BAFT Announces New Vice President of Payments and Financial Crime

BAFT has named Deepa Sinha as its new Vice President of Payments and Financial Crime. Sinha will lead the association’s payments, cash management and financial crime-focused policy initiatives.

WASHINGTON – BAFT, the leading global financial services association for international transaction banking, has named Deepa Sinha as its new Vice President of Payments and Financial Crime. Sinha will lead the association’s payments, cash management and financial crime-focused policy initiatives, as well as support its related councils and committees.

Sinha will work to advance the goals of the payments and cash management industry through standardization, defining best practices and developing usable industry data. She will also be responsible for formulating policy recommendations and educating industry stakeholders including practitioners, regulators, policymakers and the broader business community.

“I’m excited for Deepa to join BAFT,” said Tod Burwell, President & CEO, BAFT. “Her experience in corporate treasury and consulting roles provides her with a unique perspective on critical cash management and financial crime issues that affect our members. With the rapid pace of change in this space, her experience will be quite valuable in driving issues forward.”

Prior to joining BAFT, Sinha accumulated more than 25 years of treasury and cash management experience at both corporations and banks. She formerly served as Treasurer at Caliburn International, now Acuity International, where she oversaw cash forecasting, working capital and debt management, and implemented policies and banking technology to support all core treasury functions. As the Associate Vice President of Banking Operations and Relationships at the Carlyle Group, she developed the cash management, FX and banking platforms, and built and managed the infrastructure for multicurrency cash management across 5,000+ bank accounts at more than 100 global banks. She also served on both the JPMorgan Chase Treasury and Wells Fargo Treasury Advisory Councils. Sinha is a graduate of George Mason University where she received a bachelor’s degree in government and global systems management.

BAFT Media Contact:
Blair Bernstein
Director, Public Relations
[email protected]
+1 (202) 663-5468

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BAFT’s Economic Sanctions Resources Hub is a collection of links and documents to various resources across numerous international jurisdictions that can help you and your organization manage economic sanctions impacting the global transaction banking industry.

BAFT is committed to providing details on economic sanctions and export controls enacted by the European Union (EU), the United Kingdom (UK), the United States (U.S.), and other international jurisdictions in response to Russia’s violations of international law and the territorial integrity of Ukraine. We are also providing details on economic sanctions and export controls enacted by the EU, Japan, the UK, and the U.S. in response to Belarus’ role in the invasion of Ukraine.

The Economic Sanctions Resources Hub features industry statements on Russian sanctions from credit card and payments processers including SWIFT, international development and trade organizations including the EBRD, the ICC, the IMF, and the World Bank Group; in addition to jurisdictional resources on Russian sanctions from Australia, Canada, the EU, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Liechtenstein, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Switzerland, the UK, and the U.S.

We encourage members to actively monitor this resource hub as sanctions could change on a frequent basis, and we will endeavor to keep our community updated on changes that impact our industry.

As you review the sanctions and export controls we encourage you to send your questions and items for clarification to [email protected]. We will consolidate member questions and engage with the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on behalf of the industry.

Lenders, banking associations and trade finance users are lobbying the European Commission, European Parliament and member states to scrap planned amendments to the treatment of off-balance sheet instruments such as technical guarantees, performance bonds, warranties and standby letters of credit.

Via Global Trade Review (GTR)

Proposed changes to the treatment of trade finance in the EU’s capital requirements regulations could push up financing costs for businesses and allow insurers a bigger slice of the guarantees market, banks and borrowers claim.

The European Commission published the final text of its proposed changes to the Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) in October last year, part of the bloc’s implementation of the Basel III banking reforms.

Lenders, banking associations and trade finance users are lobbying the Commission, European Parliament and member states to scrap planned amendments to the treatment of off-balance sheet instruments such as technical guarantees, performance bonds, warranties and standby letters of credit.

The Commission has proposed that those products be categorized as medium risk for determining the credit conversion factor, which is used to calculate what a bank might have to pay out under those instruments – taking into account the likelihood the payout obligation will materialize – and therefore the risk they represent on its books.

The planned change would hike the required credit conversion factor for those off-balance sheet trade finance products to 50%, from the 20% under the current CRR.

