The Treasurer’s Guide to Trade Finance

(Martin Jones) #1

Chapter 6 The use of documents in trade


bank) will issue a letter of credit in favour
of the seller. This is sent to the seller’s
bank (the advising bank).


  1. Seller’s bank advises seller of receipt of
    letter of credit documents from buyer’s
    bank.
    The seller’s bank receives the L/C from
    the buyer’s bank. The seller’s bank will
    then check the content of the L/C before
    passing it to the seller.
    Depending on the circumstances, the
    seller’s bank (or another bank) will confirm
    the L/C before passing it to the seller.

  2. Seller checks detail of received letter of
    credit.
    The seller should check the detail of the
    received L/C (see checklist, page 102).
    If there are discrepancies between the
    terms agreed in stage 1 and the detail of
    the L/C, the seller should ask the buyer
    to amend the L/C, otherwise the seller is
    running the risk of non-payment. Only the
    buyer has the authority to ask its bank to
    amend the L/C.

  3. Seller ships goods.
    Once the seller is happy with the terms
    and conditions of the L/C, it will ship
    the goods according to the terms of the
    contract, as listed on the L/C. This may be
    to a named warehouse or storage facility
    close to the buyer’s location.

  4. Seller prepares required documents.
    Once the goods have been sent, the
    seller must also prepare all the necessary
    documents for submission to its bank.
    These documents need to be presented in
    the form required by the L/C so that they
    match the terms and conditions. Under the
    terms of a documentary credit, the buyer’s
    bank’s responsibility is to ensure payment
    is only made when the seller provides
    documents which match those listed on
    the L/C.


Common errors include the following:
ƒ An incorrect number of, or wrongly
titled, documents presented.
No additional documents should be
presented, and the seller should take
care to provide the agreed number of
originals and copies of the required
documents.
ƒ Inconsistent details across the
different documents required.
The goods must be correctly and fully
described on the invoice to match
the description given on L/C. The
transport document must accurately
describe the method of transport used,
including details of all parties to the
shipment. The insurance document
must show the appropriate cover
(usually starting on or before the date
of shipment). Any bill of exchange
should be drawn in line with the terms
and conditions of the L/C, for the
correct amount and with appropriate
endorsements. All documents should
be dated.
ƒ Unauthorised changes made to
documents.
If any changes have been made to
any documents, they must be properly
authenticated.


  1. Seller sends prepared documents to its
    bank.
    Once prepared, the documents must be
    forwarded to the seller’s bank. The seller
    must ensure the documents are received
    by the bank by the expiry date on the letter
    of credit. This must also be within any
    limits established either by the transport
    documents (usually 21 days, unless
    otherwise stated) or by any import licence
    requirements.
    The seller should also confirm its
    settlement instructions for this transaction.

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