Professional Documents
Culture Documents
IF ASSIGNMENT
Submitted By:
Group NO
Kunjan Shah (36)
Nikhil Joshi (43)
Digant Desai (57)
Rohan Shah (65)
Robin (72)
Swapnil Naik( 96)
Contents
1. Introduction ......................................................................................................3
1.2 Documents a beneficiary has to present in order to receive payment:
........................................................................................................................... 4
1.3 Concept of an LC:.........................................................................................5
1.4 A detail Flowchart depicting the concept of an LC........................................6
....................................................................................................................... 6
1.5 Pitfalls Of Letter Of Credit: ...........................................................................7
1.6 Executing a Letter of Credit:......................................................................7
2. Type of letter of Credit:.....................................................................................8
2.1 Revocable Credit..........................................................................................8
2.2 Irrevocable Credit.........................................................................................8
2.3 Revolving LC:...............................................................................................9
2.4 Standby LC:................................................................................................ 10
2.5 Transferable letters of credit:.....................................................................10
2.6 Confirmed LC:.............................................................................................12
2.7 Unconfirmed credit ....................................................................................13
3.Assignment of proceeds:..................................................................................13
4.ANNEXURE I: A Typical Format of Assignment of Proceeds ..............................14
...........................................................................................................................14
1. Introduction
Letters of credit are often used in international transactions between a supplier in one country and a
customer in another to ensure that payment will be received. Due to the nature of international
dealings including factors such as distance, differing laws in each country and difficulty in knowing
each party personally, the use of letters of credit has become a very important aspect of international
trade.
The letter of credit can also be a source of payment for a transaction, meaning that redeeming the
letter of credit will pay an exporter. The bank also acts on behalf of the buyer (holder of letter of
credit) by ensuring that the supplier will not be paid until the bank receives a confirmation that the
goods have been shipped. In such cases the International Chamber of Commerce Uniform Customs
and Practice for Documentary Credits applies.
Almost all letters of credit are irrevocable, i.e., cannot be amended or cancelled without prior
agreement of the beneficiary, the issuing bank and the confirming bank, if any. In executing a
transaction, letters of credit incorporate functions common to giros and Traveller’s cheques.
1.2 Documents a beneficiary has to present in order to
receive payment:
1. Financial Documents
1.1. Bill of Exchange, Co-accepted draft.
2. Commercial Documents
2.1. Invoice, Packing list
3. Shipping Documents
3.1. Transport Document, Insurance Certificate, Commercial, Official or Legal
Documents.
4. Official Documents
4.1. License, Embassy legalization, Origin Certificate, Inspection Certificate.
5. Transport Documents
5.1. Bill of Lading (ocean or multi-modal or Charter party), Airway bill, Lorry/truck
receipt, railway receipt, CMC Other than Mate Receipt, Forwarder Cargo Receipt,
Deliver Challan...etc.
6. Insurance documents
6.1. Insurance policy, or Certificate but not a cover note.
However, the list and form of documents is open to imagination and negotiation and might
contain requirements to present documents issued by a neutral third party evidencing the
quality of the goods shipped, or their place of origin.
Letters of credit are common in international trade because the bank acts as an uninterested
party between buyer and seller. For example, importers and exporters might use letters of
credit to protect themselves. In addition, communication can be difficult across thousands of
miles and different time zones. A letter of credit spells out the details so that everybody's on
the same page.
The bank will only issue a letter of credit if they know the buyer will pay. Some
buyers have to deposit (or already have) enough money to cover the letter of credit, and some
customers use a line of credit with the bank. Sellers must trust that the bank issuing the letter
of credit is legitimate.
1.3 Concept of an LC:
Exemplification:
A business called RAICHAND & SONS from time to time imports goods from a business
called GULABCHAND & SONS, which banks with Bank of America. RAICHAND &
SONS holds an account at the Commonwealth Bank. RAICHAND & SONS wants to buy
$500,000 worth of merchandise from GULABCHAND & SONS, who agrees to sell the
goods and give RAICHAND & SONS 60 days to pay for them, on the condition that they are
provided with a 90-day letter of credit for the full amount. The steps to get the letter of credit
would be as follows:
RAICHAND & SONS goes to The Commonwealth Bank and requests a $500,000
letter of credit, with GULABCHAND & SONS as the beneficiary.
