Skip to main content
Card class: Non-HeroCategory: Ecommerce Platform
The number of customers classified as high-risk in Oracle Fusion Credit Management. A rising count means underwriting and collections should tighten before new orders are released.

At a glance

High-Credit-Risk Customers counts the parties whose credit classification in Oracle Fusion Credit Management sits in your highest-risk tier. It is a forward-looking exposure gauge: these are the accounts most likely to slip into the danger aging band, breach their credit limit, or trigger a credit hold on their next order. A spike tells the credit and collections teams to tighten underwriting and review limits before more orders ship on terms. Sourced from Oracle Fusion Credit Management across all in-scope Business Units.
What it countsThe number of distinct customer parties whose current credit classification in Oracle Fusion Credit Management is in the high-risk tier, across every in-scope Business Unit. Counts unique parties, not invoices or orders.
Business Unit scopeRespects the dashboard’s selected Business Unit filter. By default rolls up every Business Unit the connected role can see. A single party trading across multiple Business Units is counted once at the consolidated view.
Time windowRT (real time). The count reflects the live credit classifications as of the last sync window, not a fixed period.
Alert triggerFires when the count of high-risk customers exceeds 10.
Rolesowner, finance, operations

Calculation

Calculated automatically from your Oracle ERP Cloud data. See the At a glance summary above for what the metric tracks and the worked example below for a typical reading.

Worked example

A US Fortune 500 omnichannel speciality retailer running Oracle ERP Cloud with a sizeable B2B wholesale book across three Business Units. The reading is taken live on 22 Jun 26. Oracle Fusion Credit Management scores each party into risk tiers from its credit review rules and the latest financial and behavioural inputs.
Credit risk tierCustomersCombined open AR (USD)
Low risk1,840$26,300,000
Medium risk410$13,800,000
High risk13$4,900,000
High-Credit-Risk Customers (this card)13$4,900,000
Five things to notice:
  1. The card counts parties, not money. 13 customers is the headline. The $4.9M of open AR they collectively hold is the exposure behind that count, which Vortex Mind keeps for drill-down but the card does not show as its primary number.
  2. 13 is above the alert threshold of 10, so the Nerve Centre fires. The trigger is deliberately a small absolute count, because in a B2B book even a handful of high-risk accounts can carry outsized balances.
  3. Thirteen accounts hold a disproportionate balance. That $4.9M is 11% of total AR concentrated in less than 1% of customers. This concentration is exactly why the count is worth a dedicated card: it is a small, actionable list the credit team can work directly.
  4. A spike usually precedes a hold spike. As Credit Management reclassifies accounts into the high-risk tier, their next orders are more likely to be blocked. Pair this card with Credit Hold Spike and Orders on Credit Hold to see the downstream effect on order flow.
  5. Reclassification can be a data event, not a real-world one. A batch credit review run overnight can move several accounts into the high-risk tier at once, spiking the count even though nothing changed for the customers that day. Read a sudden jump alongside the timing of your scheduled Credit Management reviews.

Sibling cards merchants should reference together

High-Credit-Risk Customers is the underwriting early warning. Pair it with these to see exposure and downstream order impact.
CardWhy pair it with High-Credit-Risk Customers
Customer Credit UtilisationShows how close customers are to their limits. High utilisation plus high risk is the combination most likely to trigger a hold.
Credit Hold SpikeThe downstream effect. As risk classifications rise, more orders get blocked at credit check.
Orders on Credit HoldThe order-level view of what is currently stuck because of credit risk.
High-Value Overdue InvoicesRisk classifications and overdue balances usually overlap. This shows the specific large invoices at stake.
AR Aging 60+ DaysHigh-risk customers are the ones most likely to populate the danger aging band.
Credit Memos ValueRising credit memos to risky accounts can be an early sign of disputes and write-off pressure.

