The High Point Market Profit Playbook: How Sales + Credit Say “Yes” Faster—With Industry Insight, Without Overextending Vendor Credit
By David Johnston, Vice President and General Manager of FMCA
Spring High Point is where optimism gets staged under showroom lights—even with uncertainty in the air—and everybody hopes this is the year the order flow stays clean.
Then the real game starts after Market.
Because in 2026, the showroom isn’t where exposure usually gets created. Exposure gets created in the post-Market surge—when buyers get home, assortments get approved, “we’re in” becomes a PO, and Sales is trying to keep momentum hot while Credit is trying not to turn vendor terms into the customer’s favorite credit facility.
High Point doesn’t just create opportunity. It creates exceptions. And exceptions—especially the “just this once” kind—are how strong suppliers accidentally start financing retailers.
This matters even more in FMCA’s world because our members are the ones showing new product lines at Market to retailers and designers—and those are often the same accounts that appear in our Credit Interchange trade history. In other words: you meet the opportunity in the aisle, and you can often see the payment pattern before you ship the first big program.
This article isn’t a brochure. It’s an operator’s playbook—how Sales and Credit work together to increase sales while mitigating risk using YES / YES-IF / NOT-YET deal structuring, supported by industry insight that helps fill the gap generic tools can’t see.
Why Spring 2026 feels like a receivables stress test
Suppliers in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry aren’t fighting one clean headwind. It’s a stack—and stacks usually create familiar behavior changes.
Current conditions in one line
Higher costs, margin pressure, and unusually high uncertainty—tariffs and geopolitical disruption are affecting landed cost, while demand remains fragile enough that many suppliers can’t simply pass every increase through.
How these headwinds hit margins (and the sale) at the same time
Most of today’s “headwinds” don’t stay in their lane. They converge in the two places suppliers feel fastest: margin and pricing confidence. When duties, oil-linked inputs, and freight costs move—or even might move—suppliers shorten quote windows, add conditional language, and re-check landed costs by origin and component. Retailers, facing cautious consumers and softer housing-driven demand, often resist ticket-price increases and push the pressure into terms, freight allowances, and “just this once” exceptions.
That’s the squeeze: suppliers absorb cost upstream while retailers push back downstream. The result is more pricing friction, more post-market “re-quoting,” and more risk that a great Market conversation turns into margin leakage—or into vendor credit financing—after the order is written.
Housing is still the category’s master switch
When moves slow, big refresh cycles slow. Demand doesn’t disappear; it becomes uneven. Uneven cycles are where pay behavior drifts first: the strong accounts stay disciplined, the marginal ones start managing cash harder, and the “middle” pushes for flexibility.
Discretionary spending is more selective
Consumers may still spend, but they hesitate longer on big-ticket home purchases when headlines feel shaky. Retailers respond with heavier promotions, tighter open-to-buy discipline, and—most predictably—more pressure on vendor terms.
Tariff uncertainty changes behavior, not just COGS
The most damaging part isn’t the number; it’s volatility. Volatility drives:
“Buy-ahead” programs that spike orders fast
pricing disputes and slower approvals
“temporary dating” requests that quietly become permanent
inventory bets that don’t always match sell-through
A big PO looks like revenue right up until it turns into aging.
Why tariff uncertainty is increasing right now
The challenge isn’t just tariffs—it’s that tariff policy is still moving in stages rather than settling into a stable framework. After the Supreme Court ruling that narrowed one major tariff authority, the administration has leaned into other tools—introducing broader baseline tariff actions in some areas while launching investigations that could lead to additional duties later. For importers, vendors, and retailers, it creates a moving target when you’re trying to price product for Spring High Point and plan shipments that land months from now.
A quick timeline of what’s driving the “moving target”
Late 2025: Tariff pressure intensified and the industry reacted with pricing adjustments, sourcing shifts, and some inventory frontloading.
Early 2026: A Supreme Court decision reshaped the legal landscape around tariff authority, adding another layer of uncertainty for companies trying to price and contract with confidence.
March 2026: The administration has shifted toward broader, baseline tariff actions (in some cases around a 10% level) while also opening or signaling investigations that may produce new duties later in the year.
Next several months: Importers are watching investigation outcomes, whether additional categories get covered, and whether tariff rates are expanded, extended, revised, or challenged again before fall shipments land.
