Home Uncategorized EXAMPLES OF TRANFERABLES AND BACK TO BACKS

EXAMPLES OF TRANFERABLES AND BACK TO BACKS

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by Old Man on Wednesday, November 16, 2011 at 10:23am

QUESTION FROM AVRAHAM

Dear Mr. Old Man,
I am looking for an example to a TRANSFERABLE letter of credit , And / Or to an example of a BACK TO BACK letter of credit.

Do you know where can I find these examples to MASTER L/C and to SLAVE L/C ?????

BR
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ANSWER
.
Dear Avraham,
.
I have written some articles regarding transferable L/Cs, back to back L/Cs… However, most of them are in my mother tongue, i.e., Vietnamese. Therefore, I need time to translate them into English.
Transferable and transferred L/C are one and same L/C except for some changes as provided in sub-article 38(g) whereas back to back L/C transaction is involved two separate L/Cs which may be called “master L/C” and “baby L/C” or “slave L/C”.

For the time being, I’m rather busy, hence, I just provide you with a quick excerpt of related articles from my blog. Hoping it is helpful.
.
An example of a back to back LC transaction

A trader (middle businessman) may wish to pay a supplier by transferring a sum owed to him under an LC even though the LC is not transferable. This can be done under a special arrangement called back-to-back LC.

The trader’s bank issues a second LC in favour of the supplier based on the security of the previous LC issued in favour of the trader. The bank is prepared to do so if the additional risks can be covered. Therefore, it insists on being nominated as paying bank for the second credit.
The bank also needs to be sure that there will be a smooth exchange of invoice because the original LC in favour of the the trader can not be settled on the strength of the supplier’s invoice from the second LC.

Please note UCP has no articles dealing with this special arrangement.
To illustrate the process, you are invited to observe the following example:

A Vietnamese importer requests his bank in Vietnam, e.g., Vietcombank Danang to issue an LC in favour of a trader in Hong Kong to import the goods produced in China.

As the Hong Kong trader is just a middle man, he must import the goods from a Chinese supplier to re-sell to the Vietnamese importer. But the Hong Kong trader does not have enough funds to pay the Chinese supplier. Therefore, he uses the LC issued by Vietcombank Danang in favour of himself as a security for his bank in Hong Kong, e.g., Cathay Bank Ltd Hong Kong, to issue an LC in favour of the Chinese supplier. This new LC is called a back-to-back LC.

Upon receipt of this LC, the Chinese supplier effects the shipment and presents the documents to his bank in China for negotiation. After negotiating (purchasing) the documents, the Chinese bank will forward the documents to Cathay Bank Ltd Hong Kong for reimbursement.

Upon receipt of the documents, the import division of Cathay Bank Ltd Hong Kong will examine the documents and send the documents together with the advice of the draft value to be paid by the Hong Kong trader to the export division of Cathay Bank Ltd Hong Kong. The Hong Kong trader is requested to present his draft and invoice to Cathay bank Ltd. Hong Kong. If the documents examined are complying with the terms of the export LC issued by Vietcombank Danang, Cathay Bank Ltd Hong Kong uses this proceeds to pay to the import division of this bank for the amount equivalent to the total amount paid to the beneficiary in China under the back-to-back LC. Then Cathay Bank Ltd Hong Kong will credit the Hong Kong Trader’s account for the difference (profit earned from the transaction).

Eventually, the documents are to be forwarded to Vietcombank Danang for payment/reimbursement. When the documents are taken up by the Vietnamese importer, the transaction are regarded as completed.

The trader is often facing dificulty in handling documents, especially the bill of lading. B/Ls prepared by a third party normally contain discrepancies such as:

* not complying with LC terms
* wrong endorsement
* not fully presented
* C/P presented

To avoid said discrepancies, the trader must be sure that the terms and conditions of the back-to-back LC must be based on relevant terms and conditions of the LC issued the final importer’s bank.

In practice, a middle trader prefers transferable LCs to back-to-back LCs. He just applies for a back-to-back LC when the LC issued by the importer’s bank is not transferable.
…….