Reconciling against Oracle ERP Cloud

Where to look in Oracle ERP Cloud: The closest native equivalents in the Oracle Fusion UI are:
Navigator → Receivables → Credit Management → Manage Credit Cases / Credit Reviews Navigator → Receivables → Credit Management → Credit Profile (per customer account) Reports and Analytics → OTBI → Financials → Credit Management Real Time Subject Area
Credit Management in Oracle Fusion holds each party’s credit classification and the review history behind it. To reconcile, list customers whose current classification matches your high-risk tier for the same Business Unit scope and count the distinct parties. Most Fortune 500 teams build this as an OTBI analysis so they can refresh it on a schedule and pivot by Business Unit. Common mistakes when comparing against Oracle’s own reports:
  • Classification scoring level (party vs account vs site). Oracle can classify at the party, the account, or the site level. This card counts distinct parties. A report run at account or site level can return a higher number because one party can have several accounts.
  • Stale classifications. A customer’s classification only updates when a credit review runs. A report comparing against last quarter’s review will not match a card reading the latest classification.
  • Custom tier definitions. What counts as “high-risk” is defined by your Credit Management scoring model and tier thresholds. A report using a different tier cutoff will count a different set.
Why our number may legitimately differ from Oracle’s reports:
ReasonDirectionWhy
Classification level (party vs account vs site)EitherThe card counts distinct parties. An account-level or site-level report counts more granular records and can be higher. Align the level before comparing.
Tier definitionEither”High-risk” depends on your Credit Management scoring model and threshold. A report using a different cutoff selects a different population.
Review timingEitherClassifications update only when a credit review runs. The card reads the latest available classification; a report tied to an older review cycle differs.
Business Unit scopeEitherA party trading across multiple Business Units is counted once at the consolidated view but may appear multiple times in a per-Business-Unit report.
Inactive or on-hold partiesEitherWhether dormant or already on-hold accounts are included depends on the report filter. The card reflects current classification regardless of activity.

Known limitations / merchant FAQs

Where does the “high-risk” classification come from? From Oracle Fusion Credit Management, which scores each customer using your configured credit review rules and inputs (payment history, current exposure, external credit data where integrated, and so on) and assigns a classification tier. This card simply counts the parties currently sitting in your high-risk tier. It does not invent its own scoring; it reflects Oracle’s. Why is the alert threshold only 10 customers? Because in a B2B book the risk is concentrated, not spread. A small number of high-risk accounts can hold a disproportionate share of total AR, as the worked example shows. A low absolute trigger keeps the credit team focused on a short, workable list rather than waiting for the count to grow large. The count jumped overnight with no obvious cause. Why? Most likely a scheduled credit review ran and reclassified several accounts at once. Classifications only change when a review executes, so batch reviews produce step changes rather than a smooth trend. Check the timing of your Credit Management review jobs before assuming a real-world event. Does the count include customers already on credit hold? It reflects current credit classification, so a customer on hold who is still classified high-risk is counted. The order-level consequence of those classifications lives on Orders on Credit Hold; this card is about who is risky, not what is currently blocked. Is a high count always bad? Not necessarily. Onboarding new B2B accounts on extended terms naturally adds risk while their payment history is thin. The signal to act is a rising trend without a matching rise in collections discipline, or high-risk accounts that also show high credit utilisation and overdue balances. Does this count parties or accounts? Distinct parties at the consolidated view. One party with several Oracle customer accounts is counted once. If your reconciliation runs at the account or site level, expect a higher number, and align the level before comparing. How fresh is the data? Vortex IQ reads Oracle Fusion Credit Management through the Fusion REST API with a short cache, so the count reflects classifications as of the last sync window. The underlying classifications themselves only change when a credit review runs, so the data is as current as your latest review cycle.

Tracked live in Vortex IQ Nerve Centre

High-Credit-Risk Customers is one of hundreds of KPI pulses Vortex IQ tracks across Oracle ERP Cloud and 70+ other ecommerce connectors. Nerve Centre runs the detection layer; Vortex Mind investigates the cause when something moves; Ask Viq lets you interrogate any number in plain English. Start for free or book a demo to see this metric running on your own data.