What it means on the ground
Shorter quote windows and more frequent cost resets
More surcharge language and origin-based pricing clauses in terms
More cautious booking at Market and more “confirm before we commit” behavior after Market
More pressure to diversify sourcing and avoid single-country dependency
More tension between margin protection and volume—often pushing pressure into terms (dating, bigger lines, exceptions)
More administrative complexity around entries, adjustments, and potential refund processes—time and attention that still hits your cost-to-serve
Net: even if you can quote a price today, you may not know whether the duty environment will change before the shipment arrives or before the customer finalizes the order. That’s why you’re seeing more short-term pricing, more conditional language, and more hesitation on big inventory bets until the investigation path is clearer.
Cost pressure has become structural. Tariffs continue to raise the cost of imported finished goods and also certain upstream inputs—pushing landed cost higher and squeezing gross margin. A common supplier reality in early 2026 is cost volatility: suppliers are reworking sourcing and pricing strategies more often, and doing it faster, because policy shifts can change the math quickly.
And even suppliers with meaningful domestic production aren’t insulated. Input inflation is still working its way through core categories—wood products, foam, fabrics, steel, aluminum, and other components used in furniture and related home goods.
Energy and shipping disruptions squeeze margins and reliability
When energy and logistics costs jump, everything heavy gets more expensive—containers, drayage, trucking, warehousing, even packaging. Route disruption and insurance surcharges reduce reliability. Then suppliers face the two most dangerous words in operations: expedite and exception.
Shipping costs remain a major variable for bulky furniture where freight, white-glove delivery, fuel, labor, insurance, and handling all matter. Ocean freight can look calmer in certain lanes on paper while still becoming more volatile in practice—more complexity, more service risk, and more “surprise” charges that show up after the quote.
The Iran conflict adds another layer of instability by disrupting energy markets and shipping corridors, which can ripple into transport, warehousing, and procurement costs—especially if uncertainty persists.
Oil-linked inputs are the quiet accelerant
As we head into Spring High Point, industry chatter is heating up around oil-related cost increases rippling through the supply chain. Even when the finished product isn’t “oil-based,” the inputs and services behind it often are—and when energy markets get unstable, those costs show up fast.
Where oil pressure shows up (even if you don’t think it will)
Foam and cushioning used across upholstery and bedding components
Adhesives, coatings, and chemicals that touch finishing, assembly, and packaging
Plastics and resins used in hardware, trim, protective parts, and subcomponents
Packaging materials and protective fillers that scale with shipment volume
Freight (fuel, insurance, accessorials) that compounds on bulky goods and white-glove delivery
The practical result isn’t just “higher costs.” It’s pricing instability: factories and subcontractors request adjustments, suppliers re-check landed costs by origin and component, and quotes that looked safe at pre-market can become outdated quickly. In volatile periods like this, some suppliers tighten ordering discipline—holding certain commitments until they have a firmer read on inputs, freight, and lead times.
Two additional wrinkles are hitting at the same time: petrochemical feedstock disruption (which can tighten availability for plastics and packaging inputs) and fuel-driven logistics surcharges that can change quickly by lane. Even if your base ocean rate looks stable, the all-in cost can move when carriers layer on fuel, insurance, or service-risk premiums.
Where all the headwinds converge: margin, pricing, and terms
At a certain point, the “headwinds” stop being separate issues and become one shared problem: margin and pricing confidence. Tariffs that can change by timeline, oil-linked inputs that ripple through foam/chemicals/packaging, and energy-driven freight volatility all raise landed cost—while cautious consumers and softer housing-driven demand make it harder for retailers to take clean price increases. That’s how a cost problem turns into a selling problem, and then into a credit problem.
This is why you’ll hear more suppliers talking about shorter quote-validity windows, more frequent cost resets, and tighter controls on large program orders until they confirm where duties, inputs, and freight are settling. It’s not “being difficult.” It’s protecting margin and preventing post-Market surprises that turn into disputes, delays, and aging.
Margins and demand: why passing through every increase is tough
Suppliers are under pressure to protect margins, but passing through every increase is difficult when consumers are cautious and housing remains soft. And it’s important to recognize how this works in the real world: suppliers sell to retailers, and retailers sell to consumers. In theory, cost increases can be passed along at each step—supplier to retailer, retailer to consumer. In practice, that pass-through is rarely clean. Some portion of every increase gets absorbed at each link when the next buyer pushes back—especially when demand is fragile and price sensitivity is high. When retailers resist price increases at the shelf, the pressure valve usually becomes terms: longer dating, bigger lines, and “just this once” exceptions that shift the burden from ticket price to vendor credit. The gap shows up quickly: suppliers absorb more cost or fund more concessions while retailers resist increases or delay buys, which can translate into smaller orders, delayed purchases, and slower inventory turns. In practical terms, that usually means tighter cash flow, more selective buying, and more attention to credit risk across the channel.
