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Who We Help
We Work With Businesses Like Yours

Parfin Capital works with SME promoters across manufacturing, trading, and services in Tamil Nadu and across South India. The promoters we work with are typically owner-managed businesses with turnover between ₹5 Crore and ₹75 Crore. They are running genuine businesses with real commercial complexity, not startups looking for venture capital. The challenges each sector faces are different. The financial discipline required to address them is the same.

01

Manufacturing

Manufacturing businesses carry high fixed costs, long working capital cycles, and capital-intensive growth requirements. Getting the finances right on both the funding and the management side is what separates profitable manufacturers from those that grow themselves into cash problems. The Indian manufacturing SME faces a particular set of pressures: input cost volatility, long debtor cycles with OEM customers, government scheme complexity, and lenders who often misunderstand asset-heavy balance sheets. Parfin Capital has worked in this space and knows exactly where the value leakage happens and how to address it.

  • Identifying which product lines are actually profitable after all direct costs, indirect costs, and overhead absorption are correctly allocated
  • Machinery and plant expansion: rigorous capital budgeting analysis including NPV and IRR before committing, followed by a lender-ready project report
  • Working capital tied in raw materials and work-in-progress: mapping the cash conversion cycle and building a plan to shorten it systematically
  • Term loans and machinery finance: structuring the application, matching to the right lender whether PSU bank, private bank, or NBFC, and managing through to disbursement
  • MSME scheme navigation: CGTMSE guarantee cover, CLCSS for technology upgradation, TUFS for textiles, and state-level capital subsidy schemes with realistic guidance on what actually gets approved
  • Raw material cost volatility: building a costing model that adjusts dynamically to input cost movements so pricing decisions are always grounded in current reality
  • Capacity utilisation and overhead recovery: understanding what happens to margins when volumes drop and structuring the cost base to protect profitability
  • OEM and export customer concentration: managing the credit risk of large buyer dependence and structuring facilities to support long receivables cycles
02

Trading

Trading businesses operate on thin margins and fast-moving working capital. The difference between a good year and a bad one is often not in the top line. It is in how well the business manages its debtors, stock, and credit lines. A trading business that cannot read its own margins at the SKU level, or that has allowed its debtor days to creep up unnoticed, will face a cash crisis long before it faces a sales crisis. That is where Parfin Capital adds value: not by growing the top line, but by protecting the margin and managing the cash cycle.

  • SKU and category-level margin analysis: identifying which product lines are genuinely profitable after all variable costs and not just on gross margin
  • Debtor management: understanding large buyer payment cycles, managing receivables ageing, and building a structured follow-up process to reduce outstanding days
  • Inventory turns and slow-moving stock: identifying capital tied up in dead or slow-moving stock and releasing that working capital back into the business
  • Cash Credit facility management: right-sizing the limit, maximising utilisation efficiency, reviewing the lender relationship, and managing annual renewals
  • Seasonal working capital planning: building a 13-week cash flow forecast that accounts for peak inventory builds and slow collection periods without paying for idle facility limits
  • Supplier payment terms and creditor cycle optimisation: extracting value from supplier relationships through better payment structuring without damaging supply security
  • Pricing discipline: margin analysis per customer and per transaction to ensure volume growth does not come at the cost of profitability
  • Working capital facility structuring for growth: when the business is growing faster than its cash cycle allows, structuring the right combination of CC, bill discounting, and invoice financing
03

Services

Services businesses face a financing challenge that most banks are poorly equipped for. No hard assets to pledge against a loan, project-based or retainer-based revenue, and billing cycles that rarely match the cost cycles that drive them. The result is that many well-run services businesses either cannot access formal bank credit at all, or are offered terms that do not match their cash flow reality. At the same time, the internal financial management of a services business is often the weakest point. Which clients and contracts are genuinely profitable? What does a hiring decision do to the cost base? Parfin Capital understands this model and helps services promoters both manage their finances more effectively and access the capital they need.

  • Project and contract profitability: understanding which clients, contracts, and project types are actually worth taking after all direct costs, indirect support costs, and management time are accounted for
  • Billing cycle vs cost incurrence mismatch: building a monthly cash flow forecast that maps when revenue will actually be collected against when costs must be paid, and managing the gap
  • Receivables and work-in-progress management: reducing the delay between work completed and cash received through structured billing discipline and client communication protocols
  • Collateral-light lending options: CGTMSE-backed term loans and working capital facilities for businesses with limited hard assets, and NBFC products structured around cash flows rather than collateral
  • Team cost management: financial modelling to evaluate the true cost of a new hire, the margin impact of a team expansion, and the break-even revenue required to justify the investment
  • Working capital facility structuring suited to service business cash flows: facilities that are sized and structured around receivables and project pipelines rather than inventory and debtors
  • Retainer vs project revenue mix: analysing the margin and cash flow implications of different revenue models and advising on the optimal balance for stability and growth
  • Lender readiness for services businesses: helping promoters understand exactly what a bank will ask for, how to present a services business to a credit committee, and what financial ratios need to be in order before approaching a lender

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