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Showing posts with label collateral. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collateral. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Accessible Credit Risk Tools for Chinese Executives

T3P LIMITED is pleased to advise that the Chinese language (Mandarin Simplified Characters) version of Global Credit Management - an Executive Summary is available.

The Authors are grateful to have had this opportunity to make such key information accessible to Mandarin literate executives and students. The original English text was adapted prior to translation in order to ensure it would be understood in the reader’s context.

This book is ideal for Chinese business executives of all types; Chief Executives (CEOs), Chief Financial Officers (CFOs), Treasurers, Credit Managers, Entrepreneurs starting or running their own businesses, and students of business practice preparing to face the tough challenges of business management.

It has been designed to provide the essential basic information needed to understand payment risk management in a domestic and international setting, with the addition of a practical tool kit covering the essential aspects.

Above all it is easy to read, Dr Jing Zhang commented; "I have enjoyed greatly reading this book as it has presented this complex subject in a very light and lively manner. The authors have summarised the entire world of credit management within an effective length, focusing on the practitioners’ perspective."

Professor Yang commented; "I believe this book should be extremely useful and helpful for Chinese firms and managers to learn about international practices and standards in credit management and improve their competitiveness."

The Hong Kong based magazine Asset Publishing & Research Ltd reported on October 28; “Taiwan and China are the markets that are the least 'credit-friendly' in the region with less than 40% of respondents conducting business-to-business (B2B) sales over credit, a new survey shows.” The result of this research strongly supports the notion that the practical skills and knowledge imparted in this book are urgently needed in China. (http://www.theasset.com.hk)

Click here to read the introductory pages, which have been translated into English to enable you to judge the book's value for yourself; the original Chinese text is also included.

The book (ISBN: 978-988-99586-1-9) consists of 250 pages; unfortunately the Paperback version is out of print so only a PDF electronic format is available. To purchase the electronic version (an eBook) click here.

BarrettWells

Friday, July 10, 2015

Chameleon in the Room: Embrace Business Risk - Assure Survival & Growth

An innovative new risk book is now available in paperback on Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk and other Europe based Amazon websites.

It is also available as a Kindle version on all Amazon websites worldwide; including India, Mexico, Brazil, Australia, Japan and Canada.

The paperback and pdf versions are available for sale through the eStoreT3P website; payments are processed by PayPal.

The Chameleon in the Room is unusual as it provides tools specifically designed to manage risks that are often ignored by executives; the same risks that have surprised and fatally wounded many giant enterprises, and countless SMEs.

The 108 pages are full of practical strategies and tactics for the management of the risks that injure real businesses. Real businesses are those that produce, trade, consume or distribute physical commodities, machinery, parts and equipment or consumer products and services.

Please click on this link to read the contents pages and a sample extract from the second chapter: http://www.book2look.de/book/XDU8RVItrX

Particularly addressed are the concerns and responsibilities of quoted company Executive Directors, Non-Executive Directors and ‘C-Suite’ Executives; as well as Owners and Directors of SME businesses and start-up Entrepreneurs.

Additionally Credit Executives may wish to assess their customers in the light of the 'unexpected and highly consequential' and ‘unimaginable’ risks, and associated management practices illustrated in this book.

In the face of rapid change and globalisation, data driven risk management methods alone are no longer adequate. Therefore this text presents alternative ways to cope with the diabolical array of risks that threaten non-financial businesses; including some seldom written about to date for example:
• Black Swan Events,
• Liquidity Risk,
• External Operational Risk,
• Concentration and Correlation Risk, and
• Lack of Flexibility Risk.

Related reference numbers are: ISBN: 9780957627949 / ASIN: B0118E0T84

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Stellar Book Review of Credit Risk Management - The Novel in The Asset Magazine

In the March 2015 edition of The Asset the Assistant Editor, Christoph Kober, reviews Credit Risk Management – The Novel (Part One).

Here is a short extract:

“In The Novel, Wells presents technical concepts in a manner that is enlightening to anyone interested in how oil majors and traders fuel the world economy. In the sometimes covert world of commodities, the book reveals how large oil majors can do business even with nefarious traders and national oil companies with erratic payment patterns.

Practical advice wrapped in lively accounts of how large commodity deals are brokered make the book a helpful guide not only to credit professionals but treasurers and financial directors as well.

But The Novel also has room for fiction. James “Jim” E Cricket, the head of the team of “creditphiles” at ShamOil, fancies more than just collateral when dealing with risky buyers. World peace is what he really strives for. Jim nearly brokers the smooth fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of Apartheid in a matter of just a few months.

