Free book for exporters
By Sam Vaknin
palma [at] unet . com . mk
http://samvak.tripod.com
Advertisements:
Published
by the Ministry of Trade
Republic of Macedonia, September 1999
ISBN: 9989-9534-0-6
I. The Export Transaction and Its Documents
The Transaction
- Finding a market for the goods (market research)
- Selecting the marketing channels
- Negotiations
- Pricing
- Distribution channels
- Order
- Contract
- Commercial Invoice
Commercial Invoice must include (minimum):
- Payment Terms
- Mode of Payment
- Division of Costs
- Details of Carrier
- Details of Receiving Party
- Details of Buyer
- Other Details
For best results use the ECE (Economic Commission for Europe)
Standard Commercial Invoice
Packing List must include (minimum):
Negotiable, transferable and assignable
Subject to the Hague conditions and MUST INCLUDE:
- Name and address of sender
- Port of loading and Port of discharge
- Date of lading and place of issuance of bill of lading
- Name of vessel and number of voyage
- Identity marks of cargo
- Description of goods – number of packing units, weight,
volume
- Condition of goods – statement of carrier (if not stated
– the goods are in good condition)
- "Clean on Board" not "Foul"
Types of Bills of Lading (BL)
- Shipped BL – Goods are on deck of ship
- Received for Shipment – Prior to loading onto ship
- Direct BL – From origin to destination, transshipment
not allowed
- Ocean Through BL – In case of transit involving a few
carriers. In such a case, each carrier imposes its own conditions
on each leg of the voyage and for the limited duration it handles
the cargo.
- Pure Through BL – First carrier must transport from port
of loading to a mid-point and is responsible for damages to the
goods.
- Combined Transport BL – Pure BL which covers shipment
by all means of transport (sea, air, land).
- Forwarder BL – An agent's BL. Issued by an international
forwarder.
- Freight Forwarder BL – BLs of the International Forwarders
Association – FIATA
Types of Insurance Policies (IP)
The IP is prepared by the insurance agent or the insurance
company.
- Open Time IP – One time IP, used in air/marine transport.
Policy expires with the completion of the transport (with delivery).
- Open IP – Open or current policy used to insure a number
of shipments. Payment of premium only for actual shipments. Entails
a declaration by the insured to the insurer pertaining to each
and every shipment on a pre-determined basis (ad hoc, weekly,
monthly and so on).
The rights of the insured party are NOT effected if it BONA
FIDE forgot or had no time to declare to the insurer as per above,
or if it gave the insurer a declaration containing wrong information.
The right declaration can be filed even after the goods are lost
or delivered.
Types of Certificates of Origin (CO)
Required by the authorities as a basis for customs duties
and taxes discounts or exemptions under trade agreements.
Some destination require CO per each shipment. Others require
CO only for specific goods. Sometimes the buyer demands a CO.
The exporter sends the CO to the buyer separately or with
the goods.
Issued by the Chamber of Commerce, or by the Customs, or
by the exporter itself or by its forwarder in trust.
- EUR1 – To the European Union
- FORM A – To the USA / NAFTA (the customs union of the
USA, Canada and Mexico)
- CO
Warehouse Receipt proves warehousing of goods in the port
area. Needed prior to commencement of the release of the goods by
the customs.
- Orders
- Inquiry
- Indication / Quotation
- Order
- Firm Order
- Acceptance (the order becomes a contract by accepting
it)
- Revolving Orders are considered contracts
Order through an agent – identical to order issued directly
by a buyer (Important: demand from the agent proof of agency or
representation, such as a power of attorney)
Should include:
1. Price of Goods (including price ex factory, shipment
/ transport – freight costs, insurance, port taxes and expenses,
other taxes, customs costs, forwarding costs, costs of issuing certificates,
permits and licenses)
IMPORTANT: Make sure WHO pays WHAT
2. Specifications of Goods – Type of goods, quality, packing,
number of units / quantity per package, packing sub-units
IMPORTANT: Prepare a sample for the buyer – which will be
WORSE than actually delivered goods.
3. Quantity and Delivery Terms
If it is an on-going (revolving) order – get from the buyer
a projection of its purchases in the future.
TIME OF DELIVERY IS CRITICAL !!!
4. Mode and Method of Payment
Transaction Documents
- Documents demanded by the authorities (permits, licenses,
standards and quality certificates, veterinary certificates, health
certificates, labeling, etc.)
- Transaction documents (bill of lading, certificate of
origin, commercial invoice and specifications, port and customs
clearances, banking documents, etc.)
- Packing, Freight and Insurance
- Define outer and inner packing and sub-packing (materials,
shape, size)
- Quantities
- Measurements
- Quality
IMPORTANT – Get freight offers from a few forwarders/carriers
and make sure ALL the components are included in the price quoted!!!
Remember:
All costs, including the insurance premiums, are negotiable.
USE an insurance agent or an insurance expert within your
company. Insurance is a complicated subject and the insurance companies
do their best not to pay on claims.
Proforma Invoice (PI)
Is actually an order and constructed as a commercial invoice
–
But a commercial invoice MUST be provided separately.
Seller sends PI in duplicate (=2 copies)
Buyer signs one copy and returns it to seller
Buyer can prepare order or PI on its letterhead and send
it to seller
Must include mode of payment
Sale Contract
Use in case of a complicated transaction, the provision of
services (or of goods which contain a service element – for example,
maintenance or training)
Sole Distributorship Contract
In case of doubt, use the ICC (international Chamber of
Commerce) Model Contract (see appendix).
A distributor BUYS the goods and distributes them through
a network of sub-distributors. He participates in advertising, marketing
and sale promotion of the products he distributes. In return, he
gets exclusivity for a certain territory, for a prescribed period
of time and under certain terms and conditions. He does not distribute
competing products and he uses a brandname.
An agent get a commission on sales generated through him
– but does NOT buy the goods.
The Sole Distributorship contract MUST include:
- Definition of territory and products
- Commitment to act bona fide and with best efforts
- Roles of the distributor
- Non competition clause
- Distributorship and distribution channels
- Fairs, exhibitions, advertising, marketing and sales
promotion
- Delivery terms and retail price list
- Sales plan and minimum sales obligations
- Sub-distributors and agents
- Information exchange
- Prices to distributor (distributor price list)
- Sales outside the territory
- Brandnames and Trademarks – protection and allowed usage
- Inventories and spare parts levels, maintenance and service
- Exclusivity
- Direct sales (by the supplier in the territory of the
distributor)
- Updates and upgrades
- Validity and Expiry of the contract
- Termination of the contract
- Compensation for damages in case of early termination
of the contract
- Obligation to return documents and inventory to supplier
in case of termination of the contract
Agency Contract
In case of doubt, use the ICC Model Contract (see appendix).
A Del Credere Agent undertakes to compensate the producer
/ manufacturer if the buyers (clients) default.
MUST include as a minimum:
- Appointment of the agent by the seller
- First right of refusal regarding new products
- Exclusion of OEM (sale to a third party which rebrands
the goods with his own brand)
- Type of clients the agent may sell to
- Exact geographical definition of the territory
- Exclusivity (or lack of it)
- Bona fide collaboration and commercial fairness
- The roles and functions of the agent
- Endorsement and adoption of orders concluded by the agent
with buyers
- No competition clause
- Marketing, advertising, fairs and exhibitions
- Minimal sales targets
- Sub-agency
- Obligation to exchange information
- Financial arrangements (Del Credere, other)
- Trademarks and brandnames
- Complaints of clients and buyers
- Right of seller to sell directly in territory of the
agent
- Special clients / buyers
- Fees and commissions and formulas for their calculation
- Right of seller to reject business
- Expiry or termination date or absence thereof
- Survival clauses and unfinished business in case of termination
of the contract
II. The Process of Exporting
Generalized Process of Export
Order received
Letter of Credit or other payment document
opened
Production and pre-export phases
Preparation of documents (EUR1, FORM A, specified
invoice, licenses and permits, certificates of origin, etc.)
Instructions to forwarder and customs agent
Checking the prices of freight, insurance and
forwarding
Commercial export (at the port facilities or
customs terminal)
Receipt of documents (bill of lading, confirmed
certificate of origin, etc.)
Presentation of documents at the bank and their
transfer to the buyer's bank
Payment received
The Phases of the Export Process:
Phase A – Decision
Phase B – Preparations
Phase C – Performance
Phase D – Post shipment
Phase A – DECISION
Collect Information (internet, specialized databases,
market research, meetings, travel, fairs and so on)
Proforma Invoice
Production, quantity, quality, delivery terms,
licensing
Price offer (firm offer)
Sale or Supply Contract
MAKE SURE THAT …
You are allowed to export the goods (no export
restrictions on your goods)
Is there credit available for purchasing imported
and domestically produced raw materials and parts – going into your
exported goods?
