Ulima
Ulima
• Name
• Profession
• Work
• Studies
• Professional Experience
• Experience Teaching
2
A few rules
On a virtual Class: “Camera on” is mandatory.
Active participation counts.
When homerwork is assigned: Groups of 4 Max.
Class in English and not an English class
Contact:
Ricardo Ortega
[email protected]
[email protected]
NO CELLULAR
Plagiarism according to:
Reglamento general de estudios
Universidad de Lima
Todas las evaluaciones de este curso serán pasador por 3 diferentes detectores de plagio, en
caso que este sea mayor al 10% tendrán automáticamente “cero” en toda la Tarea Académica y
serán enviados al tribunal de disciplina por lo que podrían ser separados (expulsados)
A recommendation to be taken into account
5
A recommendation to be taken into account
"If you catch a toad, you put it in a pot of water and you
take that pot to the fire, you will observe something
interesting: the toad adapts to water temperature,
remains within, and continues to adapt to the increase
in temperature.
But when the water reaches the boiling point, the toad
that would like to jump out of the pot, cannot because
he is too weak and tired due to the efforts he has made
to adapt to the temperature.
Some would say that what killed the toad was the water
boiling... Actually, what killed the toad was his inability
to decide WHEN to jump.
So, stop "adapting" to situations, misguided
relationships, abusive relationships, parasitic friends,
and many other things that "turn you on".
If you continue adapting, you run the risk of "dying"
inside.
Jump as soon as you can!
Author: Peter Senge
6
International Trade Finance Evaluation
EC
1 Quiz 10% Week 3
Total EC 100%
Structure and Objectives for the Course
8
Contents
General
Frame
Other
Instruments
Guarantees
9
Contents
Int’l Trade Fin I Int’l Trade Fin II
General
Frame
Revision
ST
Means of Trade Financing
Payment Finance MT
Other
Intro Revision
Instruments
Intro
Guarantees Revision
10
Peruvian Financial System
Ministry of Economy
& Finance - MEF
Regulator Regulator
Superintendence of Regulator Superintendence of
Central Bank - BCRP Banking & Insurance the Stock Market
SBS (CONASEV) - SMV
Financial Specialized
Banks
Institutions companies
Banco de Investment
CMACs
La Nación Banks
Insurance
COFIDE CRACs
Companies
COMPLEMENT
• Banks (17 + 3, BN, AGROBANCO y COFIDE)
SERVICES
• Finance Institutions (10) • Funds Transfer Institutions (5)
• Savings Banks - (Cajas Rurales de Ahorro y Crédito) (5) • General Deposit Warehouses (2)
• Savings Banks - Government owned (Cajas Municipales) • Armored Transportation Services(2)
FINANCIAL
SYSTEM
UNIONS
AFPs &
• Leasing Institutions (0) • Pension Funds Administrators (4)
• Mortgage management companies (1) • Cooperatives National Federation (2)
• Investment Banks (1) • Savings & Loans Cooperatives (Unions) (257)
• Government Mortgage Fund (Fondo MiVivienda) (1)
• Insurance companies (16)
INSURANCE
SERVICES
SYSTEM
• AFOCAT (Private funds for auto insurance programs as OTHER • Cajas y Derramas (Pension Funds from Institutions
protection against car accidents) (Asoc. de Fondos such as the Army or Police, Teachers)(3)
regionales /provinciales contra accidentes de tránsito): • Factoring companies (119)
• Authoriz. to issue CAT (39) • Foreign Bank Representative Offices (18)
• Not authoriz to issue CAT (19)
Source: SBS 14
Peruvian Financial System
REGULATORS
2. Superintendence of Banking, Insurance & AFPs (SBS)
Financial Services Providers (Assets as of March 2024)
11.01%
15
Peruvian Financial System
REGULATORS
2. Superintendence of Banking,
Insurance & AFPs (SBS)
Empresas de
de la Nación
Financieras
Municipales
Agrobanco
Empresas
Créditos
Rurales
Múltiple
Banco
Banca
Cajas
Cajas
Total
Tipo de Crédito
Fuente:
SBS
Peruvian Financial System
REGULATORS
2. Superintendence of Banking, Insurance & AFPs (SBS)
18
Peruvian Financial System
REGULATORS
2. Superintendence of Banking, Insurance & AFPs (SBS)
Source: SBS 19
Peruvian Financial System
REGULATORS
3. SUPERINTENDENCE OF THE STOCK MARKET (FORMERLY CONASEV).
OTHER INSTITUTIONS
4. BANCO DE LA NACIÓN
• Financial Agent for the government
• Banker for the public sector.
• Correspondent for the Banking System Important
5. BANCA COMERCIAL / BANCA MULTIPLE / BANCA UNIVERSAL concept
6. FOREIGN BANK BRANCHES / REP OFFICES
7. FINANCE INSTITUTIONS :
CREDISCOTIA CONFIANZA COMPARTAMOS CREDINKA
EFECTIVA PROEMPRESA MITSUI AUTO FINANCE OH! QAPAQ
8. CAJAS MUNICIPALES DE AHORRO Y CRÉDITO: A few examples:
1. Caja Municipal de Ahorro y Crédito de Cusco
2. Caja Municipal de Ahorro y Crédito de Piura
3. Caja Municipal de Ahorro y Crédito de Maynas
9. EMPRESAS DE CREDITO :
ALTERNATIVA VOLVO FINANCIAL SERVICES VIVELA
INVERSIONES LA CRUZ SANTANDER CONSUMER TOTAL SERVICIOS FINANCIEROS
10. CAJAS RURALES : A few examples:
1. Caja Rural de Ahorro y Crédito Incasur
2. Caja Rural de Ahorro y Crédito Los Andres
3. Caja Rural de Ahorro y Crédito Prymera
20
Peruvian Financial System
11. SPECIALIZED COMPANIES
a. LEASING COMPANIES
• None in existence
• All those that existed in the past have been incorporated into the
banking system to minimize costs and maximize profits
b. EMPRESAS AFIANZADORA Y DE GARANTIAS
• Insurance Companies: they issue garantees called “Pólizas de Caución.
• FOGAPI – Fondos de Garantía para la Pequeña Industria: Authorised
by SBS to issue guarantees called “Cartas Fianzas”.
c. TRUST FUNDS ADMINISTRATORS
• Most of the existing companies, owned by banks, have become
incorporated as Units within the banks Except for:
• La Fiduciaria (owned by a few banks).
• TMF Fiduperu
• CORFID
d. FACTORING COMPANIES
• 119 companies that mostly do domestic factoring.
• Examples:
• Arowana
• IMONEY PERU
• Scania Services 21
Peruvian Financial System
UNAUTORIZED INSTITUTIONS • Fondo Nacional de Crédito
Peruano
• IMarketslive • Corpoandes Perú S.A.
• M21 Element • Oferta de gran rentabilidad por • Crediaval Perú • Oferta de préstamos
• 22-08-2019
• Financika la entrega de dinero • Financiera Unión fraudulentos a través de • 28.02.2018
• Poloinvest • Concredito Internet
• Inkacréditos • Créditos YaPerú
• Créditos Perú • Corporación Crediticia
• Financréditos Perú Peruana
• Oferta de préstamos
• Corporación Comercio • 22-08-2019 • Oferta de gran rentabilidad
fraudulentos a través de Internet • Financika • 28.02.2018
• Financiera Coopemec o Copemeec por la entrega de dinero
• Préstamos Perú • Créditos Andina
• Préstamos Personales • Crediconfianza SA
• Opera sin estar inscrita en el • Oferta de préstamos
• Uniperu SA
• Coopyme Finangroup Lima LTDA Registro de Cooperativas de • 10-06-2019 fraudulentos a través de • 08.11.2017
• Corporación Inka SAS
Ahorro y Crédito Internet
• Enticréditos
• Oferta de gran rentabilidad por • Credibank SA
• IMarketslive • 12-03-2019
la entrega de dinero • Bitshare
• Coopcreasocial • Bit Global Bank / Bit Global
• Mi Financiera Peruana Cash
• Oferta de préstamos • Oferta de gran rentabilidad
• Sociedad Crediticia del Perú • One Coin • 11.09.2017
fraudulentos a través de Internet por la entrega de dinero
• Unión Latina • Coin Space
• Créditos y Préstamos • 05-11-2018 • MMM Global / MMM Perú
• Coopebank Perú • Seven Opportunity
• Oferta de gran rentabilidad por
• Kuvera • 11.09.2017
la entrega de dinero
• Airbit Club • Pay Diamond • Esquema piramidal • 11.05.2017
• Agencia Bancaria • 15.08.2016
• Corpcreditos • Oferta de préstamos
• Financiera del Perú
• Créditos en Perú • Oferta de préstamos fraudulentos a través de • 16.03.2017
• 03-07-2018 • Macrofinanciera SAS
• Fincomer fraudulentos a través de Internet Internet.
• Financredito Perú • Global Intergold • 15.08.2016
• Financial Bank • Esquema piramidal.
• Emgoldex • 18.02.2015
• Financiera Lima • Intermacional de
• Credilatino • Oferta de gran rentabilidad • 15.08.2016
Franquicias Elite
• Credifinanciera S.A. • Oferta de préstamos
• 02-04-2018 • Telar de Mujeres / Telar de
• Compañía Financiera del Perú fraudulentos a través de Internet
los Sueños / Flor de la • Esquema piramidal • 07.07.2016
• Financiera Internacional del Perú y/o
Internacional del Perú
Abundancia 22
Peruvian Financial System
Most important events in the history of Peruvian Banking:
Structural Reforms adopted during the period 1990 – 1997 (mainly banking related):
• Liberalization of Interest Rates & establishment of the minimum Legal Reserve for
banks.
• Opening to Foreign Investments.
• Liquidation of development banks and Privatization of state banks and BVL.
• New Banking Act which introduced the concept of multiple banks and facilitated the
entry of new domestic and foreign banks.
• New Organic Law for the Central Reserve Bank that conferred autonomy and set as
objective to defend price stability.
• Elimination of the single market exchange rate / MUC.
• BCRP is prohibited to grant financing to the public sector.
• Introduction of institutional investors like pension fund managers.
• Development of Central Risk Institutions.
• The Deposit Insurance Fund (Fondo de Seguro de Depósitos - FSD) was created.
• Significantly limited the discretion of SBS, strengthening the framework of preventive
regulation.
• Import liberalization. Elimination of virtually all non-tariff barriers and modification of the
tariff structure.
23
Peruvian Financial System
Deposit insurance
(Fondo de Seguro de Depósitos)
24
Peruvian Financial System
Deposit insurance
(Fondo de Seguro de Depósitos)
III 9,626.00 2000 Marzo-Mayo 65,718.00 2019 Dic. 2018 - Febrero 2019 100,864.00
IV 10,151.00 Junio-Agosto 66,359.00 Marzo - Mayo 2019 99,949.00
1995 I 10,225.00 Setiembre-Noviembre 66,872.00 Junio a Agosto 2019 100,432.00
Diciembre-Febrero '01 67,874.00
II 10,598.00 Setiembre – Noviembre 2019 100,698.00
2001 Marzo-Mayo 68,178.00
III 10,815.00 Junio-Agosto 68,174.00 2020 Dic. 2019 - Febrero 2020 100,123.00
Setiembre-Noviembre 67,422.00 Mar – May 2020 100,123.00
IV 10,948.00
2023 Marzo - Mayo 2023 125,714.00
Diciembre-Febrero '02 66,782.00
2024 Marzo – Mayo 2024 122,420.00
25
Peruvian Financial System barriers
Importance of a National Strategy of Financial Inclusion and the identification of the 4 most
important Access barriers and to find solutions for them:
1. Physical Infrastructure Last estimate: approx. $117,000MM (plus Long-Term gap that amounts to
S/ 363,452 million (2019-2038)). According to the Finance Minister.
