Trade & Finance
Goods and capital, moving together.
The bottleneck in cross-border trade is often not transport but capital and structure: how the transaction is built, how title passes, how the capital tied up in goods is released. This division works at that layer.
It is closely tied to our bonded operations — goods under customs supervision are, by their nature, sound collateral. Where a step requires a financial licence, HELLWEG works with licensed institutions in the relevant jurisdictions, contributing the structure and the goods-side operation.
Entrepôt Trade
Goods are bought and sold between two overseas markets, routed through a Chinese bonded hub without entering the domestic market. Contracts, documentation, reconditioning and cross-border settlement are arranged by the Chinese trading entity in the middle.
Aligning title, payment and physical movement across several jurisdictions is the ground on which entrepôt trade stands — and is HELLWEG’s daily work.
Cross-Border Financial Leasing
Capital assets — equipment above all — are acquired through finance or operating lease structures, converting a large one-off outlay into a predictable stream of payments.
HELLWEG designs and delivers the transaction structure, drawing on the leasing regimes of bonded and free-trade zones; the lessor of record is a licensed institution in the relevant jurisdiction, while the import, customs formalities and movement of the asset are handled in step by the logistics and customs teams.
Bonded Warehouse Receipt Financing
Goods in bonded storage are financed against their warehouse receipts. HELLWEG builds the pledge structure and manages the goods in the warehouse; the issuing of receipts and the lending itself are carried out by the licensed institutions concerned.
The dependability of receipt financing rests on the pledged goods being real, present and controlled — which is precisely why goods management and financial arrangement belong within one system.