The lobbying campaign has stepped up in recent weeks. Lenders, corporates and trade groups have sent a flurry of written submissions to the Commission arguing that the increase is incongruous with trade finance’s relatively low risk profile and high rates of recovery in the event of defaults.

In a position paper published in December, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) says it is “deeply concerned” that the two amendments “may have severe unintended consequences for the provision of cost-effective trade finance to the real economy”.

According to BAFT (Bankers Association for Finance and Trade), default rates on technical guarantees are only 0.24%. Upping the credit conversion factor to 50% “is therefore excessive and does not seem justified or appropriate”, the association said in a submission to the Commission last week.

“European banks are likely to price technical guarantees at higher rates to clients” if the change goes ahead, BAFT argues. “The effect will be to discourage these business activities and make it more costly to offer trade finance for banks and their corporate clients,” the submission says, disadvantaging small and medium enterprises and making European companies less competitive when bidding for major infrastructure projects.

The proposed changes will increase the capital charge on the trade finance instruments by 150%, according to a joint submission from banking associations in Denmark, Finland and Sweden.

Under the proposal, the cost of a €10mn performance guarantee for a corporate customer would rise from €50,000 to €125,000, the submission says.

Technical guarantees are frequently used by infrastructure, energy and defense companies fulfilling large contracts. Governments can call on the guarantees if the company fails to deliver or meet its performance goals, and often require firms to enter bid bonds when taking part in tender processes.

Engie, the French utilities giant, says in a submission that it has exposure to bank guarantees amounting “to several billions” and that “the proposed revision would imply a severe cost increase for Engie and potentially difficulties to get access to those guarantees, as banks may decide to prioritize activities with higher return on equity”.

It adds that “some banks have already alleged the potential revision of Basel requirements to justify an increase of existing guarantee line[s] that have recently matured”.

Airbus estimates its financing costs will increase by “several millions” per year if the changes go ahead, including the corporate undertakings its parent company makes with its subsidiaries.

The aircraft manufacturer says in a submission that the possible drying up of credit lines due to steeper capital requirements could hinder its ability to meet contractual obligations when its customers request technical guarantees and put its supply chain “at risk”.

“It is very important to underline we are in the real economy,” says Christian Cazenove, group head of trade oversight at Société Générale. “The things that we are dealing with are goods and services…. We are dealing with what allows corporates to succeed abroad.”

“The additional capital costs may lead the banking sector to some extent to disengage from the guarantee business,” Cazenove, who has rallied other banks and clients to campaign on the issue, tells GTR. “Trade finance by nature is still a paper-based industry and not extremely profitable – we, together with clients, really don’t need these additional costs that we would charge to our clients.”

Banks are also wary that the changes will benefit insurance companies at the expense of banks. Baft says its members are concerned that the “excessive pricing of credit risk… will accentuate the current outflow of guarantee business from banks to insurance companies” which are allowed to internally model guarantee risk.

The ICC agrees that the mooted revisions to the law could create “an uneven playing field” between banks and insurers.

Maturity concerns

Those lobbying the Commission are also concerned that a second proposal under the update of the CRR will increase the costs to EU banks of providing letters of credit and other trade finance instruments.

They say ambiguities in the draft text concerning credit risk rating approaches will effectively force financial institutions to treat key trade finance instruments such as letters of credit as having a 2.5-year maturity when they are provided to large corporates.

Currently the CRR exempts trade finance from a maturity floor in recognition that instruments in the sector mature relatively quickly. Most trade finance products have average tenors of under 130 days, according to ICC data.

“Applying an average 2.5[-year maturity] to this kind of transaction will create a significant price increase for European corporates – the main users of trade finance – putting EU exporters in a weaker position than their competitors outside the EU,” the ICC says in its submission.

Banks in the Nordic region fear that adding costs to their trade finance businesses will add further pressure to already expensive correspondent banking networks that underpin global trade.

Michael Friis, a senior adviser on banking regulation with Finance Denmark, tells GTR that the group’s members are concerned that a loss of performance bond businesses and more expensive letters of credit will mean “that some of the volume will go out of the business and make it more sluggish and more expensive”.

The Commission’s proposal will be the subject of negotiations with the European Parliament and member states through the European Council. The trade finance measures are only a small part of a much broader Basel III package being put forward by the Commission and are unlikely to come into effect until around 2025.

