Cross acceleration - ISDA Provision: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 09:39, 4 February 2024
2002 ISDA Master Agreement
A Jolly Contrarian owner’s manual™ Go premium
Crosscheck: Cross acceleration in a Nutshell™
Original text
See ISDA Comparison for a comparison between the 1992 ISDA and the 2002 ISDA.
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Comparisons
Well, it doesn’t, as such, appear in the ISDA Master Agreement at all, but you could always have a look at our long-winded article about Cross Default to see how that works and why Cross Acceleration is different and, in JC’s view, a better approach to a bad deal.
Basics
Cross Acceleration: Cross Default for nice guys
Cross acceleration is not an actual ISDA Event of Default, but it is what happens to Cross Default if only you can persuade your credit department to water it down to something kinder and gentler. Cross Acceleration harks to a world in which people wait for third party indebtedness to be actually accelerated before closing out their ISDAs.
It is only an Event of Default once the Defaulting Party’s third-party lenders have actually accelerated Specified Indebtedness in an amount exceeding the Threshold Amount.
That is a much less sensitive trigger — a much worse trigger, a credit officer might say, but bear with me — and it avoids that weird scenario when the actual lender has not itself exercised its default rights, but you have exercised yours, even though your counterparty is still performing your contract to the letter.
Cross acceleration also avoids indeterminacy and nervousness of waiting for grace periods you might not know about to expire, oral waivers or amendments to the third party contract, granting indulgences for administrative and operational error and all that dreck: if the lender has actually accelerated the loan, grace periods and operational errors must have expired and therefore no longer matter. It is too late. The game is up.
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