Can you honour the order? Do you have sufficient
capacity, the right manpower, the needed financing? It is better
to say no than to renege on a contract.
Phase B – PREPARATIONS
Import of raw materials / parts (imported or
foreign inputs)
Purchase of imported raw materials / parts
in the local markets (domestic or local inputs)
Financing the imports
Financing the production
Production
Preparation of documentation
Engaging customs agents and international forwarders
Insurance
Quality certification
Export license
Freight and transport arrangements
Certificate of origin
Consular confirmation
Phase C – PERFORMANCE
Forwarding instructions to the customs agent
Packing
Withdrawal by customs agent
Preparation of invoice and specifications
Preparation of VAT claimback
Inspection of exported goods by authorities
Warehousing at the port
Custom clearance
Inspection of exported goods by the client
Port clearance
Authorization to load
Loading and release of documents
Receipt of bill of lading
Receipt of confirmed certificate of origin
Receipt of other documents
Phase D – Post Shipment
Financing the documents (=receiving payment)
Presentation of documents in local bank
Statistical registration
Tax and port tax rebates (in some countries)
Pricing the Exported Goods
Fixed Costs (Overhead) – Administration,
rent, accounting, amortization / depreciation, etc. Should be divided
by man-hours or product units to determine their contribution to
the costs.
PLUS
Variable Costs – Directly related to
the production process. Wages, raw materials, fuel, etc. Increases
with increased production.
Incoterms Costs – See Incoterms hereunder
Transporting the goods from factory to export
port or terminal
Shipping the goods from export port or terminal
to import port or terminal
Transporting the goods from import port or terminal
to buyer.
III. Incoterms
Incoterms
Last determined by the ICC in 1994. There is
also a 1936 American version.
Used by all parties to an international trade
transaction: buyer, seller, banks, financial institutions, agents,
forwarders, insurance companies, carriers, government authorities,
lawyers and courts.
See Appendix for detailed analyses of all
13 Incoterms
EXW (Ex Works) – Seller provides goods
in his factory yard. Buyer is responsible for all the rest, including
loading the goods onto trucks in the seller's yards. Best to add:
"loaded upon departing vehicle".
FCA (Free Carrier) – Seller provides
export licenses, customs clearances and port documents to first
carrier (determined by buyer) in an agreed location within the export
country. Useful for MultiModal Transport (MMT) in land, air, or
sea. Seller pays all port and customs inspection expenses. Seller's
responsibility ends with delivery to carrier. Buyer pays all expenses
from point of delivery (transport, insurance, special inspections).
FAS (Free Alongside Ship) – Seller
delivers goods to a loading quay, alongside a ship, in an agreed
port in export country. Buyer obliged to clear goods for export
after having received loading documents from seller. Buyer pays
all port expenses and expenses related to required documentation.
Use only for marine freight.
FOB (Free On Board) – Seller delivers
customs-cleared goods with bill of lading, export license, all taxes
and duties paid clean (unharmed) on board a vessel. Seller pays
all expenses until goods are clean on board. Buyer determines carrier
and pays the carriage (including loading expenses if part of the
transport costs). Marine freight only. Best to add: "stowed
and trimmed".
Buyer must insure itself when using an "F"
Incoterm.
CFR (Cost and Freight) – Seller pays
all expenses and transport costs to port of discharge. But responsibility
for damage or loss or additional expenses is buyer's after goods
loaded and stowed under deck. Seller obtains customs and port clearances,
licenses, contracts with the carrier and with the insurance company
regarding transport of goods to the point of loading. Buyer must
obtain the import licenses, release the goods in port of discharge,
issue insurance and pay for transit and inspection of goods. Marine
freight only.
CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) – Seller
arranges marine freight insurance for buyer and provides buyer with
valid insurance policy in addition to obligations under CFR.
Unless otherwise agreed, seller buys a limited "C" policy.
Best to add: "free out". It is important to mention
the type of insurance and coverage sought by buyer.
CPT (Carriage Paid To) – Similar to
CFR but when MMT involved (car, train, ship and then airplane, for
instance). Instead of On Board – use First Carrier.
CIP (Carriage and Insurance Paid To)
– Similar to CIF but when MMT is involved. Responsibility reverts
to buyer when goods delivered to First Carrier.
DAF (Delivered At Frontier) – Seller
to deliver export cleared goods at a precise point at the border
of either import or export country. Buyer obliged to clear goods
through customs terminal, to obtain import license and to bear all
import related duties, fees and charges. Seller must inform buyer
ETD (Expected Time of Delivery) and precise location of delivery.
If preceded by international marine or air transport,
point of delivery will follow the Main Carriage (used in train transport).
DES (Delivered Ex Ship) – Marine freight
only. Seller must deliver export cleared goods to buyer on board
a ship in port of discharge but has no responsibility to clear the
goods for import in the destination country, to unload them and
to ship them to final destination within the buyer's country.
DEQ (Delivered Ex Quay) – Marine freight
only. Seller must deliver goods buyer outside the quay after unloading
them from the ship and clearing them for import through port authorities
and customs. Seller pays import taxes and port expenses. Seller
must provide buyer with bill of lading and gate pass. Buyer must
transport goods to his yards and if he does not must pay demurrage
and warehousing.
DDU (Delivered Duty Unpaid) – Seller
must deliver goods to buyer in a location within the destination
country but buyer must clear them for import through the port and
customs authorities. Buyers must pay all taxes and expenses related
to the clearance.
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) – Seller must
deliver goods directly to buyer's location (or to any other address)
after having fully cleared them for import and fully paid all taxes
and expenditures related to such clearance. Best to add: "DDP-VAT
unpaid" in case seller does not agree to pay the VAT.
IMPORTANT!!!
The buyer and the seller must include all special
conditions, not covered by the Incoterms – in their sale contract
or order or commercial invoice.
Even if you include an Incoterm in a contract
it is advised, to remove doubt, to also include a detailed list
of rights obligations of the parties (=an agreed interpretation
of the Incoterm). Always mention the version of Incoterms used (for
instance: "FOB – Incoterms 1990").
The transfer of responsibility to the goods
from seller to buyer does NOT constitute a transfer of title (ownership)
to the goods.
There are Exit Contracts (seller delivers to
buyer's carrier in country of origin of the goods and such a delivery
ends the seller's responsibility) – All the Incoterms which start
with the letters E, F and C. For example: CIF does NOT mean that
the seller is responsible to deliver the goods in a port in the
destination country – only that it has to pay for the voyage and
for the insurance.
There are Delivery Contracts (seller delivers
to buyer in country of destination and is responsible to them until
they are delivered there) – All the Incoterms, which start with
the letter D.
Insurance
This is why insurance is critical (policy types
A, B, or C).
It must include:
-
Location in which the policy becomes valid
-
Location at which the policy expires
-
Extensions to the basic policy
-
Political risks
-
Value of coverage and types of coverage
(replacement value, damages, etc.)
-
Insurance of loss of profits
-
The policy's currency
-
Currency hedging
Important
The buyer must provide full specifications
of packing of goods
If the parties use a C Incoterm, the buyer is
usually responsible for costs associated with an inspection of the
goods by the authorities of the country of origin (PSI –
Pre Shipment Inspection). If the buyer demands an inspection (quality
and quantity controls) – it must be stated clearly who will bear
the cost. If not specified – the buyer shall bear it.
It is recommended to use FCA when goods are
not delivered to the carrier on quay or on board. Buyer must arrange
the transport and provide the seller with exact instructions.
"FOB Airport" should not be
used. FOB is ONLY for marine transportation. For air transport use
FCA.
Incoterms in conjunction with Bill of Lading
(BL)
When CIF or CFR is used, use "on board
BL" (goods have been loaded on board ship).
If goods shipped in containers, carrier may
issue "Received for Shipment" (when he receives the goods
and prior to their loading on board) – instead of BL.
It is preferable to use CPT or CIP if BL not
required to conclude the transaction.
If goods arrive prior to original BL – they
are delivered to buyer against a bank guarantee. Avoid it as it
negates the function of the BL.
Non Negotiable Waybills and Receipts
If a waybill is non-negotiable, there is no
need to present its original to obtain delivery of the goods.
The following are non-negotiable:
-
Liner Waybill
-
Ocean Waybill
-
Data Freight Receipt
-
Cargo Key Receipt
-
Sea Waybill
All air waybills are non-negotiable. Only the
seller can instruct the carrier (not the buyer or his bank). Importers
dislike non-negotiable waybills (unless explicitly stated that they
are irrevocable). The names of the parties in the waybill must be
irrevocable – otherwise, the seller can change them.
BLs, Receipts and Waybills
Let us call all waybills and receipts – as
well as bills of lading – transport documents (TD).