A spokesperson for the Commission says that its draft will not be altered following the submissions received since October, but they will be used to inform the talks with the Parliament and Council.

Industry groups are also lobbying EU lawmakers and member states, Friis and Cazenove say. The French finance minister Bruno Le Maire has been made aware of the industry’s concerns over the proposed legislation, Cazenove says.

In this latest op-ed, Diana Rodriguez, Vice President of International Policy at BAFT, talks about ESG, sustainable trade finance, and BAFT’s role in sustainable transaction banking.

Via Trade Finance Global

Market Standard Definitions, Methodologies, and Measurements

Sustainability and ESG have become public and private sector priorities, with consumers and corporates alike increasingly focusing on sustainability practices when making financial decisions, and governments considering a wide variety of policy initiatives to drive behavior.

As nations work to meet the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), there is an important role for the transaction banking industry to help achieve them.

Trade finance has a crucial role to play in supporting corporate efforts to position sustainability at the core of their business strategies, and throughout their supply chains.

For several years, banks have been offering ESG-linked products including green bonds and sustainable loans, and we see informal markets developing for the trading of carbon credits.

However, in order for sustainability-linked trade finance to gain traction and ubiquity, there is general agreement that market standard definitions, methodologies, and measurements are needed.

Towards a Common Standards Framework

The difficulty of defining workable sustainability standards for international trade should not be underestimated.

The volume of global trade transactions that cross multiple jurisdictions to form part of complex supply chains presents an inherent challenge to defining what constitutes sustainable trade finance – a market that accounts for more than a third of global trade.

Additionally, institutions are at different stages of their own journey toward sustainability, and have different priorities based on their geographic footprint and client base.

This complexity heightens the importance for the trade finance industry to coalesce around a common standard that reconciles the divergent banking landscapes and provides rigorous yet implementable standards.

Policymakers in certain regions are outlining public policy frameworks and taxonomies to support policy positions for companies operating within their jurisdictions.

In some cases, private enterprise is well ahead of the policy requirements, while in others they are being influenced by policy requirements.

An appropriate balance between the public and private sectors will shape policy in a way that incentivizes behavior without creating unintended consequences with negative economic implications.

Industry advocates must strive to ensure that public policy reflects some consistency across jurisdictions, so as not to create undue advantages or burdens based on geography.

BAFT’s Role in Sustainable Transaction Banking

In the past year, we have seen the market become more collaborative, with institutions working together through industry working groups and consortia to find innovative solutions to address sustainability in transaction banking.

Last year, BAFT launched a Sustainability Working Group to address the needs for standards, tools, education, and policy advocacy on behalf of the industry.

To address these challenges, the working group will be developing resources, training, and best practice standards to promote sustainability across the trade finance and global payments industry.

The working group is focusing its efforts on five work streams:

  • Developing standards for sustainable transaction banking
  • Principles on how to apply net zero to transaction banking
  • Guidance on sustainability reporting
  • Advocacy and education on sustainable transaction banking
  • Defining an industry approach for the full spectrum of ESG – beyond the “E”

It is the objective of this working group to advance the interests of the transaction banking industry, while complementing and leveraging the work of other bodies.

To that end, the BAFT Working Group welcomed the ICC Standards for Sustainable Trade and Sustainable Trade Finance positioning paper published in November 2021

The roadmap is a positive development and moves the industry closer to agreement on a common standard that the industry can reference.

An Equal-Weighted ESG

As a common standard begins to take shape, much work remains to ensure broad industry support and wide adoption.

The first consideration is to ensure that equal weight is given to all elements of ESG. While social and governance factors are generally taken into account for the calculation of an ESG rating, most of the taxonomies are still primarily focused on the “E” for environment. The true impact of trade finance extends to the social and governance elements of ESG, and should be effectively represented in the emerging standard.

Second, recognizing the transition needed to make business more sustainable, such standards must not only recognize positive activity, but also guide those involved towards what best practices, or even minimum acceptable standards. While specific goods may not in themselves be sustainable, they can often be used for purposes that lead to sustainable ends.

