Title: Export Import Financing Letter of Credit
1LETTER OF CREDIT CITD SEMINAR Tuesday, June
22nd, 2004
2Methods of Payment
3Methods of Payment
- Cash in Advance
- Letters of Credit
- Documentary Collection
- Sight/Time Drafts
- aka D/P, D/A
- Open Account
- Risk mitigation
- Export Credit Insurance
- Standby L/Cs
L /C
4Cash in Advance
- Importer pays Exporter prior to shipment
- Exporter has no risk of non-payment or
non-acceptance - Importer has risk that exporter will not ship the
goods as ordered - Used occasionally for small amounts, new
customers, one-time sales
Importer
Exporter
5Letters of Credit
- Protects the interests of both
- the Importer and the Exporter
-
- Exporter is assured payment provided terms of L/C
are met - Importer is assured terms of L/C have been met
before she is required to pay - Used for larger amounts, higher credit risks,
sometimes mandated
6Documentary Collections
- Exporter routes documents through banking
channels, where they are held for payment or
acceptance - Exporter Exporters Importers
Importer - Bank Bank
-
- Less costly than a L/C and avoids tying up
Importers line of credit - Average of 2 - 4 weeks for exporter to collect on
a sight draft - Consignment Issues
- Used for lower risk customers
Goods
7Open Account
- Exporter ships goods and bills the
- importer for payment at sight or at a future date
-
- Importer has use of funds, no product risk
- Exporter has risk of non-payment
- Risk can be shifted through credit insurance,
standby L/Cs - Used for well-established customers with good
credit
8Letters of Credit
9Types of Letters of Credit
- Trade
- Import
- Export
- Standby
10Definition of a Trade Letter of Credit
- A letter addressed to a beneficiary (exporter) by
a bank (issuing bank) - wherein the bank undertakes, on behalf of an
applicant (importer) - to effect payment to the beneficiary for
merchandise shipped or services performed - provided that the beneficiary presents the
required documents in compliance with the terms
of the letter of credit
11Documents Common to an Export L/C
- Commercial Invoice
- Packing List
- Bills of Lading
- Certificate of Origin
- Other Certificates Quality, Inspection
- Beneficiary Statements
121. Importer and Exporter enter into a sales
agreement
Agreement
Exporter
Importer
132. Importer applies for a letter of credit with
the Issuing Bank
Importer
Application
Issuing Bank
143. Issuing Bank advises the letter of credit to
U.S. Bank, usually via SWIFT
L / C
SWIFT
154. U.S. Bank authenticates the L/C and advises
L/C to Beneficiary
Beneficiary
Letter of Credit
U.S. Bank
165. Exporter prepares the documents and ships the
goods
176. Exporter sends shipping documents to U.S.
Bank for examination
Documents
U.S. Bank
FBM
187. Assuming clean documents, U.S. Bank pays
exporter by debiting Issuing Banks account or
upon receipt of funds from a separate
reimbursing bank. Documents sent to Issuing
Bank.
Exporter
Issuing Bank
Documents
U.S. Bank
198. Issuing Bank examines documents and delivers
to importer against payment. Importer
takes possession of goods by presenting
documents.
Importer
Documents
Docs
209. The exporter has been paid, the importer has
their goods, the banks have been reimbursed,
and the cycle is complete!
Goods
Agreement
Exporter
Importer
Letter of Credit
Application
Documents
Documents
Letter of Credit
Issuing Bank
U.S. Bank
Documents
21Special Uses ofLetters of Credit
22Bankers Acceptances
- On a time draft, the bank on whom the draft is
drawn commits to pay the face amount at maturity
by stamping Accepted across the draft . -
- If the exporter wishes early payment, the
accepting bank may discount the draft and pay
the exporter at sight. -
- U.S. Bank can offer you very competitive rates
for BAs if the draft is drawn on us!
23Standby Letter of Credit
- Standby L/Cs are an irrevocable commitment
issued by a bank for a stated time period - to pay a beneficiary a stated amount of money
- upon presentation of specified documents stating
that the applicant did not fulfill their
contractual obligations.
24- Transferable Letters of Credit
- Often used by an export intermediary to pay a
vendor or producer - The L/C may be transferred only once, but there
may be several partial transferees - Vendor controls presentation of documents to
bank - Intermediary may substitute his own invoice and
draft, but it still may be difficult for the
vendor and buyer to remain unknown to each other
25- Assignment of Proceeds
- Similar to Transferable L/C in that it is
commonly used by an export intermediary to pay a
producer or vendor - Intermediary (beneficiary) controls document
presentation, not the vendor, allowing him/her to
keep information on the vendor out of the
paperwork - Vendor relies on intermediary for proper
presentation / performance under the terms of the
L/C before funds will be remitted to them
26Confirmations ofExport Letters of Credit
- Confirmed - A second bank, usually in the
exporters country, guarantees the obligation of
the issuing bank, providing an extra layer of
protection - especially important if the country
or the issuing bank is considered risky.
27More on Confirmations ...
- Gives the greatest degree of payment
protection and an immediate payment
source, provided the documents are clean. - Added cost, normally to the exporter.
- Exporter must instruct the importer to have the
L/C issued with a request for confirmation. - The confirming bank makes a credit decision based
on the credit of the issuing bank and the country
risk. Approval will depend also on availability
under an established line of credit.
28Adding a confirmation or engagement to purchase
documents
Goods
Exporter
Agreement
Importer
Letter of Credit
Application
Documents
Documents
Faxport
Letter of Credit
Issuing Bank
Advising Bank
Confirm. Bank
Documents
29Benefits of Letters of Credit
- To the Exporter
- Payment protection
- Reliance on issuing banks credit rather than
buyers - Rapid, local source of repayment, if payable at a
U.S. bank
- To the Importer
- Documentary evidence that the ordered goods have
been shipped on time - Assurance that necessary clearance documents will
be provided - Payment deferred until goods are shipped and
documents presented (use of funds)