TDs are delivered to the buyer or to the seller
according to instructions given to the carrier (never mind who paid
for the carriage). The seller might get them to prove delivery.
The buyer needs them to release the goods (to instruct the carrier).
TDs can be divisible (article A8 of Incoterms)
in case one TD covers goods deliverable to many buyers.
Buyers responsible to release the goods and
accept delivery – or to compensate seller for any damages.
Buyer is liable for damages to the goods after
the transfer of responsibility from seller to buyer ("Price
Risk").
It is recommended to use "Force Majeure"
articles in sales contracts.
Some countries oblige exporters and importers
to insure the goods in their own countries (to minimize foreign
exchange outlays).
Rules of Use of Incoterms
-
Use DEQ, DES, CIF, FOB and FAS
only in marine carriage and for marine freight.
-
Use CPT, CIP, FCA universally except
if goods are in bulk of carried in chartered vessels.
-
Be clear: how are the goods to be transported,
who has the obligation to have them loaded, who pays for what,
who is responsible to clear the goods, to release them and to
unload them and so on.
-
Be clear: how much insurance you require
and what type (A, B, C)
-
What restrictions and special demands would
you like to impose on the carriage and the carrier.
-
Include "Force Majeure"
and validity, expiry and termination clauses
-
Indicate which Incoterms version is used
(example: FOB-Incoterms 1990).
-
The Incoterms CPT, CIP, CFR and
CIF deal only with the transport aspect of the transaction
– not with the transfer of responsibility or ownership.
IV. Payment
Payment
Payments schedule (when?)
Payment mode or method of payment (how?)
Place of payment (where?)
Currency of payment (which?)
Payments Forms
Advance payments (cash in advance)
Open account credit
Cash Against Documents (CAD)
Documents for collection, Cash on Delivery
(COD)
Letter of Credit or Documentary Credit (L/C)
General Principles of Payment
If cash was paid in advance by buyer, seller
will give buyer the documents, courier them to the buyer or airmail
them (Captain Mail them).
COD – the carrier delivers the good against
cash (collect).
But in all other forms of payment:
The carrier of the goods is hired by either
the seller or the buyer to carry the goods, in accordance with instructions,
to a destination.
The seller sends the goods to a bank in geographical
proximity to the final destination of the goods.
The transport documents (bill of lading, waybill,
receipt) are sent to that CONSIGNEE bank.
The consignee bank – having received the transport
documents, the commercial invoice, the certificate of origin, the
insurance policy and other documents, invites the buyer to buy (to
redeem) these documents (with which he can get the goods).
The buyer pays the bank and the bank endorses
the bill of lading and instructs the carrier (if the BL is non-negotiable)
to give the goods to the buyer.
The buyer pays the carrier, presents the endorsed
bill of lading and gets a delivery order with which the buyers releases
the goods, having paid customs, duties, taxes and port expenses.
He receives a gate pass which allows him to load the goods to his
lorries and transport them to his yards.
Open Account
Either with big, reliable clients, or with
agents, distributors, subsidiaries which maintain a consignment
warehouse or a forward warehouse.
Use Exchange Note – A financial instrument
in which the seller instructs the buyer to pay his bank for the
goods. The buyer signs the note. Buyer's signature confirms receipt
of the goods in good order and the buyer's debt. Exchange notes
are transferable, negotiable, endoreseable and assignable.
It is a stand-alone document which does not
refer to the underlying transaction.
It is recommended to date the exchange note
(on its back) and thus transform it into a Time Note.
Cash On Delivery (COD)
Payment with delivery of goods.
Exporters which maintain warehouses in destination
countries – use COD.
Payment can be in cash, deposit receipt, bank
guarantee, bankers' acceptance.
Be careful to receive payment only by your authorized
representative.
Cash Against Documents
-
Contract
-
Carriage of goods to port of discharge
-
Documents (commercial invoice, bill of lading,
insurance policy, certificate of origin) transferred by to seller's
bank for collection
-
Seller's bank (usually through carrier)
transfers documents to buyer's bank
-
Buyer's bank (the consignee) invites buyer
to receive endorsed (ownership transferred to buyer) documents
-
Buyer deposits payment (or arranges credit
line) for the goods in his bank
-
Goods delivered to buyer (using the endorsed
documents)
-
Buyer's bank transfers the payment to seller's
bank
-
Seller's bank credits seller's account with
the payment minus fees and charges and commissions
If bank endorses documents to buyer prior to
receipt of payment – the bank assumes the buyer's obligation to
pay.
CAD not to be used with branded or customized
goods (buyer might refuse the goods and if they
are branded or customized – they cannot be sold to another buyer).
Banker's or Bank's Acceptance (Accept)
Exporter can ask buyer to provide a bank draft.
An acceptance stamp and signature on the draft ("Accept")
transforms it into an obligation of the bank itself to pay, on a
given date to bearer.
Both Exchange Notes and Bankers' Acceptances
are traded in special exchanges in the world.
Letter of Credit and Documentary Credit
A letter in which a bank undertakes to pay
the exporter if and when the exporter meets certain terms and conditions
enumerated within the L/C.
The bank's commitment is usually irrevocable
(the L/C should contain this word: "irrevocable" – although
it is irrevocable even by default).
If the exporter fulfils all the conditions of
the L/C - the bank will pay, regardless of the situation of the
buyer. If the seller did not comply with the conditions in the L/C,
the bank will pay only if buyer expressly agrees to it.
IMPORTANT
-
The letter of credit is only as good as
the issuing bank
-
Check: are the conditions of the L/C identical
to the conditions specified in the sale contract, the commercial
invoice or the order?
UCP-500
These are the uniform rules of international
payments determined by the ICC in Paris, France:
-
Importer signs sales contract which includes
prices, schedules of delivery and payment, types of packing,
modes of carriage, volume, documents to be exchanged and more.
Importer gets pro-forma invoice from exporter.
-
Based on the pro-forma invoice, Importer
asks his bank to open letter of credit in favor of Exporter.
Importer instructs the opening bank which details to add to
the L/C which are not included in the Sales Contract or in the
pro-forma invoice. Such details may include: permission or prohibition
of transit, transshipment, division of the L/C, part shipment,
the number of copies of the documents, certificates of origin,
the coverage amount of the insurance policy, should the policy
be endorsed and so on.
-
The bank uses its letter of credit form
and incorporate all the terms and conditions of the sales contract
in the letter of credit.
-
The Importer's bank send the details of
the L/C to the Exporter's bank (the Correspondent Bank).
-
The Correspondent Bank informs the Exporter
that an L/C was opened in the Exporter's favor and conveys to
the Exporter the details of the L/C.
-
Exporter compares the conditions of the
L/C to the conditions of the sales contract and especially whether
the Importer's Bank has irrevocably agreed to accept the Correspondent
Bank's signature regarding the receipt of the documents.
-
Exporter consults his bank and others whether
the Importer's bank is a prime, world bank of good standing.
-
Exporter makes sure the L/C is valid and
corresponds to the timetables agreed with the Importer regarding
both the delivery of the goods and payments. Another question:
can the documents be negotiated or transferred within the term
of the L/C? Can the Exporter accept all the restrictions and
limitations of the L/C? Are there any impossible conditions
(for instance, in contravention of the foreign exchange regime)
or wrong details (name of a port which does not exist, etc.).
-
If the L/C is accepted by the Exporter,
he starts production and manufacturing operations. When the
goods are ready, Exporter contacts a carrier. After the goods
are loaded, Exporter gets a bill of lading, a certificate of
origin EUR1 or FORM A signed by the Customs, an export list
and other documents.
-
Exporter presents documents to his bank
which checks whether all required documents have been presented
and whether they comply with the conditions of the L/C. The
correspondent bank then issues an ACCEPTANCE. The L/C
then becomes a bank guarantee.
-
If the correspondent bank is also the confirming
bank, it also pays the Exporter.
-
The correspondent bank transfers the documents
and the acceptance to the opening bank.
-
The opening bank checks the documents. But
if the correspondent bank is also the confirming bank – even
if the documents are wrong or faulty – the opening bank must
pay.
-
The opening bank transfers the payment to
the correspondent and confirming bank.
-
The opening bank informs the Importer that
the documents arrived. Importer deposits payment with the opening
bank (or opens a credit line with it).
-
Importer gets from the opening bank the
documents endorsed.
-
Importer clears the goods and takes delivery
of them through the carrier (he gets a delivery order
from the carrier, having settled all outstanding accounts with
carrier).
Settlement by Acceptance
-
Seller transfers documents to correspondent
bank with a note made out to the bank (the bank is the note's
beneficiary).
-
Correspondent bank confirms acceptance of
dated note to the seller.
-
Opening bank gets the document.
-
Opening bank credits correspondent bank.