2. Documentation (consumers lack of it stops the demand)
3. Costs (Very high Operating costs in rural areas)
4. Alternative channels development (we still need to spread knowledge of how to take advantage
of mobile phones and other digital solutions)
Source: REPORTE DE INDICADORES DE INCLUSIÓN FINANCIERA DE LOS SISTEMAS FINANCIERO, DE SEGUROS Y DE PENSIONES
SBS, BCRP e INEI Last Available: December 2022 27
Peruvian Financial System
Evolución de los Indicadores de Intermediación e Inclusión Financiera del Sistema Financiero 1/
Source: REPORTE DE INDICADORES DE INCLUSIÓN FINANCIERA DE LOS SISTEMAS FINANCIERO, DE SEGUROS Y DE PENSIONES
SBS, BCRP e INEI Last Available: December 2022 28
Banking
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3diU6_DuiU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXzAAcbMydY
29
Banking: Understanding the Basics
What is a Bank?
A bank is defined by Merriam-Webster’s dictionary as ‘‘an
establishment for the custody, loan, exchange, or issue of
money, for the extension of credit, and for facilitating the
transmission of funds.’’
‘‘Banking’’ can be defined as ‘‘the business of banking,’’ a business that
continually evolves to meet the latest financial needs and economic
conditions.
https://youtu.be/fTTGALaRZoc
31
Banking Operations in relation to the Balance Sheet
Bank
Balance Sheet
* Local Guarantees
Assets Liabilities * Avals
* Collections Means of payment
Out of the Balance * Letters of Credit in Foreign Trade
33
Banking & Financial Intermediation
Individuals,
Lending Deposits
Credit Banks & Institutions &
Solicitors Financial Companies
Institutions with Cash in
Lending Rate Deposit Rate
Excess
Superavitary Agents
Deficitary Agents
(Borrowers)
Financial (Savers)
https://youtu.be/iPkJH6BT7dM
35
Companies Objective
OBJECTIVE
Sales =
$1M
Sales =
$100M
¡GROWTH!!!!!
36
Sources for Financing: intermediation
37
Banking & Financial Intermediation
38
Banking & Financial Intermediation -
Asset transformation
• Asset transformation is the easiest way to explain intermediation as satisfies both
borrowers’ needs for long-term capital and the desires lenders for high liquidity in their
assets.
• Financial intermediaries undertake four main transformations:
1. Maturity transformation: the liabilities of financial intermediaries generally mature more quickly
than their assets. The traditional role of banks is to make long-term loans and fund them by
issuing short term deposits, a process commonly referred to as ‘borrowing short and lending
long’. Also ‘capturing long term deposits to lend short term’
2. Size transformation: the amounts lenders make available are on average smaller than the
amounts required by borrowers. Financial intermediaries collect the small amounts made
available by lenders and parcel them into the larger amounts required by borrowers.
3. Liquidity transformation: Deposits are contracts that offer high liquidity and low risk while
Loans are illiquid and a higher risk. Banks usually hold liabilities and assets of different liquidity
features in their balance sheet through diversification of their portfolios to avoid default
probability.
4. Risk transformation: intermediaries transform risks to reconcile the need of Savers to regard
his deposits as absolutely safe with the ability to transform risky loans into virtually riskless
deposits (liabilities).
39
Objective of the Financial intermediation
○ Term conversion:
○ Amount conversion:
○ Risk Mitigation:
40
Term Conversion
41
Amount Conversion
TERM DEPOSIT
USD 5,000.00
MORTGAGE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEPOSIT USD 70,000.00
USD 2,000.00 BANK
LOAN 1
LOAN 2
DEPOSIT LOAN 3
LOAN 4
BANK
LOAN 5
44
Banking & The Creation of Money
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPnMWModBWo
45
Banking & The Creation of Money
(7)
(2) $800 can
$640 be loaned
deposit Initial $1,000 has
out
generated $1,440
Home “new” money in the
Mr. Plumber
Furniture Co system
46
Banking Risks
Solvency
Transferability Liquidity
Inflation Systemic
Devaluation
47
Cost of Lending: how is it calculated?
Return on Invested
Bank’s Profit Capital
Operative & Get reduced by volume
Administrative
& Efficiency
Costs
Determined by
Clearing
Regulators
Deposit rate
Bank’s Funding (Tasa Pasiva)
48
Maximum Cost of Lending?
BANK
50
Bank Structure
BANK
RETAIL BANKING
• Small Business Banking & Individuals
• Private & VIP Banking
• Credits through Private Branding &
Retail Outlets
• Marketing
• Market Research
51
Bank Structure
BANK
WHOLESALE BANKING
• Corporate & Commercial Banking
• Institutional Banking
• Trade Finance & Correspondent
Banking
• Corporate Finance
52
Bank Structure
BANK
CAPITAL MARKETS
• Stockbrokers, Mutual Funds & Trust
Funds Administration
• Treasury (Money Desk & Exchange
Desk
• Custody
• Market & Portfolio Risk
53
Bank Structure
BANK
BANKING SERVICES
• Channels Administration: Branches
network, ATM’s, Internet Banking,
movile Banking, etc.
• Central Processes Administration;
clearing, Bills for Collection, Cash, etc.
54
Banking & Financial Intermediation:
Transactional Model
Government Exports
Distributors
Local Sales
Employees
Imports
55
Banking System: Main Trends
56
NOMBRE DE LA DEPENDENCIA O CARRERA
HASTA DOS LÍNEAS
2
Documentary Collections
Remittance of
Export
documents to a
Collection
foreign country
Documentary
Collections
Reception of
Import
documents from a
Collection
foreign country
3
Documentary Collections
EXPORTER
(Drawer)
IMPORTER
COLLECTING BANK
(Drawee)
REMITTING BANK
Presenting Bank ?
4
Documentary Collections
Subject to ICC’s URC 522
Banks DO NOT COMMIT FOR PAYMENT nor review
documents.
Parties:
Drawer
Drawee
Remitting Bank
Collecting Bank
Will the documents be consigned to the bank? AWB & B/L.
6
Documentary Collections
7
Module: Collections
8
Documentary Collections
1. Merchandise
Exporter Importer
Drawer Drawee
4. Notice of Arrival
5. Acceptance
of Documents
of documents
3. Documents
Presenting bank! 10
Module: Collections
Parties
The bank that presents the
documents to the buyer and
collects payment will be
referred as Presenting bank.
The Remitting bank will not always send the collection directly to the Presenting
bank.
The collection may be sent through another bank in the buyer's country -
perhaps a correspondent of the Remitting bank.
12
Documentary Collections
For the Exporter: less complicated than the L/C & safer
than selling in Open Account.
Parties
Acme Products have sent documents plus a Bill of Exchange to their customer, Zenith for
collection.
The documents plus collection order were given to Acme's bank, North Bank.
North Bank sent it all to their correspondent, Global Bank. Global Bank passed the
collection on to East Bank, who have Zenith as their customer.
East Bank contacted Zenith, handed over the documents after the acceptance; and
Received payment after 30 days
14
Module: Collections
Parties
ONE
There is only one Presenting bank: East Bank.
Two
Both Global Bank and East Bank are Collecting banks
15
Module: Collections
Parties
ACME. D.
All the banks in a collection act for the exporter or principal. A collection is at the risk of the exporter. No bank gives any
This is the case even for East Bank, whose customer is the payment undertaking.
buyer. So, there is no bank exposure (unless a bank has lent money
to the Exporter in advance of the proceeds of the collection).
16
Documentary Collections
BY TYPE OF
COMMERCIAL FINANCIAL DOCUMENT
BY
IMPORT EXPORT DOCUMENTS
ORIGIN
MODALITIES
AVALIZED
TO BE SEEN IN ITF2
17
Avalized Collections: scenarios
I’m an exporter. The buyer has accepted to receive the documents for
collection through their bank, but requests to pay at term, 60 days from
the B/L. I am concerned about not being protected since according to
the rules for collections the bank is not obliged to effect payment. They
are only in charge of trying to collect at maturity.
Please note that today, as per your directions, we have placed our aval on the
following Promissory Note / Bill of Exchange / Draft:
We have also endorsed the Promissory Note / Bill of Exchange / Draft as follows:
"Endorsed to the Order of The Bank ZZZZZZZZZ"
At Maturity (DATE) we promise to pay you Principal + Interest (at SOFR + x.xx% p.a.).
The instrument will remain in our Safekeeping until Maturity when we’ll pay you.
19
Bill of Exchange
Acceptance
Aval
20
Avalized Collection: process
7. PAYMENT
4. NOTIFICATION
9. PAYMENT
3. DOCUMENTS
Exporter
Collection Commission
Docuuments
Base: Flat
0.20%
At Sight Acceptance /
Collection Commission Deferred Payment
< 100M - 0.50% Min US$ 80.
USD82.00
> 100M - 0.50% Min US$150.
Base: Flat
AVAL: 3% p.a. (if avalised)
* Other commissions may apply.
Importer
22
Documentary Collections - Imports
23
Documentary Collections - Exports
24
Documentary Collections
Cases….
25
NOMBRE DE LA DEPENDENCIA O CARRERA
HASTA DOS LÍNEAS
2
To bear in mind…..
¡NO!
Nevertheless, we can
mitigate risks through:
Same currency is applicable for the Transaction most likely will require Foreign
transaction Exchange for one of the parties
Terms and conditions are usual and standard Terms and conditions need to be agreed
4
The different interest of the parties…
SELLER BUYER
¿¿TRUST??
- SELLING - RECEIVE GOODS
- COLLECT FASTER - PAY LATER 5
PURCHASE AND SALE AGREEMENT
1 Goods Description
2 Delivery Terms
Payment Terms
3 (Sales Conditions &
Means of Payment)
Moment
4 Applicable Law & venue & Mean of
Payment
6
A-7 PAYMENT CONDITIONS (Art. 5)
Payment on Open Account (art. 5.1) To be
Time for payments (if different from art. 5.1 _____ days from data of invoice. Other _____
Open Account backed by Demand Guarantee or Standby Letter of Credit (art. 5.6)
covered
Payment in advance (art. 5.2)
on ITF2
Date (if different from art. 5.2): ______ Watch out if
Total price
_____ % of the price, remaining amount ______ % to be paid at ________ you are the
Payment in advance backed by Advance Payment Bond buyer
Documentary Collection (art. 5.4)
D/P Document against Payment
D/A Document against Acceptance
Irrevocable Documentary Credit (art. 5.3)
Confirmed
Unconfirmed
Place of Issue (if applicable) ______ Place of Confirmation (if applicable) ______
Credit available: Partial Shipments: Transhipment:
At sight __ Allowed __ Allowed
By deferred payment at ___ days __ Not Allowed __ Not Allowed
By acceptance of drafts at ___ days
By negotiation
Date on which the documentary credit must be notified to seller (if different from art. 5.3
______ days before date of shipment __ other: _________
Irrevocable Bank Payment Obligation (art 5.5)
Settlement by Payment
Settlement by Deferred Payment Undertaking and payment at maturity. Deferred payment term
______ days after sight or after date of ______
Date on which the Bank Payment Obligation must be notified to seller (if different from art. 5.3)
______ days before date of shipment __ other: __________
Other: ________
(e.g. cheque, bank draft, electronic funds transfer to designated bank account of seller)
Seller’s Bank Details IBAN / bank account number ______ BIC/Swift code 7
Identifying the methods of Payment that can be used
Characteristics
TRADITIONAL BANK INSTRUMENTS Documentary or not documentary
• Letters of Credit (L/C) Internationally accepted
• Documentary Collections (D/P o D/A). International Rules (ICC)
• Open Account through Int’l Transfer (T/T) Costs & procedures well defined
• Draft / Bank Check (Issued by a Bank) Apply to any type of good / service
• Personal Check NOT ADVISABLE
(especially if you are the seller)
ELECTRONIC
• Credit Cards
• Paypal Characteristics
• Escrow, • Newly used
• Digital Wallets (apple pay, google pay, etc.) • Limits on amounts
• Mercado Pago • Banking and not banking
• Ali Pay (Ali Express) • Offer other services like Currency Exchange
• IberPay
• etc.
8
Methods of Payment identified by Peruvian Customs Authorities
• Regarding the obligation to pay, articles 54 and 59 of the Vienna Convention state that the buyer must pay
the price in accordance with the requirements set by the contract, the laws or the regulations, on the date set
or on which he can determined in accordance with the contract and the Convention.
