Payment against documents: Difference between revisions

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{{infobox4
|list1=
<ul>
<li>[[Confirmed letter of credit]]</li>
<li>[[Purchase agreement]]</li>
<li>[[Transferable letter of credit]]</li>
<li>[[Shipping guarantee]]</li>
<li>[[Revolving letter of credit]]</li>
<li>[[Murabaha]]</li>
<li>[[Payment in due course]]</li>
<li>[[Contra deal]]</li>
<li>[[Transfer cost]]</li>
</ul>
}}
'''Payment against documents''' is [[method]] of payment that is dependent on documents established in contract of sale. The reason of that method is to '''decreases the [[risk]] and guarantee''' for [[customer]] that goods are shipped as in the contract, before they are actually paid for.
'''Payment against documents''' is [[method]] of payment that is dependent on documents established in contract of sale. The reason of that method is to '''decreases the [[risk]] and guarantee''' for [[customer]] that goods are shipped as in the contract, before they are actually paid for.
Buyer may wait until goods will arrive and then may examine them.
Buyer may wait until goods will arrive and then may examine them.
Line 48: Line 31:
<references />
<references />


== References ==
{{infobox5|list1={{i5link|a=[[Confirmed letter of credit]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Purchase agreement]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Transferable letter of credit]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Shipping guarantee]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Revolving letter of credit]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Murabaha]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Payment in due course]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Contra deal]]}} &mdash; {{i5link|a=[[Transfer cost]]}} }}
 
==References ==
* Bridge M. G., (1998), [http://journals.sas.ac.uk/amicus/article/viewFile/1622/1502 ''Documents and cif contracts''] in "Amicus Curiae, Journal of the society for advanced legal studies. Issue 3'',
* Bridge M. G., (1998), [http://journals.sas.ac.uk/amicus/article/viewFile/1622/1502 ''Documents and cif contracts''] in "Amicus Curiae, Journal of the society for advanced legal studies. Issue 3'',
* Brand R., (2000), ''Fundamentals of International Business Transactions'', Kluwer Law International B.V.
* Brand R., (2000), ''Fundamentals of International Business Transactions'', Kluwer Law International B.V.

Revision as of 00:56, 18 November 2023

Payment against documents is method of payment that is dependent on documents established in contract of sale. The reason of that method is to decreases the risk and guarantee for customer that goods are shipped as in the contract, before they are actually paid for. Buyer may wait until goods will arrive and then may examine them. Payment is based on shipping documents, but final document are not handed over to customer until customer agreed to pay for goods. This kind of payment costs about 2% of sales volume value[1]. Payment on delivery is required even if price is not defined and might be only estimated [2]. Mechanism of payment against documents is very similar to issuing letter of credit[3].

When payment against documents is used

Method of payment against documents is used when the seller and the buyer [4]:

  • know each other,
  • have long-term business relationship,
  • are reliable partners,
  • are prepared to take some risks,
  • want to avoid higher bank fees (charged for letter of credit),
  • are ready to check every time documents very carefully and understand matters in documentation,
  • have no doubts that each party wants to fulfil the contract.

Documents used for payment against documents

Documents used for payment against documents is draft of payment. Draft of payment is an order wrote by seller and requests the buyer to pay specific amount of money within defined time. There a three specified types of drafts which are negotiable within the contract[5]:

  1. Sight draft - payment has to be done immediately,
  2. Time draft - payment has to be within defined time (30, 60, 90, 120 or 180 days),
  3. Deferred payment - payment has to be done by specific date defined in the contract,

Forms of payment against documents

There are two most frequently used forms of payment against documents[6]:

  1. Documents against payment (D/P) - based on sight draft,
  2. Documents against acceptance (D/A) - based on time draft

Footnotes

  1. Mühlbacher H., Leihs H., Dahringer L., (2006), p. 681 - 682
  2. Brand R., (2000), p. 47
  3. Evans D. A. , (1995), p. 417
  4. Mühlbacher H., Leihs H., Dahringer L., (2006), p. 681 - 682; Malbon J., Bishop B., (2014), p. 118
  5. Mühlbacher H., Leihs H., Dahringer L., (2006), p. 681 - 682
  6. Mühlbacher H., Leihs H., Dahringer L., (2006), p. 681 - 682


Payment against documentsrecommended articles
Confirmed letter of creditPurchase agreementTransferable letter of creditShipping guaranteeRevolving letter of creditMurabahaPayment in due courseContra dealTransfer cost

References

Author: Dominika Kaczmarczyk