The Novel recounts some of the most dramatic geopolitical events at the end of the 20th century – which of course proved to be watershed moments for the commodities industries as well. Fast forward two decades and geopolitical hotspots throughout the world again keep businesses on their toes. Although set in the 1990s, the solutions presented by Wells were in fact developed more recently, he says, and their applicability today adds to the book’s relevance.

Wells aims to reach an entirely different group of readers with The Novel – students and graduates undecided where to work. “Younger people looking for a career in finance are drawn to investment banking because of the money it offers. I have always found that working in business is much more exciting because real stuff moves as a result of your actions as a credit specialist. There are very few finance programmes that give students exposure to credit risk management in their courses. I hope The Novel can add to this education and show that managing customer and supplier risk in a real business is an exciting career opportunity.”

Credit Risk Management – The Novel, Part One (2013) is published by T3P LIMITED and available for purchase at Amazon.
ISBN: 978-0-9576279-2-5, 104 pages

To read the whole Book Review click: www.t3plimited.com/TAMar2015TheNovelReviewCK.pdf

To subscribe to The Asset click: www.theasset.com

Friday, November 21, 2014

Now there are 16 Banking Groups Live on BPO

This list includes 6 of the top15 Trade banks (based on Cat 7 traffic)

ANZ - Australia & New Zealand Banking Group
Bank of China
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ
Bangkok Bank
BNP Paribas
China CITIC Bank
CIMB - Commerce International Merchant Bankers Berhad
Commerzbank
Hua Nan Bank (Head Office: Taipei )
Korea Exchange Bank ( KEB )
Maybank - Malayan Banking Berhad
Siam Commercial Bank ( SCB Thailand )
Standard Chartered Bank ( SCB )
Türkiye Is Bankasi ( Isbank )
Turkish Economy Bank Inc. ( TEB )
UniCredit

Information as at November 17, 2014 supplied by SWIFT

As you can see there are plenty of banks to turn to for this service if yours is being unhelpful.

Ron Wells

Thursday, November 6, 2014

A Novel about Credit Risk Management ... No way! How can that work?

Credit Risk Management - The Novel (Part One) presents two cracking good stories for your enjoyment and enlightenment.

It is the first narrative non-fiction novel to feature the true to life experiences of a team of professionals managing business to business credit risk, day to day. This is intertwined with a parallel story that follows the adventures of Credit Exec and Secret Agent, James E Cricket, which provides an undercurrent of twists and turns.

Click this widget to browse inside a sample of this unique and innovative book, satisfy your curiosity….



Visit and follow the James E Cricket fictitious celebrity Facebook page to learn more about his early life, and other useful posts at www.facebook.com/jamesecricket.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

List of the 15 Banking Groups Now Live on BPO

This list includes 6 of the top 15 Trade banks (based on Cat 7 traffic)

ANZ - Australia & New Zealand Banking Group
Bank of China
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ
Bangkok Bank
BNP Paribas
China CITIC Bank
CIMB - Commerce International Merchant Bankers Berhad
Commerzbank
Hua Nan Bank (Head Office: Taipei )
Korea Exchange Bank ( KEB )
Maybank - Malayan Banking Berhad
Siam Commercial Bank ( SCB Thailand )
Standard Chartered Bank ( SCB )
Türkiye Is Bankasi ( Isbank )
UniCredit

Information as at October 16, 2014 supplied by SWIFT

Plenty of banks to turn to for this service if yours is a laggard.

Ron Wells

Monday, September 1, 2014

Bank Payment Obligations (BPOs) – Basics for Corporates

Whether you are a Seller or Buyer of goods this article provides the basic information you need in order to start replacing Standby Letters of Credit and/or Documentary Letters of Credit (LCs) with the BPO or BPO-Plus process respectively.

You can download a copy of this article by clicking here.

Why bother to make the change?
Companies that adopt the BPO and/or BPO-Plus processes are able to capture a number of benefits from the BPO system; for example:
• Improved cash flow management based on certainty as to when invoice payments will be credited.
• Reduced document handling – whether paper or electronic – since purchase orders and invoices are keyed into the system and communicated automatically; via one or two banks in nanoseconds. The SWIFT system is exceptionally secure and reliable, and covers more than 10,000 financial institutions and corporations in 210 countries
• Reduced information discrepancies and/or reduced time involved in identifying and correcting mismatched data. The BPO system automatically matches buyer and seller data against the Purchase Order/Contract baseline and provides various reports
• Better payment protection (for the seller) compared to a Standby or Documentary Letter of Credit; with reduced costs and handling required on both sides of a transaction
• Access to financing options is improved for both buyer and seller

According to an article that you can find with this link.

