Cash - NY VM CSA Provision: Difference between revisions
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{{ | {{nman|csa|2016 NY|Cash}} |
Latest revision as of 17:11, 13 May 2024
2016 ISDA Credit Support Annex (VM) (New York law)
A Jolly Contrarian owner’s manual™ Cash in a Nutshell™
Original text
Resources and Navigation
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Comparisons
For the Original Gangsta CSA, there was only one kind of cash: that special folding currency with the odd little pyramid with the eye on the back of it. In the more international-looking versions of the CSA, including later versions of the New York Law CSA, the currency basket is a lot wider.
“Cash” is not a defined term in the title transfer CSAs: the closest you will get is Eligible Currency, which is not a defined term in the OG CSA, but is in the more internationalist 2016 NY Law VM CSA.
Basics
The OG CSA is single currency only
You have to love, don’t you, the preparedness of ISDA’s crack drafting squad™ to contemplate a world in which the lawful currency of the United States might not be the U.S. dollar, given how sacred the U. S. dollar is to our American friends. This from a place that hasn’t changed the fundamental look or the even construction of the greenback since 1935. That’s when they put the pyramid with the all-seeing eye on it. Nothing to see here, folks.
One tres interessant difference between the 1994 NY CSA and the 1995 CSA is that the American version only contemplates a single currency. Because there is only one currency right?
This is what it is — to the extent the constituency trading on a NY CSA are US counterparties that will generally be what they want, and even for those who aren’t, that will generally be what they want, or at least are prepared to put up with, but note it in any case. If you fund in another currency, you might think about using the 2016 NY VM CSA, which does contemplate multiple currencies (but doesn’t contemplate IM) — or at least borrowing some language from it.
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