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Our
procedures are designed to provide our customers with a flawless
sale process and high service quality. We strongly recommend that
you read these standard procedures and comply with them to expedite
your orders.
Forms referred to on this page, can be accessed as a PDF and
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Procedures
• Review our hot deals and/
or products list and decide your needs
• Contact us for additional information where deemed necessary.
Generally all critical information is included in the listings so that you
have a clear picture of what is being offered.
• Assuming that you have all the information that you need and that you
have a firm interest in a particular hot deal, the following procedure
applies:
a) You send to us the end buyer’s LOI
(Letter of Intent) or ICPO
(Irrevocable
Corporate Purchase Order), this document should be on buyer’s letterhead
and should be signed and sealed by the buyer and include buyer’s banking
details to allow the supplier to check buyer’s financial capability.
Some suppliers require, in addition, buyer’s BCL
(Bank
Capability or
Comfort Letter).
b) On receipt of the LOI/ ICPO and BCL, the supplier will send to the
buyer a Pro Forma Invoice, sales/purchase contract and/or FCO (Full
Corporate Offer)
c) Once the buyer and suppliers have agreed and signed on the pro-forma
invoice, FCO and/or contract, the deal is executed in compliance with the
terms of the agreement.
Notes: 1) Where brokers are involved, the NCND
(Non-Circumvention and Non-
Disclosure and FPA (Free
Protection Agreement) will be required and signed
by parties involved before steps a, b, c above.
2) method of payment is generally Fully Funded Documentary L/C payable at
sight (FFDLC), Revolving Documentary L/C (RDLC), Stand-by
L/C (SBLC), Bank
Guarantee (BG), Escrow Account or wire transfer after inspection (100% or
x% deposit and y% balance after inspection).
To a great extent prices are determined by your method of payment. This is
why you should always specify your method of payment in the LOI and,
whenever possible, provide the text of your proposed payment instrument.
The L/C must be issued or confirmed by a prime International Bank
acceptable by the supplier.
3) Buyer’s LOI is also generally required by the supplier to provide soft
price quotes. In some cases, the supplier may require the LOI and
BCL
before he provides a soft quote.
THE RATIONALE FOR THE PROCEDURES
Everything we do in the early stages are informal exchanges of
information, designed to insure that when the time for written, legally
binding commitments are to be made by both seller and buyer, all the terms
and conditions are not only perfectly understood, but have been accepted
by both parties.
1. LOI: tells our seller exactly what the buyer wants and reveals which
bank he will be using through which he will pay the supplier, and how he
will be paying. Seller now knows specifications, shipping schedule, etc.,
and can decide if he can meet all those buyer conditions. If not, he will
inform the buyer and that part of the LOI is negotiated to an acceptance
point by both principals.
2. Now that the seller knows he can indeed meet the LOI requirements, he
must pass the text of the LC in front of his bank for their informal
acceptance of all its terms and conditions. There may be something in that LC that is unacceptable to the seller’s bank, and would eventually be
rejected and subject to expensive amendments AFTER the LC is formally
presented to the seller’s bank. We avoid all of these potential pitfalls
by having the LC text reviewed early on and informally. To this point the
seller’s bank is not formally “engaged” in the transaction, so there are
no fees or expenses incurred by the buyer.
3. FCO can now be issued by the seller since he knows exactly all the
terms and conditions of the transaction and has agreed to legally meet
them all, including price.
4. With the LC text agreed on both buyer and seller (and the seller ‘s
bank) we move to a draft of the contract. This should go quickly because
it is based on the terms and conditions already approved in the LOI and
the LC. There should be no surprises at all in this document. This can be
the first time the seller and buyer know each other since intermediaries
can be used up to this point.
5. The buyer can, at this point, request a Proof of Product from the
seller. This allows him to safely, comfortably and legally sign the
contract. At this time a POF (Proof of Funds) will be required from the
buyer’s bank.
6. With signing of the contract the LC can safely be opened by the buyer,
with no possibility of problem occurring with either the method of payment
on his side or performance by the seller on the other.
You can now see why we structure all of our transactions this way. The
procedures do not favor either the buyer or seller but do favor the
successful completion of the transaction. These procedures will very
quickly stop a transaction dead in its tracks if either the buyer or
seller is not serious. It does stop a broker chain immediately.
Our suggestion is that you please make your buyers aware of the above
procedures to see if they will accept them. There is no reason that they
would not, but one never knows how people will respond, and none of us
want to waste time.
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