Template:Erisa netting: Difference between revisions
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===={{tag|ERISA netting}}==== | ===={{tag|ERISA netting}}==== | ||
Famously, ERISA plans tend to be set '''not''' to [[Netting|net]], and for the unholiest of reasons, courtesy of the phantasmagorical imagination of some wise [[mediocre lawyer|counsel]] at a [[U.S. law firm]] which prudence counsels it would be wiser not to name<ref> | Famously, ERISA plans tend to be set '''not''' to [[Netting|net]], and for the unholiest of reasons, courtesy of the phantasmagorical imagination of some wise [[mediocre lawyer|counsel]] at a [[U.S. law firm]] which prudence counsels it would be wiser not to name<ref>Definitely not Cadwalader, obviously.</ref>, upon whom the whole market relies. | ||
This gentleman’s opinion is predicated on the risk that a court would interpret the {{tag|ERISA}} act as requiring the US [[Bankruptcy Code]] ''as it stood in 1971'' to be applied to the insolvency of an {{tag|ERISA}} plan, rather than as it stands at the time of insolvency. The reason that’s a problem is that the “[[safe harbor]]s” for closing out swaps in the [[Bankruptcy Code]] were only enacted in the 1980s. | This gentleman’s opinion is predicated on the risk that a court would interpret the {{tag|ERISA}} act as requiring the US [[Bankruptcy Code]] ''as it stood in 1971'' to be applied to the insolvency of an {{tag|ERISA}} plan, rather than as it stands at the time of insolvency. The reason that’s a problem is that the “[[safe harbor]]s” for closing out swaps in the [[Bankruptcy Code]] were only enacted in the 1980s. |
Revision as of 20:03, 9 October 2019
====ERISA netting==== Famously, ERISA plans tend to be set not to net, and for the unholiest of reasons, courtesy of the phantasmagorical imagination of some wise counsel at a U.S. law firm which prudence counsels it would be wiser not to name[1], upon whom the whole market relies.
This gentleman’s opinion is predicated on the risk that a court would interpret the ERISA act as requiring the US Bankruptcy Code as it stood in 1971 to be applied to the insolvency of an ERISA plan, rather than as it stands at the time of insolvency. The reason that’s a problem is that the “safe harbors” for closing out swaps in the Bankruptcy Code were only enacted in the 1980s.
Let me say that again:
- The Bankruptcy Code, today, contains a safe harbor allowing you to close out an ISDAs without fearing for your netting.
- The ERISA legislation, today, allows you to rely on available safe harbors set out in the Bankruptcy Code.
- Since the ERISA legislation was enacted in 1971, thought, the very wisest eagle of the legal eagles thinks this might mean only the safe harbors that were there in 1971 count, even if they don’t exist today, and none of the safe harbors that have been enacted since, even if they do, because when referring to the Bankruptcy Code, ERISA doesn’t say “as amended from time to time”.
Seriously. That’s it.
It is a frankly fantastical fear: Not only is it impossible to be certain, at this remove, exactly how the US Bankruptcy Code stood in 1971 much less how it might have been interpreted in those days, but many of the institutions and concepts it relies on — including per chance, some old hippyish safe harbors from the 1960s — will have since been abolished or materially changed.
Utterly, totally, stupid.
- ↑ Definitely not Cadwalader, obviously.