Wandrag, RiekieFieties, Leon2014-07-242024-11-062014-07-242024-11-062013https://hdl.handle.net/10566/18030Magister Legum - LLMThe classic justification for Letters of Credit is that it provides an effective assurance of payment from a financially responsible third party. Cross-border transactions magnify the concern of non-payment from a buyer because litigation is not only costly, but it also normally occurs in a foreign and unfamiliar forum. Not only do Letters of Credit provide assurance to the seller that it will be paid, even if the buyer would not pay voluntarily but it also compensate for the weakness of relational ties between the buyer and the seller, should no such ties exist at the time the contract is established.enChinese letters of credit lawIndependent principleInternational payment systemsLetters of creditSouth African letters of credit lawStrict compliance principleThe fraud exceptionUniform customs and practice (UCP)United Kingdom letters of credit lawUnited States of America letters of credit lawLetters of credit - the fraud exception: a time for conformityuwc