• In turn, subparagraphs a) and c) of numeral 4.1 of literal C of Instructions DESPA-IT.00.04 specify that when
credit payment (deferred payment) is declared, the means of payment that will be used is recorded……..
(those mentioned above)
TUO = Texto Único Ordenado 9
Let’s take a look at the following…
10
Another example…..
11
¿What are they talking about?
12
¿What are they talking about?
13
14
15
$178/pc
Min Order 100 pcs
16
Delivery: 25 days
17
Identificar el medio de pago
18
Moment for payment…
¿Cash?
Advance Credit
Sight Term
Shipment
DOCUMENTS DOCUMENTS
AGAINST AGAINST
PAYMENT ACCEPTANCE
DEFERRED PAYMENT
19
MEANS OF PAYMENT: 4 OR JUST 3?
Advance Payment
IT IS NOT A MEAN OF PAYMENT
(no documents have been generated and
therefore there is no export YET!!!!!
20
Payment in Advance – NOT A MEAN OF PAYMENT!!!!!!!!
(or Advance Payment)
21
Payment in Advance – NOT A MEAN OF PAYMENT!!!!!!!!
(done through International Transfers)
5. Merchandise &
Beneficiary documents
Applicant
(exporter) (Importer)
1. Payment Instructions
4. Credit Benef.
2. Debit Applicant’s
Account
Account
Correspondent Banks
Receiving Issuing
Bank 3. Payment Order Bank
Message (MT103) 22
How to select the Method for Payment
+ TRUST / CONFIDENCE -
+
LETTERS OF
CREDIT
Collection
DOCUMENTARY
COLLECTIONS
Safe
OPEN ACCOUNT
- (Int’l Transfers)
- Transaction Costs +
23
Open Account through International Transfers
24
Open Account through International Transfers
It is required to indicate:
25
Open Account through International Transfers
1. Merchandise &
Beneficiary documents
Applicant
(exporter) (Importer)
2. Payment Instructions
5. Credit Benef.
3. Debit Applicant’s
Account
Account
Correspondent Banks
Receiving Issuing
Bank 4. Payment Order Bank
Message (MT103) 27
International Transfers: The MT 103 Format
Biodata GMBH. order Union Bank of Switzerland, Zurich, to pay 1,958,47 euros to
ABN Amro Bank, Amsterdam, for credit to the account of H.F. Janssen.
Applicant
Biodata GmbH
Zurich
50a
Explanation Format
Sender UBSWCHZH80A
Type of message 103
Receiver ABNANL2A
Message Text
Issuer UBS, Issuing Bank Reference :20:494931/DEV
Zurich Code for Bank operation :23B:CRED
Value Date/ currency / amount :32A:020528EUR1958,47
MT
Applicant :50K: BIODATA GMBH
ZURICH
MT 103
Beneficiary :59:/502664959
H.F. JANSSEN
LEDEBOERSTRAAT27
Beneficiary’s
AMSTERDAM
Bank ABN Amro Bank Expenses :71A:SHA
Amsterdam
End of Text/ Message Trailer
Beneficiary
H. F.
59a Janssen
Amsterdam
28
International Transfers: The MT 103 Format
(and the Reimbursement Process)
MT103 = Single Customer Credit Transfer
MT202 = interbank order from a Correspondent bank
MT910 = Confirmation of Credit or
MT950 = Statement Message
29
International Transfers: Used for Remittances
(Not only for Goods or Services Trade)
bit.ly/3GUtLwU
30
Types of payments in USD
CHIPS FEDWIRE
USD
BOOK CHEQUE
31
Types of payments: Book to Book
32
Cash Compensation/Settlement most common systems
33
Types of payments: FEDWIRE (ABA)
FEDWIRE
Definition System for High Value Payments (HVP) LBTR
Domestic Payment system in real time among banks in USD
Owner Belongs & it is administered by the 12 Federal Districts
Operating Starts at 21:00 EST (Day before value date)
Hours Closes operations at 18:00 for payments to customers
Closes all types of operations at 18:30 EST value date)
Details Average volume per day: 534,000 transactions for $2.7
trillion (*)
More than 9,500 US connected participants
(*) 2009 figures
35
Types of payments: CHIPS
Definition The Clearing House Interbank Payments System is a private payment
system on real time CCE
Cross border & Domestic payments in USD among banks (mostly used
for cross border)
Owner CHIPS is owned by 10 U.S. Banks.
Operating Starts at 21:00 EST (Day before value date)
Hours Closes operations at 17:00 for day of the value date)
Details Average volume per day: 363,000 transactions for $1.8 trillion (*)
41 Participants: (as of Jun 2023)
Opening funded by the FED & closed with a payment to the FED
95% of international payments go through CHIPs & 50% of domestic
(*) 2010 figures
Senders (payors), called originators in the ACH world, provide their banks
ODFIs (originating depository financial institutions) with payment
instructions. Unlike high-value systems, there are usually multiple payments
in each instruction sent to the ODFI. The ODFI processes the instructions and
sends a file of all customer instructions to its ACH Operator. The ACH
Operator then distributes all of the payments in all of the batches to the
appropriate RDFIs (receiving depository financial institutions) which then
credit the individual receivers (payees).
Banco Bilbao Vizcaya, S.A. Spain Deutsche Bank AG Germany The Northern Trust Company United States
Banco do Brasil S.A. Brazil Deutsche Bank Trust Co Americas United States PNC Bank United States
Bangkok Bank Public Company Limited Thailand Fifth Third Bank United States Societe Generale France
Bank of America, N.A. United States Habib American Bank United States Standard Chartered Bank England
Bank of China China HSBC Bank USA United States State Bank of India India
Bank of Communications China Industrial and Commercial Bank of China China State Street Bank and Trust Company United States
MUFG Bank, Ltd. Japan Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A. Italy Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation Japan
Barclays Bank PLC England Israel Discount Bank of New York United States The Bank of New York Mellon United States
BNP Paribas New York France JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. United States Truist Bank United States
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. United States KBC Bank N.V. Belgium UBS AG Switzerland
Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company United
China Merchants Bank China States Valley National Bank United States
Citibank, N.A. United States Mashreqbank psc United Arab Emirates Wells Fargo Bank NY INTL. United States
Commerzbank AG Germany Mega Int’l Commercial Bank Co. Taiwan Wells Fargo Bank, San Francisco United States
Credit Agricole Corporation and Investment Bank France Mizuho Bank, Ltd. – NY Japan 37
CHIPS: Annual statistic
2023
38
Compensation Systems in Europe
EBA/EUR1 TARGET2
EUR
BOOK CHEQUE
40
Compensation Systems in EURO
TARGET 2
Definition Liquidation system for high value payments in real time
Cross Border & domestic payments in euros LBTR
Owner Property of the European Central Bank
Operated as “SSP“ (Single Shared Platform) by Central Banks in
Europe
Operating Hours Starts at 7:00 C.E.T (Central European Time) and ends at 18.00 CET
EBA/EUR1
Definition Private high value payments system on real time
Cross Border & domestic payments in Euros CCE
Owner Belongs to a Compensator: EBA (ABE CLEARING S.A.S, Paris)
The compensator EBA is owned by 67 European shareholders
Operating Hours Starts at 7:30 CET and ends at 16:00 CET
Detalles Average volume per day: 230,000 transactions (*)
Participants: Direct 67 & 59 Indirect (*)
Access to more than 25.000 BICs (*)
Based SWIFTs FIN service
Starts funding their position with a payment via Target2 & closes
returning a payment also via Target 2
(*) www.ebaclearing.eu 41
International Transfers: Identification Banking Codes
42
Price Options
32 12102011USD797000
50 Applicant
Characteristics 53 /04XXXXXX
Example:
MT103 MT103
BEN
$1000 $980
$1000 $990
$10 $10
43
Price Options
32 12102011USD797000
50 Applicant
Characteristics
53 /04XXXXXX
Claims from intermediaries
OUR banks are absorbed by the 56 Issuing Bank
issuing bank 57 Beneficiary’s
Bank
59 Beneficiary
70 Payment Details
71 OUR
72
Example:
MT103 MT103
OUR
$10 $10
44
Price Options
SHA
$50
Applicant Issuer DB Benef. Bank Beneficiary
MT103 MT103
$1000 $970 $1000 $950
$30
45
What do I need to send an International Transfer?
46
What do I need to send an International Transfer?
How do I get
this
information?
THAT’s it.
48
International Transfers
Send (OUTGOING)
Receive (INCOMING)
49
Payment in Advance – NOT A MEAN OF PAYMENT!!!!!!!!
(done through International Transfers)
5. Merchandise &
Beneficiary documents
Applicant
(exporter) (Importer)
1. Payment Instructions
4. Credit Benef.
2. Debit Applicant’s
Account
Account
Correspondent Banks
Receiving Issuing
Bank 3. Payment Order Bank
Message (MT103) 50
Open Account (through International Transfers)
1. Merchandise &
Beneficiary documents
Applicant
(exporter) (Importer)
2. Payment Instructions
5. Credit Benef.
3. Debit Applicant’s
Account
Account
Correspondent Banks
Receiving Issuing
Bank 4. Payment Order Bank
Message (MT103) 51
International Transfers
Cases….
52
NOMBRE DE LA DEPENDENCIA O CARRERA
HASTA DOS LÍNEAS
2
Buying & Selling process
CONTRACT
Quantity Quality
3
Difficulty for X to verify
Fx regrettably will payment capacity of their
always benefit only 1 M must insist on a Pre
foreign buyers. Risk of non Inspection Certificate
of the parties. Easiest payment, late payment or
solution: set the Price fraud.
in your own currency.
If not possible due to Payment Term
the weakness of the Commercial Risks
Non Payment / + Marketing of
currency procure
protection with
Fraud Products
derivatives such as complicate the
forwards or Options. export context
due to additional
Greater Distances + investments as a
load changing hands
+ long storage = risk RISKS result of changes
in the market
Investment
of damage, lost or conditions (i.e.
Risk
robbery. X / M must unstable
IN
related risks
understand their
Transport
Exchange rate).
rights in respect to X / M would like
carriers and to impose the
insurances.
Misunderstanding
TRADE application of
their country
law. One way
can arise from Legal out: abide by the
international
transactions due to
political ICC clause for
solution of
the fact that parties
disputes – Int’l
come from different Unforeseen court of
cultures & express Circumstances arbitrage.
themselves with
differentiated A strike, natural catastrophe or a war can
vocabulary. hinder a delivery. Provisions Force Majeure. 4
DEEPENING IN RISK TYPES
COUNTERPARTY RISK
Although there is sometimes a direct relationship between buyer and seller, cross‐border (i.e., international)
trade demands first‐hand information of the trade partner. Can be summarized as the possibility that the
counterparty is insolvent or defaulting for one or more of the following reasons:
• Does not pay for the goods or services received • Does not pay claims
• Wrongly enforces a guarantee • Arbitrarily suspends or revokes the order
• Does not withdraw goods even if the goods conform to the original demand
Bank can help its client trading with a foreign company with an assessment by providing a safer means of
payment, such as a documentary credit, a payment guarantee, or a promissory note endorsed by a leading
foreign bank. It could also offer credit insurance, if possible, or international factoring or leasing.
PRODUCTION RISK
Particularly relevant in the supplies of machinery and industrial plants. The preparation of the delivery lasts
for months and has the seller committed to significant investments that are not easily resalable to third
parties in case of order cancellation. In these trade agreements, the buyer usually requires the supplier to
communicate the date of shipment well in advance of the goods’ shipping date. Only in front of a receipt of
the information (typically by fax) will buyers open the letter of credit with their bank. This deal exposes the
manufacturer to the risk of a possible suspension/revocation of the order without sufficient guarantees.
GOODS RECEIVING RISK
Occurs in all transactions where against a shipment of goods or services, there is no guaranteed payment.
This is the case when the vendor’s domestic bank has taken neither the trade counterparty credit risk nor the
country/foreign bank risk. A bank can offset this type of risk from the buyer by offering a payment guarantee.
