The Treasurer’s Guide to Trade Finance

(Martin Jones) #1
A Reference Guide to Trade Finance Techniques

Case study


Large multinational outsourcing the preparation of


documents to its bank


As with many companies, this large Asian-based subsidiary of a European


electronics manufacturer faced staffing pressure. It found it did not have


the correct skill set among existing staff to prepare the full set of documents


needed to support letters of credit. With the company preparing about 2,000


sets of documents a year, the proportion of errors resulted in a large number of


discrepancies in the documents which the company presented to the bank. As a


result, the company saw a serious adverse impact on its days sales outstanding


(DSO) and decided to outsource this non-core activity to its bank.


The bank had specialist teams
responsible for originating and checking
all such documents, and today the bank
prepares the full set of documents for the
company. The solution was implemented
in a short time frame to the company’s
satisfaction, using dedicated resources at
the bank. Not only did the bank improve
efficiency by using its own expertise in
the preparation of documents, it was also
able to reduce the risk of discrepancies,
by simplifying the company’s own
internal processes.


As a consequence the company has


effectively shortened its collection
cycle, resulting in an improvement in
the company’s DSO of three to four
days. Moreover, when establishing the
outsourced arrangement, the bank’s trade
advisors also reviewed the company’s
processes, leading to further operational
savings and reduced staff costs.
Thus, this move had both cost and
revenue benefits. The company started by
outsourcing trade documents prepared by
at least one of its divisions to the bank. It
is now considering opportunities to further
expand this service.


  1. Seller’s bank checks received documents
    and sends them to buyer’s bank.
    The seller’s (advising) bank will check
    the received documents against the
    requirements of the letter of credit.
    If the advising bank approves the
    documents, it will forward them to the
    buyer’s (issuing) bank. Depending on the
    agreed payment terms (if payment is at
    the exporter’s bank), the advising bank
    may then also pay the seller.
    If the advising bank identifies
    differences between the presented
    and required documents, it may advise
    the seller to amend and represent the


documents. This course of action is only
appropriate if the seller can present new
documents within the timeframe shown on
the letter of credit. If this is not possible,
or if the differences are minor and there
is a good relationship between the buyer
and seller, the advising bank may ask the
issuing bank to authorise payment despite
the differences.
The alternative is for the advising
(seller’s) bank to send the documents to
the issuing (buyer’s) bank ‘on inspection’.
This protects the seller’s interests, because
the issuing bank will still hold the title to the
goods until the buyer authorises payment.
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