6.6 Financing International Trade
147
A New York exporter dealing with an importer in Portugal with whom there has been
little experience may ship goods on the basis of a documentary draft that has been deposited
for collection with the local bank. That bank, following the specifi c instructions regarding the
manner of collection, forwards the draft and the accompanying documents to its correspond-
ent bank in Lisbon. The correspondent bank holds the documents until payment is made in the
case of a sight draft, or until acceptance is obtained if a time draft is used. When collection is
made on a sight draft, it is remitted to the exporter.
Financing Through the Exporter’s Bank
It is important to recognize that
throughout the preceding transaction the banking system only provided a service to the ex-
porter and in no way fi nanced the transaction itself. The exporter’s bank, however, may off er
fi nancing assistance by allowing the exporter to borrow against the security of a documentary
draft. Such loans have the fi nancial strength of both the exporter and the importer to support
them, since documents for taking possession of the merchandise are released only after the
importer has accepted the draft.
The amount that the exporter can borrow is less than the face amount of the draft and
depends mainly on the credit standing of both the exporter and the importer. When the exporter
is fi nancially strong enough to off er suitable protection to the bank, a substantial percentage of
the draft may be advanced even though the importer may not be known to the exporter’s bank.
In other cases, the advance may be based on the importer’s fi nancial strength.
The character of the goods shipped also has an important bearing on the amount lent,
since the goods off er collateral security for the advance. Goods that are not breakable or per-
ishable are better as collateral; goods for which there is a ready market are preferable to those
with a very limited market.
Financing by the Importer
Like the exporter, the importer may also arrange payment for goods without access to bank credit.
When an order is placed, payment in full may be made or a partial payment off ered. The partial
payment gives some protection to both the exporter and the importer. It protects the exporter
against rejection of the goods for no reason, and it gives the importer some bargaining power
in the event the merchandise is damaged in shipment or does not meet specifi cations. When the
importer is required to make full payment with an order but wants some protection in the transac-
tion, payment is sent to a bank in the exporter’s country. The bank is instructed not to release pay-
ment until certain documents are presented to the bank to prove shipment of the goods according
to the terms of the transaction. The bank, of course, charges a fee for this service.
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