5
DEEPENING IN RISK TYPES
TRANSPORTATION RISK
The way in which goods are shipped and delivered influences the selection of the most appropriate payment form. Tax
implications, insurance, and legal disputes must not be underestimated.
Banks can cover their clients’ risks suggesting the prescriptions provided by the International Commercial Terms, or
“Incoterms.” The rules have become the standard in international business rules setting. They help traders avoid costly
misunderstandings by clarifying the tasks, costs, and risks involved in the delivery of goods from sellers to buyers.
Incoterms are accepted by governments, legal authorities, and practitioners worldwide for the interpretation of most
commonly used terms in international trade.
GUARANTEE RISK
The exporter wants to hedge the risk of undue enforcement of sureties presented to participate in auctions or tenders,
get advances, or guarantee the performance of the contract. The bank can help by issuing a policy that directly covers
its credit exposure toward the exporter for which the guarantee was issued.
CONTRACT RISK
The sale to a counterparty residing or established in a different country from the trade counterparty’s presents the
problem of concluding a contract for international sale.
The bank can advise its client during the process of formalizing the relevant contractual terms, which are generally
those related to the entry into force of the contract, its duration, the applicable law, the jurisdiction/arbitration, the
early termination clauses, the terms of delivery of goods, and (especially) the payment terms.
6
DEEPENING IN RISK TYPES
COUNTRY RISK
Country risk is a concrete event for an exporter when the authorities of a foreign country do not allow, for political or
practical impossibility, the performance of the obligations assumed by an entity that is subject to that local authority. The
failure to perform can be caused by economic and financial reasons as well as political and social ones. Country risk,
therefore, is represented by the presence of credit risk (resulting from default of the country) and/or transfer risk (as a result
of restrictive measures on the movement of funds imposed by local authorities).
Even though the commercial risk of the foreign borrower is fairly low, it must be considered increased to the level reached
by the country risk of its own country.
https://datosmacro.expansion.com/ratings 8
DEEPENING IN RISK TYPES
9
Main Contracts in Trade
SELLING BUYING
PURCHASE/SALE
INTERNATIONAL CONTRACT
1. QUOTATION /PROFORMA
2. PURCHASE ORDER
3.ACEPTANCE = P/O or Signature
INTERNACIONAL TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INSURANCE
CONTRACT CONTRACT
OTHER CONTRACTS
(CUSTOMS BROKER, BANK,
ETC.)
10
International Purchase & Sale Agreement
1 Goods Description
2 Delivery Terms
Place of application of
4
laws and jurisprudence
11
International Purchase & Sale Agreement
16
Delivery Terms
Transportation Methods
• MARITIME:
• Cheaper, Bigger capacity, Less frequent
• Document: B/L
• AIR:
• More expensive, Less Capacity, More frequent
• Document: AWB – Airway Bill
• TERRESTRIAL:
• Ideal for door to door, Medium Capacity
• Document: Transport Bill – CMR (CONVENTION RELATIVE AU
CONTRAT DE TRANSPORT INTERNATIONAL DE MARCHADISES
PAR ROUTE) (also Roadway Bill)
• RAIL:
• Big volumes, low costs
• Document: Railroad Bill – COTIF (CONTRAT DE TRANSPORT
INTERNATIONAL FERROVIAIRE) (also Railway Bill) 17
Delivery Terms
Accidents? Do they occur?
18
Delivery Terms
Accidents? Do they occur?
Baltimore Key Bridge Tragedy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WR5szXR2IKU
19
Pirates in the 21st Century? Captain Philips?
Yes, piracy is still a problem in the 21st century, particularly in certain regions of the
world. According to the International Maritime Bureau's (IMB) Piracy Reporting
Centre, there were 120 incidents of piracy and armed robbery against ships in
2023, with the majority of incidents occurring in the Gulf of Guinea off the coast of
West Africa. This represents an increase from the 115 incidents reported in 2022.
The IMB is a specialized division of the ICC that has been monitoring piracy and
armed robbery against ships since 1991. You can find more information on their
website at https://www.icc‐ccs.org/piracy‐reporting‐centre.
It's worth noting that not all incidents of piracy are reported, so the actual number of incidents may be higher than what is
reported to the IMB. Additionally, the definition of piracy can vary from country to country, so statistics on piracy may differ
depending on the source.
Reports highlights Southeast Asia as an area where pirate attacks keep increasing, with attacks particularly targeting small
tankers that are more difficult to trace on the black market.
Indonesia’s waters, particularly the area close to Singapore, are usually the most targeted. Similar attacks were on the rise
along the coast of Bangladesh and in Nigeria waters, too.
East Africa and around Somalia in particular are usually reported incidents.
The IMB emphasises the importance of incident reporting and knowledge sharing to monitor and tackle piracy.
Information sharing and co‐ordinated action between concerned coastal states is crucial in responding to this threat.
20
Pirates in the 21st Century? Captain Philips?
21
Pirates in the 21st Century?
22
Delivery Terms
Transport Insurance
Branch of the Insurances that covers the risks of loss or damage to
the merchandise, but never loss or damage caused by delay or bad
habit, normally found in the insured merchandise.
POLICY:
o Individual (specific shipment) or
o Global / Floating / Open: Hired for certain period & for all the
shipments in that period (each w/ Certificate of Insurance).
It should determine covered risks as they are too diverse & complex.
Guidance is given by the Institute of London Underwriters (Main
center for development of policies)
The International Cargo Clauses (ICC):
o ICC (A): Maritime
o ICC (B): Maritime
o ICC (C): Maritime
o ICC (Air): by air
ICC = International Cargo Clauses 23
Delivery Terms
ICC “A”, “B” & “C” are current since 1982 when they substituted the old
“all risks”, “with average” and “free of particular average”.
The Policy:
ICC (A) includes all risks except those that are specifically excluded.
ICC (B) includes besides
earthquake, washed by sea, wet, total loss during loading or unloading
...
ICC (C) includes basic covers such as
fire, sinking, General Average (avería gruesa) (load sacrifice),
unloading damages …
24
Delivery Terms
Transport Insurance
COBERTURAS DEL SEGURO MARITIMO BRITANICO
Claúsula Claúsula Claúsula
Tipo de siniestro A Claúsula B Claúsula C de Guerra de Huelga
1.- Incendio o Explosión
2.- Varadura, hundimiento, zozobra
3.- Vuelco, descarrilamiento de un vehículo
4.- Colisión de buque
5.- Descarga en un puerto de abrigo
6.- Sismo, erupción volcánica, rayo
7.- Sacrificio por avería gruesa
Siniestros
25
Delivery Terms
Transport Insurance
26
Delivery Terms
Incoterms 2020
27
Incoterms 2020
https://youtu.be/7g7IC4IzjDM (6min)
https://youtu.be/bYnCQtgjY‐k (9min)
28
Delivery Terms
Incoterms 2020
• INternational COmmercial TERMS (Publication 723E)
• Rules for the interpretation of the more used commercial terms in international
trade:
• Applicable to diverse commercial practices
• Standardization of practices and terminology
• To avoid uncertainties in trade
• To diminish litigations
• Referred to merchandise Transport contracts
• Published by the ICC (Int’l Chamber of Commerce) in:
• 1936, 1953, 1967, 1976, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010 and 2020
• Main characteristics:
• Optable--Identifiable--Equal--Flexible
• Aspects regulated (to sellers & buyers):
• Rights, Obligations and Responsibility in the process
• Documents and expenses.
• Risk Transfer, Moment and place for delivery.
29
Delivery Terms
30
Delivery Terms
INCOTERMS -Classificacions
Group Sea & Inland Waterway Transport
32
INCOTERMS 2020
TYPES OF USED QUOTATIONS
(By Delivery Place)
34
Delivery Terms
at agreed
on agreed DDP
FCA destination
transport CPT CIP
alongside on board
ship FAS DAP
the Vessel
on board
the Vessel FOB CFR CIF at Terminal DPU
export
import
35
Delivery Terms
• freight paid
• freight prepaid
• freight collected
• freight due
• freight to be paid
• freight collect
• freight payable at destination
36
Delivery Terms
Seller Buyer
37
Delivery Terms
S B
Group C Group F
Transport contract between Transport contract between
Seller & Carrier Buyer & Carrier
38
Delivery Terms
Traditional Ocean Traffic with FOB, CIF, CFR
Seller Buyer
Insurable interest Insurable interest
S B
Delivery to carrier
Seller Buyer
Insurable interest Insurable interest
S B
FCL LCL
Delivery to carrier
39
Delivery Terms
Buyer risk
Buyer insurance
S B
Delivery to carrier
40
Delivery Terms
41
Case Study:
42
NOMBRE DE LA DEPENDENCIA O CARRERA
HASTA DOS LÍNEAS
2
Subjects for Discussion
3
SWIFT : Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication
200+ 11k+ 23
countries Institutions offices
4
SWIFT : Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication
• Establishes:
– A common language for financial transactions
– A shared Data Process System
– A Worldwide Telecom Network
• Defines:
– Fundamental Operation Procedures
– Rules to define responsibilities
– Standardization
Bank A Bank B
SWIFT Network
5
SWIFT : Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication
• MT standards
(for L/Cs, Demand Guarantees, Collections)
6
SWIFT : Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication
Different
The Role of Standards Channels
+
Different formats:
Costing
Implementation
Costing
Maintenance
Costing
Misinterpretation
7
SWIFT : Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication
The structure of the SWIFT BIC code
Money Terrorist
Laundering Financing
Money laundering is an illegal way to “clean” dirty money that was acquired from criminal activity such as
drug-related crimes, embezzlement and terrorist funding, by running it through legitimate businesses. In that
way, financial criminals try to avoid detection by disguising their dirty money as legal profit.
15
Sanctions Framework | Types of Sanctions
Trade Based
o Restricted or prohibited trade with a country
Comprehensive
o Broad restrictions prohibiting the provision of financial services
and/ or investments with or benefiting specific countries
16
History Cost of Non-Compliance
17
17
Sanctions screening over SWIFT
18
Public Sanctions Lists available
AU - Australia Department of Foreign
Affairs and Trade SG - Singapore MAS - Investor Alert
AU - DFAT Countries Embargoes List
AU - DFAT Iran Specified Entities List CH - Switzerland Secretariat d'Etat a
CA- Canada Foreign Affairs and I'Economie
International Trade CH - SECO Countries Embargoes
CA - FAIT Countries Embargoes UK - Her Majesty's Treasury
Organization Website
Global Affairs Canada(GAC) www.international.gc.ca/sanctions
Office of the Superintendent of Financial www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca/Eng/fi-if/amlc-
Institutions(OSFI) clrpc/snc/ https://ofac.treasury.gov/sanctions
Office of Foreign Assets Control(OFAC) www.treasury.gov/resource- -programs-and-country-
center/sanctions information
United Nations Security Counsel www.un.org/sc/suborg 19
U.S. Department of the Treasury
Office of Foreign Asset Control - OFAC
20
The KYC Registry
21
Banks – Knowing your customer
KYC
Know Your …an ongoing process throughout the client relationship
Customer
23
Banks – Know your customer
Which of the following customers would be classified as a Normal Risk Customer
and which one as a High Risk Customer (if any)?
CASE 1
Leticia Jimenez has been a customer of Bank A for 10 years. She uses
her Small Company account to make business deposits for the sale of
cosmetics. As average, Leticia deposits from $1,000 to $1,500 per
month. She also works from her house as a secretary, 3 times a week
for a well-known private company. She also has a personal account
where her payroll is deposited. Her accounts have accumulated a high
amount of money that will help her when she decides to retire.
NORMAL RISK HIGH RISK
CASE 2
Jose Garcia lives in the Caribbean and operates a family-owned
supermarket that sells home products and dry food. He also owns a
Cafeteria within the supermarket where he sells daily prepared food.
As average, the supermarket generates monthly cash deposits
between $50,000 to $60,000 and the coffee shop between $10,000 to
$20,000 cash deposits.
