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A bankers acceptance (BA) is a money market instrument—a
short-term discount instrument that usually arises in the course of
international trade. Before we explain BAs, let's introduce some more
basic concepts.
A draft is a legally binding
order by one party (the drawer) to a second
party (the drawee) to make payment to a third
party (the payee). A simple example is a bank
check—which is simply an order directing a bank to pay a third party. The three
parties don't have to be distinct. For example, someone might write
himself a check as a simple means of transferring funds from one bank
account to another. In this case, the drawer and payee are the same
person. When a draft guarantees payment for goods in international trade,
it is called a bill of exchange.
A draft can require immediate payment by the second party
to the third upon presentation of the draft. This is called a
sight draft. Checks are sight drafts. In
trade, drafts often are for deferred payment. An importer might write a
draft promising payment to an exporter for delivery of goods with payment
to occur 60 days after the goods are delivered. Such drafts are called
time drafts. They are said to mature on the
payment date. In this example, the importer is both the drawer and the
drawee.
In cases where the drawer and drawee of a time draft are
distinct parties, the payee may submit the draft to the drawee for
confirmation that the draft is a legitimate order and that the drawee will
make payment on the specified date. Such confirmation is called
acceptance—the drawee accepts the order to
pay as legitimate. The drawee stamps ACCEPTED on the draft and is
thereafter obligated to make the specified payment when it is due. If the drawee is a bank, the acceptance is called a
bankers acceptance (BA).
A bankers acceptance is an obligation of the accepting
bank. Depending on the bank's reputation, a payee may be able to sell the
bankers acceptance—that is, sell the time draft accepted by the bank. It
will sell for the discounted value of the future payment. In this manner,
the bankers acceptance becomes a discount instrument traded in the money
market. Paying discounted value for a time draft is called
discounting the draft.
In international trade, bankers acceptances arise in
various ways. Consider two examples:
An
importer plans to purchase goods from an exporter. The exporter will not
grant credit, so the importer turns to its bank. They execute an
acceptance agreement, under which the bank will accept drafts from the
importer. In this manner, the bank extends credit to the importer, who
agrees to pay the bank the face value of all drafts prior to their
maturity. The importer draws a time draft, listing itself as the payee.
The bank accepts the draft and discounts it—paying the importer the
discounted value of the draft. The importer uses the proceeds to pay the
exporter. The bank can then hold the bankers acceptance in its own
portfolio or it can sell it at discounted value in the money market.
In
an alternative arrangement, the exporter may agree to accept a letter of
credit from the importer's bank. This specifies that the bank will accept
time drafts from the exporter if the exporter presents suitable
documentation that the goods were delivered. Under this arrangement, the
exporter is the drawer and payee of the draft. Typically, the bank will
not work directly with the exporter but with the exporter's correspondent
bank. The exporter may realize proceeds from the bankers acceptance in
several ways. The bank may discount it for the exporter; the exporter may
hold the acceptance to maturity; or it may sell the acceptance to another
party.
Bankers acceptances date back to the 12th century when
early forms of the instruments were used to finance trade. During the 18th
and 19th centuries, there was an active market for sterling bankers
acceptances in London. When the United States
Federal
Reserve (Fed) was formed in 1913, one of its purposes was to promote a
domestic bankers acceptance market to rival London's. This would boost US
trade and enhance the competitive position of US banks. National banks
were authorized to accept time drafts, and the Fed was authorized to
purchase certain eligible bankers
acceptances. Rules for eligibility are complex. Generally, they require
that a bankers acceptance finance a self-liquidating transaction with a
maturity under six months. Today, the Fed no longer buys bankers
acceptances. The practical significance of eligibility is that there are
no reserve requirements if a bank sells an eligible acceptance. Banks
sometimes
create ineligible acceptances, but they incur reserve requirements if
sold.
Bankers acceptances are quoted in discount form.
Maturities are generally between one and six months, and they trade as
bearer instruments. Their credit
quality is excellent. Not only are they a primary obligation of the
accepting bank, but they are usually also a contingent obligation of the
drawer.
Bankers acceptances trade at a spread over
T-bills. The rates at which they trade are called
bankers acceptance rates (or
BA rates). The Fed publishes BA rates in its
weekly H.15 bulletin. Those rates are a standard index used as an
underlier in various
interest rate swaps and
other derivatives.
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basis swap
A floating-for-floating interest rate or currency swap.
certificate of deposit A money market instrument issued by a depository institution as
evidence of a time deposit.
COFI
Cost of Funds Index.
commercial paper
Short-term promissory notes issued primarily by corporations.
credit risk Risk due to
uncertainty in a counterparty's ability to meet its obligations.
discount instrument
A money market instrument that pays no coupons, matures for its face value, and
is issued at a discount to its face value.
discount
yield A formula for calculating yield on a discount instrument.
interest
rate swap A swap under which both cash flow streams are in the same currency and are defined as cash flow streams that might be associated with some fixed income obligations.
Fed funds Deposits
held by US banks in accounts at their regional Federal Reserve banks.
fixed income
term structure Refers collectively to a spot curve, forward curve,
discount curve, yield curve or any other curve that describes the time value of
money.
floater
A fixed income instrument whose coupon fluctuates with some designated reference
rate.
interest rate spreads
Spreads between interest rates.
Libor
London Interbank Offered Rate.
repurchase
agreement An agreement to sell and
subsequently repurchase a security.
Treasury bill US
Treasury security with with a maturity of a year or less at the time of issue.
United States financial regulation An overview. |
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Ads by Contingency Analysis
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Fabozzi, Mann and Choudhry (2002)
is an introduction to the money markets that discusses bankers
acceptances.
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