostly short-term.

However, the most recent figures revealed a $2.5 trillion shortfall between requests and approval for trade finance, the so-called trade finance gap, according to data from 2022 issued by the Asian Development Bank.

LC Lite specialises in blockchain-based trade finance services. It was bought in February by Singapore-based Incomlend, which describes itself as a global invoice finance marketplace for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

Jean-Charles Devin trade financeLC Lite
Jean-Charles Devin, co-founder of LC Lite, says ‘There is a need for alternative financing solutions’ in the face of reduced bank lending

A crypto token on LC Lite’s private blockchain facilitates the financing process.

The price of the token is algorithmically determined according to the amount of trade finance activity generated on the platform; as the number of transactions funded through the token increases, so too does its value.

Likewise, should activity decline, so will the price of the token. The token has a fixed supply.

“The role of Incomlend and LC Lite is to give access to working capital to SMEs around the world by connecting all the participants, that is, exporters, importers, institutional and accredited investors in our marketplace,” Devin said. “We facilitate [and] secure the transactions and the payments.”

How it works

After a shipment is loaded onto a ship and all necessary export paperwork is completed, LC Lite purchases and resells the so-called receivable – the money owed for the goods involved in its marketplace.

Nearly all trades financed through the Incomlend-LC Lite platform are covered by credit insurance, Devin said.

Since launching services in 2017, Incomlend Group has facilitated around 8,000 trade transactions worth together more than $1 billion in invoice face value.

The average size of a transaction on the platform is $100,000, although they range from $10,000 to more than $1 million.

Devin said his company expects to increase the annual total value of invoices financed through its platform by 50 percent this year over 2023.

Only accredited individual investors, who must commit a minimum $100,000, and institutions, which typically invest at least $1 million, are eligible to join LC Lite’s platform.

Latest articles

Gas Pump, Machine, Pump

Adnoc Distribution to expand as earnings rise

Adnoc Distribution plans to open 15 to 20 more fuelling stations in 2024 after opening eight in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Egypt in the year so far. The expansion increased fuel and non-fuel sales, driving revenue up by over 9 percent year on year to AED8.7 billion ($2.4 billion) in the three months to […]

Patrick Pouyanné, CEO of TotalEnergies, said last month that he expects the first phase of the project to be completed in 2025

Iraq forges ahead with plans for first big solar plant

Iraq is proceeding with its first large-scale solar plant, which will be constructed by France’s TotalEnergies. The 1GW plant will be built in Basra, southern Iraq, as part of a $27 billion investment agreement for an integrated project that includes four oil, gas and renewables facilities. According to reports it will supply clean electricity equivalent […]

Jaumur Neom resort gulf of Aqaba

Neom announces superyacht resort on Gulf of Aqaba

Plans to build a high-end resort town on the Gulf of Aqaba aimed at the luxury yacht community have been announced by Neom, despite rising doubts about Saudi Arabia’s ability to maintain funding lines for the country’s giga-projects.  The new project, Jaumur, was described by Neom as an “exclusive residential community set around an inspiring […]

Emirates Global and Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development plan to develop a factory that can produce electric buses and trucks

Deal signed to build electric bus factory in Abu Dhabi

Abu Dhabi is planning a factory to manufacture and build electric buses and trucks. The Abu Dhabi Department of Economic Development has signed an agreement with Emirates Global Industries, part of Alfahim Group, for the project. The agreement also includes plans to establish manufacturing facilities to meet the anticipated growth in demand for energy storage […]