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Latest revision as of 15:52, 27 May 2022
2000 Global Master Repurchase Agreement
Paragraph Equivalent in a Nutshell™ Use at your own risk, campers!
Full text of Paragraph Equivalent
Related agreements and comparisons
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Content and comparisons
See Equivalent Securities under the 2010 GMSLA for a comparison. It is rather similar, truth be told.
Summary
So why do we say “equivalent” and not just “the same” or even “identical”?
Largely, to keep accountants happy. “The same” is narrower: it means exactly the same security or banknote that you were originally referring to, with not just the same ISIN but the same individual serial number. A different note from the same series, that happens to be fungible with it, even though in all material respects identical, would not do. If, for example, I give you my security to look after, you must give me that exact piece of paper back. If I title transfer my security to you, with the expectation you will title transfer the same security back, I give up all my ownership of that security. You can do with it what you will, but must at some point give me back a note that is fungible with what I gave you, but not need be exactly the physical piece of paper I gave you, and I am in exactly the same financial position.
As I say, all very moot in the age of electronic book-entry clearing.
Why do accountants care? Shouldn’t the simple fact that they do be enough? Well, it has to do with making sure the original transfer was a valid, absolute title transfer, so that the recipient can be confident it may freely deal with the security as long as it has it, and its only obligation is a debt claim back to the original transferor. This may also be important for the seller, if it is wanting the asset off its balance sheet.[1] If I give you a security by title transfer, but you must give me back precisely the security that I gave you — the very one; not just a fungible equivalent — then this suggests that I retain some claim to or ownership right over the original security I gave you. This in turn implies you are not free to deal with it, as in some way it remains mine: I have not fully transferred title to that security to you. By agreeing you may settle our debt by returning an equivalent security, it puts beyond doubt that you are free to deal with that security as you see fit, and when it comes to reversing out the transaction you can just go and buy in a security from the market, and we avoid the sort of anxiousness that can plague accountants.
“Equivalent” isn’t just “similar”
You may come across someone (in OTC Clearing/CCP space) who wants to modify “equivalent” to mean not just fungible securities of the same Series/ISIN, but “similar ones” – same issuer, but different maturity, and under a different ISIN etc.
Resist this. It is likely to have arisen by way of misapprehension. In most master docs, “equivalent” is carefully defined to be exactly fungible [2]but at the gallop at which most collateral operations managers’ working days pass, they may have missed this, labouring instead under the illusion (based on its ordinary dictionary meaning) that “equivalent” allows redelivery of non-fungible securities of a “similar” type. They may even defend their misapprehension. “Yeah, they may protest, “but what if there’s some illiquidity in the market?”
But — well, you have that exact risk across your entire ISDA collateral book, so it’s a bit late. In practice, if there is a market disruption and you can’t get hold of the necessary collateral, as long as it doesn’t coincide with your own credit deterioration[3], you should be able to hash it out.
And if you are worried about it, go for a cash-only CSA — these days most are — or don’t allow potentially illiquid assets as collateral, or just don’t reuse that asset.
Now there may be a need for the “similar securities” concept in the OTC to CCP space that we haven’t yet divined, doubtful, but let’s say — but we should call that something else – perhaps “Similar Credit Support” – to differentiate it from “Equivalent Credit Support” which is still needed in the CSA to support the title transfer analysis.
See also
- A longer essay on the topic of equivalence, if the above is not enough for you.
References
- ↑ Though, if you simultaneously acquire a right or become obliged to take the equivalent security back, good luck getting it off your balance sheet.
- ↑ See: 1995 CSA: “Equivalent Credit Support”; 2010 GMSLA: Equivalent; Global Master Repurchase Agreement: Equivalent.
- ↑ I mean, imagine.