Medium- and long-term export finance – supplier credit. Documentary Letters of Credit and Documentary Collections are
Documentary Letters of Credit and Documentary Collections are
methods of payment in international trade used with Bills of Exchange
for short-term credit (up to 6 months). But export finance is needed to
provide money for longer periods of credit – for large-scale engineering
and building projects, for machinery and installations supplied over sev-
eral years. The aim is still the same – to provide money for the exporters
and to get it back later from the importers – only the amounts of money
are greater and the periods of credit longer: 6 months to 2 years (me-
dium-term) and up to 5 years or even longer (long-term).
From this it can be seen that the size of the risk is often too great for
one bank to take on. This is why all the various techniques of export
finance such as forfeiting export insurance, leasing and lease purchase
have been developed. Also, financial institutions besides individual
banks are involved. For instance export insurance is provided by the Ex-
port Credits Guarantee Department (ECGD) in the UK for long-term
contracts and by the Dutch company NCM for contracts up to 2 years.
Some projects are syndicated by a consortium of banks and leasing is
provided by subsidiary finance companies of banks. The ECGD is a gov-
ernment department set up in 1919 on a commercial basis, to protect
exporters from buyer default and political risk. It has a database of over
200.000 credit ratings on importers around the world. The insurance is
in the form of guarantees to banks.
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These guarantees may be given either to the supplier or the buyer. If
the suppliers (exporters) have a credit guarantee they receive payment
from their bank as soon as they have shipped the goods, or handed over
the factory in working order, according to agreement. There is no risk for
them as long as they carry out the contract according to the terms of the
agreement. Their bank has a guarantee from the ECGD or NCM and
will not therefore have recourse to them.
When the ECGD or NCM provides a guarantee of buyer credit, the
bank also receives the money to pay the exporters. In addition it has
promissory notes or acceptance bills as collateral security from the buy-
er. If these are not paid when they mature/ the insurers (i.e. the ECGD
or NCM) pay. The main advantage of this from the suppliers’ point of
view is that they are freed from all recourse problems, as long as they
carry out the contract.
Leasing and lease purchase are methods of finance operated by fi-
nance company subsidiaries of banks, which work rather like buying a
car or house. Leasing is a form of renting while lease purchasing is a form
of buying. They are both used to finance major capital assets which have
a long life, such as factories and other business premises.
As soon as the plant is set up and in working order the exporters get
paid and the importers get immediate use of it. Part of the total price
comes from the importers and the rest is provided by the finance com-
pany. The importers agree to pay the balance in installments. The bank
may be in the importers’ country. If it is in the exporters’ country, the
operation is known as cross border leasing.
As with export insurance, the big advantage of leasing to the exporters
of leasing is that there is no recourse to them in the case of buyer default.
1. Are Documentary Letters of Credit a method of payment or a
method of finance?
2. Are Bills of Exchange a method of payment or a method of finance?
3. Does The Export Credit Guarantee Department provide export
insurance or guarantees?
4. Large projects are often too big to be financed by one bank, aren’t
they?
5. Who can be given the guarantees the supplier or the buyer?
Date: 2015-12-13; view: 499; Нарушение авторских прав Понравилась страница? Лайкни для друзей: |
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