The best practices for ensuring compliance in SBLC monetisation involve a multi-layered verification process: first, ensuring the instrument is governed by URDG 758 or ISP98 standards; second, performing deep-level SBLC due-diligence on the issuing bank; and third, strictly following anti-money laundering regulations (AML) and KYC protocols to verify the source of funds and the legitimacy of all parties involved.
URDG 758 (Uniform Rules for Demand Guarantees) is a set of international rules developed by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) that governs demand guarantees and counter-guarantees. Unlike previous versions, the URDG 758 rules provide a clearer, more balanced framework that protects both the applicant and the beneficiary, making instruments under these rules highly attractive for monetisation.
While both are globally recognised, they serve slightly different functions in the compliance landscape:
| Feature | URDG 758 | ISP98 |
| Primary use | Demand guarantees | Standby letters of credit (SBLC) |
| Focus | Independent and documentary nature | Developed for the banking/insurance industry |
| Geographic preference | Widely used in Europe and Asia | Preferred by US and Canadian Banks |
| Enforceability | High; strict rules on non-documentary conditions | Extremely high; specifically tailored for SBLCs |
In our decade of experience at IntaCapital Swiss, we have found that the most common cause of bank guarantee fraud is a lack of transparency during the initial screening. SBLC due-diligence is not merely a checklist; it is a deep-dive investigation into the “entity relationship.”
Best practices for turn-down monetisation in lending turn-down occurs when a lender rejects an instrument due to compliance failures. To avoid this, our expert team discovered that verifying the signing authority at the issuing bank, not just the bank’s general reputation, is vital. If an instrument is issued by a Tier-1 bank but lacks the proper SWIFT MT760 formatting or is subject to restrictive local laws, it will be turned down by most institutional monetisers.
Bank guarantee fraud often involves providers offering instruments from non-rated or offshore “shell” banks that do not have the liquidity to back the paper.
At IntaCapital Swiss, we utilise a unique system called the Entity Integrity Protocol (EIP). This framework ensures that every SBLC due-diligence report includes:
The most critical URDG 758 rules for monetisation are Article 15 (requirements for demand), which mandates that a demand must be supported by a statement of breach, and Article 7 (non-documentary conditions), which requires banks to ignore conditions that do not have associated documents.
Anti-money laundering regulations require that the monetiser (the lender) performs a full audit of the project for which the funds are used. If the project identification does not match the corporate profile of the applicant, the payout may be delayed or frozen by clearing banks.
International Standby Practices ISP98 is often preferred for SBLCs because it was specifically designed for Standby Letters of Credit, whereas URDG is a broader catch-all for various demand guarantees. Monetisers find ISP98 more precise for credit-line transactions.
Our expert team ensures your documentation meets all URDG 758 and AML standards for seamless funding. Contact IntaCapital Swiss today to begin your compliance review.
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