An example of a reciprocal L/C transaction

Regarding the terms “master L/C” and “slave L/C or “baby L/C”, these terms can be used in back to back L/C transactions or reciprocal L/C transactions. The following example can help clarify the process of a reciprocal L/C transaction:

Shingbang Co (Korea) and Garment Processing Co (Vietnam) have signed a garment processing contract under which Shingbang will open an L/C payable at sight in favour of Garment Processing Co to import finished products and Garment Processing Co will open a usance L/C payable at 90 days sight in favour of Shingbang Co to import materials. The L/C opened by Shingbang Co may be called as “master L/C” whereas the L/C opened by Garment Processing Co may be called as “slavery or baby L/C”.
Upon receipt of the L/C issued by Korean bank, e.g., Korean Exchange Bank, Garment Processing Co requests his bank, e.g., Vietcombank to issue an L/C payable at 90 days sight in reciprocal to the master L/C. The reciprocal L/C issued by Vietcombank may have a payment condition as follows: “This L/C is reciprocal to Master L/C no… dated … issued by Korea Exchange Bank. Upon receipt of the documents complying with the credit terms and conditions, we shall incur a deferred payment undertaking but the payment when due shall be effected only after our full receipt of the proceeds under Master L/C no…. dated ….

Reciprocal L/Cs were rather popular in some Asian countries in 1990s.
—————-

By the way, please follow the following links to find out more examples of back to backs and transferables:

http://lcviews.com/ravi_articles/GTR_Sept_Oct_04-LCs.pdf
http://www.lcviews.com/back_to_back_lc.htm
.
Hoping it’s helpful and informative.
.
Best regards,
Mr. Old Man

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5 Comments

  1. pumpkin1988

    November 17, 2011 at 8:11 am

    Dear Mr Old Man,I need your urgent advice in this case. That's LC cancelation.We, as the importer, issued the LC 30 days after sight in July. In October, the vendor failed to fullfill thier obligation( can't supply the goods in time, and not in the same description in the original contract) Therefore we asked to cancel our contract to look for another supplier. Vendor accepted, but told us that the 1st milestone, being paid upon receipt of Tax invoice & Performance Bond, has submitted through the bank for LC payment.On 28th Oct 2011, our bank, HSBC advised the 1st claim was clean and made payment acceptance on 03-Nov-2011. HSBC advised us in this case that we should ask the vendor to work with their bank, sending a swift message to cancel this claim, and withdraw the documents back. Yesterday, vendor sent an email said that their bank, not accepted 'cause they had received the payment acceptance from HSBC. The vendor promised to pay back us the payment amount afterwards.The question is : Is it true that the bank (vendor's bank) can't not withdraw their claim in this case ? and How can the vendor pay us the remaining amount? As this is a big contract to us: USD1,441,000.00 and we want to solve this case asap to make another purchase order.Thanks & regards,

    Reply

  2. mroldmanvcb

    November 17, 2011 at 11:11 pm

    Hi,I’m not sure I understand your issue. If the beneficiary (i.e., the vendor as called by yourself) wishes to cancel the claim and asks for the return of the documents, he may ask his bank to confirm cancellation of the claim and ask the issuing bank to return the documents and treat the issuing bank’s acceptance as null and void.I do not know the content of the performance bond and by whom it is issued (I guess it is issued by his bank). However, if the beneficiary fails to effect shipment, you can claim payment from the guarantor under the performance bond. Best regards,Mr. Old Man

    Reply

  3. pumpkin1988

    December 1, 2011 at 3:12 pm

    Dear Mr Old Man,Sorry for showing late gratitude to you. In this case our vendor has big problem with their finalcial status and tried to get the money from us at soonest although the contract was cancelled. That made the issue so confusing for us (and maybe for your understanding). Now, it has closed due to your advice, and also the support from HSBC,our issuing bank. Thanks again for your consideration in this case.Rgds,

    Reply

  4. anonymous

    May 23, 2013 at 5:05 pm

    Anonymous writes:mr old man,please can you recommend a very good book that covers all aspects of l/c.i.e the l/c process and all the details?

    Reply

  5. mroldmanvcb

    May 23, 2013 at 11:05 pm

    Sorry but to tell the truth, there must be very good books but I haven't ever come across one that covers all aspects of LC. I would read here and there on the internet.

    Reply

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