Finance:Payment order

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Payment order, in international banking, is a directive to a bank from a bank account holder instructing the bank to make a payment or series of payments to a third party.[1]

Payment orders are post-contract instruments often used to pay fee agreements to agents and usually contain conditions for the payment to be met such as successful completion of contract requirements.[citation needed]

Payment orders with "conditions" should not be confused with "conditional payment orders". Conditional payment orders are pre-contract instruments consisting of a documented fee agreement between the beneficiary and the payer, proof of ability for the payer to pay which is often issued by Swift MT799 to the recipient's bank, and occasionally may include bank instructions for the establishment of a payment order following contract execution. Either payment orders or conditional payment orders are assumed to be irrevocable unless otherwise stated.[citation needed]

Payment orders with conditions may be established after signing of a contract and posting of a letter of credit or other financial instrument with the paying bank but are never put in place prior to contract execution because of the risk that the contract will not materialize.[citation needed]

References

  1. "PAYMENT ORDER - DEFINITIONS". Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute. 2017. https://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/4A/4A-103.