Showing posts with label SWIFT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SWIFT. Show all posts

Saturday 6 April 2019

International Trade Finance (4-part online training course)

This 4-part online training course provides a comprehensive foundation for understanding all aspects of International Trade Finance in a global context. The course covers the key principles, concepts, infrastructures, practices, issues, and current developments in this very imprtant aspect of international arrangements.




The full course is divided into four parts, which together form a complete picture of international trade, its various instruments, its operations and its financing Each part may be studied as a stand-alone unit.

This course will be of especial interest to banking, business, and import/export professionals who wish to expand their knowledge base as well as enhance their expertise and advance their careers in or gain a deeper understanding of the international trade finance arena.

The four parts are:

Part 1 - Trade Finance Instruments
Part 2 - Payment Instruments
Part 3 - International Payment Systems
Part 4 - Supply Chain Finance



Please click on the individual Part Title for more information on each part.

This four-part course has full CPE accreditation. 

GET A 10% DISCOUNT ON THIS COURSE!
Use Coupon code CITADEL10 when registering to claim the discount.  



Wednesday 24 August 2016

Webinar - Payments and Settlements Systems - RTGS, SWIFT, LVTS, CLS


Webinar – Tuesday November 1, 10:00 AM PDT / 1:00 PM EDT

This webinar focuses on the entire payments and settlements process: beginning with the making of a payment and ending with the payment being received by the beneficiary and settled in a manner that makes it final and irrevocable.

We will explore the nature of a payment and the many ways that these funds may be transmitted from the payer to the receiver, depending on the parties’ physical location and their requirements, as well as the settlement that occurs between the intermediaries handling the payment so as to ensure that the transaction cannot be legally challenged.

We cover the full range of major payment & settlement systems including; Payment systems, Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS), Large Value Transfer Systems (LVTS), Deferred net settlement, Continued Linked Settlement (CLS), SWIFT financial messaging and, Correspondent banking.

FURTHER DETAILS AND REGISTRATIONS>>

Use coupon code 335840 and get 10% off on registration

Friday 20 May 2016

Webinar - Payments and Settlements Systems - RTGS, SWIFT, LVTS, CLS


Join Citadel Advantage’s STANLEY EPSTEIN on Tuesday November 1st, 10:00 AM PDT / 1:00 PM EDT.

Understand the payments and settlements process through this webinar: beginning with the making of a payment and ending with the payment being received by the beneficiary and settled in a manner that makes it final and irrevocable.

This webinar will explore the nature of a payment and the many ways that these funds may be transmitted from the payer to the receiver, depending on the parties’ physical location and their requirements, as well as the settlement that occurs between the intermediaries handling the payment so as to ensure that the transaction cannot be legally challenged.

DETAILS HERE>>

Wednesday 27 April 2016

Concerns about SWIFT

The international payments-messaging system SWIFT, used by 11,000 banks, issued a mandatory software upgrade to users of its Alliance Access interface, as concern deepened about cyber-attacks on the banking system. The non-profit body said criminals were using malicious software to disguise fraudulent transactions. In February cyber-criminals stole $81m from Bangladesh’s central bank—one of the biggest heists in history.

Wednesday 20 January 2016

What is a payment system?


By Stanley Epstein - Principal Associate, Citadel Advantage

What is a payment system? I am reminded of lengthy debates around the office on just this question - and the heated and, at times, passionate discussion that ensued. My antagonist, who is also my partner, took one view and I took the other. The thrust and parry of the dialogue ebbed and flowed … long into the night over innumerable cups of coffee.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) definition of a payment system states; “A payment system consists of a set of instruments, banking procedures and, typically, interbank funds transfer systems that ensure the circulation of money”. (From “A glossary of terms used in payments and settlement systems”, Committee on Payment & Settlement Systems. BIS, Basel, Switzerland).

Armed with this definition we can examine the components that make up what we so glibly refer to as a “payment system”. This examination will help us see what a payment system really is.

The BIS definition focuses on “... instruments, banking procedures … interbank funds transfer systems”. Let us examine each in a little more detail.

Instruments – a mere half century ago this was easy to define. Payment instruments were basically cash and cheques. Today however there is a vast range of payment instruments. Apart from the cheque and cash we now have giro-payments, electronic transfers, internet payments, debit orders, standing orders, credit cards, debit cards, electronic “cash”, mobile payments and so on. And the nature is each is vastly different from the other.

Banking procedures – these cover a huge area. Anything that is not an instrument or that does not relate to how that instrument is moved, must, by definition, be related to a banking procedure. Here there are internal bank procedures (such as how a branch initiates payments), payments systems rules, the agreements (such as those between banks, between banks and their customers, between banks and the clearinghouse), national and international payment laws and payment regulations. We must also not forget the actual operational procedures, either manual or technology driven within individual banks that are used to initiate, verify and process the payment. All of these procedures are simply to get the payment ready for the next step, to move it to a transfer system.

Interbank transfer systems – this covers local and national clearinghouses (for physical instruments such as paper), ACHs (automated clearinghouses for the electronic ones), message carriers (such as S.W.I.F.T. – Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Transactions), switches for ATM transactions, the national and international credit card networks and so on. Missing from the BIS definition is the intrabank systems that give effect to payment instrument transfers within the same bank. These are transfer systems too.

The key word in the definition is “set” - for all these components have to be combined to make up a complete unit which achieves the desired outcome – just like a tea set with its cups, saucers, tea-pot, strainer (or perhaps a tea-bag holder), milk jug and sugar bowl are just the thing for carrying out correct ritual for brewing and serving tea.

Sure, one can have tea without all this but it’s not really the same.

The analogy, while useful as a description ends here - in a payment system the missing components give rise to a serious problem – Risk.

Risk takes on many forms; credit risk, liquidity risk, legal risk, operational risk, settlement risk, systemic risk and put the whole fabric of the payment system in danger.

Despite this we often associate the word “system” with only the technology; the bits and bites, the hardware and the software. We tend to forget that there is a lot more that goes into making up a payment system.

So the next time that you write out a cheque or take that credit card from your wallet, or casually use you smartphone give a thought to the process that you are initiating in a complex structure that we take so for granted - the payment system.
 
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