Understanding Article 7 of UCP 600: Issuing Bank’s Undertaking

In every letter of credit (LC), the issuing bank plays a central role — it is the bank that opens the LC on behalf of the importer. Article 7 of UCP 600 sets out the commitments and responsibilities of the issuing bank, ensuring exporters have confidence that payment will be made if documents comply.

What Does Article 7 of UCP 600 Say?

Article 7 establishes that:

1. Irrevocable Undertaking

• Once an LC is issued, the issuing bank is bound to honor it.

• The bank cannot cancel or modify the LC without the agreement of all parties.

2. Payment Obligation

• The issuing bank must honor a complying presentation by:

• Sight payment.

• Deferred payment (at maturity).

• Acceptance of a draft.

3. Reimbursement

• If another bank (nominated or confirming) makes payment, the issuing bank must reimburse that bank promptly.

4. Scope of Undertaking

• The bank’s obligation applies only when documents comply strictly with LC terms.

• The bank is not concerned with goods, services, or performance (as reinforced in Article 5).

Breaking Down Article 7

1. Irrevocable Commitment

• Importer cannot ask to cancel or amend the LC unilaterally.

• Exporter has assurance of payment if documents comply.

2. Bank’s Payment Duty

• Issuing bank must honor the LC at the agreed method of availability (sight, deferred, acceptance).

• Even if the importer defaults, the bank must pay.

3. Reimbursement of Nominated Banks

• If a nominated bank (like Standard Chartered Dhaka) pays the exporter, the issuing bank (say HSBC London) must reimburse it.

• This maintains trust between banks in global trade.

4. Condition: Complying Presentation

• The bank’s obligation exists only if documents meet the exact LC requirements.

• No room for approximation or “close enough.”

Practical Trade Example

A Bangladeshi exporter ships garments to a buyer in Germany.

• The buyer’s bank (Deutsche Bank) issues an LC, available by sight payment.

• Exporter presents all required documents to the nominated bank in Dhaka.

✔ If documents comply: Deutsche Bank must pay — even if the buyer later refuses to accept the goods.

❌ If documents have discrepancies: Deutsche Bank can refuse payment, as its undertaking applies only to a complying presentation.

Why Article 7 Matters

• Provides exporters with payment security — the core purpose of an LC.

• Ensures that once issued, an LC cannot be arbitrarily cancelled.

• Strengthens global trust in LCs as a reliable payment mechanism.

• Protects nominated banks that act in good faith by requiring reimbursement.

Final Thoughts

Article 7 is the heart of the UCP 600 framework. It defines the issuing bank’s binding obligation, making letters of credit a trustworthy instrument in international trade. Exporters know they will be paid if they present documents correctly, while banks gain clarity on their exact role in the LC chain.

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