Global trade is slowing, credit is tightening, and for many exporters, access to financing is becoming harder to secure. That combination is pushing structured trade finance back into focus, not as a niche product, but as a practical response to a more uncertain environment.
Banks and corporates are increasingly turning to financing structures backed by receivables, inventory and commodities as traditional lending becomes more cautious. The shift reflects a broader reality: in today’s market, the ability to access and structure financing is becoming just as important as the underlying trade itself.
The backdrop is becoming more difficult. The World Trade Organization has forecast global merchandise trade growth of just 1.9 per cent in 2026, highlighting the pressure building across supply chains. At the same time, access to trade finance remains uneven, particularly for smaller firms and businesses operating in emerging markets.
The scale of the gap is significant. The Asian Development Bank estimates the global trade finance shortfall has widened to $2.5tn, according to Reuters, underscoring how difficult it has become for many businesses to secure funding for cross-border transactions.
“Without the financing, we’re just not going to realise growth,” Steven Beck, head of trade and supply chain finance at the ADB, said in comments reported by Reuters.
Against this backdrop, structured trade finance is gaining renewed relevance. By tying financing to underlying assets and specific transactions, it offers lenders greater visibility over cash flows and collateral, while giving corporates a more reliable way to access working capital.
Finance and trade are becoming more tightly linked
What is becoming clearer is that trade and finance can no longer be viewed separately.
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development estimates that more than 90 per cent of global trade relies on some form of financing. “We cannot understand trade isolated from finance,” Rebeca Grynspan said in remarks reported by Reuters.
In practice, this is changing how banks approach lending. Rather than relying heavily on corporate balance sheets, there is a growing shift towards transaction-based structures that provide clearer insight into repayment flows and underlying risk.
Asia sees faster adoption
Across Asia, adoption is picking up quickly as exporters respond to currency volatility, rising input costs and ongoing supply chain shifts.
In markets such as Vietnam and Indonesia, exporters are making greater use of pre-export finance and receivables-backed facilities to stabilise working capital. In India, bankers point to policy support and evolving trade dynamics as factors encouraging wider use of structured financing, particularly in export-driven sectors such as pharmaceuticals and textiles.
China, meanwhile, continues to deploy structured trade finance in support of strategic priorities, including securing critical imports and financing outbound projects. Market participants also point to a growing use of sustainability-linked features in these transactions, reflecting the increasing alignment between trade finance and environmental objectives.
Europe adopts a more cautious but deliberate approach
In Europe, the shift is more measured but increasingly intentional.
Banks are operating under tighter capital requirements and heightened regulatory scrutiny, making asset-backed financing more attractive from both a balance sheet and risk management perspective. Structured trade finance is being used more widely in sectors such as energy, raw materials and supply chain finance, particularly as companies respond to energy security concerns and the transition to greener technologies.
At the same time, ESG considerations are influencing deal structures, with corporates seeking financing that aligns with evolving environmental standards and regulatory expectations.
From specialist solution to strategic tool
What is emerging is a broader shift in how trade is financed.
Structured trade finance is no longer seen as a specialist solution used in select situations. It is increasingly becoming a core tool for maintaining liquidity, managing risk and supporting trade in a more fragmented global economy.
By anchoring lending to real assets and identifiable transactions, these structures offer greater certainty for both lenders and borrowers at a time when traditional credit conditions are tightening.
For many market participants, the transition is already under way. Structured trade finance is not expanding by choice alone, it is expanding because traditional credit is no longer sufficient. As risks become more complex and liquidity more selective, the ability to structure financing around tangible assets and predictable cash flows is quickly becoming less of an advantage and more of a necessity.
