Correspondent Bank: Definition and How It Works (original) (raw)
What Is a Correspondent Bank?
A correspondent bank is a financial institution that provides services to another one—usually in another country. It acts as an intermediary or agent, facilitating wire transfers, conducting business transactions, accepting deposits, and gathering documents on behalf of another bank.
Correspondent banks are most likely to be used by domestic banks to execute transactions that either originate or are completed in other countries. Domestic banks generally use correspondent banks to gain access to foreign financial markets and to serve international clients without having to open branches abroad.
Key Takeaways
- A correspondent bank is an authorized financial institution that provides services on behalf of another financial institution.
- Correspondent bank's services may include funds transfer, settlement, check clearing, and wire transfers.
- The accounts held between correspondent banks and the banks to which they are providing services are referred to as nostro and vostro accounts.
- Domestic banks can serve their international clients and gain access to foreign financial markets by using correspondent banks, rather than setting up branches overseas.
How a Correspondent Bank Works
Correspondent banks are third-party banks. They act as middlemen between different financial institutions. As such, they provide treasury services between sending and receiving banks, especially those in different countries. Services can include:
- funds transfer
- settlement
- check clearing
- wire transfers
- currency exchange
Correspondent banks may also act as agents to process local transactions for clients when they are traveling abroad. At the local level, correspondent banks may accept deposits, process documentation, and serve as funds transfer agents.
The accounts held between correspondent banks and the banks for which they provide services are referred to as nostro and vostro accounts. An account held by one bank for another is referred to by the holding bank as a nostro account, or our account on your books. The same account is referred to as a vostro account—your account but on our books—by the counterparty bank. Generally speaking, both banks in a correspondent relationship hold accounts for one another for the purpose of tracking debits and credits between the parties.
A correspondent bank must act as the middleman when sending and receiving banks don't have agreements in place for wire transfers.
Correspondent banks are a pivotal part of the financial industry, as they provide a way for domestic banks to operate when it isn't feasible for them to open branches in a different location—especially in another country.
For instance, a small domestic bank with clients in different countries can partner with a correspondent bank to meet the needs of its client internationally. Doing so also gives it access to the foreign financial market. The correspondent bank will, therefore, charge a fee for this service, which is usually passed off from the domestic bank to the customer.
Special Considerations
International wire transfers often occur between banks that don't have an established financial relationship. For example, a bank in San Francisco that receives instructions to wire funds to a bank in Japan can't wire funds directly without a working relationship with the receiving bank.
Most international wire transfers are executed through the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) network. Knowing there isn't a working relationship with the destination bank, the originating bank can search the SWIFT network for a correspondent bank that has arrangements with both banks.
Upon finding a correspondent bank having arrangements with both sides of the transfer, the originating bank sends the transferred funds to its nostro account held at the correspondent bank.
Using the example above, the correspondent bank deducts its transfer fee, usually between 0and0 and 0and50, and transfers the funds to the receiving bank in Japan. In transactions such as this, the correspondent bank adds value in two ways:
- It alleviates the need for the domestic bank to establish a physical presence abroad.
- It saves the work of setting up direct arrangements with other financial institutions around the world.
Risks of Correspondent Banking
Correspondent banking poses some risk-management challenges because the correspondent bank relies on its customer, the respondent bank, to perform Know Your Client (KYC) due diligence on its customers.
Reliance on a third party’s compliance program—rather than conducting KYC on all customers for whom the respondent bank is processing payments through the correspondent bank—is why this activity is generally considered to be high-risk, from a money-laundering perspective.
Correspondent Bank vs. Intermediary Bank
Although there are some similarities between both correspondent and intermediary banks—namely that they act as third parties for other banks—there is a major difference between the two.
While correspondent banks normally handle transactions involving multiple currencies, an intermediary bank completes transactions involving only a single currency. They are especially key for domestic banks that may be too small in size to handle these types of transactions.
What Is a Correspondent Bank?
A correspondent bank is a third-party financial institution that acts as a go-between for domestic and foreign banks that need to conduct cross-border payments with each other.
What Is the Difference Between a Correspondent Bank and an Intermediary Bank?
Correspondent banks and intermediary banks both serve as third-party banks and are used by beneficiary banks, or receiving banks, to execute international fund transfers and transaction settlements. The main variance between correspondent banks and intermediary banks is often the number of currencies in use in a transaction, with correspondent banks handling more than one currency and intermediary banks generally working in one currency.
How Does a Correspondent Bank Add Value?
In transactions that require their use, the correspondent bank adds value in two ways. It alleviates the need for the domestic bank to establish a physical presence abroad and saves the work of setting up direct arrangements with other financial institutions around the world.
The Bottom Line
A correspondent bank is an authorized financial institution that provides third-party services on behalf of another financial institution that's usually in another country. Correspondent bank services may include funds transfer, settlement, check clearing, wire transfers, and more. Domestic banks can serve their international clients and gain access to foreign financial markets by using correspondent banks, rather than setting up their own branches overseas.