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Expanding international business offers fantastic business opportunities for all-including fraudsters. Many times the default/fraud succeeds because of the unawareness of parties involved in the trade transaction. This unawareness can be on account of inherent weakness in a document involved in the transaction or may be due to myths related to a specific payment system as proposed by the counter party . For example, many exporters consider a letter of credit as a police to the commercial transaction which is not true . It is therefore of ultimate importance for banks , traders and all other parties to be aware of associated risks, pitfalls and the red flags etc while handling the international trade transactions. FIEO in association with JIMS, Rohini is organizing a one day workshop to impart knowledge on all dimensions of a trade transaction so as to be able to take necessary preventive precautions. Extensive coverage will be given on technical aspects of trade transactions, alternative possibilities , applicable rules , inherent strength or weakness of a particular type of document etc. The various topics covered in the workshop will be highlighted through case studies. It also covers further the legal and practical aspects; in particular the means of asset recovery post-fraud will be dealt with. The workshop was led by Dr.(Prof.) Ashok Bhagat Ex. Head Sales – Trade&VP Societe Generale, ICC India nominee for ICC Banking Commission Paris –India Chapter & Ex-Officio Member ICC INDIA Executive Committee and currently Dean -IB , JIMS, Rohini. Delhi.
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www.jimsindia.org
24th April, 2014
By Dr. (Prof.) Ashok Bhagat Dean -International Business
Jagan Institute of Management Studies
#3, Institutional Area, Sector-5,
Rohini, New Delhi-11008
www.jimsindia.org
Functions of Transport Documents
FUNCTIONS:
a) Receipt of Goods
b) Contract of Carriage
c) Document of Title of Goods (Sales of Goods
Act)
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Transport Documents
1. Consignee
2. Payment Terms
3. Guarantee cover to the transaction
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Transport Documents
1. Bill of Lading
2. Airway Bill
3. Postal Parcel Receipt
4. Road,Rail, Inland Waterway trasport documents
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Consignee
1. Buyer
2. Buyer’s Bank
3. To the order of Shipper
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Types of Bills of Lading
1. Conferences Line Bills of Lading
2. Charter Party Bill of Lading
3. Seaway Bill
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CONFERENCE LINE VESSELS
“Vessel” is registered with an approved Classification Society (C.S.) as per
the Institute Classification Clause and class maintained equivalent to
Lloyds 100A1.
Vessels are only classed with C.S. in accordance with their rules and are
issued class certificates.
Classification Societies are approved by the Institute of Lloyd
Underwriters and incorporated in the Institute Classification Clause.
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CONFERENCE LINE VESSELS
DEALS WITH FITNESS OF THE VESSEL AND REQUIRES SURVEY OF
SHIPS CONDUCTED AT REGULAR INTERVALS.
IT ALSO CONFIRMS THAT HULL AND MACHINERY IS EQIVALENT TO
LLOYDS 100A1
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Various Payment Systems &Risks Attached
1. ADVANCE PAYMENT
2. OPEN ACCOUNT/DOC. COLLECTIONS
3. AVALISATION
4. LETTERS OF CREDIT
5. BANK PAYMENT OBLIGATION
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Risks Attached with LC transactions
1. Bank Risk
2. Country Risk
3. Documentary Risk
4. Transferred LCs
5. Stand by LCs
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Complying Presentation
CP means a presentation that is as per the
- Terms and conditions of the credit
- The applicable provisions of these
rules (UCP 600) and
- International banking and practices
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Is there an alternative to confirmation
1. Silent Confirmation
2. No bank is ready to add the
confirmation in your country.
3. Confirmation is added by another
bank overseas?
4. Partial confirmation
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FINANCING TO EXPORTER
1. Negotiation/Discounting
2. Payment
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BANK PAYMENT OBLIGATION
A BPO is an irrevocable undertaking given by one bank ( Obligor Bank)to the another (Recipient Bank ) that payment will be made on a SPECIFIED DATE after a SPECIFIED EVENT has taken place .
1. This “specified event “ is evidenced by a “match “ report that has been generated by Trade Service Utility (TSU) developed , hosted and maintained by SWIFT .
2. TSU is a matching engine that matches data extracted from trade documents.
3. SWIFT has developed new ISO 20022 messaging standards for matching the data.
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BANK PAYMENT OBLIGATION
1. The obligor bank is irrevocably bound to pay to the recipient bank according to the terms of the established TSU baseline if there are no mismatches or all involved parties accept the mismatches.
2. Documents will go directly to the buyer from seller
3. Only data will be matched
4. BPO will decide for payment of documents and not the documents will decide for payment
5. Good for countries like Japan where payment is against a Invoice and a copy of transport document
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Interactions between a Buyer, a Seller and their
respective Banks
Buyer’s Bank Seller’s Bank
Buyer Seller
Contract
Shipment & Documents
NB. These flows are OUTSIDE the scope of the URBPO.
