What Is a Trust Receipt?
A trust receipt is a notice of the release of merchandise to a buyer from a bank, with the bank retaining the ownership title of the released assets. In an arrangement involving a trust receipt, the bank remains the owner of the merchandise, but the buyer is allowed to hold the merchandise in trust for the bank, for manufacturing or sales purposes.Key Takeaways
- A trust receipt is a notice of the release of merchandise to a buyer from a bank, but the bank retains title to these goods.
- Typically companies involved in these arrangements are equipment dealers, automotive dealers, or companies involved in expensive durable goods.
- The bank remains the owner of the merchandise, but the buyer is allowed to hold the merchandise in trust for the bank, for manufacturing or sales purposes.
- This arrangement often falls under a letter of credit financing. The trust receipt serves as a promissory note to the bank that the loan amount will be repaid upon sale of the goods.
How Trust Receipts Work
A trust receipt is a financial document attended to by a bank and a business that has received delivery of goods but cannot pay for the purchase until after the inventory is sold. In most cases, the company's cash flow and working capital may be tied up in other projects and business operations.
In the normal course of running a trade business, companies purchase goods for their inventories from vendors or wholesalers to resell to consumers or to manufacture goods. These goods may either be purchased locally or imported from other companies. When these companies receive the merchandise, they are also billed by the seller or exporter for the goods purchased. In the event that the firm does not have the required cash on hand to settle the bill, it may obtain financing from a bank via a trust receipt.The trust receipt serves as a promissory note to the bank that the loan amount will be repaid upon sale of the goods. The bank pays the exporter on its end or issues the seller (or seller’s bank) a letter of credit guaranteeing payment for the merchandise. The lender, however, retains the title to the merchandise as security. The customer or borrower is required to keep the goods separate from its other inventory and, in effect, holds and sells the goods as a trustee for the bank.
Although the bank has a security interest in the goods under the standard terms of a trust receipt, the customer takes possession of the goods and may do what they want with them as long as they do not violate the terms of their contract with the bank. If the customer decides to terminate the bank’s security interest and tie it to the inventory, they may tender the amount advanced on the goods, gaining total ownership of the goods.
Example of a Trust Receipt
Under a typical trust receipt transaction, the business has little to none of its own assets invested in the particular goods financed. The bank bears the majority of the credit risk prevalent in the transaction. The business keeps any profits made from the resale of the goods but also bears the business risk.
If the goods get damaged, lost, or deteriorate in quality or value, the loss is solely the burden of the business and it remains liable for repaying the full loan amount to the bank. In addition, any business expense (such as manufacturing costs, freight, custom dues, storage, etc.) is the responsibility of the business, not the lending institution.