Turning Passive Mitigations into Proactive Monitoring

Realistic “before and after” examples are essential for shifting ingrained habits. Below is a curated list of re-framing examples for common credit risks. These use linguistic anchoring to replace passive “mitigation” language with active “monitor–trigger–response” framing.


🔁 Reframing “Mitigation” Language in Credit Risk Write-Ups

Reframing & Anchoring to build new mental models

Risk Type❌ Old Mitigation Language (Passive)✅ Reframed Monitoring Language (Proactive)
Customer concentration“The company has long-standing relationships with major customers.”“If any single customer contributing >20% of sales reduces orders by 10% or more over two quarters, it will trigger a revenue impact review and credit line recalibration.”
FX mismatch“FX risk is mitigated by natural hedges and some forward contracts.”“The CFO monitors USD/IDR weekly. A >5% move triggers a hedge coverage check and rebalancing of USD receivables exposure.”
Weak succession planning“The owner has been managing the business for 30 years and is experienced.”“If the CEO becomes unavailable or there is no named CFO by the next board cycle, the bank will re-evaluate counterparty continuity and control measures.”
Commodity price volatility“Margins are protected as the company passes on costs to customers.”“If gross margin falls below 18% in any month, this triggers a pricing review and working capital recalibration.”
Seasonal working capital swings“Cash flow is seasonally tight in Q1, but the company manages it well.”“If cash conversion cycle exceeds 120 days in Q1, we will increase AR monitoring frequency and assess need for interim facility draw.”
Regulatory change“The company complies with all current regulations.”“If a draft regulation enters consultation that affects 20%+ of product sales, management will escalate contingency planning within 30 days.”
Customer default risk“The company deals only with established customers.”“Any payment delay >30 days beyond terms triggers a credit policy review and bank notification.”
Raw material dependency“The company uses multiple suppliers to reduce risk.”“If the lead supplier’s pricing increases >10% or delivery delays >14 days, procurement is triggered to reallocate orders and review alternative suppliers.”
Key-man risk“The management team is experienced and hands-on.”“Absence or unavailability of the CEO/CFO for more than 2 weeks activates a delegated authority protocol and bank notification.”
Environmental risk (e.g., flood zone)“The plant is insured against flood risk.”“If water levels exceed risk thresholds during monsoon season, plant ops will implement relocation plan within 72 hours.”
Technology disruption“The company is investing in IT systems.”“If digital sales penetration remains <15% by year-end, the bank will re-evaluate the company’s competitiveness in digital channels.”

🧠 Why This Works (Anchoring):

  • The old language falsely signals control → It soothes reviewers but hides fragility.
  • The new language introduces dynamic mental anchors:
    • Trigger Benchmark = “When would we worry?”
    • Response Protocol = “What would we do?”
    • Ownership = “Who is watching?”

✅ Use in Practice: Credit Template Guidance

  • Require each risk section to end with:
    🟢 “This risk will be actively monitored. A trigger threshold of [X] will lead to [Y action] by [Z party].”
  • Examples for template prompts:
    • “What data will signal this risk is emerging?”
    • “What will the company or bank do in response?”
    • “Who is responsible for monitoring and responding?”

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