Settlement by Negotiation
-
Seller transfers documents to correspondent
bank with a note made out to the buyer (the buyer is the beneficiary
of the note).
-
The correspondent bank pays seller against
documents and note.
-
Correspondent bank transfers documents and
note to opening bank.
-
Opening bank credits correspondent bank.
Letters of Credit - Form, Structure and
Details
-
Number and ID (this number must be placed
on all subsequent documentation pertaining to the same transaction.
-
Names and details of buyer, seller, opening
bank (buyer's bank), correspondent bank.
-
Description of goods – usually the proforma
invoice is attached and this sentence is then added: "In
accordance with proforma invoice number … dated … herewith attached
to this letter of credit and which constitutes an integral and
inseparable part thereof".
-
Total cost or price.
-
A list of documents (with the presentation
of which by the seller payment to the seller will be effected):
-
Commercial invoice, including a list of
the goods, details of buyer and seller and signatures.
-
Packing list signed by seller.
-
Insurance policy including its type, the
coverage it affords, amount covered. The policy's beneficiary
must be the opening (importer's) bank and it must be fully
endorseable.
-
Detailed billways, receipts or bill of
lading: who is entitled to receive delivery of the goods,
who pays for the carriage, is carriage prepaid and where,
etc.
-
Other documents.
-
Dates – when was the L/C opened, how long
is it valid, date of loading and date of presentation of documents
at the bank (maximum 21 days after loading of goods, if not
otherwise specified).
-
Special instructions: is transit or transshipment
allowed (best to write "transshipment allowed"), is
part shipment allowed (best to write "part shipment or
partial shipment allowed").
If carriage or delivery not according to L/C
– L/C will NOT BE PAID!!!
Types and Specifications of Documentary Credits
Confirmed versus Unconfirmed
Opening bank uses a bank in the Exporter's
country (usually the correspondent bank) to interface with the exporter.
The corresponding bank informs exporter about
opening of L/C and checks and verifies the exporter's documentation
after goods have been loaded (such verification subject to opening
bank's consent).
Sometimes the correspondent bank verifies the
documents AND pays for them – this is known as CONFIRMATION.
With a confirmed L/C, the correspondent bank must pay the exporter
upon verification of the documents. The exporter pays a confirmation
fee.
Transferable and Divisible
An L/C that can be transferred to or be paid
in parts to sub-contractors and suppliers of the Exporter. Only
one transfer is allowed:
-
The name and details (address, etc.) of
first beneficiary can be changed to name and details of second
beneficiary.
-
The amount of transferred credit must be
smaller than original amount of credit.
-
The period of validity of the L/C or its
parts can be altered.
-
The percentage of insurance can be increased.
-
The details of the new L/Cs issued on basis
of original L/C can be different to details of original L/C
– as long as new L/C are less (in amount) or shorter (in period)
or partial and do not expand the original L/C or otherwise enhance
it.
Revolving
For a series of identical transactions with
known delivery and payment schedules.
If irrevocable, cannot be revoked even if revolving
and even if the buyer went bankrupt. The bank is responsible to
pay.
Counter Credit (Back to Back)
The L/C is pledged by the Exporter to his bank
(the corresponding bank) or (more often) to another bank against
receipt of credit from the bank. This credit is then used to pay
suppliers.
The exporter's obligation to pay the back to
back credit it received from its bank – is NOT dependent upon the
payment of the L/C used as a collateral.
V. Shipping
- Packing and transportation of goods to port or terminal
- Marine transport
- Air transport
- International forwarding and customs agency
- Cargo insurance
- Credit insurance
- Prevention of loss and damages
- Labeling
- Land export and import
Packing
Cardboard (two or three waves)
Crate (wood with or without cardboard)
Wooden boxes (heavy and expensive)
Barrels (metal, plastic, wood; for the transportation of
fluids; fluids must fit the material of the barrel)
Sacks (jute, paper, plastic, cloth)
The Goods can be transported …
Loose (each unit – box, barrel, etc. – separately)
Unitizing (one unit composed of sub-units) – shrink, containers,
big bags or semi bulk, stretch, etc.
Marine Transport
The carriage fee or rate + charges, fees, levies, duties
and commissions = carriage tariff
Influenced by:
Fixed and variable transport costs
(such as the distance traveled, expenses and fees in various
ports, balancing the cargo, frequency, size and type of vessel,
properties of the goods, modes of loading and warehousing, volume/weight
ratio, transport risks, possible damage to cargo, size of cargo
and its composition, etc.)
But "Likes are not treated as likes" – different
prices are quoted for similar situations.
This is because of additional costs related to the market
in the goods and to the marine transport marketplace.
The carriage fee is determined also by "what the traffic
can bear" – how in demand are the goods, how valuable they
are, etc.
The conditions of the global marketplace in marine transport
and the competition in it also determine the quoted price – as well
as fees, levies, charges, commissions and taxes in the various ports
and in the various origin and destination countries. Changes of
technology also influence prices.
Tariffs are determined as CLASS RATE – a class of
transport, which includes many types of cargo with the same rate
or
A COMMODITY RATE – specifically tailored to every
type of cargo and multiplied by the weight or the mass (volume).
Payment is according to the higher of the weight and the mass.
To this the exporter should add charges (such as the Heavy
Lift Charge or the Extra Length Charge) and other levies…
...such as the CAF (Currency Adjustment Factor –
a currency hedge in favor of the shipowner);
...the BAF (Bunker Adjustment Factor – a percentage
of the rate intended to offset certain expenses of the ship operator);
War Risk (or Political Risk – to offset a high insurance
premium);
Congestion Surcharge (to offset expenses which are
the result of long periods of waiting at the port) or
THC (Terminal Handling Charges – imposed by the port
itself for the right to anchor).
Containers
Door to Door (House to House)
An empty container is deposited with the exporter in a pre-determined
date.
The Exporter fills it and transports it to the harbor.
In the destination country – the container is deposited
with the importer.
He empties it, returns it to the port.
Pier to House
In the port of discharge, cargo and goods from different
suppliers are concentrated in one container which is then sent to
the importer / buyer.
House to Pier
Like House to House – but because the container contains
goods for various buyers, the container itself is not sent to any
single buyer.
Pier to Pier
Cargoes reach the port, get containerized by the agent in
the port of loading. In the port of discharge, it is emptied and
each cargo is sent separately to each buyer.
Consolidation
Transporting the cargoes of a few sellers in one container.
REMEMBER !!!
Compare Prices – you will always find a cheaper alternative!!!
Types of Ships
Liner – operate in regular lines with regular vessels
in pre-determined dates
Charter(ed) –
Voyage Charter – Cargo owner charters a vessel to
transport the cargo from port of loading to port of unloading
Time Charter – Cargo owner or shipping company charters
a vessel for a defined period of time (upto a few years)
Bareboat Charter – Long term (5-15 years) charter
(common in the transport of fuel and grains). The lessee takes care
of the cargo, of operating the vessel and its crew
Container ships – Built like a beehive with cells
the size of containers
RORO – Cargo rolled on wheeled carriages under deck
(for transporting vehicles, etc.)
Multi Purpose Boat
Tankers (fluids, liquids, fuel)
Bulk – Transports grains or chemicals in bulk
Lash – Carry with them big platforms or rafts
Conference
All shipowners are organized in a cartel called "Conference"
Marine Bill of Lading (MBL)
Serves as a receipt for the cargo, proof of existence of
a carriage contract and proof of ownership. It is negotiable and
endorseable.
Under the Hague principles, a bill of lading (BL) must include
the following:
- Name and address of shipper / exporter
- Port of loading and port of discharge
- Date of loading and place of issuance of BL
- Name of vessel (ocean liner, etc.) and voyage number
- Cargo identification marks
- Description of goods – number of units, weight, volume
(mass)
- Condition of goods (if not filled – no external or visible
damage)
- BL must be "clean on board" not "foul"
A Marine Bill of Lading must include these to be valid:
- The words "bill of lading" and the words "lading"
or "shipped" (which prove that goods have been loaded
on board vessel)
- Date of loading
- Confirmation of the shipping company
- Numbers of original bills of lading, if any
- The words "Clean on Board"
- Name of the shipper
- Name of the consignee or "To Order" (of the
shipper) together with endorsement of the shipper
- Name of vessel
- Port of loading, final destination and is re-loading
required
- Name of parties to be notified upon arrival to the port
of discharge
- Marks and numbers stamped on the packages
- Abbreviated description of the goods (weight, number
of units and volume / mass)
- How many original copies of the MBL are there and is
the presentation of all original copies required to in order to
release the goods
Types of Marine Bills of Lading
Shipped MBL – Goods were loaded and carrier received
them in good order
Direct MBL – No transshipment allowed
Ocean Through MBL – Transit MBL. When more than one
carrier handles the goods, each one is responsible for the goods
only during his tenure and under the terms and conditions of his
contract
Pure Through MBL – Pure transit MBL. The first carrier
must transport the goods from the port of loading to the port of
discharge through an intermediate port and is responsible for damages
Combined Transport BL – Covering all modes of transport
(not only sea)
Forwarder BL – Issued by an agent, an international
forwarder
Freight Forwarder BL – Issued by FIATA, the international
organization of forwarders
IMPORTANT
The Hague Principles regulate the legal relationship between
carrier and shipper from loading to discharge.