The Commonwealth Bank can issue a letter of credit either on approval of a
standard loan underwriting process or by RAICHAND & SONS funding it directly with a
deposit of $500,000 plus fees which are typically between 1% and 8% of the face value of
the letter of credit.
The Commonwealth Bank sends a copy of the letter of credit to the Bank of America,
which notifies GULABCHAND & SONS that payment is available and they can ship the
merchandise RAICHAND & SONS has ordered with the full assurance of payment to
them.
On presentation of the stipulated documents in the letter of credit and compliance
with the terms and conditions of the letter of credit, the Commonwealth Bank transfers
the $500,000 to the Bank of America, which then credits the account of GULABCHAND
& SONS for that amount.
Note that banks deal only with documents required in the letter of credit and not the
underlying transaction.
Many exporters have mistakenly assumed that the payment is guaranteed after
receiving the letter of credit. The issuing bank is obligated to pay under the letter of credit
only when the stipulated documents are presented and the terms and conditions of the
letter of credit have been met.
1.4 A detail Flowchart depicting the concept of an LC
Issues Letter of
credit.
4
Opening Advising
Bank 8 Bank
7
8
LC solutions
presents to Clean
Negotiating bank Documents
3 Negotiati
LC
ng Bank 7
solutions
Exporter forwards
L/C terms agreed docs and LC to LC
upon solutions
1. Carefully review all requirements for the letter of credit before moving forward
with a deal.
2. Understand all the documents required. Can get all the documents required for the
letter of credit
3. Understand the time limits associated with the letter of credit, and whether they
are reasonable.
4. Know how quickly your service providers (shippers, etc) will produce documents
for you can get the documents to the bank on time.
5. Make all the documents mentioned in Letter of Credit match exactly with the
Letter of Credit application exactly
A seller only gets paid after performing specific actions that the buyer and seller
agree to. For example, the seller may have to deliver merchandise to a shipyard in
order to satisfy requirements for the letter of credit. Once the merchandise is
delivered, the seller receives documentation proving that he made delivery. The letter
of credit now must be paid even if something happens to the merchandise. If a crane
falls on the merchandise or the ship sinks, it's not the seller's problem.
To pay on a letter of credit, banks simply review documents proving that a seller
performed his required actions. They do not worry about the quality of goods or other
items that may be important to the buyer and seller.
2. Type of letter of Credit:
2.1 Revocable Credit
A revocable credit is a credit that may be withdrawn, amended or cancelled by the credit
opening (issuing) bank unilaterally at any moment and without notice or reference to the
beneficiary. Consequently it does not constitute a legally binding undertaking between
the banks and the beneficiary as the credit can be modified or cancelled at any time
without notice to the beneficiary. A problem can arise if the letter of credit is withdrawn
after the advising / negotiating bank has without notice of the withdrawal made payment.
To protect the negotiating bank against this possibility, the issuing bank must:
• Reimburse another bank with which a revocable credit has been made
available for sight payment, acceptance or negotiation, for any payment,
acceptance or negotiation made by such bank prior to receipt by it or notice of
amendment or cancellation, against documents which appear on their face to be
in accordance with the terms and conditions of the credit.
• Reimburse another bank with which a revocable credit has been made
available for deferred payment, if such branch or bank has, prior to receipt by it
of notice of amendment or cancellation, taken up documents which appear on
their face to be in accordance with the terms and conditions of the credit.
In short the withdrawal, amendment or modification occurs only when the other bank
receives the information from the opening bank. This is only fair
• To pay on the maturity date stipulated if the credit provides for deferred
payment.
• To accept drafts drawn by the beneficiary if the credit provides for acceptance
and payment at maturity if the credit stipulates that they are to be drawn on the
applicant for the credit or any other drawee stipulated in the credit.
• To pay without recourse to drawers and for bonafide holders of the draft
drawn by the beneficiary at sight (if a sight draft) or on the due date (if a usance
draft) if the credit provides for negotiation.
Irrevocable credits are more practical and popular as their terms cannot be changed
without the agreement of all parties.