And when those cost pressures stack up—tariffs, energy, freight, and oil-linked inputs—this is how the negotiation usually shows up at the buyer level:
Retailers often push that squeeze downstream:
“Hold price.”
“Ship faster.”
“Give us longer dating.”
The triple threat
If you accept all three, you’re not just selling product—you’re donating margin and financing inventory.
What the strongest suppliers are doing operationally
This is where execution separates the pack. Strong suppliers are tightening the basics without choking growth—diversifying sourcing, resetting costs more frequently, tightening freight planning, and monitoring exposure with more precision (by SKU, origin country, and program size). In this environment, suppliers that can move quickly on sourcing and pricing are better positioned than those relying on a single country or a fixed-price model.
Bottom line: in Spring 2026 you should expect more:
order spikes (often after Market)
terms pressure (framed as temporary)
vendor rotation (accounts hunting fresh credit availability when cash tightens)
So the goal isn’t to get “tighter.” The goal is to get structured.
Credit doesn’t prohibit Sales—Credit protects Sales by structuring a faster “Yes”
The best suppliers don’t treat Credit like the brakes. They treat Credit like the steering wheel.
When Sales and Credit are aligned, the goal isn’t to slow deals down—it’s to shape faster approvals through clear YES-IF structures that protect cash while keeping momentum.
1) It turns “approved/declined” into “approved with a path”
Instead of “no,” the buyer hears:
approved if deposit is received
approved if shipments are staged
approved if the incremental portion is cash-backed
approved if the account stays current for 60–90 days
That keeps the deal alive and gives Sales a professional structure to close with.
2) It stops Sales from wasting Market-season time on accounts shopping for vendor credit
Every Market season includes a subset of accounts that aren’t shopping for product as much as they’re shopping for terms—because other suppliers have tightened exposure or placed them on hold.
You don’t have to accuse anyone. Recognize the pattern early and move the opportunity into a structured YES-IF lane.
That saves Sales weeks of chasing a “big program” that was actually a liquidity strategy.
Turn on the insight light: shadows aren’t the full room
Here’s the practical problem: vendor-credit strain often doesn’t show up clearly in bureau reports. Bureau tools can be useful for identity, public records, and broad signals—but trade payables behavior frequently lives in the trade channel.
The “full room” test
With one light, you don’t see the room—you see shadows.
With two lights, you see outlines and stop tripping over the big furniture.
With three lights, you finally see what’s actually in the room: what’s real, what’s clutter, and what you’re about to run into.
Bureau information can be a light. Your internal payment history can be another. But when a retailer is stretching vendors—especially in a Market-season squeeze—the vendor credit reality can still sit in the dark unless you turn on that additional switch: industry trade history.
That’s why adding industry insight matters. It helps you see what the buyer is doing on terms—information that often determines whether a Market win becomes a clean, collectible order or a slow-moving A/R problem.
The operating system: YES / YES-IF / NOT-YET
Sales should be able to hear the outcome and know exactly what to do next.
YES Approved as requested.
YES-IF Approved if conditions are met. Preserves momentum while controlling exposure.
NOT-YET Not approved on open terms today. Still a yes—just cash-first, deposit/milestones, or phased releases.
Market-season reality
If you’re wondering which lane wins Market season: YES-IF. Not because you’re nervous—because this is exactly when vendor credit gets stretched across the industry.
Where exposure really lives at Market: retailers on terms
Let’s not pretend every buyer creates the same risk.
Designers/studios are typically prepay, deposit-first, or milestone-billed—especially for custom/project work. The risk is operational: lead times, change orders, release discipline.
Retailers drive big open-terms exposure: higher lines, longer dating, “Market exceptions,” and most avoidable losses.
So this playbook is retailer-first, because that’s where credit risk compounds fast.
Real-world YES-IF structures that close deals and protect cash
These aren’t theories. They’re the moves suppliers use to keep product moving without shipping the loss.
1) Deposit on the incremental portion (best “buy-ahead” tool)
Retailer program spike
Scenario: A retailer normally buys $35,000/month. Two weeks after Market they want a $110,000 program “before costs move again.”
A sloppy answer: “Sure—Net 60.” A profitable answer: YES-IF.
Keep normal run-rate on standard terms (e.g., $35k)
Cash-back the incremental exposure (e.g., 30% deposit on the extra $75k, or partial CBD on the incremental portion)
Sales still gets the placement. Credit stops financing the jump.
2) Earn-your-line phasing (the cleanest new-account structure)
New retailer
Scenario: New retailer wants a $60,000 opening order, rush shipping, and Net 60.
The right move isn’t a lecture. It’s a ramp:
Start at $15,000 Net 30
Release additional shipments as payments post
Expand after 2–3 clean cycles
That’s how you grow the account without swallowing a first-order loss.
