Chapter 11: Trade Finance Flashcards

1
Q

• What is the difference between letter of credit and documentary collection –

A

○ Both under banks, documentary collection- bank doesn’t monitor payment and shipment, but just watch the documents.

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2
Q

• What are they payment methods

A
Open Account 
Documentary Collections 
Documentary letters of credit
confirmed documentary letters of credit 
sight or term payments
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3
Q

• Steps to a letter of credit.

A

§ Agreement between buyer and seller to do business
§ Buyer goes to buyers bank and requests application for a letter of credit
§ Buyers bank calls sellers bank and tells them about the details of the deal and application checked out - so there is an issuance of the letter of credit
§ Sellers bank advices the seller
§ Seller ships the product.
§ Buyer presents documents to prove that they have received the product
§ Buyers bank forwards presented documents to the sellers bank.
Release of payment by sellers bank to seller

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4
Q

Four pillars of finance

A
  1. Payment Facilitation
  2. Financing
  3. Risk Mitigation
  4. Provision of Information
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5
Q

Four pillars of finance : 1. Payment Facilitation

A

across borders and jurisdictions, in timely manner (use of electronic remmitence)

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6
Q

Four pillars of finance : 2. Financing

A

to several parties in a deal, available at nearly every stage of a transaction, from pre-shipment to post-delivery
○ The availability of numerous mechanisms to provide financing to one or more parties in a trade transaction
○ Need for financing can appear at any point in the trade, so have sufficient funds.

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7
Q

Four pillars of finance :3. Risk Mitigation

A

covering everything from revolutions and military coups to economic crises, to commercial default or bankruptcy, civil unrest
○ Not only is this critical in terms of assuring successful conclusion of business, but it is also very important in reducing the overall risk profile of a transaction, and therefore, the cost of that transaction.
○ Example: letters of credit
○ Risk mitigation can be provide by financial insitutions working in partnership with government
○ Risk to be managed:
§ Commercial risk - risk associated with the trading partner (insolvency)
§ Bank risk- financial health of the trading parnter
§ Sovereign or country risk - economic or political risks
§ Currency or foreign exchange risk- risk associated with changes in relative values of currencies.

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8
Q

Four pillars of finance :4. Provision of Information

A
  • about the status of shipment, and the status of financial flows
    - Timely, accurate and detailed information about every aspect of the trade.
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9
Q

Payment methods : Open Account

A
  • Transfers of funds to the account of the exporter and may be effected prior to shipment or on delivery.
  • Used between very stable and secure markets (well established relationship and trust)
    • Payment in advance
    • Payment on delivery
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10
Q

Payment methods : Documentary Collections

A
  • Banks act as intermediaries between the importer and exporter, agreeing to facilitate payment to the exported only once a set of shipping documents have been prepared and presented to the intermediary bank.
  • Documentary collections afford some degree of incremental protection to both parties
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11
Q

Payment methods : Documentary letters of credit

A
  • Most secure trade finance- instrument available in terms of protecting the interest of both parties.
  • Banks act as intermediaries.
  • Difference is that banks are required to verify that the terms and conditions of payment specified in a documentary credit have been full complied with by the exporter. This involves
    • Detailed documents presented by the exporter
    • Requires a review of elements such as the shipment date, the deception of goods and the presentation of carious inspection certificates.
    • Documents of transport should be verified, including negotiable bills of lading
  • This method provides a high degree of comfort for both parties.
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12
Q

Payment methods : confirmed documentary letters of credit

A

• If exporter is not trusting of importers bank, they can ask for the letter of credit to be confirmed
This means another bank steps in, one that the exporter trusts, this bank adds its own separate and

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13
Q

Payment methods : sight or term payments

A
  • Payment undertaking under collections or documentary letters of credit may be at sight or could be term payments
    • Payment at sight refers to payment immediately upon recipt of documents that are presented as per the collection of the letter of credit
    • Term payments, are future-dated, as agreed upon between buyer and seller.
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14
Q

Other forms of finance and trade facilitation

A
  • medium term financing
  • long term financing
  • buyer credit
  • supplier credit
  • forfeiting
  • countertrade
  • leasing
  • project financing
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15
Q

Medium- and long-term financing

A

○ Medium term financing arrangements are structured for repayment periods of up to five years
○ Long term financing arrangements can range between 5-15

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16
Q

Buyer credits’

A

○ Used to fiance an export over a medium or long term. . Funds are lent directly to the foreign buyer. Best for larger transactions involving capital goods
○ Credit worthiness is based on ability to repay and buyers integrity.
○ May be supported by ECA or government.

17
Q

Supplier credits

A

A financial institution purchases from the exporter a foreign buyers debt (to the exporter) for products or services purchased.

18
Q

Forfaiting

A

A medium term form of seller credit provided by trade banks. A bank purchases medium term promissory notes due to the exporter from a foreign buyer. The value of the promissory note is discounted at a fixed rate so that the exporter receives cash, after deduction of the interest charge or discount. The exporter benefits by passing on the credit risk and currency exposure to the bank, turning a term credit sale into a cash transaction and receiving fixed rate financing.

19
Q

Countertrade

A

A sale to an importer is condition on a reciprocal purchase by the exporter. (exchange of products)

20
Q

Leasing

A

Private companies lease to exporters to give them a competitive edge in the foreign market.

  • the export firm receives cash for its transfer of title to the leasing company and the delivery of capital equipment to the buyer . The leasing company then collects regular payments from the leaseholder.
21
Q

Project financing

A

Secures repayment for a sale out of the cash flow that the project is expected to generate when it comes into production. The assets of the project serve as collateral, and the lenders also have recourse to the cash flow of created by the project.

22
Q

Risk Mitigation : Confirmed letters of credit

A

Risk Mitigation is a key value proposition of trade finance
○ Involves taking on the full risk of the transaction.
○ Banks will frequently seek to mitigate the risk of confirm risk letters of credit by seeking insurance coverage, with from the private-sector risk insurers or from Export Credit agencies.

23
Q

Risk Mitigation : Export credit and receivables insurance

A

Offer a comprehensive suite of trade-finance and risk-management products and services

24
Q

Risk Mitigation : Bonds, guarantees and standby credits

A

These instruments are intended to provide for a guarantee of performance, failing which a financial penalty is triggered.

  • Bid bonds
  • Performance Bonds
  • Guarantees and Standby letters of credit
25
Q

Bid Bonds

A

Commit partiers to submit a bid to a project or ender or forfeit a pre-defined penalty

26
Q

Performance Bonds

A

Requested to ensure that partiers contracted to execute a project will see it through to completion and will carry out their obligations as envisioned in the contract, failure to do so can result in a penalty.

27
Q

Guarantee’s and Standby letters of credit’

A

Not meant to be payment mechanisms, but rather a form of security, triggered only in the even of a failure to perform or a failure to pay.

28
Q

Trade finance evolves

A
  • Trade finance is fundamentally the same business, but technology has evolved to enable virtual/Internet-based solutions
  • The market is referring increasingly to a ‘Financial Supply Chain’, and seeking to optimize it through technology
  • Every major vendor of trade finance solutions is evolving its solutions and service offerings