White labelling in financial services refers to the practice of one company’s product or platform being rebranded and offered by another company under their own name and identity. In supply chain finance, white labelling means that banks, financial institutions, and enterprise technology providers can offer a full SCF platform — its technology, workflows, and financing capabilities — to their own clients, under their own brand.
What It Is #
A white label product is built by one provider but sold by another. The end user sees only the brand of the company presenting the product — not the underlying technology provider. In financial services, white labelling is widespread: many corporate banking portals, insurance platforms, and payment solutions that appear to be proprietary bank products are in fact built on third-party technology platforms, rebranded and configured for the presenting institution.
For supply chain finance, white labelling allows banks and financial institutions to offer SCF technology to their corporate clients without the 18–36 month development cycle and significant engineering investment required to build it from scratch. They bring the client relationships, regulatory status, and balance sheet; the technology provider brings the platform, operational infrastructure, and SCF expertise.
How White Label Works #
| Layer | What the Tech Provider Provides | What the White Label Partner Controls |
|---|---|---|
| Platform technology | Full SCF platform — invoice management, early payment workflows, approval engines, reporting | None — consumed as-is |
| Branding | Customisable — partner logo, colour scheme, domain | Full brand presentation |
| Product configuration | Configurable parameters — discount rates, eligible tenors, programme structures | Programme design and pricing |
| User onboarding | KYC/KYB flows, supplier onboarding tools | Client-facing communication and relationship |
| Funding | Provider balance sheet or partner balance sheet (depending on structure) | Partner provides capital if self-funded |
| Customer support | Platform support | Front-line relationship management |
| Reporting | Full programme analytics and data exports | Client-facing reporting presentation |
White Label Structures #
Technology-Only White Label. The bank or institution uses the platform as the technology backbone for its own SCF programme. The institution funds the programme from its own balance sheet; the provider supplies the technology, onboarding infrastructure, and operational support. The client sees only the bank’s brand throughout.
Full White Label (Technology + Funding). The provider supplies both the platform and the financing — the partner institution brings the client relationships and distribution. Corporate clients are onboarded to what appears to be the partner institution’s SCF programme, but the underlying financing and technology are powered by the provider.
Co-Branded Programme. The programme is presented under a joint brand — typically used where the provider’s brand adds credibility or is already known to the client base, but the partner institution’s relationship is primary.
Who Uses White Label #
| Partner Type | Why They White Label | Typical Clients |
|---|---|---|
| Regional and challenger banks | Build SCF capability without building technology | Corporate banking clients seeking working capital solutions |
| ERP and procurement software providers | Add embedded finance to core product | Existing ERP user base seeking integrated financing |
| Accounting platforms | Offer invoice financing natively | SME clients managing receivables |
| Trade finance specialists | Expand into SCF without platform investment | Import/export businesses, commodity traders |
| Corporate treasury platforms | Add SCF functionality to treasury management suite | Large corporates managing complex supply chains |
Benefits for White Label Partners #
- Speed to Market. Building an SCF platform from scratch takes 18–36 months. White labelling allows a partner to launch a fully functional SCF programme in weeks.
- Reduced Technology Risk. The platform is tested, proven, and continuously updated. Partners avoid the risks of building proprietary technology: bugs, compliance gaps, scalability failures, and ongoing maintenance costs.
- Revenue Expansion. Partners earn revenue from programme fees, funding margins, or both — creating a new income stream from their existing client base.
- Client Retention. Offering SCF as an integrated service deepens the relationship between the partner institution and its corporate clients.
- Regulatory Simplicity. The provider handles platform-level compliance, data security, and operational resilience obligations.
White Label vs. Direct Access #
| Dimension | White Label (via Partner) | Direct Access |
|---|---|---|
| Brand presentation | Partner brand | Provider brand |
| Relationship owner | Partner institution | Provider |
| Onboarding | Via partner | Directly |
| Programme funding | Partner balance sheet or provider | Provider |
| Pricing | Set by partner | Set by provider |
| Best for | Clients embedded in partner’s ecosystem | Companies seeking direct SCF platform access |