It covers only exported goods, carried by vessels by sea
It applies only when a transport contract has been incorporated
in the BL
It does not cover goods (such as animals) on deck
Air Transport
Types of Transport Tariffs
Air transport tariffs are indicated by IATA – but often
these tariffs are ignored. SHOP AROUND.
Minimum Rate – not in accordance with actual weight
(when under 45 kg.)
General cargo Rate (GCR) – for all kinds of cargo
Specific Commodity Rate (SCR) – per a minimum weight
of a specific type of cargo and valid for a limited period of time.
Cheaper than GCR.
Unit Load Device (ULD) – Special tariff for cargo
transported as a unit on a surface or in a container. Only weight
is limited (maximum and minimum)
The tariff is derived from:
- Destination of cargo
- Type of goods – SCRs can be negotiated with the local
IATA representative
- Minimum Rate
- Weight / Mass (volume) ratio (every 6 cu.m. equal 1000
kg.) – if W/M exceeds this ratio – payment will be according to
weight
REMEMBER
Try to exceed the minimum rate and the minimum weight
Negotiate an SCR or a ULD wherever possible
Make sure that the W/M ration does not exceed the allowed
ratio
Airway Bill
Issued by the air carrier.
Mainly a confirmation of transport – not of ownership or
any right to goods.
Absence of airway bill does not effect validity of contract
of air carriage or the applicability of the treaty – but may prevent
carrier from resorting to exemptions and other restrictions in the
treaty.
Airway bill is proof of weight, measurements, quantity and
packing. It is also a carriage invoice, an insurance policy (if
insurance taken out by carrier) and a customs declaration (if no
other declaration is required by law).
Not negotiable and ownership cannot be transferred by its
endorsement or transfer.
Only consignee can accept delivery at discharge. Buyer appears
under "also notify" when bank is consignee and fiduciary
on behalf of seller. Buyer receives power of attorney from bank
to release and clear the goods.
Issued in three original duplicates to shipper, consignee
and carrier.
International Forwarding and Customs Agency
The international organization of forwarders – FIATA – created
a document system called FBL (Forwarder's Bill of Lading
- equivalent to MBL). The forwarder responsible for goods door to
door (house to house).
FCR (Forwarder's Certificate of Receipt) – A receipt
issued by forwarder confirming receipt of goods at the factory to
be carried to destination.
FWR (Forwarder's Warehouse Receipt) – Receipt issued
by forwarder that it received goods in a warehouse to be carried
to destination.
Airfreight Forwarder – As opposed to marine forwarders,
airfreight forwarders have to comply with certain professional and
financial conditions. Some of them are IATA forwarders – with minimal
volume of activity, proven acquaintance with airfreight rules, skilled
staff and so on. IATA forwarders get 5% of carrier's rate and are
allowed to issue airway bills to shippers on behalf of air carriers.
An airfreight forwarder:
Arranges a number of shipments, unites them and passes them
to the aircraft, handles commercial export / import operations for
exporter / importer, prepares all paperwork, takes care of transit
from one aircraft to another and of air insurance (if client demands
it), consolidates cargoes, issues airway bills and selects routes.
Customs Agent deals with goods only within the port
while an international forwarder handles the goods from door to
door.
Customs Agent deals with the following:
Reserving space in a vessel, coordination of acceptance
of containers, provision of information regarding prices, routes,
schedules, preparation of documents for exporter including BL, CO
and all other documents demanded by the customs. The agent appraises
and classifies the goods for customs purposes, obtains a gate pass
and arranges the transportation of the goods to the buyer's location.
The buyer is responsible for the activities of the agent.
Cargo Insurance
About 0.15% of value of cargo, except if dangerous or fragile
cargo.
One Time Policy expires with completion of transport.
Open Policy or Current Policy – see above.
REMEMBER
Insurance is cheap – use it abundantly.
Insure the cost, the profit, the carriage rates, the marine
insurance premium, port expenses and land transport, customs agency,
import taxes and so on.
Double marine insurance is allowed.
Marine insurance is subject to the London Clauses.
Institute Cargo Clauses deal with general cargo.
A Clauses Coverage – All risks insurance against loss
or damage caused by random event which happens outside the cargo
and effects it.
Does not cover loss or damage which is the result of intentional
behaviour of the insured, general leakage, loss or vaporization
of mass or weight, normal wear and tear, inappropriate packing or
preparation of insured goods, breach of contractual schedules and
obligations by insured or owners, charterers or operators of vessel,
inherent defects, war, nuclear fusion or fission, radioactive material,
incapacitation of vessel known to insured at time of loading.
B Clauses Coverage – loss or damage due to fire, explosion,
shipwreck, capsizing, derailment of a land vehicle, collision or
contact with another body except water, unloading in distress, earthquake,
volcanic eruption or thunder, general average, penetration of sea,
lake, or river water into the ship's warehouses, lift, etc., total
loss of cargo which fell in the sea during unloading of loading.
C Clauses Coverage – covers only catastrophic marine
disasters such as fire, explosion, shipwreck, drowning, capsizing,
derailment, collision, unloading in distress, general average or
dumping in the sea.
Credit Insurance
Both private and state companies (such as ECGD in the United
Kingdom, COFACE in France and OPIC in the USA) provide insurance:
- Against the credit risks of the buyer
- Against political risks (war, terror, acts of state)
- Against financial risks (non convertibility, non repatriation)
Credit risks insurance policy serves as collateral. It is pledged
against credit, which goes towards financing the production of the
goods and working capital.
Credit insurance firms check and rate clients (or rely on
credit rating agencies such as Moody's, Fitch-IBCA for banks or
Dun and Bradstreet). They issue policies guaranteeing payment to
the supplier / exporter in case of the buyer's bankruptcy, refusal
to pay, default, nationalization and expropriation, etc.
Insurance is provided mainly or only to firms registered
in the domicile of the insurance company or in another member of
the same customs union or trade block (EU, EFTA, etc.) – so, it
is recommended to establish subsidiaries in these territories to
be eligible.
Premiums range between 0.5-0.7% per insurance unit for a
period of 90 days.
Prevention of Loss and Damage
Use only new packings suitable to the goods
Fit crates and cardboard boxes with metal corners
Use shrink wherever possible, tie and strengthen everything
massively
Do not paste labels with descriptions, pictures, brandnames,
trademarks or labels on the packages – these attract thieves. Mark
the packing with letters and numbers on at least two of its sides.
Proper packing is an implied warranty in the carriage contract and
an expressed warranty in a marine/ air insurance policy.
Mark the packages with instructions: "Fragile",
"Printed", "Handle with Care", "Avoid X-rays"
and so on.
The standard marking of cargo should include:
- Initials or abbreviated name of consignee (full name
and address required in case of road or rail transport)
- Reference number (order number or similar). Avoid indicating
the date
- Name of port and final destination and "via"
in case of transit
- Package number out of total (example: 2/20)
- Mark the packages Big, Clear and Brief (BCB)
- Use metal, plastic or strong cloth tags – do not use
cardboard or wood tags
- Marks bags and sacks with sealing liquid
- Mark dangerous and radioactive materials with warnings,
the chemical composition and the shipper's name
- Use Latin letters as well as local alphabets – a maximum
of 10 lines of 17 characters each
- It is advisable – but not required – to mark gross weight
in case of air transport. Net weight and measurements are not
required at all – unless chemicals or dangerous materials are
involved.
- Some countries demand to mark the name of country of
origin, number of import license, etc. – pay attention to local
regulations
Change your markings often.
Use big packages to pack smaller and non-uniform packages
in.
Leave no empty space inside the package – fill empty spaces
with paper, Styrofoam, pad the goods and tie them tightly.
Do not overfill the crates, sacks, or boxes.
Do not concentrate the goods in one part of the package
(internally) – spread them evenly.
Place light cargo on heavy cargo.
Separate types of packings (cardboard boxes from crates,
etc.)
Do not leave any space between the wall of the container
and the packaged goods.