3) Shipment gating tied to payment cadence (when drift starts)
Existing account drift
Scenario: A seven-year customer historically paid in 35–45 days. Over two quarters they drift to 55, then 65. They’re still paying… just later. The language changes from specifics to vibes: “soon,” “shortly,” “this week.”
The right response usually isn’t a dramatic hold. It’s structured discipline:
Set a payment cadence (two payments per month on set dates)
Tie releases to cleared payments
For any new order above a defined “safe zone,” require paydown first
That protects the relationship by preventing it from becoming unmanageable.
4) Staged releases for the “one big order after silence” trap
Quiet → spike
Scenario: Strong history, then 60 days quiet. Suddenly: a large rush order with “payment Friday.”
Two possible truths: legitimate opportunity or liquidity scramble/vendor shuffle. You don’t guess. You structure:
Release 30–40% after deposit/paydown
Next tranche only after the next payment clears
Keep the path back to normal terms documented and measurable
This keeps momentum without shipping the whole exposure.
“Robbing Peter to pay Paul”: the Market trap nobody admits
Sometimes a retailer is shopping your line because they love it. Sometimes they’re shopping because they’re behind with other suppliers and need fresh credit availability.
The tells are consistent:
Terms questions before assortment planning
Urgency to ship immediately
Vague answers about current vendor relationships
A big opening order that feels out of proportion
Complicated “cash is coming” stories
The most professional question you can ask
“Are you currently on terms with most vendors in this category, or are any relationships on hold while things get caught up?”
If the answer is foggy, don’t accuse—YES-IF the deal:
Earned line
Cash-back increments
Gating tied to staying current
Short proving-period dating
Sales still gets the opportunity. Credit refuses to be the next stretched vendor.
The “Good Customer” myth: how great accounts drift into trouble
In credit, one of the most dangerous phrases isn’t “this account is risky.” It’s: “They’re a good customer.”
Most accounts don’t flip overnight. They drift: Green → Yellow → Beige → “Wait, what just happened?”
Simple rule (that prevents expensive surprises)
If you see two or more drift signals, the account automatically moves into YES-IF structures.
Drift signals that matter:
Days-to-pay trending worse vs baseline
Past-due % creeping up even while orders look healthy
Exposure growing faster than collections
Payment frequency dropping (bigger gaps between payments)
Buying pattern shifting (quiet periods followed by spikes)
Silence → rush order → confidence-heavy promises
When drift appears, don’t trust harder. Structure harder.
Post-Market is where profit is won or donated: the 48-hour Deal Activation workflow
Because so many orders are written after Market, the follow-up window is where discipline must live.
“We’re excited to set you up quickly. To support the initial program, we’ll start with X structure. As payments post, we can expand the line.”
This keeps momentum—and keeps internal blame games out of the deal.
FMCA Credit Interchange Reports: the industry lens that supports Sales—not just Credit
FMCA Credit Interchange Reports provide member-reported trade history on retailers and designers in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry. They are designed to complement—not replace—bureau reports, financials (when available), and your internal experience by adding an industry-specific view of how accounts have performed on trade terms.
Why this matters in Market season
1) Interchange reports reduce reliance on time-consuming trade references
Traditional trade references are slow and selective. You request them, wait, follow up, and end up with snapshots that can be incomplete or overly polished—right when Sales needs a decision while the opportunity is warm.
Interchange reporting helps reduce that friction and speeds the YES / YES-IF / NOT-YET decision.
2) Vendor credit behavior often isn’t fully visible in bureau reports—but it can appear in trade reporting
That’s the additional light switch. It doesn’t replace your underwriting; it helps you stop guessing and start structuring.
Antitrust clarity
FMCA provides factual trade experiences and education. Each member independently sets its own pricing, terms, credit limits, and collection actions. FMCA does not facilitate agreements or coordinated action.
Protecting commissions: why “collectible sales” is a Sales issue, not just a Credit issue
Bad debt doesn’t just hit A/R. It hits Sales culture.
When an account doesn’t pay, one of two ugly things usually happens:
Clawback (rep gets punished for a “win” that didn’t collect), or
No clawback (the company pays commission on revenue that never turns into cash)
Real-world commission example
A rep lands a $250,000 post-Market program order.
Commission rate: 7%
Gross margin: 30%
Commission on that deal: $250,000 × 0.07 = $17,500
If the deal goes sideways, $17,500 becomes either a clawback argument or a real cash leak. Even if we ignore the full write-off and look only at commission leakage:
$17,500 ÷ 0.30 = $58,333 in additional sales
That’s ~$58K of extra selling just to offset the commission piece—before you even deal with the bigger damage.
