Credits from the U.S., and even the non-U.S. branches of some U.S. banks, contain U.S. ‘regulatory’ clauses. I quote an example below from a freely negotiable credit for over USD2M we were very recently asked to advise in favour of an account holding customer:
“THIRD PARTY SHIPPER/DOCUMENTS ARE PERMITTED PROVIDED THAT SUCH PARTY IS NOT ANY PERSON WITH WHOM U.S. PERSONS ARE PROHIBITED FROM DOING BUSINESS UNDER U.S. FOREIGN ASSETS CONTROL REGULATIONS OR OTHER APPLICABLE U.S. LAWS AND REGULATIONS. IN THE EVENT THAT DOCUMENTS ARE PRESENTED TO US CONTAINING A PARTY WITH WHOM WE ARE PROHIBITED FROM DOING BUSINESS AS STATED ABOVE, THEN WE SHALL NOT BE IN A POSITION TO HONOUR SUCH PRESENTATION.”
As we haven’t the faintest idea if any particular party is one with whom U.S. persons are prohibited from doing business -under U.S. foreign assets control regulations or other applicable U.S. laws and regulations- our policy is to refuse to carry out a nominated bank role where a credit contains a U.S. ‘regulatory’ clause and only to handle any documents presented on an ‘approval basis’.
A few questions please, to which I’d be grateful for replies:
1. To non-U.S. bankers: Do you take our approach? If not, how do you get around the problem of identifying if a party is a 'prohibited person'?
2. U.S. bankers: What checks do you carry out regarding ‘prohibited persons’ when you receive a set of documents and what databases do you use? Is this information available somewhere on the internet?
Look forward to receiving all your replies, particularly from those U.S. bankers that seem to have recently joined the forum.
Hope you all have a good weekend. I don’t think I will, the Bees are playing Bristol.

[edited 2/19/2005 10:23:29 AM]