l -
litre
L. def. - Latent defect
L.A.S.H. - Lighter aboard ship
L.A.T. - Linseed Association
Terms
L.A.T.F. - Lloyd's American
Trust Fund
L.A.U.A. - Lloyd's Aviation
Underwriters' Association
L.A.U.T.R.O. - Life Assurance
and Unit Trust Regulatory
L.C. - London clause
(chartering), Label clause
L.C.L. - Less than full
container load
L.C.T.A. - London Corn trade
L.d.d. - Loss during discharge
L.d.l. - Loss during loading
L.H.A.R. - London, Hull,
Antwerp or Rotterdam
L.I.B.C. - Lloyd's Insurance
Brokers' Committee
L.I.M. - London Insurance
Market
L.I.M.D.S.M. - London Insurance
Market Data Standards Manual
L.I.M.T.C.G. - London Insurance
Market Technical Co-ordination Group
L.I.P. - Life Insurance Policy
L.L.T. - London Land Terms
L.M.C. - Lloyd's machinery
certificate
l.m.c. - Low middling clause
(cotton trade)
L.M.C.C. - Lloyd's machinery
certificate, continuous survey
L.N.G. - Liquified natural gas
carrier
l.n.y.d. - Liability not yet
determined
L.P.G. - Liquified petroleum
gas carrier
L.P.S.O. - Lloyd's Policy
Signing Office
L.R. - Lloyd's Register of
Shipping
L.R.M.C. - Lloyd's
refrigerating machinery certificate
l.s. - Lump sum
L.S. Cls. - Livestock clauses
L.S.H.W. Liab. - Longshoremen's
and Harbor Workers' Liability
L.S.T. - Local standard time
L.T.A. - Long term agreement
L.U.A. - Lloyd's Underwriters'
Association
L.U.A.A. - Lloyd's Underwriting
Agents Association
L.U.A.M.C. - Leading
underwriter agreement for marine cargo
L.U.A.M.H. - Leading
underwriter agreement for marine hull
L.U.C.R.O. - Lloyd's
Underwriters' Claims and Recoveries Office
L.U.T.I.R.O. - Life and Unit
Trust Intermediaries Regulatory Organization
L.W. - Low water
L.W.O.S.T. - Low water,
ordinary spring tides
L/A - Letter of authority.
Landing account. Lloyd's agent
L/C - Letter of Credit
l/u - Laid up, Letter of
undertaking
L/U - Leading Underwriter
La Zone Franc - See: Franc
Zone.
Labor Advisory Committee - A
committee of private sector advisors, consisting of trade union
representatives and other experts, which advises the Labor Department and
the United States Trade Representative on U.S. trade policy matters.
LAES - Latin American Economic
System
LAFTA - Latin American Free
Trade Association
lagan - Goods that have been
jettisoned but are attached to a floating object so that they can be
recovered.
LAIA - Latin American
Integration Association
Laisser Passer - A document
accorded by a host government to foreign diplomatic personnel, which
permits them to pass freely across the border of that country.
Lake Chad Basin Commission -
The LCBC recommends plans for developing the Chad Basin and coordinates
research programs. The Commission was established in 1964; headquarters
are in N'Djamena, Chad. LCBC members include: The Cameroon, Chad, Niger,
and Nigeria.
LASH - Lighter aboard ship
Latin American Association of
Development Financing Institutions - The Association promotes
cooperation among members in ways which support the integration of Latin
American economies, including efforts to improve the flow of information
among members and encouraging studies of problems of common interest.
Members include 24 Latin American countries and several countries in
Europe and North America. The Association was established in January 1968;
headquarters are in Lima, Peru.
Latin American Economic System
- LAES (Spanish: Sistema Econ¢mico Latinoamericano, SELA), established in
October 1975, promotes economic and social integration among approximately
26 Latin American and Caribbean member states. The System also seeks to
present a united view for Latin America before agencies of the European
Economic Communities and the United Nations. LAES headquarters are in
Caracas, Venezuela.
Latin American Export Bank -
See: Banco Latinoamericano de Exportaciones.
Latin American Free Trade
Association - See: Latin American Integration Association.
Latin American Integration
Association - LAIA (Spanish: Asociaci¢n Latinoamericana de Integraci¢n,
ALADI) was originally created in 1960 as the Latin American Free Trade
Association (LAFTA). LAFTA was restructured by the 1980 Montevideo Treaty
as a more flexible alternative to LAIA. LAIA, whose membership included
Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay,
Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela, has been declining as a major Latin American
integration effort in favor of regional efforts, such as Mercosur.