How much selling it takes to recover from one bad one
If you write off a $250,000 program order and your gross margin is 30%, how much additional sales do you need to generate $250,000 of gross profit to get back to even (before overhead)?
Recovery math leaders respect
$250,000 ÷ 0.30 = $833,333
So one bad $250K account can require roughly $834K in additional sales at a 30% margin just to recover—before overhead, before extra freight, before collection costs, and before the time drain.
That’s why strong suppliers treat credit structure as profit protection, not “risk avoidance.”
Why FMCA membership delivers high ROI (especially in Market season)
FMCA membership tends to be high ROI because it strengthens two things suppliers fight for every day: protected exposure and faster, better-informed decisions—especially when Market-season order spikes and terms pressure increase.
Just as important, FMCA isn’t only data—it’s a network:
70+ suppliers and factoring firms that factor for suppliers
300+ credit professionals
Members share real-world credit and collections knowledge within clear antitrust guidelines.
In plain terms
You don’t have to solve the hardest credit problems alone—and you don’t have to learn every lesson the expensive way—while staying squarely inside antitrust rules (no coordination of pricing, terms, credit limits, or collection actions; every member makes independent decisions).
Spring High Point Market — New Member Special
Tap into the collective knowledge and experience of over 70 of the top suppliers and factoring firms in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry.
75% off
Dues for 2026
50
Free Credit Interchange Reports
If you’re attending Spring High Point, this is a low-friction way to evaluate how quickly industry insight can improve decision speed, reduce preventable exposure, and help Sales close deals that actually collect.
Closing: the Market advantage isn’t more orders—it’s more collectible orders
Spring High Point is a selling event. It’s also an exposure event—especially now, when so much ordering happens after Market and uncertainty pushes retailers to lean harder on vendor terms.
The companies that win don’t “tighten.” They structure. They keep Sales moving with YES-IF tools, they catch drift early, and they stop financing risk with exceptions.
That’s how you increase sales while mitigating risk. Not by being afraid—by being informed.
Tap into the collective knowledge and experience of over 70 of the top Suppliers and Factoring Firms in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry
Spring High Point MarketNew Member Special
75% off Dues for 2026 plus 50 Free Credit Interchange Reports
Outdoor/Casual Only Suppliers (No 2026 Dues PLUS 1/2 off Reports after 50 free)
The High Point Market Profit Playbook: How Sales + Credit Say “Yes” Faster—With Industry Insight, Without Overextending Vendor Credit
The High Point Market Profit Playbook: How Sales + Credit Say “Yes” Faster—With Industry Insight, Without Overextending Vendor Credit
Spring High Point is where optimism gets staged under showroom lights—even with uncertainty in the air—and everybody hopes this is the year the order flow stays clean.
Then the real game starts after Market.
Because in 2026, the showroom isn’t where exposure usually gets created. Exposure gets created in the post-Market surge—when buyers get home, assortments get approved, “we’re in” becomes a PO, and Sales is trying to keep momentum hot while Credit is trying not to turn vendor terms into the customer’s favorite credit facility.
And exceptions—especially the “just this once” kind—are how strong suppliers accidentally start financing retailers.
This matters even more in FMCA’s world because our members are the ones showing new product lines at Market to retailers and designers—and those are often the same accounts that appear in our Credit Interchange trade history. In other words: you meet the opportunity in the aisle, and you can often see the payment pattern before you ship the first big program.
This article isn’t a brochure. It’s an operator’s playbook—how Sales and Credit work together to increase sales while mitigating risk using YES / YES-IF / NOT-YET deal structuring, supported by industry insight that helps fill the gap generic tools can’t see.
Why Spring 2026 feels like a receivables stress test
Suppliers in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry aren’t fighting one clean headwind. It’s a stack—and stacks usually create familiar behavior changes.
Higher costs, margin pressure, and unusually high uncertainty—tariffs and geopolitical disruption are affecting landed cost, while demand remains fragile enough that many suppliers can’t simply pass every increase through.
Most of today’s “headwinds” don’t stay in their lane. They converge in the two places suppliers feel fastest: margin and pricing confidence. When duties, oil-linked inputs, and freight costs move—or even might move—suppliers shorten quote windows, add conditional language, and re-check landed costs by origin and component. Retailers, facing cautious consumers and softer housing-driven demand, often resist ticket-price increases and push the pressure into terms, freight allowances, and “just this once” exceptions.
That’s the squeeze: suppliers absorb cost upstream while retailers push back downstream. The result is more pricing friction, more post-market “re-quoting,” and more risk that a great Market conversation turns into margin leakage—or into vendor credit financing—after the order is written.
