Template:M summ Pledge GMSLA 10: Difference between revisions

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Now there's a subtle point to look out for here about control over assets. If, as you are likely to have under a {{pgmsla}}, you have ''[[pledge]]d'' your assets to an [[escrow agent]] or third party [[custodian]], the key (for your financial reporting friends and relations) will be that you retain ownership of those assets and, more to the point, they stay ''outside'' the [[insolvency estate|bankruptcy estate]] of your {{pgmslaprov|Lender}}. That’s the whole reason you have the {{pgmsla}} and not an ordinary [[title-transfer]] {{gmsla}} in the first place — to avoid having to hold capital against the credit risk of your {{pgmslaprov|Lender}}s for the return of excess {{pgmslaprov|Collateral}}.
[[10 - GMSLA Provision|Now]] there's a subtle point to look out for here about control over assets. If, as you are likely to have under a {{pgmsla}}, you have ''[[pledge]]d'' your assets to an [[escrow agent]] or third party [[custodian]], the key (for your financial reporting friends and relations) will be that you retain ownership of those assets and, more to the point, they stay ''outside'' the [[insolvency estate|bankruptcy estate]] of your {{pgmslaprov|Lender}}. That’s the whole reason you have the {{pgmsla}} and not an ordinary [[title-transfer]] {{gmsla}} in the first place — to avoid having to hold capital against the credit risk of your {{pgmslaprov|Lender}}s for the return of excess {{pgmslaprov|Collateral}}.


On the other hand, at the point where you, {{pgmslaprov|Borrower}}, are spiralling into a Lehman-shaped crater in the side of a hill is just the point where jumpy Sir from the {{pgmslaprov|Lender}}’s credit sanctioning team will be hyperventillating, jumping up and down on the spot and shrieking at anyone within earshot how he’d like to “put a cap in yo’ ass” and just go and ''take'' those assets away from you  and start liquidating them.
On the other hand, at the point where you, {{pgmslaprov|Borrower}}, are spiralling into a Lehman-shaped crater in the side of a hill is just the point where jumpy Sir from the {{pgmslaprov|Lender}}’s credit sanctioning team will be hyperventillating, jumping up and down on the spot and shrieking at anyone within earshot how he’d like to “put a cap in yo’ ass” and just go and ''take'' those assets away from you  and start liquidating them.

Revision as of 17:32, 19 June 2020

Now there's a subtle point to look out for here about control over assets. If, as you are likely to have under a 2018 Pledge GMSLA, you have pledged your assets to an escrow agent or third party custodian, the key (for your financial reporting friends and relations) will be that you retain ownership of those assets and, more to the point, they stay outside the bankruptcy estate of your Lender. That’s the whole reason you have the 2018 Pledge GMSLA and not an ordinary title-transfer 2010 GMSLA in the first place — to avoid having to hold capital against the credit risk of your Lenders for the return of excess Collateral.

On the other hand, at the point where you, Borrower, are spiralling into a Lehman-shaped crater in the side of a hill is just the point where jumpy Sir from the Lender’s credit sanctioning team will be hyperventillating, jumping up and down on the spot and shrieking at anyone within earshot how he’d like to “put a cap in yo’ ass” and just go and take those assets away from you and start liquidating them.

There’s — at this particular moment in time, and no other — a little tension in the air. As Borrower you need to satisfy your accountants that the assets really are yours, in case the Lender unexpectedly blows up; the Lender wants quick access to them, and to put aside all ceremony, in case you do.

Should we be unthinkably deep in the tail of improbable market events such that both parties are blowing up simultaneously — the sort of event that Fisher Black would tell you ought to be unobservable in a period several times the life in the universe, but that Nassim Nicholas Taleb lijkes to remind us does happen once every five years or so, these two contingencies can arrive at once. On the theory, the Borrower’s interest trumps the Lender’s, since the security interest keeps teh assets out of range of the Borrower’s other creditors. But that is cold comfort for most credit sanctioners, and besides, they don’t want to hang around waiting when collateral values are pogo-ing around with all the market dislocation.

Thus the dynamics dealing with who can tell the escrow agent to do what at any point in time are — sensitive, shall we say. Nowhere did ISLA’s crack drafting squad™ address this in the document. It can be dealt with by a little grace period, requiring the credit officer to wait, not for long, but for long enough to satisfy a financial reporting officer that there is enough time to settle any debts, call off the dogs and carry sedately on.

Try this:

The Events of Default listed in Paragraphs 10.1(a), (b) and (c) will only become Events of Default 2 hours after the time at which Lender gives Borrower written notice of the event in question. If Borrower cures the relevant default in full before that 2 hour period has expired, there will be no Event of Default with respect to that event. If the 2 hour period has expired without any such cure, the Event of Default will occur immediately without the need for further notice from the Lender.