Termination Date - ISDA Definition: Difference between revisions

From The Jolly Contrarian
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{fullanat|isdadefs|3.3|2006}}
{{isdadefsanat|3.3}}
On the {{isdadefsprov|Termination Date}} a {{isdaprov|Transaction}} terminates but that does not mean it winks out of existence entirely, in the sense that all existing and future rights and obligations under that {{isdaprov|Transaction}} cease to exist. Instead, it is the final day on which new payment obligations (such as coupon payments) arise in respect of the Swap Transaction: a coupon payable the day after the termination date is just not payable under the swap. this isn’t any great surprise, of course. But existing rights and obligations under a Transaction continue to exist, and - for example, and subject to limitations and claims and so on, if, a year after the termination date, it becomes clear that a payment date fell under it — this seems odd, but might arise as the result of a dispute subsequently resolved by litigation, or retrospective legislation — then this amount would still be payable.
On the {{isdadefsprov|Termination Date}} a {{isdaprov|Transaction}} terminates but that does not mean it winks out of existence entirely, in the sense that all existing and future rights and obligations under that {{isdaprov|Transaction}} cease to exist. Instead, it is the last day ''on which new obligations arise'' under the {{isdadefsprov|Swap Transaction}}: a [[coupon]] payable the day ''after'' the termination date is just not payable under the {{isdadefsprov|Swap Transaction}}.  
 
This isn’t any great surprise, of course. But existing rights and obligations under a {{isdaprov|Transaction}} continue to exist, and for example, and subject to [[limitation period]]s and counter-claims and so on, if, a year after the {{isdadefsprov|Termination Date}}, it emerges that a payment date fell under it — this seems odd, but might arise as the result of a dispute subsequently resolved by litigation, or retrospective legislation — then this amount would still be payable.
 
{{Effective date trade date termination date}}

Latest revision as of 16:54, 30 September 2019


In a Nutshell Section 3.3:

Template:Nutshell 2006 ISDA Definitions 3.3 view template

2006 ISDA Definitions: The full text of Section 3.3:

3.3. Termination Date. “Termination Date” means, in respect of a Swap Transaction, the date specified as such in the related Confirmation, which date is the last day of the Term of the Swap Transaction. The Termination Date shall not be subject to adjustment in accordance with any Business Day Convention unless the parties specify in the related Confirmation that the Termination Date will be adjusted in accordance with a specified Business Day Convention.
view template

Tell me more
Sign up for our newsletter — or just get in touch: for ½ a weekly 🍺 you get to consult JC. Ask about it here.


On the Termination Date a Transaction terminates but that does not mean it winks out of existence entirely, in the sense that all existing and future rights and obligations under that Transaction cease to exist. Instead, it is the last day on which new obligations arise under the Swap Transaction: a coupon payable the day after the termination date is just not payable under the Swap Transaction.

This isn’t any great surprise, of course. But existing rights and obligations under a Transaction continue to exist, and — for example, and subject to limitation periods and counter-claims and so on, if, a year after the Termination Date, it emerges that a payment date fell under it — this seems odd, but might arise as the result of a dispute subsequently resolved by litigation, or retrospective legislation — then this amount would still be payable.

The Effective Date is the day when everything starts for real on a Transaction — at which point payments start happening, Calculation Period begin to run and so on. To be contrasted with the Trade Date, being the date when traded and went “on risk” — at that point you struck your prices (Initial Price, Strike Price, so on).

So the sequence is Trade Date, Effective Date — — and Termination Date.