Association headquarters are in Montevideo, Uruguay.
latitude - Distance north or
south of the equator.
LCB - Local Competitive Bidding
LCBC - Lake Chad Basin
Commission
LCL - Less than full container
load
LDC - Less Developed Country
LDCs - Least developed
countries
ldg. - Loading
Ldg. & Dly. - Landing and
delivery
lds. - Loads
LDT - Light displacement tons
League of Arab States - The
League of Arab States (or Arab League) is a regional grouping aimed at
improving relations among Arab nations. Members include: Algeria, Bahrain,
Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania,
Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria,
Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Yeman Arab Republic, Yemen People's
Democractic Republic. The League was established in March 1945;
headquarters are in Cairo, Egypt. See: Arab Bank for Economic Development
in Africa Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development.
Leg. Chgs. - Legal charges
length overall - Maximum length
between the farthest ends of a ship.
Less Developed Country - An LDC
is a country with low per capita gross national product. Terms such as
third world, poor, developing nations, and underdeveloped have also been
used to describe less developed countries.
Lesser Developed Countries -
The classification LLDC (sometimes also known as "Least"
Developed Countries) was developed by the United Nations to give some
guidance to donor agencies and countries about an equitable allocation of
foreign assistance. The criteria for designating a country an LLDC,
originally adopted by the UN Committee for Development Planning in 1971,
have been modified several times. Criteria have included low:
per-capita-income, literacy, and manufacturing share of the country's
total gross domestic product. There is continuing concern that the
criteria should be more robust and less subject to the possibility of easy
fluctuation of a country between less developed and least developed
status.
Letter of Credit - A financial
document issued by a bank at the request of the consignee guaranteeing
payment to the shipper for cargo if certain terms and conditions are
fulfilled. Normally it contains a brief description of the goods,
documents required, a shipping date, and an expiration date after which
payment will no longer be made.- An Irrevocable Letter of Credit is one
which obligates the issuing bank to pay the exporter when all terms and
conditions of the letter of credit have been met. None of the terms and
conditions may be changed without the consent of all parties to the letter
of credit.- A Revocable Letter of Credit is subject to possible recall or
amendment at the option of the applicant, without the approval of the
beneficiary.- A Confirmed Letter of Credit is issued by a foreign bank
with its validity confirmed by a U.S. bank. An exporter who requires a
confirmed letter of credit from the buyer is assured payment from the U.S.
bank in case the foreign buyer or bank defaults.- A Documentary Letter of
Credit is one for which the issuing bank stipulates that certain documents
must accompany a draft. The documents assure the applicant (importer) that
the merchandise has been shipped and that title to the goods has been
transferred to the importer.
Letter Of Credit - An
instrument of audit issued by the buyer's bank, at the buyer's request, in
which the issuing bank promises to pay the seller upon presentation of
documents stipulated in the terms and conditions of the audit
LETTER OF CREDIT (Confirmed) -
A letter of audit issued by one bank to which another bank added its
irrevocable confirmation to pay, thereby obligating itself in the same
manner as the opening bank. For example, "we hereby confirm this
credit and undertake to pay drafts drawn in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the letter of credit."
LETTER OF CREDIT (Cumulative) -
A revolving letter of credit which permits any amount not utilized during
any of the specified periods to be carried over and added to the amounts
available in subsequent periods.
LETTER OF CREDIT (Deferred Payment)
- A letter of credit issued for the purchase and financing of merchandise,
similar to acceptance letter of credit, except that it requires
presentation of sight drafts which are payable on installment basis
usually for periods of 1 year or more. Under this type of credit, the
seller is financing the buyer until the stipulated time his drafts can be
presented to the bank for payment. There is a significant deference in the
bank's commitment, depending on whether the negotiating bank advised or
confirmed the letter of credit.
LETTER OF CREDIT (McLean) - A
letter of credit which requires the beneficiary to present only a draft or
a receipt for specified funds before he receives payment.
LETTER OF CREDIT (Negotiable) -
A letter of credit issued in such form that it allows any bank to
negotiate the documents. Negotiable credits incorporate the opening bank's
engagement, stating that the drafts will be duly honored on presentation,
provided they comply with ail terms of the credit.
LETTER OF CREDIT (Non-Cumulative)
- A revolving letter of credit which prohibits the amount not utilized
during the specific period to be available in the subsequent periods.
LETTER OF CREDIT (Revocable) -
This type of letter of credit is not as legally binding as an irrevocable
credit. It can be modified or canceled without the beneficiary's consent,
unless the negotiation has already taken place. The issuing bank must
honor the drafts negotiated before the notice of revocation or amendment
has been made. Negotiability is restricted to the advising bank and
confirmation is usually not available.