“This process (the BPO & BPO-Plus) results in a fully electronic alternative to the letter of credit (LC), which will enable efficiency gains, working capital reduction and cost saving. This electronic alternative can be processed in a much shorter time than traditional, paper-based LCs – estimates are as low as 10-15 days. Reduced processing times result in significant cost savings: Brazilian mining company Vale estimates that a combination of electronic bills of lading and BPOs is saving it $37 million per year on its exports of iron ore to China alone.”

The BPO Train is leaving the station, so you better hurry to catch it… or risk being left in the LC dust by your competitors…

It is understandable that many Trade Finance Bankers will resist the switch to BPO and BPO-Plus but it would be preferable for them to accept that BPO related changes are unstoppable. The sooner Bankers accept that and start to make the necessary changes in their careers the better, delay will only mean more painful and difficult changes will have to be made later.

In 2000 Gary Hamel wrote in his book ‘Leading the Revolution’: …”change has changed. No longer is it additive. No longer does it move in a straight line. In the twenty-first century, change is discontinuous, abrupt, and seditious. We now stand on the threshold of a new age – the age of revolution. In our minds we know the new age has already arrived; in our bellies, we’re not sure we like it. For we know it is going to be an age of upheaval, of tumult, of fortunes made and unmade at head-snapping speed.”

In fact it was in 2000 that TradeCard brought its solution to market, a product that BPO more than resembles, it virtually mirrors. Admittedly it has taken 14 years for the BPO to become a globally viable LC alternative but the challenges overcome in terms of proving the technologies involved, agreeing standards and putting in place internationally accepted rules have been formidable.

The prize for banks and users (exporters/sellers, importers/buyers and traders) is significant.

On the other hand there will inevitably be losers, mainly those who have built a career on the basis of UCP expertise; bankers, consultants, trainers and academics. The losers’ whose ‘cheese is being moved’ can denounce this development, and try to derail or delay the transition, but like blowing against the wind such efforts to maintain the status quo will prove fruitless in the end.

Today one can be a Kodak strategist until one’s world falls apart when the ‘digital camera producers’ destroy the business and associated jobs, or one can recognise the signs and start searching for ‘new cheese’. As Lynda Gratton wrote in ‘The Shift – The Future of Work is Already Here’: “In a world of more and more complex technology, it is the highly skilled, or what I call those with serial mastery, who will always find work.”

Those who do not notice their 'cheese' disappearing and do not set out to find ‘new cheese’ (a new expert occupation) will, I’m afraid, find it difficult to maintain their current standard of living.

William Gibson in 1993 famously said: “The future is already here — it's just not very evenly distributed.”

Ron Wells

Friday, August 22, 2014

The BPO & Friends have a Stranglehold on the LC and will soon finally lay it to rest…

Read why every business that accepts Standby Letters of Credit as collateral cover (security) for its sales transactions should switch to requiring Bank Payment Obligations (BPOs).

Discover how the BPO-Plus (BPO & Friends) will gradually but inexorably replace transaction related Documentary LCs over the next five years or less. The considerable rewards intrinsic to using BPO and electronic documents in combination are available to every trading partnership today; you should be benefiting.

To read the full article click here.

Ron Wells

Ron Wells is a B2B counterparty credit risk and trade finance practitioner and author of “Credit Risk Management – The Novel (Part One)”. This is not a text book, it is a story that follows the day to day work of a credit risk management team as they face and overcome various challenges. You are invited to ‘listen in’ to their conversations and read the outline of the solutions they employ. There is a parallel story that follows the adventures of James E Cricket, providing and undercurrent of twists and turns.

Ron also wrote “Global Credit Management – an Executive Summary” published by John Wiley & Sons. His books are sold by Amazon.com and other retail outlets.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Convention on International Security Interests in Mobile Equipment (Aircraft etc)

The Cape Town Convention or Treaty, as it is commonly known, took effect in 2006.

‘The treaty creates an international system of perfecting security interests in aircraft and simplified and stronger methods of enforcing the rights created by such interests. It was created to engender more certainty for lenders which will, in turn, lower the costs of financing for the purchase and lease of aircraft.’

The European Community ratified the convention in April 2009. The convention was due to enter into force throughout the European Community (with the exception of Denmark) on 1 Aug 2009.

Below is a link to a good introductory article explaining the Cape Town Treaty:
http://www.aviationtaxlawyer.com/pub_docs/Article-CapeTownTreaty.pdf

Official site for the Treaty:
http://www.unidroit.org/english/conventions/mobile-equipment/main.htm

List of countries that have ratified the Convention:
http://www.unidroit.org/english/implement/i-2001-convention.pdf

Editor: These notes kindly supplied by honorary GCMG member SN