Commercial Letter of Credit
Commercial Letter of Credit
A
commercial letter of credit is the most common type of credit in
usage. In fact, it is commonly known as a regular letter of credit.
Global trade is rising and
brings difficulties for all the parties involved. The significant challenges
include each country’s different laws, different customs rules, and different
languages. Also, a significant problem is not knowing a foreign buyer or a
seller personally. Therefore, it becomes difficult to judge credibility. It has
become essential to have a standard tool that gives security to both the buyer
and the seller. This is where the letter of credit comes into the picture.
Table of Contents
|
1.
Commercial Letter of Credit – Definition |
|
2.
Commercial Letter of Credit Process with Example |
|
a.
Step 1: Sales Agreement |
|
b.
Step 2: Opening Instructions |
|
c.
Step 3: Issuing Letter of Credit |
|
d.
Step 4: Seller Ships the Goods and Prepares Documents |
|
e.
Step 5: Document Submission and Verification |
|
f.
Step 6: Confirmation and Payment |
|
3.
Pros |
|
a.
Ease in International Trade |
|
b.
Transfer of Creditworthiness |
|
4.
Cons |
|
a.
Increase in the Administration Cost |
|
b.
Material Fraud |
A letter of credit is a payment
term used for international trade. By availing of a letter of credit, the buyer
knows that he will receive the goods he is paying for, and the seller is sure
that he will receive the payment against his supply.
There are
many types of letters of credit; in today’s post, we are going to discuss the
commercial letter of credit:
Commercial Letter of Credit – Definition
A commercial letter of credit is a legal document from a bank or a financial institution. It represents a promise to pay the holder if he fulfills his obligation. Sellers in international transactions often require a guarantee of payment. This guarantee comes from the bank in the form of a letter of credit. If the buyer fails to make payment against his purchases, the bank will cover the total or remaining amount of the purchase.
Commercial Letter of Credit Process with Example
Let us
understand the process flow of a letter of credit with an example.
There are
four parties involved in a commercial letter of credit as follows –
·
Buyer – Tom resides in the USA
·
Issuing Bank – Bank of America, the USA
· Correspondent Bank – Bank of India, India
·
Beneficiary/Seller – Ram residing in India
Step 1: Sales Agreement
On 1st January 2018, Mr. Tom from the USA agreed to buy goods worth USD 10,000.00 from Mr. Ram in India. During the negotiations, it was decided that payment would be made in a commercial letter of credit.
Step 2: Opening Instructions
Mr. Tom requests Bank of America to open a letter of credit of USD 10,000.00 in favor of Mr. Ram. The Bank of America checks Mr. Tom’s creditworthiness and completes the required formality to issue a letter of credit for this transaction.
Step 3: Issuing Letter of Credit
On 8th January 2018, The Bank of
America issued the requested letter of credit that expires 90 days from the
date of issue and forwarded it to the corresponding bank, i.e., Bank of India.
The corresponding bank is usually located in the country where the seller resides;
in our example, it is in India. Bank of India will authenticate the letter of
credit and send it to Mr. Ram.
It is necessary that Mr. Ram exports the goods and submits the required documents before the expiry of the letter of credit. If not, then bank of America has no obligation to pay if Mr. Tom doesn’t.
Step 4: Seller Ships the Goods and Prepares Documents
On 1st March 2018, Mr. Ram shipped
the goods to Mr. Tom and prepared the required shipping documents as per the
instructions of the letter of credit. The usual documents required are – a
commercial invoice, packing list, transport document (bill of lading or airway
bill), and insurance policy. Some banks require additional copies, but these
are necessary.
Step 5: Document Submission and Verification
Mr. Ram
submits the documents to the Bank of India. Bank of India checks all documents
to confirm whether they comply with the instructions of the letter of credit. After
that, the Bank of India sends the documents to Bank of America and asks for
payment.
Step 6: Confirmation and Payment
Bank of
America again checks the documents for compliance. If all the documents are in
place, it debits Mr. Tom’s account of USD 10,000.00 + letter of credit fees and
pays USD 10,000.00 to the Bank of India, which further deducts its own costs and
deposits the remaining amount in Mr. Ram’s account.
As the
banks are involved in the transaction, both parties are secure that the other
will fulfill its obligation; otherwise, the bank will intervene.
There are
many different types of letters of credit, but that is a story for another day.
Pros
Ease in International Trade
One of
the best usages of a commercial letter of credit is the ease of undertaking international
trade. It ensures the seller about the payment risk of a buyer sitting at some
corner of the world and thus develops trust and relationship. An importer
should be able to convince the issuing bank about his capability, which makes
the bank issue the credit to the seller. This is a conditional trust which has
to be earned by the buyer. From the seller's viewpoint, issuance of the
credit is an indication to undertake the shipment of the goods to the buyer.
Transfer of Creditworthiness
The
overall liquidity of the importer increases as the banker takes over the buyer's obligations. This can help the buyer enter into transactions more
than the expected limit due to its business size. It even allows the seller in
the worst case where the importer might turn bankrupt. The probability of
forged international transactions has gone down to an extent due to the rise in
the use of these customizable letters of credit. Suppose there is any dispute
in the execution of the transaction. In that case, the seller can
withdraw his consent on the marketing, which is otherwise not possible in a
usual course of business. The certainty of the amount, better planning of the
cash flows, and reduced risk of bad debts are a few of the benefits of the
evolvement of a commercial letter of credit in the usual course of business.
Cons
Increase in the Administration Cost
The cost
being paid to the banks for managing the letter is an additional cost for the
business. It is significant to a regular businessman with an
import-export company. Next is the changing regulation rules, and the
requirement to comply with the same has added to the daily routine jobs and has
made it difficult from a compliance perspective.
Material Fraud
Even though the issuance of the letter is based upon the shipping documents,
what is being ignored is the quality of goods which isn’t something the banker
is aware of. The buyer can get something different than the
promised goods in the letter. Other than this, the other risks involved are the
exposure to forex, the expiry of the letter before the execution of the sale of
goods, and the chances of defaulting/bankruptcy of the issuing bank being
ignored here.
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