Grace period: Difference between revisions

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An item liable to give a credit officer hot flushes. Most frequently seen in the context of a [[failure to pay]] or a [[bankruptcy]] [[event of default]] in a financing or trading document.
{{g}}A [[grace period]] — being the difference between an [[event of default]] and a [[potential event of default]] — is the sort of thing that is liable to give a [[credit officer]] hot flushes. Given away years before, in a weak moment in a sterile negotiation, when the sap finally rises and our credit fellow is fumbling in his trousers for his termination triggers, it will flare up and spoil the moment.  


It gets these people so excited because, just when they're ready to hit the kill switch, their lawyers tell them they have to wait. It's like coitus interruptus. A credit office who's hot to trot is quite a sight to behold. Just don't get between him and his cross default trigger finger.
[[Grace period]]s are usually found in buried into [[failure to pay]] or [[bankruptcy]] [[events of default]]. Your counterparty has failed to pay on a due date, or a petition has been presented, but the contract stipulates the counterparty has a period to cure its failure or discharge the petition. Until that period has elapsed you must keep your agitated credit officer under a cold shower. Until then, you have a [[potential event of default]] — a sort of murky netherworld of counterparty turpitude where oxygen is in short supply, skies darken and debtors start to go blue — and this might afford you some comfort (under [[representations]] and [[warranties]]) but it won’t ''yet'' permit your credit guy to pull his trigger.


A failure to pay where a grace period hasn't expired may amount to a potential event of default - a sort of murky netherworld of counterparty turpitude where oxygen is in short supply, skies darken and debtors start to go blue.
{{Grace periods and time of essence}}


Places to look for more focused information therefore:
Places to look for more focused information therefore:
* ISDA {{isdaprov|failure to pay}} and {{isdaprov|bankruptcy}}
* ISDA {{isdaprov|failure to pay}} and {{isdaprov|bankruptcy}}

Revision as of 10:15, 2 July 2019

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A grace period — being the difference between an event of default and a potential event of default — is the sort of thing that is liable to give a credit officer hot flushes. Given away years before, in a weak moment in a sterile negotiation, when the sap finally rises and our credit fellow is fumbling in his trousers for his termination triggers, it will flare up and spoil the moment.

Grace periods are usually found in buried into failure to pay or bankruptcy events of default. Your counterparty has failed to pay on a due date, or a petition has been presented, but the contract stipulates the counterparty has a period to cure its failure or discharge the petition. Until that period has elapsed you must keep your agitated credit officer under a cold shower. Until then, you have a potential event of default — a sort of murky netherworld of counterparty turpitude where oxygen is in short supply, skies darken and debtors start to go blue — and this might afford you some comfort (under representations and warranties) but it won’t yet permit your credit guy to pull his trigger.

Grace periods and “the essence”

We have heard it argued that time being of the essence might override otherwise carefully negotiated grace periods. When challenged, the counsel in question was tongue-tied for a moment, before mumbling something about litigation over the Lehman administration[1] but could not, ultimately supply any grounds, let alone actual authority, for this proposition.[2] Time being of the essence means, more than anywhere, that one should assume the parties meant what precisely what they said. Here, one should pay exact attention to the time limits prescribed by a contract — including the grace periods so tediously injected into it — not ignore them.

Places to look for more focused information therefore:

  1. As we all know, the Lehman administration was, in the Harry Potter universe, a Horcrux and, in our own, charted a new portion of legal space-time where normal rules of Euclidean geometry do not apply.
  2. Please write in if you can think of one.