VI. More on Documents
Invoice
Must include:
-
Country of Origin
-
Place and date of preparation, number of
invoice, reference to order number
-
Names, addresses and other details of buyer
and seller (and consignee if not the buyer), address for delivery
of documents
-
Type of carriage (sea, land, air, multimodal)
-
Port of loading
-
Port of discharge
-
Final destination
-
Commercial conditions and schedules (delivery
and payment)
-
Number of packages, their description and
markings (numbers, etc.), statistical classification
-
Description of goods according to type,
quality, special properties, composition in percentages of each
material
-
Amount of goods in units / weight / volume
-
Gross, net and net net and measurements
of each package
-
The price agreed between the parties, costs
of freight and insurance
-
Conditions of shipment, dispatch and payment,
including all discounts, fees, commissions and charges
-
Exporter number if any
-
Stamp and signature of seller plus declaration
that all the above is true
Packing List (Specifications)
The first part includes name of firm, date,
address of buyer and, sometimes name of bank, payment conditions,
etc.
The second part contains very detailed description
of the goods and their packing. Some countries demand the inclusion
of special units of weights and measurements, method of marking,
customs classification and so on.
Insurance Policy
Includes the value of the goods, details regarding
the mode(s) of transport, points of departure and arrival, details
of the agency or insurance company to be contacted in the destination
country in case of damage.
Must include the following details to be valid:
-
Name of insurer
-
Policy number
-
Details of carrier
-
Route from exit to entry
-
Total value insured and type of currency
-
Conditions of the policy
-
Details of agent in destination country
-
Jurisdiction in case of disputes
-
Description of goods and their packing
-
Date of issuance of insurance
-
Method of calculation of the premium (marine
insurance, war surcharge, registration, policy, credit if payment
of premium is post dated)
Bill of Lading
Contains description of goods, their quantity
and quality ("clean on board" or "foul").
Airway bills include an invoice to be paid
by buyer or seller.
If seller pays, the bill will say "prepaid"
– if buyer is to pay, it will say "collect".
In case of marine bill of lading, a detailed
invoice is issued to seller.
Certificate of Origin
EUR1
Issued at the request of the buyer.
Confirmed by the chamber of commerce, the customs,
or the exporter or his agent / forwarder – or any other body authorized
by them.
Must be printed without corrections.
Must conform to commercial invoice.
Must include:
-
Name and full address of exporter
-
Name and full address of consignee
-
Description of goods and their packing
-
Weight of goods in kg. Or volume in liters
-
Numbers of relevant invoices
-
Declaration of exporter that goods conform
to rules of origin stipulated in the agreement under which the
certificate of origin is issued
FORM A
Like EUR1 but:
Consular Confirmation or Consular Invoice
Demanded mainly by developing countries.
Includes full description of goods in language
of destination country – including quantities, monetary values and
a sworn affidavit of the exporter attesting to the veracity of the
data.
APPENDIX I: The World of the Internet
First Steps
Buy a computer – including modem, graphic card
with 2Mb buffer and multimedia (sound card, speakers)
Open an account with one of the internet service
providers – ISPs (PTT, Unet, MOL, or others)
You will get:
-
An installation software on a diskette
(usually someone will come to install it for you)
-
A username (which is also the name of your
account and part of your email address)
-
A password – keep this secret and change
it often
-
Certain ISPs will give you a separate password
for communication purposes
Let's Go Surfing
Click on the phone (connection) icon – a window
will open
Type in your password and click with the left
button of the mouse "OK"
Once connected to the network (you will be informed
by a separate window which will show you the status of your modem
and how much time you are connected) – you have opened the door
to the world of the internet
The internet is like a huge city with many "addresses"
of "sites". To visit these sites, you need to have their
addresses (which usually start with http:// - example: http://members.tripod.com/~samvak/guide.html)
You also need a "car" to take you
to the sites – a special software called "browser". The
two best known are Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.0 and Netscape
Communicator 4.61. In this demonstration we will use the Explorer
because it is user friendly.
Click on the browser icon and study the browser.
You can always click on the "Help" button to get detailed
help.
To visit a site you can either:
-
Click on the address if it is active (in
blue color in a computer file), OR
-
Copy the address (mark it, click the right
button of the mouse and click copy in the menu)
-
Click "file" in the browser toolbar,
then click "open" (or click the "open button
of the browser directly)
-
Paste the address that you copied (click
the right button of the mouse and click paste in the menu)
-
Click "open"
The browser will find the site whose address
you asked for and bring you there.
Once in a site, you can click on any COLOURED
(hyperlinked) text to visit other sites.
Search Engines
But what if you don't have the address?
In other words, how do you find an address
of a site? Or, even more difficult, how do you find sites which
deal with subjects you are interested in?
To do that, you need to use "Search Engines".
These are special software applications. Look at the list of addresses
you received under the heading "search engines". You have
there the addresses of the 6 most important search engines.
Let us exercise.
You are interested to find the addresses of
tobacco organizations in the United States. You have no idea which
sites deal with this subject, let alone what are their addresses.
Open the "Alta Vista" search engine
(or any other – the biggest are Alta Vista and Northern Light, the
best organized are LookSmart and Yahoo) – using the address you
have.
Type your search term: "tobacco organizations
in USA" (use the "" marks).
You will get a list of sites.
Click on the colored text (the hyperlinked
text).
Each title you click on will lead you to another
site.
We will learn more advanced modes of searching
in this seminar.
The internet is the biggest library in the world.
It has everything you need about any subject in the world. BUT,
it is very chaotic.
Other Ways of Knowing Things
A more orderly way of obtaining information
is by:
Subscribing to specialized providers of information
through subscription databases – such as DIALOG and NEXIS-LEXIS
(let's find their addresses through the internet)
OR
Subscribing to specialty magazines and CD-ROMs
(let's find a few of these through the internet) – the biggest such
providers are US agencies (the USDA and even … the CIA!!!).
Electronic Mail (E-Mail)
When you open an account with an ISP – you
get an email address. This is YOUR address in cyberspace, in the
world of the internet. It is NOT the address of a SITE – it is your
PERSONAL address and it looks like this: sand@mpt.com.mk
(all letters usually small).
You can:
-
Send messages
-
Receive messages
-
Send and receive computer files (attached
to the message as attachments) – whole documents, pictures,
diagrams, faxes, EVERYTHING and you can send it at the price
of a local phone call to anywhere in the world.
-
Design a special signature
Good luck and welcome to the internet.
Appendix II: Incoterms In-Depth
Documentary Credits and INCOTERMS - International Commercial
Terms
1. Incoterms are part of international sales contracts.
They regulate:
- Carriage of goods from seller to buyer
- Export and import clearances
- Division of costs and risks between the parties
2. Important acronyms: Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), Electronic
Data Interchange for Administration Commerce and Transport (EDIFACT)
and Uniform Rules of Conduct for Interchange of Trade Data by Teletransmission
(UNCID).
Internet: GE - TPN
3. Electronic Bills of Lading – use the CMI Uniform Rules.
4. As a result of the container revolution and cargo unitization,
the incoterms FCA, CIP and CPT were developed. Emphasis shifted
from means of conveyance to the place of carriage. FOR / FOT / FOBA
were omitted.
5. Case Study: warehouse to warehouse insurance and the
FOB point - where is delivery effected?
CIF - seller exposed to claims for failing to reach the ships
rail on time.
6. The mirror method - the 10 headings – see Appendix of
Incoterms.
7. INCOTERMS - part of larger picture (deal with delivery
and with nothing after delivery - not with quantity, costs of loading
/ discharging, clearance, transport, risks of loss / damage and
insurance against them, title, quality breach of contract or price).
There are: Contract of sale, applicable law, custom of trade.
Example: an FOB Buyer would insure the goods despite the
fact that Incoterms do not oblige him to do so - difference between
obligation and commonsense.
8. Specific reference required. Example: trading with a US
firm (UCC - AFDT).
9. CISG - Contracts for the International Sale of Goods:
POD where breach is determined in conjunction with Incoterms (concerning
delivery).
10. D-terms: seller's delivery obligation is extended to
the country of destination (arrival contract).
E-terms, F-terms, C-terms: seller fulfils delivery obligation
in his country (shipment contract).
11. The common error: there is no connection between risks,
costs and delivery.
12. F-terms: Free of risks
C-terms: Costs borne after critical risk point reached
D-terms: Destination
C-TERMS: 2 points of interest: delivery and risk / costs
13. FCA buyer to instruct seller how to hand over goods –
and wher
FCL Full loads (railway wagon
/ container) vs. LCL break bulk
14. FOB additional service
Seller contracts for carriage - though he has no obligation
to do so
15. FOB The port decides how to distribute loading
16. FAS Seller does not have the obligation to clear
goods for exports (unlike FOB!)
17. C-terms Do not stipulate arrival date! seller obliged
to ship good
so that they COULD ARRIVE!