LETTER OF CREDIT (Revolving) -
A credit which includes a provision for reinstating its face value after
being drawn under within a stated period of time. This kind of credit
facilitates the financing of on going regular purchases.
LETTER OF CREDIT (Standby) -
One issued for the express purpose of effecting payment in the event of
default. The issuing bank is prepared to pay but does not expect to as
long as the underlying transaction is properly fulfilled.
LETTER OF CREDIT (TRAVELER'S) -
A letter of credit which is issued by a bank to a customer preparing for
an extended trip. The customer pays for the letter of credit at the time
of issuance, and a bank issues the letter for a specified period of time
in the amount purchased. The bank furnishes a list of correspondent banks
where drafts against the letter of credit will be honored. The bank also
identifies the customer by exhibiting a specimen signature of the
purchaser in the folder enclosing the list of correspondent banks. Each
bank, which honors a draft, endorses on the letter of credit the date when
a payment was made, the bank's name, the amount drawn against the letter
of credit, and charges the issuing bank's account.
Letter of Credit ADVICE OF CREDIT
- Communication by the advising bank that a letter of credit has been
issued. The primary responsibility of the advising bank is to take care in
establishing the authenticity of the credit.
Letter of Credit ADVISING BANK
- A bank which acts as an agent of the issuing bank of a letter of credit
in supplying the details of the letter of credit to its beneficial,
without any responsibility or engagement on its part.
Letter of Credit-ACCEPTANCE
FINANCING - An acceptance transaction unrelated to a letter of credit,
created for the purpose of borrowing, is referred to as acceptance
financing. In contrast to direct loans, the bankers acceptance provides a
vehicle of financing customers without the use of bank funds. By accepting
a draft the bank merely adds its name to a bill which then can be used to
raise funds by selling in the open market.
Letter Of Intent - A clear and
defined letter of intention on the buyers notepaper that they intend to
purchase the product specified. The LOI will contain full details of the
desired transaction including a specification of the product required;
proposed payment details; delivery and shipping.
Liab. - Liability
LIB - Limited International
Bidding
LIBID - London Interbank Bid
Rate
LIBOR - London Interbank
Offered Rate
Life-Cycle Processing - An
accounting approach in which a company sets product prices based on
recovering costs over the life cycle of the product. U.S. authorities
dispute the validity of this approach because projections of future yield
improvements cannot be verified at the time of dumping calculations.
LIFFE - London International
Financial Futures and Options, Exchange
lift - Weight of an individual
piece of cargo lifted or carried.
lift-on lift-off - To load and
discharge cargo by lifting it on and off a ship via cranes. This is the
method generally used for containers.
Lighter - An open or covered
vessel which transfers cargo between ship and shore, used mainly in
harbors and inland waterways. Lighters are generally used for shorter
hauls than barges.
LIMEAN - London Interbank Mean
Rate
Limited (Liability) - In the
United Kingdom there are two types of limited companies: (a) a private
limited company in which the public cannot be invited to subscribe to any
share issue and (b) a public limited company (plc) which can raise funds
through share issues. Before a limited company can "go public,"
it must have a minimum share capital. A private limited company requires
no minimum share capital.
Limited Appointment - Limited
appointees to the U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service (or to other foreign
services) are persons from the private sector or from the Federal
Government who are non-career officers assigned overseas for a limited
time.
Limited International Bidding -
LIB is one of several forms of procurement made with World Bank financing.
In some circumstances (such as: small purchases, urgent need, or few
suppliers), suppliers or contractors of specialized goods and services
participate by invitation rather than in response to an advertisement.
See: International Business Opportunities Service International
Competitive Bidding Local Competitive Bidding.
LIMNET - London Insurance
Market Network
line - A company that operates
a ship on a regular basis between advertised ports and offers space for
goods in return for freight based on a tariff of rates.
Line Release System - The Line
Release System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, is
designed for the release and tracking of shipments through the use of
personal computers and bar code technology. To qualify for line release, a
commodity must have a history of invoice accuracy, and be selected by
local Customs districts on the basis of high volume. To release the
merchandise, Customs reads the bar code into a personal computer, verifies
that the bar code matches the invoice data, and enters the quantity. The
cargo release is transmitted to the Automated Commercial System, which
establishes an entry and the requirement for an entry summary, and
provides the Automated Broker Interface system participants with release
information.
Liquidation System - The
Liquidation System, a part of Customs' Automated Commercial System, closes
the file on each entry and establishes a batch filing number which is
essential for recovering an entry for review or enforcement purposes. An
entry liquidation is a final review of the entry. P.L. 95-410 (Customs
Procedural Reform and Simplification Act of 1978) requires that all
liquidations be performed within one year from the date of consumption
entry or final withdrawal on a warehouse entry. Three one-year extensions
are permitted.