Payment
After the Buyer and Seller have contracted to use BPO as the
method of payment, the relevant purchase order data is passed to
each bank
After shipment, the Seller will provide commercial and transport
data to the Sellers Bank
When the commercial and transport data has been matched to
the purchase order data, the BPO is due and payment will follow
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Interactions between Buyer’s Bank, Seller’s Bank and the
TMA: Establishing a BPO where Buyer’s Bank is only Obligor
Bank
Buyer’s Bank = Obligor Bank
Seller’s Bank = Recipient Bank
BPO
established
BPO
due
TMA
NB. These flows are
INSIDE the scope of
the URBPO.
The Buyers Bank uses the purchase
order data to submit a Baseline
The Sellers Bank uses the purchase
order data to re-submit the Baseline
The Buyers Bank receives a Baseline
Match Report to confirm that the two
Baselines match
The Data Set Match Report confirms
that the invoice & transport data match
the Baseline and the BPO is due
The Sellers Bank receives a Baseline
Match Report to confirm that the two
Baselines match The Sellers Bank submits the invoice &
transport data to the TMA
The Data Set Match Report confirms
that the invoice & transport data match
the Baseline and the BPO is due
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Guiding principles under LC Operations
1. What credit states is what goes.
2. Banks are dealing in “CONDITIONS” and not in “FACTS”.
3. Credit is to facilitate payment and not a “POLICE” to commercial transaction.
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3 principles of an LC
1.LCs are separate transactions from underlying commercial contracts
2.All parties deal in documents and not in goods
3.Doctrine of strict compliance
3 Basic Principles
3 Guiding Principles
1. Be careful while drafting underlying sales contract.
2. Analyze LC conditions carefully and seek amendment for what can not be done.
3. Prepare documents carefully and also instruct associates clearly .
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LC expired on 30th Sept (Sunday)
Banks were closed due to Puja
holidays from 1st Oct to 6th Oct. 7th
Oct (Sunday) and 8th Oct due to
strike banks could not open.
Docts submitted on 9th Oct.
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Expiry Dates
Article 14c – 21 days
Article 36 - Force majure
conditions
previous working day
Article 29 –
Next working day for other than
article 36 situations
Date of shipment never gets
extended
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If a LC mentions “third party
documents acceptable”
………it means that any
document issued by other
than beneficiary will be
acceptable under the LC.
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PARA 21
Third party documents
acceptable – All documents,
excluding drafts, but including
invoices may be issued by a party
other than the beneficiary.
Article-14K allows all documents
to show a shipper other than the
beneficiary.
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LC requires ‘Inspection
Certificate confirming goods
have been inspected at the port
of shipment'.
Your inspection agency fails to
arrive in time for inspection
and hence certificate could not
be issued .
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Article 3 - Interpretations
Issuer of doct- if mentioned as
“first class, qualified,
etc,……doct can be issued by any
body other than beneficiary.
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You have received export LC which is restricted for negotiation with X Bank . You present complying documents to X Bank who refuses to negotiate the documents without assigning any reason. You are out of funds.
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Once the applicant of LC takes delivery of goods( where the goods are consigned in the name of the applicant ), LC issuing bank must pay.
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Good docts and LC containing all conditions of the sale contract will deliver proper goods to applicant whereas a badly drafted LC / bad docts will produce bad goods.
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Documents submitted under
a letter of credit must
comply with all the
conditions of sales contract
as the LC calls for a
certificate that all terms and
conditions of the sales
contract no …has been
complied with.
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Article 4 - Credits v. Contracts
Credit is separate from sale
contract even if it has been
specifically referred in the LC
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Your discrepant documents
are acceptable to the
applicant . He is ready to
waive the discrepancies and
conveys his acceptance to
Issuing Bank but Issuing
bank still rejects and refuses
to honour?
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MUST BE AVOIDED
1. Accepting a LC which requires presentation of a document which is under control of buyer.
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Inoperative documentary credit
Includes conditions over which bene has no control
By issuing a pre advise only – issue of operative instructions under suspense
Examples of clauses
- payment will be made after goods have been cleared by customs
- goods to shipped by a ship which will be named later on by an amendment
- linked with issuance of performance gtee
- linked with issuance of license
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MUST BE AVOIDED
2. Accepting a LC which requires passing of title of goods directly in the name buyer.
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MUST BE AVOIDED
3. Accepting a LC which is not from a reputed bank even in a good country.
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SUMMARY- Aide Memoire
Exports /Local Sales
Ask amendment to delete non documentary condition/ ambiguous clauses
Avoid putting additional/unrelated details on documents
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SUMMARY- Aide Memoire
EXPORTS /Local Sales
NEVER LOOSE CONTROL OF GOODS
(A)DO NOT CONSIGN GOODS FVG BUYER
(B)DO NOT SEND TPT DOCTS DIRECTLY TO BYR
SAME DAY DESPATCH FROM YOUR BANKER
FOLLOW UP RECEIPT OF DOCTS BYLC IB
AVOID TAKING BENEFIT OF 21 DAYS FOR LODGING
Check the reimbursement instructions carefully
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THANKS……… ashok bhagat