18. CFR, CIF Only by sea! A8 demands bill of lading / sea
waybill
If Buyer wants to sell in transit
- he will be unable because of lack of
the right document Þ
breach of seller
19. CIF, CIP Minimum Cover vs. all risk and political
Appendix III: More about Modes of Payment
SIGHT DRAFT (=COD) - Document against payment
- Original shipping document attached --> CB (collecting
bank)
- Original bill of lading made to the order of the shipper
and endorsed by him blank, or to the order of CB
- Notification to drawer of draft about payment
TIME DRAFT
- Like sight drafts but paid X days after acceptance
- The CB holds and presents for payment
BANK GUARANTEE dependent on underlying obligation
or independent (=note)
- Bid bonds } dependent
- Performance bonds } dependent
- Advance Payment bonds } dependent
- Payment Bonds } independent but with recourse and stoppable
by court injunction
LOCs
DLC - Documentary
FLC - Financial
SLC - Standby
- CLEAN (Self-contained)
- REGULAR (Dependent on an event)
FACTORING AND FORFAIT / EMC
COLLECTION
CREDIT PROTECTION
FINANCING (=LOAN / Credit line) on Approved Accounts
Recourse Factoring: Collection + Financing
How to choose a Factor?
Profile of Users of Factoring
Restricted access to credit
High or low net worth
Satisfied customers
Credit - worthy customers
Successful products / services
Factoring Services
Conventional Min 2 ½ %, 3 days (5% per 30 day invoice)
Weekly agings, daily collection reports
Credit services, fees prorated daily,
2-weekly reserve releases, 24 hour funding
No hidden fees / long term contracts
Debt Consolidation Payment to creditors when company is
in default
Maturity On pre-approved account debtors
Financing / Sale - Leaseback (for bankrupt companies) including
equipment
How does It Work
Bring invoice + delivery slip
Receive upto 80% of the face amount
Receive the balance (reserve) when the invoice is paid
Appendix IV: International Trade – An Introduction
1. Globalisation - economic interdependence of nations.
2. Imported products = imported employment = internal
unemployment
3. Ricardo's theory of Comparative Advantage
4. Absolute advantage - fewer resources to produce
the same products
Comparative Advantage - it take less
to produce the same in terms of other goods
5. Two country / two goods model - mutual absolute
advantages
Phase A: Mutual absolute advantage
Macedonia USA
Wine 6 2
Tobacco 2 6
Phase B: Land allocation for equal
unit production
Macedonia USA Totals
Wine 25 x 6 = 150 75 x 2 = 150 300
Tobacco 75 x 2 = 150 25 x 6 = 150 300
Phase C: International trading
Macedonia USA Totals
Wine 100 x 6 = 600 0 600
(Mac. sells 300 to USA)
Tobacco 0 100 x 6 = 600 600
(USA sells 300 to Mac.)
7. Trade enables countries to move beyond previous
resource and productivity constraints.
8. Two country / two goods model - unilateral absolute
advantages
Phase A:
Macedonia USA Totals
Wine 50 x 6 = 300 75 x 1 = 75 375
Tobacco 50 x 6 = 300 25 x 3 = 75 375
Phase B: Land allocation for equal
unit production
Macedonia USA Totals
Wine 75 x 6 = 450 0 450
(Mac. sells 100 to USA)
Tobacco 25 x 6 = 150 100 x 3 = 300 450
(USA sells 200 to Mac.)
9. Explanation: The opportunity cost
of 3 bales of tobacco in Macedonia is 3 litres of
wine - in USA, only 1 liter.
The opportunity cost of 1 litre of wine in
Macedonia is 1 bale of tobacco - and in the USA
it is 3 bales.
10. When countries specialize in production of goods
in which they have a comparative advantage - they maximize
their combined output and allocate their resources
more efficiently.
11. Terms of trade: The ratio at which
a country can trade domestic products for imported ones.
In the above example: 1 litre wine
= 2 bales tobacco
Macedonia benefits because its opportunity
cost is 1 = 1
(it would get 1 bale domestically by giving up 1 litre)
USA benefits because its opportunity
cost is 1 = 3
(it would have to give up 3 bales domestically to get 1
litre)
12. Exchange rates determine the terms of trade.
For any pair of countries, there is a range of exchange
rates which can lead to both countries realizing gains
from specialization and comparative advantage.
Within that range, the exchange rate will determine
which country gains the most from trade.
13. Two country /two good world
Macedonia USA
Wine 3 DM $ 1
Tobacco 4 DM $ 2
Exchange rate Price of DM Result
$ 1 = 1 DM $ 1 Macedonia imports both
$ 1 = 2 DM $ 0.5 Macedonia imports wine
$ 1 = 2.1 DM $ 0.48 Macedonia imports wine -
$ 1 = 2.9 DM $ 0.34 USA imports tobacco
$ 1 = 3.3 DM $ 0.33 USA imports tobacco
$ 1 = 4 DM $ 0.25 USA imports both
14. Comparative advantage can be expressed in terms
of exchange rates:
Instead of comparing goods directly - money is used.
In Macedonia - the production of 1 bale of tobacco costs
4/3 litres of wine.
15. Exchanges rates in the right ranges drive countries
to shift resources into sectors in which they enjoy comparative
advantages.
16. Factor endowments - the quantity of
labour, land and natural resources of a country
17. Heckscher - Ohlin theorem and the Learner corollary
A country has a comparative advantage in the production
of a product if that country is relatively well endowed with inputs
(natural resources, knowledge capital, physical capital, land,
skilled and unskilled labour) used intensively in the production
of that product.
18. Why do countries import and export the same
product?
Differentiation of products
in response to diverse preferences / brand loyalty.
19. Acquired (versus natural) comparative advantages
(specific skills, goodwill)
PROTECTIONISM
1. Protection - shielding a sector
of the economy from (foreign) competition
2. Tariff - tax on imports
Export subsidy - payment to encourage exports
Dumping - sale of products at prices below
the costs of production
Quota - limit on quantity of imports
(mandatory and legislated or voluntary and negotiated)
3. GATT, the Uruguay round, the WTO,
latest multilateral WTO agreements
4. Free trade zones: EU, NAFTA, MERCOSUR, FTA (economic
integration)
5. Trade barriers
Prevent a country from benefiting from specialization
Push it do adopt inefficient production techniques
Force consumers to pay higher prices for protected
products
6. Protection Counter - Argument
(A) Saves jobs
- Reallocation - not disappearance
- Retraining and relocation
(B) Unfair trade practices
Underinvestment in environment
(C) Cheap foreign labour
Reflects lower productivity
(unfair competition)
This IS comparative advantage
(D) Protect national security
Every industry uses it
(E) Discouraging dependency
(F) Safeguarding infant industries
No infant industry asked for help (allows them to
acquire comparative advantage)
(H) Protection against currency fluctuations
What is proper rate?
Temporary currency overvaluation
International Trade and Exchange Rates
1. International trade is determined by exchange rates.
2. History: The gold standard, Bretton Woods (1944-1971),
the snake (EMS), the Louvre accord (1985).
3. Influences on foreign exchange: central banks interventions,
macroeconomic policy, statements by policymakers.
4. Balance of payments: the record of a country's transactions
in goods, services & assets - current account and capital account.
5. (Merchandise exports - merchandise imports) = balance
of trade (deficit or surplus) + (exports of services - imports of
services) = net export / import of services + (income from investments)
- (payments to investors) = net investment income + net transfer
and other payments = current account
6. Increase (-) or decrease (+) in private (and in Government)
assets abroad + increase (+) or decrease (-) in foreign private
(and in Government) assets in the country = balance of capital account
7. (6) + statistical discrepancy = balance of payments
8. Debtor and creditor nations
9. The effect of a sustained increase in Government spending
(or investment) on income (= the multiplier) - is smaller in an
open economy, some of the extra consumption goes to imports.
Multiplier = 1 / 1-(MPC-MPM) (in open economy)
10. Anything that affects consumption - affect imports (income,
aftertax real wages, aftertax nonlabour income, interest rates,
relative prices and the state of the economy).
11. The trade feedback effect - export increases consumption
which increases imports. Imports in one country is exports in another
which increases consumption and so on.
An increase in one country's economic activity leads to worldwide
increase in economic activity which feeds back to that country.
Its imports stimulate other countries' exports which stimulate those
countries' imports and so on.
12. Prices of exports / imports are influenced by inflation.
Export prices of other countries affect a country's import
prices.
Inflation is exported through export. It affects a country's
import prices.
13. An increase in the price of imports affects local prices:
(A) Through stagflation: rising prices and falling output
(B) Expensive imports lead to increased demand for domestic
products
14. The price feedback effect
Inflation in one country is exported to another and then
re-exported to the first
15. The demand and supply for currencies
Firms, households and Government that import / export
Tourists in / out the country
Buyers of stocks, bonds or other financial instruments in
/ out the country
Investors in / out the country
Speculators who bet with / against a currency
16. What affects appreciation and depreciation of currencies?
The law of one price (for the same good everywhere)
For the same basket of goods - The exchange rate would be
determined
by the relative price levels in the 2 countries
This is the purchasing power parity theory (PPP)
17. PPP does not account for transportation costs
Substitute products are not identical
Baskets of goods are different
18. Relative interest rates - higher rates lead to appreciation
19. Imports, like taxes and savings are a leakage from the
income - consumption cycle.