Housing is still the category’s master switch
When moves slow, big refresh cycles slow. Demand doesn’t disappear; it becomes uneven. Uneven cycles are where pay behavior drifts first: the strong accounts stay disciplined, the marginal ones start managing cash harder, and the “middle” pushes for flexibility.
Discretionary spending is more selective
Consumers may still spend, but they hesitate longer on big-ticket home purchases when headlines feel shaky. Retailers respond with heavier promotions, tighter open-to-buy discipline, and—most predictably—more pressure on vendor terms.
Tariff uncertainty changes behavior, not just COGS
The most damaging part isn’t the number; it’s volatility. Volatility drives:
A big PO looks like revenue right up until it turns into aging.
The challenge isn’t just tariffs—it’s that tariff policy is still moving in stages rather than settling into a stable framework. After the Supreme Court ruling that narrowed one major tariff authority, the administration has leaned into other tools—introducing broader baseline tariff actions in some areas while launching investigations that could lead to additional duties later. For importers, vendors, and retailers, it creates a moving target when you’re trying to price product for Spring High Point and plan shipments that land months from now.
A quick timeline of what’s driving the “moving target”
Net: even if you can quote a price today, you may not know whether the duty environment will change before the shipment arrives or before the customer finalizes the order. That’s why you’re seeing more short-term pricing, more conditional language, and more hesitation on big inventory bets until the investigation path is clearer.
Cost pressure has become structural. Tariffs continue to raise the cost of imported finished goods and also certain upstream inputs—pushing landed cost higher and squeezing gross margin. A common supplier reality in early 2026 is cost volatility: suppliers are reworking sourcing and pricing strategies more often, and doing it faster, because policy shifts can change the math quickly.
And even suppliers with meaningful domestic production aren’t insulated. Input inflation is still working its way through core categories—wood products, foam, fabrics, steel, aluminum, and other components used in furniture and related home goods.
Energy and shipping disruptions squeeze margins and reliability
When energy and logistics costs jump, everything heavy gets more expensive—containers, drayage, trucking, warehousing, even packaging. Route disruption and insurance surcharges reduce reliability. Then suppliers face the two most dangerous words in operations: expedite and exception.
Shipping costs remain a major variable for bulky furniture where freight, white-glove delivery, fuel, labor, insurance, and handling all matter. Ocean freight can look calmer in certain lanes on paper while still becoming more volatile in practice—more complexity, more service risk, and more “surprise” charges that show up after the quote.
The Iran conflict adds another layer of instability by disrupting energy markets and shipping corridors, which can ripple into transport, warehousing, and procurement costs—especially if uncertainty persists.
Oil-linked inputs are the quiet accelerant
As we head into Spring High Point, industry chatter is heating up around oil-related cost increases rippling through the supply chain. Even when the finished product isn’t “oil-based,” the inputs and services behind it often are—and when energy markets get unstable, those costs show up fast.
The practical result isn’t just “higher costs.” It’s pricing instability: factories and subcontractors request adjustments, suppliers re-check landed costs by origin and component, and quotes that looked safe at pre-market can become outdated quickly. In volatile periods like this, some suppliers tighten ordering discipline—holding certain commitments until they have a firmer read on inputs, freight, and lead times.
Two additional wrinkles are hitting at the same time: petrochemical feedstock disruption (which can tighten availability for plastics and packaging inputs) and fuel-driven logistics surcharges that can change quickly by lane. Even if your base ocean rate looks stable, the all-in cost can move when carriers layer on fuel, insurance, or service-risk premiums.
Where all the headwinds converge: margin, pricing, and terms
At a certain point, the “headwinds” stop being separate issues and become one shared problem: margin and pricing confidence. Tariffs that can change by timeline, oil-linked inputs that ripple through foam/chemicals/packaging, and energy-driven freight volatility all raise landed cost—while cautious consumers and softer housing-driven demand make it harder for retailers to take clean price increases. That’s how a cost problem turns into a selling problem, and then into a credit problem.
This is why you’ll hear more suppliers talking about shorter quote-validity windows, more frequent cost resets, and tighter controls on large program orders until they confirm where duties, inputs, and freight are settling. It’s not “being difficult.” It’s protecting margin and preventing post-Market surprises that turn into disputes, delays, and aging.
