SBLC Full Guidelines
SBLC Full Guidelines
SBLC Full Guidelines
The SBLC should not be confused with the documentary credit which
is instead a means of payment since the buyer goes to his bank and
asks him to pay the seller at a given moment, ie on a date or to the
fulfillment of a condition (delivery for example).
SBLC/BG FACTS:
By its own nature and definition, only banks can legally issue
SBLC (Stand-By Letters of Credit) or BG (Bank Guarantee). This
is not only common sense, but actually regulated by banking laws
in most countries since these are debt obligations issued by banks.
Most people often confuse the term NOT RATED with the fact
that some SBLC/BG issuing entities are not real banks, but private
companies offering consulting services, and sometimes, issuing
documents that are beyond their legal and financial capacity,
hiding themselves behind the excuse that because they are an
“offshore bank” or a foreign corporation or because they only deal
with foreigners, they do not need to hold a banking license or
comply with reserve deposits with the Central Banks of the
jurisdictions from where they operate. The reality is, a rating is just
an opinion given by one person or company, about the credibility
of the bank or institution what the rating is about; but this has
almost nothing to do with the truth, that the documents in question
are worthless not because of the credit rating of the issuer, but
because the issuer is not a bank.
The UCP governs standby letters of credit to the extent that its
articles are applicable.The UCP does not explain when and how its
articles should be applied to standby letters of credit.Even
preparing a draft to be presented under a standby letter of credit
can present challenges for those who do not have a working
knowledge of how banks expect drafts to be worded and presented.
Yet every regime that governs letters of credit provides that
standard banking practices or international standard banking
practices are to be used to determine whether documentary
presentations and other aspects of letter of credit transactions are
proper and compliant.