found: Work cat.: Fisman, R. Outsourcing tariff evasion, 2007:t.p. (a new explanation for entrepôt trade)
found: Law, J. A dictionary of business and management, 2006(Entrepôt trade. Trade that passes through a port, district, airport, etc. before being shipped on to some other country)
found: OED online, 1 Feb., 2008(Entrepôt. 1. Temporary deposit of goods, provisions, etc.; chiefly concr. a storehouse or assemblage of storehouses for temporary deposit. 2. A commercial centre; a place to which goods are brought for distribution to various parts of the world. Also attrib., as in entrepôt-trade)
found: Wikipedia, Feb. 6, 2008(Entrepôt: an entrepôt (from the French "warehouse") is a trading post where merchandise can be imported and exported without paying import duties, often at a profit. This profit is possible because of trade conditions, for example, the reluctance of ships to travel the entire length of a long trading route, and selling to the entrepôt instead. The entrepôt then sells at a higher price to ships travelling the other segment of the route. Today, this use has mostly been supplanted by customs areas. Entrepôts were especially relevant in the Middle Ages and in the early modern period, when mercantile shipping flourished between Europe and its colonial empires in the Americas and Asia)