How Letters of Credit Affect Customer Orders
The list below describes the situations in which customer Letters
of Credit (LCRs) affect customer orders.
- LCRs tie customer orders to customer LCR records when an LCR is assigned to the order.
- LCRs track the accumulated order and shipped value of all orders tied to each LCR.
- Like payments, you can enter customer LCRs in the customer's currency or the base currency.
- The system marks the customers from whom you require a letter of credit before shipping orders.
- The system issues a warning when you enter or change an order:
- That causes the accumulated order amount (on a line level) for the LCR to exceed the original LCR.
- If an LCR is required and you have not entered one.
- If the line item due date you entered is later than the LCR expiration date.
- The system stops order shipment to a customer if the Customers
form indicates you must use an LCR, and at least one of the following
is true:
- The order LCR has passed its expiration date as compared to the line's ship date.
- The combined value of the current shipment and the previous shipment against the LCR exceeds the LCR original amount.
- There is no LCR tied to the order.
- During shipment, the system warns you if a customer does NOT require LCRs but optionally uses them, and at least one of the following is true:
- The line item due date is later than the LCR expiration date.
- The combined value of the current shipment and the previous shipment against the LCR exceeds the LCR original amount.
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