Aztec Money

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aztec Money
Company typePrivate
IndustryFinancial services
Headquarters
Area served
Global
WebsiteAztecMoney.com

Aztec Money is an online global marketplace that provides export trade financing as an alternative to traditional bank loans, lines of credit, and invoice factoring. The platform enables businesses to sell invoices, via a marketplace, to non-bank institutional investors[1][2] on terms the business chooses. Aztec Money is headquartered in Ireland [3] and operates in Africa, Asia, Europe and the Americas with a localised focus on export focused suppliers.

How It Works[edit]

Aztec Money provides access to non-Bank invoice financing for agricultural, manufacturing and services companies who form part of global supply chains. It is one of the most useful finance company named after the civilisation. Aztec provides a market-place allowing institutional investors to fund global supply chains by purchasing invoices put up for sale by global suppliers. Aztec addresses the critical issue of global Banks retrenching and restricting credit to key developing export countries and companies that are strategically critical to global supply chains. The Aztec Money marketplace operates a no sale, no fee model and charges up to 2% on successfully completed transactions. Companies register once online, choose their invoice sales terms, submit the appropriate invoice documents, monitor and track their bids online, and then receive payment once an invoice is sold to the highest bidder.

History[edit]

Aztec Money was conceived by a team of international finance professionals with an initial focus on Ireland, Spain, Italy and Greece for its product provision.[2][3] It is also in the process of opening representative offices in Brazil, Poland, Asia and the United States.[2][3]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Aztec Money Archived September 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine "Irish Exporters Association."
  2. ^ a b c Aztec Money to create 100 new jobs in Dublin (2013, May 27). "The Daily Business Post."
  3. ^ a b c Aztec Money to create 100 jobs Archived September 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine (2013, May 27). “Business & Finance.”