Condition End Date - ISDA Provision: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:12, 23 May 2023
2002 ISDA Master Agreement A Jolly Contrarian owner’s manual™
2(e) in all its glory
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Overview
Section 2(e), dealing with default interest, was removed in the 2002 ISDA, and replaced with a spikier, more fulsome Section 9(h) (Interest and Compensation).
A new and different Section 2(e) for the 2002 ISDA was almost revived after the global financial crisis as a tool for imposing a “use it or lose it” trigger on Section 2(a)(iii), but the moment passed. See Condition End Date for more information.
Summary
Numbering confusion alert: the 1992 ISDA has a Section 2(e), dealing with Default Interest and other amounts payable by way of compensation for failing to pay or deliver (over and above your Section 6 close out rights). This Section was moved in the 2002 ISDA to Section 9(h). We know not why, but there is sure to have been a reason and it is water under the bridge now.
So as a result there was not, and is not, a Section 2(e) in the 2002 ISDA.
“Condition End Date”
But there might have been. ISDA went through a period of hand-wringing after the global financial crisis, which revealed to the world how unsatisfactory the existing section 2(a)(iii) was.
The idea was to allow the victim of a 2(a)(iii) exercise — that is, the person in putative breach — to preempt the condition precedent, and say to the innocent party, “Well, use it or lose it within 90 days” — the titular Condition End Date.
Well, the moment passed, but some have adopted this as a standard in their schedules — good sports, for the most part — but regulator angst has long since moved on, as did legal eagle appetite to amend swathes of standard contracts for a contingency no-one in their right mind would use, or for that matter can make head or tail of.
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- The JC’s famous Nutshell™ summary of this clause
- Mechanics:
- How and when 2(a)(iii) is or, more to the point not, triggered.
- The confusion arising from no-one knowing whether 2(a)(iii) applies.
- The confusion arising from not knowing when it applies.
- The JC’s theory about why anyone thought 2(a)(iii) was a good idea in the first place.
- The JC’s view that even if once upon a time it was, Section 2(a)(iii) is no longer fit for purpose.
- How Section 2(a)(iii) held up during the sanctions extravaganza when Russia invaded Ukraine (TL;DR: it didn’t help!)
- Regulatory issues
- Why regulators don’t like 2(a)(iii).
- What the courts think of 2(a)(iii) — in a nutshell, they are confused about it.
- A table comparing the six major decisions on the clause.
- Practical issues:
- How Section 2(a)(iii) operates in the case of non-payment-or-delivery defaults.
- How corporate buyers of fully paid options might feel about 2(a)(iii) (hint: not happy!)
- Amendments those corporates might think about making if they want to feel happier.
See also
- The famous, infamous, much-misunderstood, dare we say flawed Section 2(a)(iii) of the ISDA, and our summary of the litigationey cases surrounding it.