Lkge & Bkge - Leakage and
breakage
Ll. & Cos. - Lloyd's and
Companies
LLDCs - Lesser Developed
Countries
LNG - Liquefied natural gas
loa - Length overall
Local Competitive Bidding - LCB
is one of several forms of procurement made with World Bank financing. LCB
is generally used for contracts involving: (a) labor intensive activities;
(b) small value; (c) locally procurable services or goods priced below the
world market; (d) intermittent work; or (e) activities to be performed at
numerous sites. See: International Business Opportunities Service
International Competitive Bidding Limited International Bidding.
LOI - Letter of Intent
Lombard Rate - The Lombard rate
is one of the official interest rates in Germany used to regulate the
money market. Other countries use the term Lombard to describe rates which
function somewhat like the Lombard rate. The Swiss, for example, have
their own Lombard rate. In France, it's called the Central Bank
Intervention rate but performs the same function.
Lome Convention - The
Convention is an agreement concluded at Lome, Togo in February 1975 and
which entered into force in April 1976. The original Convention has been
followed by several additional Lome Conventions which expanded the scope
of the original agreement. The Convention is between the European
Community (EC) and 62 African, Caribbean, and Pacific states (mostly
former colonies of the EC members). The agreement covers some aid
provisions as well as trade and tariff preferences for the ACP countries
when shipping to the EC. Lome grew out of the 1958 Treaty of Rome's
"association" with the 18 African colonies/countries that had
ties with Belgium and France. The ACP members are: Angola, Bahamas,
Barbados, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde,
Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Djibouti,
Dominica, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, Fiji, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana,
Grenada, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Guyana, Jamaica, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritius, Mauritania, Mozambique, Namibia,
Niger, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent,
Samoa, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Solomon
Islands, Somalia, Sudan, Suriname, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Trinidad and
Tobago, Uganda, Zaire, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
London Club - The London Club,
a creditor cartel of commercial banks, evolved in the early 1980s. Debt
rescheduling (i.e., constructing new repayment profiles over a specific
period of time) was a primary function of the club. The Brady deals on
debt restructuring (i.e., renegotiating the entire stock of outstanding
debt at a discount), obviated the need to reschedule repayments every
couple of years. In some respect, the Bank Advisory Committee has replaced
the London Club. The Paris Club, also concerned with debt repayment, is an
association of official creditors. See: Bank Advisory Committee.
London Interbank Bid Rate -
LIBID is the rate of interest paid for funds in the London interbank
market. The bid to Libor's offer has been used as a reference for floating
rate payments for especially strong borrowers.
London Interbank Mean Rate -
Abbreviated as LIMEAN, this is the midpoint of the LIBOR-LIBID spread.
LIMEAN has been used as a reference for floating rate payments.
London Interbank Offered Rate -
LIBOR, the most prominent of the interbank offered rates, is the rate of
interest at which banks in London lend funds to other prime banks in
London. LIBOR is frequently used as a basis for determining the rate of
interest payable on Eurodollars and other Eurocurrency loans. The
effective rate of interest on these Eurocredits is LIBOR plus a markup
negotiated between lender and borrower. See: Interbank Offered Rate.
London International Financial
Futures and Options Exchange - LIFFE, Europe's leading exchange,
trades in futures contracts including short-term interest rates,
government bonds, stock indices, and traded options on these instruments.
The Exchange was established in 1982 to provide a means for hedging
interest rates and currency exposures against volatility. Originally
called the London International Financial Futures Exchange, LIFFE merged
in March 1992 with the London Traded Options Market (LTOM) and retained
the original acronym.
long ton - 2,240 lbs.
Long-Dated Forward - The
long-dated forward is a foreign exchange contract whose maturity exceeds
one year; a few have extended over ten years.
longitude - Distance east or
west of the Greenwich meridian.
Louvre Accord - The Louvre
Accord (February 1987) attempted to stop the dollar's fall and stabilize
currency relationships by introducing reference ranges among the G-7
currencies. See: Plaza Accord.
LPG - Liquefied petroleum gas
Lt.-v. - Light-vessel
LTD - Limited (Liability)
LTFV - Less Than Fair Value
LTGE - Lighterage
Ltr. - Lighter
LUF - Lifting unit frame
Lusophone Countries - Lusophone
countries are those in which the official language is Portuguese: Angola,
Brazil, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Portugal, and Sao-Tome and
Principe.
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