Lastly, underpinning the development of any standard, care must be taken to be inclusive of the global nature of the business. For a global sustainability standard to take hold, geographically diverse stakeholders must be an integral part of the development and adoption.

The sooner the industry can stand behind a shared understanding and common vocabulary of what is considered sustainable trade, the more effectively the industry can dispense with concerns over ESG-washing and realize the potential of sustainable trade finance.

The BAFT Sustainability Working Group welcomed the International Chamber of Commerce’s (ICC) Standards for Sustainable Trade & Sustainable Trade Finance positioning paper published in November 2021. The roadmap is a positive development and moves the industry closer to agreement on a common standard that the industry can reference.

As a common standard begins to take shape, BAFT offers recommendation on how to strengthen the ICC’s proposal in order to ensure broad industry support and wide adoption. 

The working group highlights several elements in its comments; first prioritizing equal weight to all elements of ESG beyond the environmental factor; second, acknowledging that standards must not only recognize positive activity, but also guide those involved towards what best practices or even minimum acceptable standards; and lastly, underpinning the development of any standard care must be take to be inclusive of the global nature of the business.

For a global sustainability standard to take hold, geographically diverse stakeholders must be an integral part of the development and adoption. Download the comment letter to read our latest recommendations, clarifications, and comments regarding sustainable finance and the ICC’s positioning.

Now in its sixth year running, the TFG International Trade Awards 2022, in cooperation with BAFT, recognize those who have provided an outstanding contribution to global trade and finance.

London, UK –  Nominations for the Trade Finance Global International Trade Awards 2022, in cooperation with BAFT, are now open.

Award winners are recognized for their outstanding contributions to global trade and finance. Now in its sixth year running, the annual TFG Awards are presented to businesses and service providers in trade, supply chain, and receivables finance. The TFG Awards logo is used as a badge of excellence in both the intermediary (B2B) and direct (B2C) markets.

This year, Trade Finance Global (TFG) is announcing the winners at the 2022 BAFT Global Annual Meeting in Washington, DC on May 4, 2022.

International Trade Awards 2022 Categories

Global

  • Best Trade Financier
  • Best Receivables Financier
  • Best Supply Chain Financier
  • Best Export Credit Agency
  • Best Multilateral Development Bank
  • Sustainable Trade Finance Award
  • Tradetech Innovator Award
  • Best SME Trade Finance Lender

Regional

  • Best Trade Financier in Western Europe
  • Best Trade Financier in Central and Eastern Europe
  • Best Trade Financier in the Middle East
  • Best Trade Financier in Africa
  • Best Trade Financier in Asia-Pacific
  • Best Trade Financier in North America
  • Best Trade Financier in Latin America

Specialist

  • Trade Finance Deal of the Year
  • Best Trade Finance Education Provider
  • Best Trade Finance Law Firm
  • Best Trade Credit Insurance Provider
  • Best Freight Forwarding & Logistics Company
  • Best Islamic Trade Financier
  • Trade Digitalization Award

Individuals

  • Outstanding Contribution to Trade Finance
  • Rising Trade Finance Star

Steering Committee for 2022 Announced

The TFG Steering Committee is made up of experts and leaders from all areas of trade, including finance, technology, policy, and governance. Members of the steering committee will provide their impartial views to TFG’s leading annual awards campaign that aims to promote inclusive trade as a force for good.

Members

  • Mark Abrams, Trade Finance Global
  • Robert Besseling, Pangea Risk
  • Steven Beck, Asian Development Bank (ADB)
  • Noreen Cesaro, OWIT UK
  • Sean Doherty, World Economic Forum
  • Sean Edwards, ITFA
  • Emmanuelle Ganne, World Trade Organisation
  • Angela Koll, Commerzbank
  • Tomasch Kubiak, ICC
  • Maria Mogilnaya, Independent
  • Peter Mulroy, FCI
  • Rudolf Putz, EBRD
  • Harri Rantanen, Standardised Trust
  • Ian Sayers, International Trade Centre
  • Susan Starnes, IFC
  • Scott Stevenson, BAFT
  • NLN Swaroop, HSBC
  • Erik Timmermans, WOA

Find out more about the awards and nominate yourself or a company here.

TFG Media Contact:
Joana Fabiao
Marketing and Editorial Assistant
Trade Finance Global
[email protected]