25 NORMAL RISK HIGH RISK
24
Banks – Knowing your customer
Which of the following customers would be classified as a Normal Risk Customer
and which one as a High Risk Customer (if any)?
CASE 3
Julio Delgado owns a Retail Company that sells construction supplies.
Mr. Delgado often deposits between $10,000 to $15,000 and most of
his deposits are with Checks. He has a very profitable operation, and
the construction supply company is one of the most important in the
country.
NORMAL RISK HIGH RISK
CASE 4
Tina Rodriguez and Maria Alvarado operate a retailer and wholesaler
company for the sale of jewels and precious metals. They own 4
stores situated in high traffic areas of the city. They wish to open an
account with Bank A with the purpose to receive payments for their
sales (Domestic and International). Their sales have been growing due
to a high demand of these products and they project that their
deposits will be around $50,000 per month.
25
• Related to the above, banks should further ascertain that the parties to a trade transaction - both
importer and exporter - deal in the type of goods as mentioned in the L/C or collection
26
ICC & Wolfsberg Trade Finance Principles
1. Trade Finance can be described as the provision of finance and services by FIs for the movement of goods
and services between two points, either within a country or cross border. Both FIs and Trade Bodies (such
as the ICC & BAFT), as well as Governments are critical in promoting international commerce and free
trade. ICC = International
Chamber of
2. There is a perception that Trade Finance is a “higher risk” area of business from a financial crime Commerce
perspective, therefore, all FIs involved in Trade Finance should have risk policies and controls which are
appropriate for their business.
3. Trade Based Money Laundering (“TBML”) covers Trade Finance, but also transactional activities across
current and deposit accounts and payments for example, which are not in the purview of Trade Finance BAFT = Bankers
operations of FIs. The detection of unusual and potentially suspicious activities across transactional Association for
activities, should take place via whatever transaction monitoring systems and processes an FI has in Finance and
place, be it manual or automated. Trade
4. The majority of world trade is carried out under “Open Account” terms, whereby the buyer and seller
agree to the terms of the contract and goods are delivered to the buyer followed by a clean or netting
payment through the banking system. Under such Open Account terms, unless the FI is providing credit
facilities, the FI’s involvement will be limited to the clean payment and it will not generally be aware of FI’s = Financial
the underlying reason for the payment. As the FI has no visibility of the transaction, it is not able to carry Institutions
out anything other than the standard anti-money laundering (AML) and sanctions screening on the
clean or netting payment. If the FI is providing credit facilities in relation to the trade transaction there
may be more opportunity to understand the underlying trade process and financial movements.
27
Monitoring Trade Transactions
Red flags
Banks must also perform a review of all trade transactions
to determine if there are any risk indicators ("red flags")
present that are typically associated with money
laundering, terrorist financing, economic sanctions,
Screening
bribery, or other illicit activity
A bank's trade operations must screen its
transactions against the applicable SDN and
This may involve manually comparing each item to:
sanctions lists (SDN = "Specially Designated
• AML Examination Manual Trade Finance
Nationals“).
• Red Flags List
• Financial Action Task Force
This includes not just the content of SWIFT
• Trade-Based Money Laundering Typologies
messages received, but all the related
• Wolfsberg Trade Finance Principles
documents, too—the individuals, entities,
• Proprietary red flag listings
goods, vessels, etc. Listed therein
o High risk businesses
o High risk products
o High risk countries
A red flag analysis is the minimum amount of due diligence required before a transaction may be
executed; trade personnel should always be encouraged to use their expertise and experience to
evaluate each transaction on its merits and to escalate any potential concerns
28
Examples of Trade Red Flags - General categories.
Wolfsberg - Trade Finance
• Over invoicing - where the invoice
misrepresents the value of the goods to a
higher value and the seller gains excess value as
TBML - Trade-based Money Laundering a result of the payment
TBML is a complex form of money • Under invoicing - where the opposite occurs
laundering that exploits the international and the buyer gains excess value through the
trade system. It involves the manipulation payment
of trade transactions to disguise the illicit • Multiple invoicing - where more than one
invoice is issued for the same goods and the
origins of funds.
seller can justify the receipt of multiple
payments
• Short shipping - where the seller ships less than
Typologies the invoiced quantity or quality of goods,
• Over and under invoicing of goods and misrepresenting the true value of goods in
services those documents
• Multiple invoicing of goods and services • Over shipping - where the seller ships more
• Over and under shipments than the invoiced quantity or quality of goods,
misrepresenting the true value of the goods in
• Falsely described goods and services
the documents
• Phantom shipping - where no goods are
shipped at all and the documentation is
completely falsified
29
Examples of Trade Red Flags
30
Trade-Based Money Laundering (TBML)
Among Biggest Banking Risks
• There are several TBML schemes, but most use a variation of falsified shipping documents and invoices.
• For example, consider a fictional case of money generated through piracy and kidnapping:
o A Somali pirate, who is also a businessman, receives $50,000 in cash from a kidnapping ransom.
o He cannot put the money into his local bank, because he knows it will question the deposit.
o Instead, he uses the cash to purchase 50 luxury watches worth $1,000 each.
o Now, with a simple transaction, he can ship the goods to a buyer in the United States and ask for a wire deposit
into a U.S. bank, which can either be wired back to Somalia linked to a legitimate transaction, or it can wait in
the United States for another trading purchase.
• Additional complications in trading arrangements exist because there are often multiple criminal
transactions occurring on both sides of the buyer-seller relationship.
• For example, consider a Somali national living in the UK who wants to finance a piracy operation by
sending £10,000 to his brother, who will pay bandits to hijack ships.
o His brother is also a trader, so they arrange for a shipment of goods valued at £10,000 to be made from Africa
to the UK.
o The invoice, however, falsely reports that the shipment is worth £20,000.
o The UK based partner then uses a British bank to wire £20,000 (£10,000 for the goods and £10,000 for the
piracy venture) to a Somali bank account.
• Another variation on this theme is the use of "ghost shipments," where proper-
looking paper-work documents financial transfers for trades that never actually occur.
In short, the buyer and seller collude to fraudulently use the financial system
31 to
facilitate criminal activity. 31
Examples of Trade Red Flags
Even when multiple red flags are present, a qualitative review of a transaction may
allow it to proceed.
• A jeweler (high risk business) located in Kuwait (high risk country) buys diamonds
(high risk goods) from a diamond district jeweler (high risk industry) in New York
City
• An initial review of this trade transaction yields at least four red flags, as noted
above
• However, upon further review, it is determined through publicly available
information that the Kuwaiti jeweler is a well known and reputable retailer who is
legitimately purchasing diamonds for wealthy clients, in reasonable amounts, from a
licensed wholesale jeweler in the US who banks with [Citi/B of A/JPM]
• This further due diligence sufficiently mitigates the red flags, with the residual risk
considered low enough to process the transaction
General guideline: Do not escalate for a single red flag (e.g., country, product,
value) unless the transaction is obviously suspicious. If several or more red flags
are present, without mitigating qualitative factors, then escalate
If several red flags are present, without mitigating qualitative factors, then escalate
32
And, in Peru, what is going on…….?
LEGAL FRAME
https://www.sbs.gob.pe/prevenc
ion-de-lavado-activos/normas-
de-aplicacion-general-en-
materia-de-laft
Gambling Places & Casinos 2. Oficial de Cumplimiento (#OC): Precisan requisitos y reglas de
designación, remoción y vacancia.
Antiquities Brokers
3. Conocimiento de #Clientes (#KYC): Si el Sujeto Obligado no tiene
capacidad de cumplir medidas de debida diligencia con un cliente,
Lending Institutions & Pawn Shops debe
(i) no iniciar relaciones, ni efectuar la operación y/o terminar
Showbusiness Companies relación
(ii) enviar un reporte de operaciones sospechosas (ROS).
Real Estate Companies
4. Conocimiento de Trabajadores.
Companies that trade in jewels, metals & Precious
Stones, coins, Art 5. Préstamo / empeño y compraventa de divisas: Elimina exigencia
de autorización municipal. Precisa divisas como monedas de
Car, Truck, Ships & Planes dealers curso legal, por lo que exceptúa #criptoactivos y #criptomonedas.
34
Definición
35
35
Some videos…….
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ObJPaSZxCs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIRrld4TGZ0&ebc=ANyPxKqgmlOc3q-
L_oeTeORfKz4xSBdXJUUEcFqsjnQV6pEfPbxsqWnUkkg4PtKigo_5ZixrxB0eyy7eOaYjAQ
fJGozlJglnEA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XOJKiOw8Xqo
36
https://group.atradius.com/publications/trading-briefs/risk-map.html
37
NOMBRE DE LA DEPENDENCIA O CARRERA
HASTA DOS LÍNEAS
2
Subjects for Discussion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTTGALaRZoc
4
International Financial System
Organismos Mundiales Asociaciones Internacionales Otras Organizaciones
Corporación Financiera Internacional (IFC) Federación Internacional de las Bolsas de Valores Asian Development Bank
Agencia de Garantías de Inversiones Multilaterales (MIGA)
Directorio de los Bancos Centrales Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
Asociación de Naciones del Sudeste Asiático (ASEAN)
Banco de Pagos Internacionales (BIS)
Organismos de Estados Unidos Banco de Desarrollo de América del Norte (BDAN)
Sudamérica Consejo de la Reserva Federal Banco de Desarrollo del Caribe (BDC)
Bolsa de Comercio de Buenos Aires Bolsa de Valores de Nueva York Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (BID)
Bolsa de Valores de Lima Nasdaq Comunidad Andina de Naciones (CAN)
Bolsa de Valores de Río de Janeiro Comunidad del Caribe (CARICOM)
Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago Federación Int'l de Bolsas de Valores Norteamérica Conferencia de las NNUU sobre Comercio y Desarrollo
(UNCTAD)
American Stock Exchange Corporación Financiera Internacional (CFI)
Europa Bolsa Mexicana de Valores European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
Amsterdam Exchanges N.V Chicago Board Options Exchange, Inc European Investment Bank
Barcelona Stock Exchange National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc Grupo de los Siete
Bolsa de Madrid New York Stock Exchange G-20 Group of Twenty
Deutsche Börse Ag Stock Exchanges Bourse de Montreal G-24 Intergovernmental Group of Twenty-Four on
International
Helsinki Exchanges Vancouver Stock Exchange Instituto de Relaciones EuropeoLatinoamericanas
Italian Stock Exchange The Toronto Stock Exchange Monetary Affairs
London Stock Exchange G-30 Group of Thirty
Oslo Bors Otras Organizaciones Latinas G-77 Group of 77
Sbf-París Bourse Area de Libre Comercio de las Américas North American Development Bank (NADBANK)
Swiss Exchange Asociación Latinoamericana de Integración Organización de Estados Americanos (OEA)
The Stock Excahnge of Hong Kong Ltd. Centro de Información para la Integración Regional Organización de las Naciones Unidas (ONU)
Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL) Org. de las NNUU para la Agricultura y la Alimentación
(FAO)
Organismos de Europa y Asia Instituto para la Integración de América Latina y el Caribe Organización Internacional del Trabajo (OIT)
Banco Europeo de Inversiones Mercado Común del Sur Organización Mundial de Comercio (OMC)
Easdaq Red de Estudios de la Economía Mundial Org. para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económico
(OCDE)
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Sistema Económico Latinoamericano Unión Europea
World Economic Forum
Asia Otras Instituciones Financieras World Trade Organization
Jakarta Stock Exchange, Inc. ABN Amro
Korea Stock Exchange BNP Pacífico
Tokyo Stock Exchange Bank of America Australian Stock Exchange Ltd.
Stock Exchange of Singapore Ltd. Bank of Nova Scotia New Zealand Stock Exchange
Taiwan Stock Exchange Corporation Bilbao Vizcaya
The Tel-Aviv Stock Exchange Ltd. Citibank
The Stock Exchange of Thailand JP Morgan 5
Tokyo-Mitsubichi A sample of thousands of Institutions…
The Global Financial System
GOVERNMENT SUPERVISORY
TREASURIES AUTHORITIES
ACCOUNTING
CENTRAL
STANDARD
BANKS
CURRENCIES BODIES
FINANCIAL
INVESTMENT MARKETS INSTITUTIONAL
BANKS INVESTORS
SOVEREIGN RATING
FUNDS AGENCIES
6
The Global Financial System – Main Participants
• Commercial banks are at the centre of global financial • Investment banks are in the business of raising
system since any financial transaction involves them. capital for companies. They sell securities to
• Systemick risk is intrinsic and that is why it is the most public investors to raise cash & the securities can
regulated sector! come as stocks or bonds.