Exports are like investments and Government purchases (stimulate
output).
20. A depreciation stimulates exports and domestic consumption
= the GDP
21. The J curve: balance of trade gets worse before its gets
better
following a currency depreciation.
Exports increase, imports decrease, currency price of exports
doesn't change very much (until domestic prices adjust), currency
price of imports increases.
The value of imports increases, even as volume decreases,
initially.
22. Expansion of money supply ® decrease in interest
rates ® investment and consumption ® lower inventories ®
rising income (output).
Lower demand for debt securities ® lower demand for currency
® more foreign securities bough ® currency sold and depreciates
® stimulates the economy.
Appendix V: Countertrade
COUNTERTRADE - (A) GENERAL
1. Countertrade - a transaction which links
exports to imports in place of a financial settlement
2. Reasons
- Trade financing risky (debt crisis)
- Tight import credits (because of low exports)
- Entry into new markets (both the exporter and the importer)
- Products differentiation and creating competitive advantages
- Convertibility or political - financial problems
3. Transaction phases
- Identify target country arrangements / regulations
- Evaluate their attractiveness and
- Find the most favored one from the buyer's perspective
- Match your strengths with current / potential countertrade
(internal / external uses for the goods, distribution network)
- Consider the accounting / taxation aspects
- Choose between in - house expertise and outside specialists
- Beware of risks:
- Quality and consistency of goods
- Delivery times
- Supplier reliability
- Changes in the value of goods over time
- Negative attitude of Governments and IFIs (e.g., EXIM
bank in USA)
4. Countertrade is a marketing tool:
- Generating hard currency for clients
- Helping them to market their products
- Sharing (information, marketing, technology, production)
5. Countertrade components
- Piecing together sources of finance, services and supplies
in different countries to minimize hard currency net outlays of
the importer.
- Creating FOREX income for the importer through unrelated
protects / new investments.
- Partial payment in soft currencies through reinvestment
of the proceeds in the importer's country.
- Escrow accounts in foreign banks funded by the importer
through export revenues (hedge until counter delivered goods are
sold).
6. Arguments in favour of countertrade
- International commerce - an extension of national (economic)
policies.
- (Leads to) a preference to deal with trade competition
through bilateral accommodations favoring domestic exporters.
- Uneven recovery rates and protective import policies.
- A hedge against declining trade levels.
- The growing third world debts.
- Constraints on credits and debt rescheduling.
- Dependence of developing countries on import - led growth
and export expansion for debt servicing and unemployment.
- Tool of long term industrial policy and economic planning.
7. Factors affecting the future of countertrade
- Ability of world markets to accommodate counterdeliveries.
- Nature of assets offered (raw materials, components, finished
goods).
- Streamlining of bureaucratic bottlenecks.
- Willingness of western exporters to engage in higher risk
trade.
COUNTERTRADE - (B) FORMS
1. Countertrade and offset are reciprocal
arrangements.
Countertrade is the exchange of goods
and services intended mainly to alleviate FOREX shortages of importers.
Offset is intended to advance industrial
development objectives.
2. Assets exchanged include physical goods, services
(e.g., tourism, engineering or transportation), rights (licenses,
leases, etc.), lien instruments (e.g., sovereign promissory notes),
or temporary ownership (BOT - built, operate, transfer arrangements).
3. Developed industrialized countries emphasize technology
and production processes while developing countries emphasize
additional exports.
4. The contractual arrangements include cashless exchange
of goods of comparable value, parallel import / export transactions
with their own separate finances, production sharing / equity position.
5. Countertrade ratio - percent of the value of export
offset by counterdeliveries
DISAGGIO - subsidy paid as a commission / discount by the
exporter to a broker responsible for marketing counterdeliveries
(in the hands of the broker it is AGGIO).
SWITCH - transfer of rights to countertrade goods to third
parties
Protocol / link or framework contracts - side agreement linking
the primary and secondary contracts in a countertrade
6. Bilateral Government - To - Government trade agreements
Reciprocal market access privileges (preferential terms)
- To integrate the economies using clearing units - exporters
and domestic currency by their Central bank.
- Special political / regional trade relations.
- Trading interests for raw materials sources.
7. SWING - margin of credit allowed on a bilateral
clearing account (beyond which all trading stops ) - usually 30%.
Clearing SWITCH - DISAGGIO driven financial
operations. Bilateral imbalances are monetarised by brokerage networks
through final sale products sourced from the country with the clearing
arrears (or rights to products).
8. Forms of compensatory trade arrangements
OFFSET - in cases of purchases of military / (high cost)
civilian equipment, counter - purchases are demanded as compensation.
Usually in the form of expansion of industrial capacity:
coproduction, licensed production, subcontracting,
overseas
investment, technology transfer, countertrade.
(IN) DIRECT OFFSET - articles (not) related to the
sale.
BARTER - one time exchange of goods /
services of equivalent value.
[examples: US - Jamaica, the dissolution of COMECON, Brokers'
swaps]
BUYBACK (Compensation) - exporter
receives products derived from the export.
Each leg is regulated by a separate contract.
COUNTERPURCHASE - exporter receives
products unrelated to the export.
Exporter not allowed to transfer his credits and some advance
purchases by exporters qualify.
UMBRELLA (Countertrade agreement) - includes
multiple trading partners.
Between Western exporters and Government entity (Evidence
account)
Between Governments concerning specific products (Bilateral
clearing)
Countertrade used to release blocked currencies / funds
(Expatriation of profits against compensation)
OFFSHORE ESCROW ACCOUNTS - insulation
from local banks ensure timely payments to exporters
Allowance for insufficient cash flows (production / marketing
slippage)
COUNTERTRADE - (C) ANALYSIS AND PLANNING
1. BENEFITS (mainly intangible)
- Locking in foreign market shares
- Circumventing export restrictions
- Supporting subsidiaries /affiliates
- Depleting surplus inventory
- Preserving production / employment levels
2. COSTS (mainly tangible)
- General and administrative (handling, documentation)
- Subsidy (DISAGGIO)
- Financing and insurance (including holding & escrow
accounts)
- Performance / completion guarantees
3. RISKS
- Expensive and partial insurance
- Political risks and bureaucratic delays
- Liability claims (personnel, product)
- Property risks (direct damage or time dependent)
- Lack of standardization
- Shortfalls in delivery and marketing of the products
- Losses due to delays: changes in production / export priorities
- sudden unavailability of raw materials
- crop failures
- inadequate transportation
- quality problems
- non-competitive pricing
- (arbitrary) marketing restrictions
- protectionist shifts
- contract failures of brokers / end users
4. COUNTERMEASURES
- Analysis and viable pricing (maybe inflation of export
prices)
- The right contract
- An insurance policy
- Information about the importer, the markets and potential
competitors brokers / end users
- Recognizing anticipatory purchases and additionality requirements
(transferable)
- Separate the contracts to insulate performance and to
facilitate financing, guarantees and insurance
5. The CONTRACTS
- Primary sale - standard export contract + countertrade
clause
- Link contract - the countertrade contract includes:
- amount and period of obligation
- type, standards, pricing criteria of counterdeliveries
- names of companies providing counterdeliveries or: free
choice clause
- transferability clause
- currency of payments
- notification and remittance procedures
- rights or restrictions affecting the marketing of goods
- non-performance penalties and damages
- disputes, termination, unavailability of goods
- Counterpurchase (buyback) contract includes:
- reference to primary contract
- standards, specifications, pricing, handling
- disputes, force majeure, arbitration, law, indemnities
COUNTERTRADE - (D) SUPPORT SERVICES
1. TRADING HOUSES have:
- Specialists and experience
- Financial resources
- Positions in markets and / or marketing networks
Can help with:
- Marketing and representation
- Transportation, warehousing, insurance
- Finance: credits and investment management
- Manufacturing, upgrading
2. BANKS - advisory services and matchmaking, switch
trading of clearing currencies and debt conversions
3. INSURANCE - state and private (LLOYDS, CHUBB, AIG)
4. OTHERS - law firms, trade consultants and information
firms, export management companies, government agencies, industrial
giants
Copyright Notice
This material is copyrighted. Free,
unrestricted use is allowed on a non commercial basis.
The author's name and a link to this Website must be incorporated
in any reproduction of the material for any use and by any means.
Source: http://samvak.tripod.com/exporter.html
Sam
Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com
) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and
After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist
for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline,
and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East
Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com
Published - December 2008
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