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A banker’s acceptance is a short-term, bank-guaranteed debt instrument used to secure international trade transactions.
A Banker’s Acceptance (BA) is a short-term debt instrument guaranteed by a bank, commonly used in international trade to facilitate secure payments between buyers and sellers.
Definition
A Banker’s Acceptance is a time draft backed by a bank, promising that the bank will pay the holder a specified amount on a future date, typically 30 to 180 days.
In international trade, sellers often want guaranteed payment before shipping goods. A buyer’s bank issues a BA to assure the seller that payment will be made at maturity. Once the bank “accepts” the draft, it becomes a BA—effectively a bank-guaranteed IOU.
Because BAs carry the credit strength of the accepting bank, they can be traded in secondary markets at discounted prices, functioning similarly to Treasury bills or commercial paper.
Discounted Price = Face Value ÷ (1 + (Discount Rate × Days/360))
Banker’s acceptances reduce transaction risk in global trade, improve liquidity for exporters, and provide investors with low-risk short-term instruments.
| Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Trade Acceptance | Draft guaranteed in trade transactions. | International shipping |
| Finance Acceptance | Used for financing needs not tied to specific shipment. | Working capital funding |
To secure payment in international trade and access short-term liquidity.
Yes—risk depends primarily on the issuing bank’s creditworthiness.
Yes, it is a negotiable instrument often sold at a discount.