• Institutional Investors refer to a variety of entities that • Full-service investment banks usually provide
intermediate savings: insurance companies, pension both advisory and financing banking services,
funds, mutual funds, hedge and speculative funds, etc. sales, market making, & research on an array of
They manage huge pools of money and have no less financial products as equities, credit, rates,
influence than banks. currency, commodities, and their derivatives.
• They invest in all kinds of assets, from real estate to the • The biggest full service investment banks include
most complex financial instruments. Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Citigroup,
• They play a vital role in capital markets as they diversify Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs,
portfolios across asset classes, economic sectors, JPMorgan Chase, Lazard, Morgan Stanley,
countries, and regions. Nomura Securities, UBS, Wells Fargo Securities.
• Central banks are major actors in financial markets as • Sovereign Wealth Funds are special state-owned
they create money & regulate the amount of liquidity in investment funds.
the system and in systemic crisis they can help avoid a • They hold and manage the wealth accumulated by a
liquidity crunch by providing cheap money to banks. country through its central banks’ activity, balance
• Approaches differ from central bank to central bank. i.e. of payments or state-owned entreprises.
there is a major difference between the FED, whose
mandate includes the objective of supporting economic
growth, and the ECB, that targets inflation (less than 2%)
7
and also charged with banking supervision (e.g. in UK).
International Financial Organizations
• International financial organizations, like the World
Bank (WB) and the Int’l Monetary Fund (IMF),
provide liquidity to countries with temporary or
structural problems and hence may influence financial
markets.
8
The Bank for International Settlements
9
International Settlement (Int’l Compensation)
Definition
“International settlement” refers to the
transfer of money through banks to
compensate accounts, debts and demands
in different countries.
10
Other Settlement Attempts
More and more countries seek to stop paying their trade in dollars
Countries such as China, Russia, Brazil, India, Indonesia, Argentina and South Africa, are looking for ways to avoid
the US dollar as the main currency of exchange, and are increasingly looking to the Chinese currency, the yuan,
as a currency to pay their exchanges and integrate their reserves. The governments of these states want to use
the currency of a country that does not confiscate their reserves in case of conflict
The Brazilian government announced an agreement
ASIA / 26-07-23 / with its Chinese counterpart to carry out
BY FELIX THOMPSON transactions in Yuan and Reais
India and Bangladesh launch rupee settlement
scheme for trade transactions
https://www.gtreview.com/news/asia/india-and-bangladesh-launch-
rupee-settlement-scheme-for-trade-transactions/
Russia has agreed with Beijing to accept the yuan as payment for oil and other commodities supplied
to the Asian giant.
The BRICS group (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) is also advancing towards the creation of a new currency to replace the US
dollar. New members since January 2024: Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, and the United Arab Emirates joined the organization on 1 January 2024
11
Risks
• A BANK faces several risks but among the main ones are five: Credit risk, Market risk (price or volatility of assets & liabilities),
Interest rate risk (adverse change in spreads & profitability), Liquidity risk (bank cannot meet a demand for cash or fund
obligations) and Operational risk (inadequate internal processes).
• Interest rates vary per the risk embedded in financial assets. The higher the risk for the lender or the investor to get his money
back, the higher the interest rate that he demands.
• INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS face all kinds of risk but besides:
• Exchange rate risk: when investing in an asset denominated in a foreign currency, the exchange rate prevailing at the end of
the investment period is going to affect significantly the final return.
• Country risk: the risk that a country may default (totally or partially) on its foreign obligations due to economic, political or
social problems.
• Systemic Risk: is the risk that a crisis may involve an entire region or even the global economy.
• A systemic crisis can originate in a single country (or region) and spill over to the entire system through various financial
and real channels (‘contagion’ or ‘domino’ effect).
• The financial system with its multiple links is a major channel of transmission of shocks.
• In a systemic crisis rational behaviour – like running away from too risky assets or countries – may be heightened by
irrational components (herding or panic).
• Financial globalization has hightened systemic risk.
• Large financial institutions (like Lehman Brothers) may be ‘too large to fail’ and hence be classified as ‘systemically’ important.
• INDIVIDUALS AND INVESTORS are normally risk adverse. Two fundamental ways to cope with risk.
1. Diversification: an international investors has additional opportunities compared to a domestic investor as he can diversify
his portfolio over a much larger number of assets, countries and regions of the world.
2. Hedging (especially against ex. rate risk): special types of contracts designed to enable investors as well as importers and
exporters to cover the risk of unexpected changes in exchange rates. 12
OTHER RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH TRADE
4 Ungoverned AI
OTHER RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH TRADE
5 Axis of rogues
1 The United States vs. itself The world’s most powerful rogue
states have been working to
strengthen their cooperation
Since Russia invaded Ukraine
6.
4 Ungoverned AI
Breakthroughs in artificial
intelligence are moving 7. No China recover?
much faster than
governance efforts
Regulatory Environment
• Banking industry is highly regulated not only by local government but
also by global regulatory authorities
• Regulations require banks to comply to certain capital, leverage, and
liquidity ratios in order to control risk
• Regulations also require banks to monitor for illegal transactions
and to provide consumer protection
• Changes in regulations can significantly influence a bank’s profitability
and operations
• 2008 Financial Crisis resulted in the introduction of many new
regulations aimed at protecting consumers and increasing
accountability
• Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in the US
• Independent Commission on Banking in the UK
• Basel III global banking standards (Capital adequacy)
15
International Accounting Standards
• Accounting Standards are an important variable in the context of financial
crises, as they may contribute to the spread of financial instability depending
on the way assets are valued in financial statements.
• Recording assets at their ‘historical’ values may not reflect over time their true
value.
• This spiral was certainly at work during the recent crisis, and has hit especially
banks.
16
Ratings
• Ratings help assess the creditworthiness of firms, banks & countries (government bonds) when they
operate internationally. They are a measure of the ‘quality’ of credits.
• The 3 giants of Ratings are: Standard&Poors (US), Moody’s (US) and Fitch (France) are the best known
international rating agencies but there are a lot more, such as DBRS (Canada), R & I (Japan), Dagong
(China), etc.
• Ratings go from AAA of Std&Poors (Aaa for Moody’s & Fitch) to Bbb or ‘C’ (junk bonds.) Assets with a
rating above BBB are known as ‘investment grade’.
• Bank regulations rely significantly on ratings (Basle Accord)
• Institutional Investors also rely on ratings in their investment decisions. Fund managers may set a
threshold rating below which investment has to be dismissed.
How reliable are rating agencies?
• There is a serious debate on the validity of ratings, and their methods. Rating agencies are accused of:
- setting often the wrong ratings (e.g. subprime loans – 2008 Crisis)
- failing in predicting financial/corporate crises thus issuing downgrades when it is too late (see Lehman
Brothers)
- aggravating financial or corporate crises due to the wrong timing of downgradings (see the recent
downgrading of several European countries during the euro crisis)
- being in a conflict of interest as they are paid by the firms that ask to be rated.
Yet, it is difficult to imagine a world without ratings!
17
DEEPENING IN RISK TYPES
https://datosmacro.expansion.com/ratings 18
Revenue & Cost Composition Revenue Composition
• The primary component of a bank’s
revenue comes from Net Interest
Income (NII), which is the interest earned
from the bank’s earning assets (loans,
advances, securities), minus the interest
paid on the bank’s liabilities (customer
deposits, bank borrowings)
• Second largest component of revenue
comes from Fees which the bank charge on
financial transactions and services
Cost Structure
• A bank has two primary expenses:
– Interest expense, which
comprises of the interest paid on
the bank’s liabilities such as
customer deposits and other debt
– Employee salaries and benefits
19
INTERNATIONAL
BANKING
SERVICES
20
International Banking Services
• International banks characterized by the types of services they provide & distinguished from
domestic banks:
• Facilitate imports and exports of their clients by arranging trade financing.
• Arranging for foreign exchange necessary to conduct cross-border transactions and make
foreign Investments. Banks often assist their clients in hedging exchange rate risk in
foreign currency receivables and payables through forward and options contracts.
• They generally also trade foreign exchange finance products for their own account.
• Large international banks borrow and lend in the Eurocurrency market among others.
• Frequently become members of international loan syndicates, participating with other
international banks to lend large sums to MNCs (Multi National Companies) needing
project financing and sovereign governments needing funds for economic development.
• They participate in the underwriting of Eurobonds and other foreign bonds.
• Banks that both perform traditional commercial banking functions and engage in investment
banking activities are often called merchant banks.
• International banks frequently provide consulting services and advice to their clients.
• Banks that do provide a majority of previously mentioned services are commonly known as
UNIVERSAL BANKS or FULL SERVICE BANKS (also MULTIPLE BANKS).
21
International Banking Services
Why may a bank establish multinational operations?
Rugman and Kamath (1987) provide a more formal list:
1. Low marginal costs: knowledge developed at home can be used abroad with low marginal costs.
2. Knowledge advantage: Subsidiary can draw on parent’s knowledge for use in that foreign market.
3. Home country information services: more complete market info about the subsidiary’s country.
4. Prestige: high perceived prestige, liquidity & deposit safety can be used to attract clients abroad.
5. Regulation advantage: Multinational banks are often not subject to regulations as domestic banks: reduced need to
publish financial information, lack of required deposit insurance & reserve requirements & the absence of territorial
restrictions.
6. Wholesale defensive strategy: Banks follow their multinational customers abroad to prevent the erosion of their clientele
to foreign banks.
7. Retail defensive strategy: Multinational banking operations help a bank prevent the erosion of its travelers, tourists and
foreign business markets.
8. Transaction costs: By maintaining foreign branches & currency balances, banks may reduce transaction costs & forex risk on
currency conversion if government controls can be circumvented.
9. Growth: Growth prospects in a home nation may be limited by a market largely saturated with the services offered by
domestic banks.
10. Risk reduction: Greater stability of earnings is possible with international diversification. Offsetting business & monetary
22
policy cycles across nations reduces the country-specific risk of any one nation.
Types of International Banking Offices / Relations
Banking
Institution
23
International Banking Facilities
Correspondent Banking
1.Definition:
• a bank located elsewhere that provides a service for another bank, sometimes the 2 banks maintain
deposits with each other. For example, a large New York bank will have a correspondent bank account
in a London bank, and the London bank will maintain one with the New York bank.
• The large banks in the world will generally have a correspondent relationship with other banks in all the
major financial centers in which they do not have their own banking operation.
• Correspondent banking allows a bank’s MNC client to conduct business worldwide through his local
bank or its correspondents.
2.Main function: to provide financing for affiliates of MNCs.
3.Advantages of Correspondent Banking
a) Low cost market entry
b) Minimal staffing expense
c) Multiple business sources
d) Local banking opportunities
e) Network of local contacts
4.Disadvantages of Correspondents
a) U.S. customers may be given lower priority
b) Some credit forms prohibited
c) Irregular, not extensive credit results
24
International Banking Facilities
Representative Offices
1.Definition
• A representative office is a small service facility staffed by parent bank personnel that is
designed to assist MNC clients of the parent bank in dealings with the bank’s
correspondents.
• It is a way for the parent bank to provide its MNC clients with a level of service greater
than that provided through merely a correspondent relationship. Representative offices
also assist MNC with information about local practices, economy & credit evaluation of
the MNC’s customers.
2.Functions:
• to provide advisor services
• to speed up services
• to help loan generation
• not authorized to directly accept deposits/make loans
26
International Banking Facilities
Edge Act and Agreement Corporations
1.Definition
• U.S. bank subsidiaries that may carry on international banking activities
• Edge Act banks are federally chartered subsidiaries of U.S. banks that are physically
located in the U.S. that are allowed to engage in a full range of international banking
activities.