Margins and demand: why passing through every increase is tough
Suppliers are under pressure to protect margins, but passing through every increase is difficult when consumers are cautious and housing remains soft. And it’s important to recognize how this works in the real world: suppliers sell to retailers, and retailers sell to consumers. In theory, cost increases can be passed along at each step—supplier to retailer, retailer to consumer. In practice, that pass-through is rarely clean. Some portion of every increase gets absorbed at each link when the next buyer pushes back—especially when demand is fragile and price sensitivity is high. When retailers resist price increases at the shelf, the pressure valve usually becomes terms: longer dating, bigger lines, and “just this once” exceptions that shift the burden from ticket price to vendor credit. The gap shows up quickly: suppliers absorb more cost or fund more concessions while retailers resist increases or delay buys, which can translate into smaller orders, delayed purchases, and slower inventory turns. In practical terms, that usually means tighter cash flow, more selective buying, and more attention to credit risk across the channel.
And when those cost pressures stack up—tariffs, energy, freight, and oil-linked inputs—this is how the negotiation usually shows up at the buyer level:
Retailers often push that squeeze downstream:
If you accept all three, you’re not just selling product—you’re donating margin and financing inventory.
What the strongest suppliers are doing operationally
This is where execution separates the pack. Strong suppliers are tightening the basics without choking growth—diversifying sourcing, resetting costs more frequently, tightening freight planning, and monitoring exposure with more precision (by SKU, origin country, and program size). In this environment, suppliers that can move quickly on sourcing and pricing are better positioned than those relying on a single country or a fixed-price model.
Bottom line: in Spring 2026 you should expect more:
So the goal isn’t to get “tighter.” The goal is to get structured.
Credit doesn’t prohibit Sales—Credit protects Sales by structuring a faster “Yes”
The best suppliers don’t treat Credit like the brakes. They treat Credit like the steering wheel.
When Sales and Credit are aligned, the goal isn’t to slow deals down—it’s to shape faster approvals through clear YES-IF structures that protect cash while keeping momentum.
1) It turns “approved/declined” into “approved with a path”
Instead of “no,” the buyer hears:
That keeps the deal alive and gives Sales a professional structure to close with.
2) It stops Sales from wasting Market-season time on accounts shopping for vendor credit
Every Market season includes a subset of accounts that aren’t shopping for product as much as they’re shopping for terms—because other suppliers have tightened exposure or placed them on hold.
You don’t have to accuse anyone. Recognize the pattern early and move the opportunity into a structured YES-IF lane.
That saves Sales weeks of chasing a “big program” that was actually a liquidity strategy.
Turn on the insight light: shadows aren’t the full room
Here’s the practical problem: vendor-credit strain often doesn’t show up clearly in bureau reports. Bureau tools can be useful for identity, public records, and broad signals—but trade payables behavior frequently lives in the trade channel.
Bureau information can be a light. Your internal payment history can be another. But when a retailer is stretching vendors—especially in a Market-season squeeze—the vendor credit reality can still sit in the dark unless you turn on that additional switch: industry trade history.
That’s why adding industry insight matters. It helps you see what the buyer is doing on terms—information that often determines whether a Market win becomes a clean, collectible order or a slow-moving A/R problem.
The operating system: YES / YES-IF / NOT-YET
Sales should be able to hear the outcome and know exactly what to do next.
If you’re wondering which lane wins Market season: YES-IF. Not because you’re nervous—because this is exactly when vendor credit gets stretched across the industry.
Where exposure really lives at Market: retailers on terms
Let’s not pretend every buyer creates the same risk.
So this playbook is retailer-first, because that’s where credit risk compounds fast.
Real-world YES-IF structures that close deals and protect cash
These aren’t theories. They’re the moves suppliers use to keep product moving without shipping the loss.
Scenario: A retailer normally buys $35,000/month. Two weeks after Market they want a $110,000 program “before costs move again.”
A sloppy answer: “Sure—Net 60.” A profitable answer: YES-IF.
Sales still gets the placement. Credit stops financing the jump.
Scenario: New retailer wants a $60,000 opening order, rush shipping, and Net 60.
The right move isn’t a lecture. It’s a ramp:
That’s how you grow the account without swallowing a first-order loss.
Scenario: A seven-year customer historically paid in 35–45 days. Over two quarters they drift to 55, then 65. They’re still paying… just later. The language changes from specifics to vibes: “soon,” “shortly,” “this week.”
The right response usually isn’t a dramatic hold. It’s structured discipline:
That protects the relationship by preventing it from becoming unmanageable.
Scenario: Strong history, then 60 days quiet. Suddenly: a large rush order with “payment Friday.”
Two possible truths: legitimate opportunity or liquidity scramble/vendor shuffle. You don’t guess. You structure:
This keeps momentum without shipping the whole exposure.
“Robbing Peter to pay Paul”: the Market trap nobody admits
Sometimes a retailer is shopping your line because they love it. Sometimes they’re shopping because they’re behind with other suppliers and need fresh credit availability.
