Bills of Exchange
Bills of Exchange
Bills of Exchange
How the Bill of Exchange is used in international trade: A Bill of Exchange can either be payable immediately or at some future date. If a Bill is payable immediately, it is usually issued payable at sight. The term "at sight" means that a buyer should pay once they have sighted the Bill, that is once the demand for payment has been made. If a Bill is payable at some future date, it must facilitate the calculation of the actual due date. For example Bills of Exchange may be drawn payable at 60 days sight, at 60 days from Bill of Lading Date etc.
Banks should be used as agents for the collection of the Bill. Visit our section on Documentary Collections in the Products and Services or Product Diagrams area of this website for further details. Guaranteed Bills of Exchange: To provide greater payment security a seller may look to have a Bill of Exchange guaranteed by a buyer's bank. A guaranteed Bill of Exchange is one drawn on and accepted by the buyer and to which, the buyer's bank has added its guarantee that the Bill will be paid at maturity. The security to a seller comes from a bank giving an undertaking to effect payment on a certain date regardless of the financial standing of a buyer on that date.
a person or business which directs the recipient to pay a fixed sum of money to a third party at a future date. The future date may be either fixed or negotiable. A bill of exchange must be in writing and signed and dated. also calleddraft.
A non-interest-bearing written order used primarily in international trade that binds one party to pay a fixed sum of money to another party at a predetermined future date.
There are two kinds of bills: Inland Bill: An inland bill is one which is (i) drawn and payable in India or (ii) drawn in India upon some person resident in India even though it is made payable in a foreign country. Thus in an inland bill of exchange both drawer and drawee belong to the same country. Foreign Bill: A foreign bill is one which is drawn in one country and payable in another country. Foreign bills are drawn in a set of three and each part of the set called a via contains a reference to the other parts. This is done to avoid delay or loss or miscarriage during the transit.