2This study argues that standby letters of credit and performance guarantees are legally and conceptually the same; therefore, the two terms have been used interchangeably in this book. However, these two instruments are compared with each other in detail in Chapter 2.
3Roy Goode, Essays in Patrick Atiyah, 211 (Peter Cane & Jane Stapleton eds., OUP 1991).
8Goode, Abstract Payment Undertakings in International Transactions, 22 Brook J. Int'l. L. 1, 3 (1997).
9Art. 4 of the UCP600 provides that: ‘A credit by its nature is a separate transaction from the sale or other contract on which it may be based. Banks are in no way concerned with or bound by such contract, even if any reference whatsoever to it is included in the credit. Consequently, the undertaking of a bank to honour, to negotiate or to fulfil any other obligation under the credit is not subject to claims or defences by the applicant resulting from its relationships with the issuing bank or the beneficiary.’ Art. 5 UCP 600 further provides that: 'Banks deal with documents and not with goods, services or performance to which the documents may relate.'