The tells are consistent:
“Are you currently on terms with most vendors in this category, or are any relationships on hold while things get caught up?”
If the answer is foggy, don’t accuse—YES-IF the deal:
Sales still gets the opportunity. Credit refuses to be the next stretched vendor.
The “Good Customer” myth: how great accounts drift into trouble
In credit, one of the most dangerous phrases isn’t “this account is risky.” It’s: “They’re a good customer.”
Most accounts don’t flip overnight. They drift: Green → Yellow → Beige → “Wait, what just happened?”
If you see two or more drift signals, the account automatically moves into YES-IF structures.
Drift signals that matter:
When drift appears, don’t trust harder. Structure harder.
Post-Market is where profit is won or donated: the 48-hour Deal Activation workflow
Because so many orders are written after Market, the follow-up window is where discipline must live.
Retailers: lane, limit, terms, conditions, triggers, gating rules.
Designers: deposit/milestones, release rules, change-order discipline.
“We’re excited to set you up quickly. To support the initial program, we’ll start with X structure. As payments post, we can expand the line.”
This keeps momentum—and keeps internal blame games out of the deal.
FMCA Credit Interchange Reports: the industry lens that supports Sales—not just Credit
FMCA Credit Interchange Reports provide member-reported trade history on retailers and designers in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry. They are designed to complement—not replace—bureau reports, financials (when available), and your internal experience by adding an industry-specific view of how accounts have performed on trade terms.
Why this matters in Market season
1) Interchange reports reduce reliance on time-consuming trade references
Traditional trade references are slow and selective. You request them, wait, follow up, and end up with snapshots that can be incomplete or overly polished—right when Sales needs a decision while the opportunity is warm.
Interchange reporting helps reduce that friction and speeds the YES / YES-IF / NOT-YET decision.
2) Vendor credit behavior often isn’t fully visible in bureau reports—but it can appear in trade reporting
That’s the additional light switch. It doesn’t replace your underwriting; it helps you stop guessing and start structuring.
FMCA provides factual trade experiences and education. Each member independently sets its own pricing, terms, credit limits, and collection actions. FMCA does not facilitate agreements or coordinated action.
Protecting commissions: why “collectible sales” is a Sales issue, not just a Credit issue
Bad debt doesn’t just hit A/R. It hits Sales culture.
When an account doesn’t pay, one of two ugly things usually happens:
A rep lands a $250,000 post-Market program order.
Commission on that deal: $250,000 × 0.07 = $17,500
If the deal goes sideways, $17,500 becomes either a clawback argument or a real cash leak. Even if we ignore the full write-off and look only at commission leakage:
$17,500 ÷ 0.30 = $58,333 in additional sales
That’s ~$58K of extra selling just to offset the commission piece—before you even deal with the bigger damage.
How much selling it takes to recover from one bad one
If you write off a $250,000 program order and your gross margin is 30%, how much additional sales do you need to generate $250,000 of gross profit to get back to even (before overhead)?
$250,000 ÷ 0.30 = $833,333
So one bad $250K account can require roughly $834K in additional sales at a 30% margin just to recover—before overhead, before extra freight, before collection costs, and before the time drain.
That’s why strong suppliers treat credit structure as profit protection, not “risk avoidance.”
Why FMCA membership delivers high ROI (especially in Market season)
FMCA membership tends to be high ROI because it strengthens two things suppliers fight for every day: protected exposure and faster, better-informed decisions—especially when Market-season order spikes and terms pressure increase.
Just as important, FMCA isn’t only data—it’s a network:
Members share real-world credit and collections knowledge within clear antitrust guidelines.
You don’t have to solve the hardest credit problems alone—and you don’t have to learn every lesson the expensive way—while staying squarely inside antitrust rules (no coordination of pricing, terms, credit limits, or collection actions; every member makes independent decisions).
Spring High Point Market — New Member Special
Tap into the collective knowledge and experience of over 70 of the top suppliers and factoring firms in the home furnishings and accessories supply industry.
If you’re attending Spring High Point, this is a low-friction way to evaluate how quickly industry insight can improve decision speed, reduce preventable exposure, and help Sales close deals that actually collect.
Closing: the Market advantage isn’t more orders—it’s more collectible orders
Spring High Point is a selling event. It’s also an exposure event—especially now, when so much ordering happens after Market and uncertainty pushes retailers to lean harder on vendor terms.
The companies that win don’t “tighten.” They structure. They keep Sales moving with YES-IF tools, they catch drift early, and they stop financing risk with exceptions.
That’s how you increase sales while mitigating risk. Not by being afraid—by being informed.