Letter of Credit — Types & Operations

Why It Matters in Branch: 
LC is the most common non-fund based facility in trade finance. Every bank officer in credit or trade finance department handles LCs daily.

SHORT NOTES

DEFINITION:

A Letter of Credit (LC) is a written commitment by the Buyer’s Bank (Issuing Bank) to the Seller, promising to pay a specified amount provided the Seller submits documents strictly conforming to the LC terms within the specified period.

PARTIES TO LC:

1. Applicant (Buyer/Importer) — who applies to his bank to open LC

2. Issuing Bank — Buyer’s bank that opens/issues the LC

3. Beneficiary (Seller/Exporter) — who receives the LC and ships goods

4. Advising Bank — Seller’s local bank that advises (communicates) the LC to seller

5. Confirming Bank — Bank that adds its guarantee to the LC (optional)

6. Negotiating Bank — Bank that purchases/negotiates documents from seller

TYPES OF LC:

1. Revocable LC — Can be cancelled by issuing bank without notice. Almost never used in practice. UCP 600 does not recognise it as an LC.

2. Irrevocable LC — Cannot be cancelled without beneficiary’s consent. Standard in practice.

3. Confirmed LC — Additional guarantee added by another bank (usually in seller’s country).

4. Standby LC — Functions like a Bank Guarantee. Payment on default, not on presentation of trade documents.

5. Revolving LC — Automatically reinstates after utilisation. For regular suppliers.

6. Red Clause LC — Pre-shipment advance allowed to beneficiary before shipment.

7. Green Clause LC — Pre-shipment advance with warehouse receipt required.

8. Back-to-Back LC — Secondary LC opened using original LC as security. Used by intermediary traders.

9. Transferable LC — Beneficiary can transfer LC to another party (second beneficiary).

10. Deferred Payment LC — Payment made after a fixed period from date of shipment (usance LC).

GOVERNING RULES:

UCP 600 (Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits) — issued by International Chamber of Commerce. All LCs must state they are subject to UCP 600.

DOCUMENTS UNDER LC:

Commercial Invoice, Bill of Lading/Airway Bill, Packing List, Insurance Certificate, Certificate of Origin, Inspection Certificate.

KEY PRINCIPLE: Banks deal in documents, NOT in goods. If documents strictly conform to LC terms, bank must pay — even if goods are defective.

The most expensive mistake in LC handling is payment against discrepant documents without proper authorisation. If a buyer refuses to accept discrepant documents and the bank has already paid, the bank is stuck with the liability. Every document scrutiny under LC must be precise — quantity, description, date, port — exactly as per LC terms.


Welcome to your Quiz on Letter of Credit — Types & Operations

1. 
The governing international rules for Letters of Credit are:

2. 
Which type of LC allows the beneficiary to transfer the credit to another party?

3. 
Under UCP 600, banks deal with:

4. 
A Red Clause LC allows:

5. 
An LC requires shipment of '100 MT of cotton'. Seller ships 95 MT and presents documents showing 95 MT. The LC has no tolerance clause. Should the issuing bank pay?

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top