Individual Capital Guidance and Letter of credit: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
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imported>Doug Williamson
(Expand and add links. Source: Voxeu.org Trade Finance Around the World http://voxeu.org/article/trade-finance-around-world)
 
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''UK bank supervision.''
(LC or sometimes LOC).  


(ICG).
A promise document issued by a bank or another issuer to a third party to make a payment on behalf of a customer in accordance with specified conditions.  


Individual Capital Guidance is guidance given to a regulated institution about the amount and quality of capital resources that the regulator has asked the institution to maintain.
Letters of credit are frequently used in international trade to make funds available in a foreign location.


It is the sum of Pillar 1 requirements and Pillar 2A requirements.




==See also==
==== Letter of credit contrasted with documentary collection ====
*[[Capital]]
Letters of credit are often contrasted, from the perspective of a seller, with an alternative structure of [[documentary collection]]s.
*[[Individual capital]]
 
*[[Individual Liquidity Guidance]]
A letter of credit is a ''direct'' obligation of a bank to pay (against specified documents).
*[[Pillar 1]]
 
*[[Pillar 2]]
A documentary collection means a bank ''collecting'' payment from the buyer (by presenting documents to the buyer).
* [[Pillar 2A]]
 
*[[Prudential Regulation Authority]]
 
A letter of credit therefore gives superior protection to the seller against credit risk or delayed cash flow, or both.
 
For this reason letters of credit are more expensive to arrange.
 
 
Compared with documentary collections (DCs), letters of credit are used for larger transactions, and a larger total value of transactions.
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Advising bank]]
* [[Bank payment obligation]]
* [[Clean letter of credit]]
* [[Commercial risk]]
* [[Condition]]
* [[Confirmed letter of credit]]
* [[Confirming bank]]
* [[Credit]]
* [[Documentary collection]]
* [[Documentary credit]]
* [[Irrevocable letter of credit]]
* [[Issuing bank]]
* [[LOC backed]]
* [[Standby letter of credit]]
* [[Trade finance]]
* [[Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits]]
 
 
===Other links===
[http://www.treasurers.org/node/5279 Letters of credit and supply chain finance, Will Spinney, ACT 2009]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Trade_finance]]

Revision as of 11:37, 12 June 2016

(LC or sometimes LOC).

A promise document issued by a bank or another issuer to a third party to make a payment on behalf of a customer in accordance with specified conditions.

Letters of credit are frequently used in international trade to make funds available in a foreign location.


Letter of credit contrasted with documentary collection

Letters of credit are often contrasted, from the perspective of a seller, with an alternative structure of documentary collections.

A letter of credit is a direct obligation of a bank to pay (against specified documents).

A documentary collection means a bank collecting payment from the buyer (by presenting documents to the buyer).


A letter of credit therefore gives superior protection to the seller against credit risk or delayed cash flow, or both.

For this reason letters of credit are more expensive to arrange.


Compared with documentary collections (DCs), letters of credit are used for larger transactions, and a larger total value of transactions.


See also


Other links

Letters of credit and supply chain finance, Will Spinney, ACT 2009