• The Edge Act was a 1919 amendment to Section 25 of the 1914 Federal Reserve Act.
2.Precisions:
a)Physically located in U.S.
b)Authorized to handle only international business
c) Customers: foreign or U.S.
d)Authorized to accept foreign currency deposits/make loans.
“Shell” Branches
Shell branches need to be nothing more than a post office box.
The actual business is done by the parent bank at the parent bank.
The purpose was to allow U.S. banks to compete internationally without the expense of
setting up operations “for real”.
27
International Banking Facilities
Offshore Banking Centers
• An offshore banking center is a country whose banking
system is organized to permit external accounts beyond
the normal scope of local economic activity.
• The host country usually grants complete freedom from
host-country governmental banking regulations.
• Operate outside the jurisdiction of most industrialized
countries
• Are subject to very few regulations
• Are located in tax havens
• The IMF recognizes
• the Bahamas
• Bahrain
• the Cayman Islands
• Hong Kong
• the Netherlands Antilles
• Panama
• Singapore
as major offshore banking centers
28
International Banking Facilities
Offshore Banking Centers (OBC)
• An individual or company will maintain an offshore account because it provides financial and legal
advantages, such as:
• greater privacy (due to bank secrecy) And Money Laundering?
• little or no taxation (i.e. tax havens)
Elusion? Evasion?
• easy access to deposits (at least in terms of regulation)
• protection against local, political, or financial instability.
• The term originates from the Channel Islands being "offshore" from the United Kingdom
• Although most offshore banks are located in island nations to this day there are some banks in
landlocked such as Switzerland, Luxembourg and Andorra also "offshore banks".
• Offshore banking has often been associated with the underground economy and organized
crime, via tax evasion and money laundering.
• Personal income tax of many countries makes no distinction between interest earned in local banks and
those earned abroad. Persons subject to US income tax, for example, are required to declare, on penalty
of perjury, any foreign bank accounts which may or may not be numbered bank accounts
• OBC operate as branches /subsidiaries of the parent, usually the largest and most reputable
international banks.
• OBC was spawned in late 60’s when Fed. Reserve authorized U.S. banks to establish ‘shell’ branches.
• Hong Kong & Singapore have developed into full service banking centers that now rival London, New
York, and Tokyo. 29
International Banking Facilities
30
Types of International Banking Offices
Major OFC:
• Bahamas: a considerable number of registered vessels.
• Bermuda: market leader for captive insurance, offshore funds and aircraft registration.
• British Virgin Islands: the largest number of offshore companies.
• Cayman Islands: the largest value of assets under management in offshore funds & the strongest
presence in the U.S. securitization market.
• Jersey: the most international of the British Crown dependencies and has a high concentration of
professional advisers including lawyers and fund managers.
• Luxembourg: the market leader in Undertakings for Collective Investments in Transferable
Securities (UCITS) and is believed to be the largest offshore Eurobond issuer
• Mauritius: used for inward & outward investment platform for Asian, African & European
countries. Has the effective commercial & legal infrastructure required to support the
development of a global network: a number of double taxation agreements, listed on the OECD
list of jurisdictions with internationally agreed tax and transparency standards.
• Panama: is a significant international maritime center. It is second in volumes of incorporations
• New Zealand: well positioned for the Asian market but retains close ties to Europe.
• Dominica: has the largest number of offshore companies formed in recent years.
• Switzerland: taxes in Switzerland are levied by the Swiss Confederation (cantons & municipalities).
31
Types of International Banking Offices
Major OFC: Why Delaware Is considered a Tax Shelter?
• And DELAWARE????? INVESTOPEDIA
A tax shelter is any method of reducing taxable income that results
in a reduction of tax payments. In the U.S., is defined as any method
that recovers more than $1 in tax for every $1 spent within a four-
year period. The specific methodology varies but a tax shelter can be
created by either an individual or a corporation.
Incorporation in Delaware affords companies numerous benefits:
• Businesses might not have to disclose officers and directors
when they file documents at the time of a company’s formation.
• Furthermore, if the business does not conduct its operations in
Delaware, the state’s corporate income tax may not apply.
Instead of paying that income tax, those Delaware corporations
instead pay a much lower franchise tax.
• Delaware also has business-friendly usury laws, which allow
banks and credit card companies to have much more freedom to
charge higher interest rates on loans.
• No Sales Tax in the state.
32
Tax avoidance: Exemplification
33
Tax avoidance: Exemplification
35
Correspondent Banking Relations
• Key to International Banking Operations.
• Frame for funding & Trade Financing.
• Forex & Accounts Receivable or Accounts Payable
Hedging (forwards & options).
• Investment services.
• Allow access to markets & currencies.
• Money Market
• And other services not related necessarily to
Lending.
38
Prime Banks Ranking – LatAm (Brand Value)
39
Prime Banks
• Cybersecurity Threats
• Sophisticated Fraud Schemes Enabled by AI
• Evolving Cyber Threats
Cyber
• Shifting Customer Expectations
• Rapidly evolving digital technologies and
changing consumer preferences demand
banks to innovate their products.
• Economic Volatility
• Macroeconomic uncertainties and potential
economic downturns, challenge Banks to
maintain profitability & Manage risk.
• Disruptive Competition
• Rise of Fintech startups and BigTech
companies are disrupting traditional banking
models 42
Pathways towards digitalisation
44
ICC Project for
Paperless Trade
• Current trade documentation spans many documents and processes, and is a manual, time-consuming, and resource-
intensive process for all stakeholders. Documentation for a single shipment can require up to 50 sheets of paper that are
exchanged with up to 30 different stakeholders.
• The bill of lading is one of the most important trade documents required for shipping.
• McKinsey analysis indicates that the BL accounts for between 10 and 30 percent of total trade documentation costs.
• Regrettably, shipping has not matured far beyond where it was in the 1400s. 45
Rules
2
UCP 600 Rules - Introduction
• The UCP rules (Uniform Customs & Practices) were originated
by the ICC (International Chamber of Commerce) and are
prepared by experts from the private sector.
• 6th revision since 1933 – Became effective 01/Jul/2007.
• For this revision were considered:
– Opinions from ICC’s Banking Commission,
– Decisions made by the ICC, Cases from DOCDEX,
– Legal Decisions,
– URR525, ISP98 & eUCP from the ICC.
• To count with harmonized rules means:
– To have a common way to understand commercial terms.
– To avoid commercial disputes.
– To count with a standardized guide.
3
Principles that rule the L/Cs
4
Article 2 - Definitions
Advising bank The bank that advises the credit at the request of the
issuing bank.
Issuing bank The bank that issues a credit at the request of an applicant
or on its own behalf.
Nominated bank The bank with which the credit is available or any bank
in the case of a credit available with any bank.
6
Article 2 - Definitions
Confirming Bank The bank that adds its confirmation to a credit upon the
issuing bank’s authorization or request.
Honour
• to pay at sight if the credit is available by sight payment.
• to incur a deferred payment undertaking and pay at maturity if the credit
is available by deferred payment.
• to accept a bill of exchange (“draft”) drawn by the beneficiary and pay at
maturity if the credit is available by acceptance.
7
Article 2 - Definitions
Commercial Offices
SATURDAY = LC Terms
+ UCP 600
Bank Main Hall + ISBP 745E
▪ Presentation / Presenter
Nominated Issuing
Beneficiary
Bank Bank
Presentation Presentation
Presenter Presenter
8
Article 2 - Definitions
• Honour • Negotiate
Payment at sight Pay at sight
Buy, discount, or
Commits to pay at term
Deferred Payment Payment at maturity Advance funds of
Compliant documents
Accept a bill of exchange
presented
Acceptance Payment at maturity
• Nominated Bank
Issuance Advise
Issuing Advising
Beneficiary
Bank Bank
10
Principle of independence: Article 4 – Credits versus contracts
A credit by its nature is a ¿discourage? Letter of
separate transaction from Contract Nº 123
Credit
the sale or other contract
The details according to
the Contract Nº123, which
An issuing bank should discourage any attempt by we attach and it is an
the applicant to include, as an integral part of the integral part of the credit.
credit, copies of the underlying contract, proforma
invoice and the like
• Expiry Date
Last day for the presentation of Documents
12
Article 7 – Issuing Bank Undertaking
Irrevocable Reimbursement
Undertaking Payable
starts 13
Article 8 – Confirming Bank Undertaking
Irrevocable Reimbursement
Undertaking Payable
starts 14
Article 9 – Advising of Credits and Amendments
Letter of Credit
Available with: Any bank
Notification
Available with: Advising Bank
For: Negotiation For: Negotiation
Reimbursement: Request payment from Reimbursement: Advising Bank holds
Bank XYZ, New York special instructions for
Branch reimbursement
15
Article 10 – Amendments
• The Issuing Bank, Confirming Bank (if it is the case), and the
beneficiary must agree with the amendments
• Partial acceptance = Notice of Refusal
• Silence ≠ Consent
• A compliant presentation with the Credit terms and an amendment that has not
been accepted yet, is considered as the beneficiary’s no acceptance of the
amendment
Has it
Original LC Amendment been
Date: July 1st 202x Date: July 4th 202x accepted?
US$150,000 Amount reduced to
US$100,000 Document
Ship before:
Aug 20th, 202x Ship before:
July 20th, 202x US$100,000
Partial Shipments
allowed Shipped:
Agreed? July 20th, 202x
Agreed?
16
Article 12 – Nomination
18
Article 14 – Standard for Examination of
Documents
Presentation Date
• A presentation including one or more original transport
documents must be made by the beneficiary not later
than 21 calendar days after the date of shipment, but in
any event not later than the expiry date of the credit.
19
Article 14 – Standard for Examination of Documents
20
Article 14 – Standard for Examination of Documents
Certificate of Inspection Certificate of
Inspection
Goods have been Goods have been
inspected and we certify We certify that the origin
that everything seems to of the goods is Singapore inspected and we certify
be in order that everything seems to
be in order
The Issuing Bank determines that a They must honour and deliver
presentation is compliant documents to the applicant
22
Article 16 – Discrepant Documents, Waiver and Notice
Ma Mi Ju Vi Sa Do Lu Ma
Maximun time allowed for documents revision
0 1 2 3 x x 4 5
23
Article 16 – Discrepant Documents, Waiver and Notice
• The refusal notification must indicate:
• The bank refuses to honour or negotiate;
• Each discrepancy that justify the refusal, and
• One of the following:
25
Article 19 - Transport Document Covering at Least
Two Different Modes of Transport
Transshipment means unloading from one means of conveyance and reloading to
another means of conveyance (whether or not in different modes of transport) during
the carriage from the place of dispatch, taking in charge or shipment to the place of final
destination stated in the credit.
27
Article 28 - Insurance Document and Coverage
• Date of the insurance document must be no later than date of shipment, unless it appears
on it that the cover is effective from a date not later than date of shipment.
29
Article 31 - Partial Drawings or Shipments
• Several Courier Receipts will not be considered as partial shipments if they are
stamped/signed by the same courier in the same place and date and with the
same destination
30
Most common
discrepancies
31
Correctable discrepancies Major discrepancies
32
NOMBRE DE LA DEPENDENCIA O CARRERA
HASTA DOS LÍNEAS
2
Letters of Credit
3
Letters of Credit
Basic Characteristics:
• Means of payment:
• Domestic (within same country)
• International (different country)
• Commitment
• Terms & Conditions
4
Letters of Credit
Requirements:
⚫ For the Importer:
1. If it is the first time, it always requires a credit assessment. If you already have a
Line of Credit approved, you must fill out an application for documentary
credit, a bank contract and take a transport insurance (depending on the
incoterms)
2. It is recommended for operations that have high value, for first purchase or
complex products.
3. It can be an operation with minimum costs above average. However, it will
depend on how much the buyer wants to mitigate risk.
5
Letters of Credit
Parties Involved
⚫ Importer: Buyer, Applicant
⚫ Issuing Bank: Issues, opens an LC (Documentary Credit)
⚫ Exporter: Beneficiary, Seller
⚫ Correspondent Bank: Advising or Confirming
⚫ Other: Negotiating, Reimbursing, etc.
