Template:M summ 2002 ISDA 2(e): Difference between revisions
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) m Amwelladmin moved page Template:M summ 2002 ISDA 6(g) to Template:M summ 2002 ISDA 2(e) |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[ | [[2(e) - ISDA Provision|There]] isn’t a Section {{isdaprov|2(e)}}, but there almost was, when ISDA went through a period of hand-wringing after the financial crisis, which revealed to the world how unsatisfactory the existing section {{isdaprov|2(a)(iii)}} was. | ||
The idea was to allow the victim — {{isdaprov|Affected Party}}, however you want to call it — to preempt the condition precedent, and say, well use it or lose it within 90 days — the titular {{isdaprov|Condition End Date}}. | The idea was to allow the victim — {{isdaprov|Affected Party}}, however you want to call it — to preempt the condition precedent, and say, well use it or lose it within 90 days — the titular {{isdaprov|Condition End Date}}. | ||
Well, the moment passed, but there are those who 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. | Well, the moment passed, but there are those who 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. |
Revision as of 17:11, 23 May 2023
There isn’t a Section 2(e), but there almost was, when ISDA went through a period of hand-wringing after the financial crisis, which revealed to the world how unsatisfactory the existing section 2(a)(iii) was.
The idea was to allow the victim — Affected Party, however you want to call it — to preempt the condition precedent, and say, well use it or lose it within 90 days — the titular Condition End Date.
Well, the moment passed, but there are those who 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.