A healthy cash flow is an essential component for the smooth operations of any given company. Small and medium-sized companies are particularly sensitive to disruptions in their cash flow, and this means that issues like late payments can have a more negative impact on their operations, even leading to their bankruptcy. It is therefore important for companies to have a clear understanding of the payment landscape in the country they operate and the tools available to them to avoid and address instances of late payments.
The EU SME Centre and the European Chamber are pleased to invite you to our next Working Group meeting, where North Asia Economist at Coface, Junyu Tan, will provide an overview of the 2024 Coface China Corporate Payment Survey. The meeting will take place online on Tuesday, 25th June from 10:00 to 11:00.
Agenda
10:00-10:05
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Opening Remarks
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10:05-10:35
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Mapping China’s payment landscape, by Junyu Tan
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10:35-11:00
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Discussion and Q&A
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About the Speakers
Junyu Tan
With his rich macroeconomic experience in leading financial institutions, Junyu contributes his insights into country and sector risk analysis to facilitate Coface’s risk decision-making processes, focusing on the North Asia region (Japan, South Korea and Greater China Region). Prior to joining Coface in Hong Kong, he was a Greater China economist at HSBC, closely tracking the macroeconomic development in the region and its implications for financial markets. Before this, he spent over four years at Natixis, covering Asian economies and working on Asian thematic research in emerging business trends and sectors. Junyu holds a Master of Finance from the University of Hong Kong, and a Bachelor of Economics in International Economics and Trade from Nankai University. He is also a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA).
About the EU SME Centre
The EU SME Centre is a European Union initiative that provides a comprehensive range of hands-on support services to European small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), getting them ready to do business in China. Currently in Phase IV of the project, the EU SME Centre is implemented by four consortium partners and two associated partners – the China-Italy Chamber of Commerce (CICC), the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, Italy China Council Foundation (ICCF), Sociedade Portuguesa de Inovação (SPI), Trade Promotion Europe (TPE), and the EU-China Business Association (EUCBA), bringing an unprecedented mix of relevant and complementary expertise and network to the EU SME Centre, with headquarters in Europe and China.