Usual Documents
⚫ Commercial Invoice
⚫ Transport Document
⚫ Insurance Policy
⚫ Origin Certificate
⚫ Weight Certificate
⚫ Packing List
⚫ Sanitary Certificates
¿Discrepancies? 6
Letters of Credit
7
Letters of Credit
Discrepancies:
❖ Differences in documents after comparing them with LC.
Consequences:
❖ Delays to pay the L/C + operating costs
❖ Additional expenses as a result of amendments
❖ Penalties and discounts
❖ Sometimes even no payment of the LC
Recommendations to avoid discrepancies:
Subscribe a full Purchase/Sale Agreement (avoid only quotations).
If you are importing:
❖ look for help when filling out the LC Application (according to the contract);
❖ request the issuing bank a copy of the swift message and verify the information consigned (make sure it’s OK).
❖ Do not request excessive details or unnecessary documents
If you are exporting:
❖ review carefully the swift message as soon as you receive it from the advising bank (do not ignore typing errors)
and make sure you will be able to provide the requested documents.
❖ Compare with the Purchase/Sale Agreement .
❖ Prepare export documents exactly as on the LC & present them as early as possible to have sufficient time to
make corrections where necessary.
❖ Avoid any unnecessary detail or unsolicited information.
❖ Pay attention to the solution of any discrepancy (even minor).
8
Most common
discrepancies
1. Letter of credit has expired
2. Late presentation of documents
3. Late shipment of goods
4. Inconsistent spelling of parties’ names in documents
5. Terms of sale not complied with
6. Merchandise description not strictly as per L/C term
Correctable discrepancies
7. Partial shipment or transshipment effected despite L/C 1. Draft not in accordance with L/C terms
terms 2. Amount of draft does not agree with invoice
8. Foreign language documents must be exactly as per total
L/C 3. Invoice incorrectly addressed to the account
9. Documents are not consistent with one another party
10. Ocean Bill of Lading issued by forwarding agent 4. Description of goods in invoice does not
unacceptable correspond with description in L/C
11. Bills of Lading not clean 5. Invoice omits shipping terms
12. Insurance does not cover risks stipulated in the LC 6. Commercial invoice not signed
13. Insurance issued after shipment date 7. Bill of Lading not endorsed
14. Bills of Lading and Drafts not properly endorsed 8. Inconsistencies found in documents
15. Drafts not completed properly presented 9
Letters of Credit
The MT700 Swift Message
Status Tag Field Name
M 27 Sequence of Total O 43T Transshipment
O 44A Place of Taking in Charge/Dispatch from .../ Place of Receipt
M 40A Form of Documentary Credit
M 20 Documentary Credit Number O 44E Port of Loading/Airport of Departure
10
Letters of Credit
NOTIFIED CONFIRMED
• Advise to Beneficiary certifying • A Confirming Bank is bound to honor, as
authenticity of the credit. is the Issuing Bank, whenever the
• Advising Bank has no obligation documents are compliant with the
to pay. terms and conditions specified in the
credit.
11
Letters of Credit
Meaning for the Exporter
12
Letters of Credit
(1) CONTRACT
BENEFICIARY APPLICANT
(Seller) (Buyer)
(5) MERCHANDISE
(6) DOCUMENTS
(8) DOCUMENTS
(11)PAYMENT
(4) ADVISE
(7) DOCUMENTS
ADVISING ISSUING
BANK (*) BANK
(10) REIMBURSEMENT
(*) Confirmation 13
Terms within the LC
Validity:
• Length of time for the issuing bank undertaking to honor a compliant presentation.
Includes the time for shipping and the term for documents presentation and the
Letters of Credit
• If due date falls on a nonbanking day, it will be prorogued to the following Banking day.
• If due date falls on a nonbanking day, it will be prorogued to the following Banking day.
falls on a nonbanking day, it will NOT be prorogued to the following Banking day.
Shipping Date:
• Last date to effect shipment of goods.
• If due date falls on a nonbanking day, it will NOT be prorogued to the following Banking
day.
14
Terms within the LC
Example: Graphing the Terms in an LC
Issuing Date: 13.03.2x Last day for Docs Presentation: 15 ds B/L Deferred Payment or
Acceptance: 90 ds B/L
Shipping Date: 20.04.2x Validity: 90 days
Supplier
Issuing Last date for docs. LC Expira
Shipping Date: credit Due
date: Presentation: tion:
20.04.2x date
13.03.2x 05.05.2x(*) 11.06.2x 19.07.2x
15 days
Docs Presentation
NOTE: * When it is not mentioned banks will consider 21 days from B/L.
15
Availability within the LC
AT SIGHT
By Payment:
• Beneficiary receives payment as a consequence of a compliant presentation (in
accordance with the terms and conditions of the credit, the provisions of the UCP
Letters of Credit
AT TERM
By acceptance:
• Sale at term or credit granted by the exporter to the importer (usually for tenors of
not less than 30 days and not greater than 180 days).
• It means accepting a “Bill of Exchange” as a way to recognition of the debt to the
issuer of the B/E
By Deferred Payment:
• Similar to Acceptances (payment at term) but there is no Draft but a
“Commitment Letter”.
• Also known as “Supplier Credit”.
16
Letters of Credit
Clasification by:
L/C
NEGOTIATION AVAILABILITY
NOTIFIED TYPE OF
CONFIRMED
INSTRUMENT
TRANSFERIBLE REVOLVING
17
Transferable Letters of Credit
18
Transferable Letters of Credit
Application for
Transferable L/C
ADVISING BANK
ISSUING BANK
of the Transferred LC Or more
FIN 700
FIN720
Field 40ª Transferable
Transfer of the LC
Opened w/instructions to
Notify Beneficiary
Bank that advises /Transfers
the Documentary Credit
Beneficiary
(Intermediary)
19
Back to Back Letters of Credit
(Support LCs): Each one of the 2 LCs is
ruled by UCP 600
USE:
• When there is an intermediary (who doesn’t manufacture the goods)
• When the exporter is unable to supply the whole purchase order.
Allows beneficiary to request a similar LC backed up by the original credit:
• In f/o another beneficiary (who manufactures the goods)
• Original L/C is used as support for the auxiliary credit (Back to Back)
• Importer might ignore existence of 2nd LC (difference with transferable).
Replacement of Invoice & Bill of exchange (if there is one).
Types:
• Export backing an Import (Exporter receives an LC but needs to import
goods)
• Export backing a Domestic purchase (Exporter receives an LC but needs
to buy domestic goods)
• Domestic Sale backing up a Import operation (Broker receives a domestic
LC but needs to import goods for the sale)
• Domestic Sale backing up a Domestic purchase (Broker receives a
domestic LC but needs to buy locally goods for the sale)
20
Back-to-Back Letters of Credit
ADVISING BANK
ISSUING BANK
for the subsidiary LC
1st 2nd
FIN 700 FIN 700
LC L/C N°1 Original L/C N°2 Subsidiary
LC
ISSUING BANK for
ADVISING BANK the subsidiary LC
GREEN CLAUSE
o Similar to Red Clause, Advance payment (partial or total), against documents that allow the
importer to take control over the goods, at origin, that are waiting to be shipped.
o Exporter will deliver a Warrant or Certificate of Deposit or Warehouse Receipt:
o Issued by an authorized Warehouse, to the order of the Importer
o Kept in custody by the negotiating or confirming bank
22
Clauses Letters of Credit
Based in Banking Practice.
UCP doesn’t cover advances
A) THE AMOUNT DRAWN IS TO BE USED FOR THE SHIPMENT OF THE MERCHANDISE FOR WHICH THIS
CREDIT IS OPENED.
B) BENEFICIARY UNDERTAKES TO DELIVER DOCUMENTS IN CONFORMITY WITH THE CREDIT TERMS
FOR NEGOTIATION ON OR BEFORE EXPIRY OF THIS CREDIT AND AGREES TO REPAY THE ADVANCE
PAYMENT AGAINST THE PRESENTATION OF DOCUMENTS.
C) BENEFICIARY GUARANTEE THAT THEY WILL REFUND THE AMOUNT DRAWN IN THE CASE THEY FAIL
TO PRESENT DOCUMENTS IN CONFORMITY WITH L/C TERMS BEFORE EXPIRY DATE OF THIS CREDIT.
ALL INTEREST AND CHARGES DURING THE PERIOD OF ADVANCES ARE FOR THE ACCOUNT OF THE
APPLICANT.
23
Clauses Letters of Credit
GREEN CLAUSE: Based on Banking Practices.
No UCP article covering it.
Sample of text to be included:
COMMERCIAL USES:
• Commodities Export/Import: Sugar, Rice, Copper, Silver, Gold, wheat, etc.
25
Non covered risks on LCs
• No way to know that purchased goods are those that have been invoiced
(Unless there is an Inspection)
• It doesn’t secure quality or quantity of goods same as in documents
(unless there is a certification)
• Banks negotiate with documents and not with goods.
• Banks are not responsible for the authenticity of the documents
• Due to a drop in goods price, applicant might feel compelled to press
Issuing bank to find whatever discrepancies there might be in order to
refuse documents.
• Technical Risks:
For the Issuing Bank: Interpretation & transmission of correct applicant
instructions.
For the Designated Bank: To make sure that documents are reviewed
thoroughly and according to issuing bank instructions
26
Commissions on Letters of Credit
Events in LCs
VALIDITY
LIFE CYCLE OF AN L/C - COSTS TO THE IMPORTER/EXPORTER 27
Letters of Credit
Cases…….
28
CASE: Solution Bk of China
Validity should be 62 or more days, Do you agree? How do you fit quantity tolerance within the amount tolerance?
CASE: Solution FANDANGO
Documents Discrepancies
2
Let’s Review….
3
¿Are the documents “compliant”?
4
Discrepancies: ¿What are the consequences?
• Possible penalties
5
Frequent Discrepancies
6
Most Common Discrepancies and how they are named:
7
¿What to do?
8
A few tips….
9
Presenting the documents and then what?
❑The exporter makes the delivery of the documents
that are specified in the Letter of Credit to the
designated local bank (Advising Bank and/or
Confirming Bank (as it is the case).
10
Criteria Banks use for the examination of Dox
EXPORTER BANK
DOCUMENTS
$ Payment against Compliant
/ Conforming Documents
Banks deal with documents & documents alone and use the following criteria to
examine documents:
• Terms and conditions of the L/C
• Uniform Customs & Practice (UCP 600)
• International Standard Banking Practice for examination of Documents (ISBP – Pub745E)
• Against each other
• Reasonable care / Common sense
11
Structure of the Application – Avoiding inconsistence
Letter of Credit Application
Content
• Structure
- Type of Documentary Credit & Parties
- Amount, Tolerance and Payment Terms
- Date & Place for expiration, last date for shipment and period for presentation
- Goods Description and shipment term (Incoterm)
- Required Documents
- Additional Conditions
12
Structure of the Application
13
Structure of the Application
14
Structure of the Application
15
Structure of the Application
Date & Place for expiration, last date for shipment and period for presentation
16
Structure of the Application
17
Structure of the Application
Required Documentation:
18
Structure of the Application
Additional Conditions
19
Analysis of the information within the application and
possible inconsistencies
Logistics Inconsistencies
20
Analysis of the information within the application and
possible inconsistencies
21
Analysis of the information within the application and
possible inconsistencies
Inconsistencies among dates vs. Presentation Period
22
Analysis of the information within the application and
possible inconsistencies
23
Analysis of the information within the application and
possible inconsistencies
Shipment Terms vs. required documentation
24
How to avoid Discrepancies and delays
LC requires as special condition that Banks, as per Trade Finance banking practice, abide
Additional Citi verifies that the signatures of by the rules, do not assume responsibility to verify
Conditions the documents presented for signatures (UCP600 Article15). As per policy, the
(signatures negotiation match against a majority of banks do not verify signatures on
verification) specimen of signatures sent to them documents presented for negotiation against any
as part of the LC specimen provided by the Issuing bank
28