Trade Finance Instruments
Trade finance and letters of credit provide the financial instruments that enable international trade: documentary credits (LCs), standby letters of credit (SBLCs), bank guarantees, forfaiting, factoring, and the receivables finance that bridges the payment gap between shipment and receipt. The global trade finance gap — estimated by the Asian Development Bank at $1.7 trillion annually — represents one of the most consequential market failures in global commerce, with SMEs in developing economies disproportionately affected.
Advisory Practice
Kaelo advises on: trade finance programme design, LC structuring (sight vs. usance, confirmed vs. unconfirmed, transferable vs. back-to-back), bank guarantee procurement (bid bonds, performance bonds, advance payment guarantees), receivables financing, and the Sharia-compliant trade finance instruments (murabaha-based commodity finance, wakala-based documentary credits, istisna for construction trade) that Gulf companies utilise. Our trade practice connects exporters to financing capacity across the corridors our three offices serve.
Digital Trade Finance
Trade finance digitisation — electronic bills of lading (TradeLens, WAVE BL, CargoX), blockchain-based LC processing (Contour, TradeIX), and the automated documentation platforms that reduce trade finance processing from 5-10 days to hours — is gradually modernising an industry that remains paper-intensive. The advisory mandate covers: digital trade finance platform evaluation, implementation planning, and the regulatory acceptance frameworks that ensure digital instruments have the same legal standing as traditional paper documents.
Trade finance is the circulatory system of international commerce — and bridging the $1.7 trillion gap requires both financial structuring capability and the digital transformation that reduces the cost of trade finance to levels where serving SME exporters becomes commercially viable.