The Australian Financial Security Authority (AFSA) – perhaps better known as the people that run the PPSR – released, earlier this month, PPSR related statistics for the July-September quarter.
I’ve included a link here.
As at the end of September, there had been a total of 19,265,693 registrations, of which marginally under half were still current.
The largest single collateral class overall was, unsurprisingly, Motor Vehicles, accounting for 49% of all current registrations (although if you take Consumer related transactions out of the picture this drops to 34%).
However, what caught my eye this time around was the extent to which Other Goods registrations have come to dominate over the last 5 years.
5 years ago, All Present & After-Acquired Property registrations (AllPAAPs) accounted for a little over 2 million registrations while Other Goods registrations made up less than a million (944k).
This shouldn’t be too much of a surprise; AllPAAPs are primarily the preserve of banks and financiers who would have been all over the PPSR upon its introduction, ensuring their security interests were properly protected from the outset. Other Goods registrations, on the other hand, are very much the tool of the trade credit supplier with Retention of Title rights and, as we know, this disparate group is not always the most organised or receptive when it comes to ‘Government Red Tape’.
However, things have changed considerably over the last 5 years with AllPAAP registrations remaining pretty static (even declining slightly) and Other Goods registrations steaming ahead as trade credit suppliers get the message that PPSR registration represents one bit of Red Tape they need to adopt if they are to protect their rights over their unpaid goods and give themselves a better chance of fending off liquidators’ preference claim clawbacks.
With over 2.6 million current registrations, Other Goods now represents the largest collateral class for non-consumer registrations.
There is every indication that this trend will continue as trade credit suppliers come to terms with the fact that the PPSR isn’t going anywhere and failing to embrace it will only contribute to them suffering larger losses than they need to.