2.3 Revolving LC:
It is established when there are regular shipments of the same commodity between
supplier and customer. It eliminates the need to issue an LC for each individual
transaction. A revolving letter of credit functions much like a credit card, where the
borrower can request funds up to the limit, pay some or all of the borrowings back, and
then borrow more funds from the line. A Letter of Credit revolving in time is of
two types:
Cumulative: the sum unutilised in a period is carried over to be utilized in the next
period,
The applicant and beneficiary may wish to have a letter of credit structured to satisfy a
long-term contract requiring the constant supply of merchandise over a specific time
period. This can be accomplished with a revolving letter of credit.
A revolving letter of credit contains instructions, which allow the beneficiary to draw for
specified amounts over specified periods. The revolving credit:
uses the same letter of credit to cover numerous scheduled shipments over a long period
without the necessity of issuing new credits or amending the existing credit,
The revolving Letter of Credit may be used in shipments of a wide range of goods to a
buyer within a period of time (several months to one year usually).
For example: a credit might permit shipments up to $10,000 monthly for a twelve-
month period. Depending on which classification is indicated, this would mean one of
the following:
Cumulative: If one monthly shipment is less than $10,000, the shortfall may be added
to a subsequent month. For example, if this month the beneficiary ships only $8,000,
next month the shipment could be $12, 000.
Non-Cumulative: Any portion not used in one month cannot be added to the next. So,
if the shipment this month is $8,000, the beneficiary still cannot ship more than
$10,000 next month.
2.4 Standby LC:
A standby letter of credit is a secondary payment mechanism. A bank will
issue a standby letter of credit on behalf of a customer to provide assurances of its
ability to pay a creditor. Normally, neither the seller nor the buyer expects that a
standby letter of credit will be drawn upon.
The standby letter of credit assures the beneficiary of payment. The beneficiary is able
to draw under a standby Letter of Credit by presenting a draft, and
other documentation indicating that the customer has not performed its obligation.
Standby letters of credit are issued to:
• Stand behind monetary obligations,
• To insure the refund of advance payment Funds given by the buyer of
goods to the seller prior to shipment, often just a percentage of the value of the
goods with the remainder paid after shipment,
• To support performance and bid obligations, and
• To insure the completion of a sales contract.
A standby letter of credit is often used to guarantee payment performance of a
customer. If payment is made in accordance with the suppliers' terms, the letter of
credit would not be drawn on. Under these provisions, the bank is given until the
close of the third banking day after receipt of the documents to honour the draft.
A confirmed letter of credit is one in which the advising bank, on the instructions of
the issuing bank, has added a confirmation that payment will be made as long as
compliant documents are presented. This commitment holds even if the issuing bank
or the buyer fails to make payment. The added security to the exporter of
confirmation needs to be considered in the context of the standing of the issuing bank
and the current political and economic state of the importer's country. A bank will
make an additional charge for confirming a letter of credit. In many cases, the
confirming bank is located in Beneficiary’s country.
Confirmation costs will vary according to the country involved, but for many
countries considered a high risk will be between 2%-8%. There also may be countries
issuing letters of credit, which banks do not wish to confirm - they may already have
enough exposure in that market or not wish to expose themselves to that particular
risk at all.
A confirmed credit, the advising bank adds its guarantee to pay the seller to that of
the buyer's issuing bank. Once the advising bank reviews and confirms that all
documentary requirements are met, it will pay the seller. The advising bank will then
look to the issuing bank for payment. Confirmed Irrevocable letters of credit are used
when trading in a high-risk area where war or social, political, or financial instability
are real threats. Also common when the seller is unfamiliar with the bank issuing the
letter of credit or when the seller needs to use the confirmed letter of credit to obtain
financing its bank to fill the order. A confirmed credit is more expensive because the
bank has added liability.
3. Assignment of proceeds:
• "Proceeds of a letter of credit" means the cash, check, accepted draft, or other item of
value paid or delivered upon honors or giving of value by the issuer or any nominated
person under the letter of credit. The term does not include a beneficiary's drawing
rights or documents presented by the beneficiary.
• A beneficiary may assign its right to part or all of the proceeds of a letter of credit.
The beneficiary may do so before presentation as a present assignment of its right to
receive proceeds contingent upon its compliance with the terms and conditions of the
letter of credit.
• Neither the rights recognized by this section between an assignee and an issuer,
transferee beneficiary, or nominated person nor the issuer's or nominated person's
payment of proceeds to an assignee or a third person affect the rights between the
assignee and any person other than the issuer, transferee beneficiary, or nominated
person.