21(13) - AIFMD Provision
AIFMD Anatomy™
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The great question of who should be liable for third party sub-custodians. The depositary will say, “well, by dint of 21(12), I am stuck with more or less absolute liability for loss of the AIF’s assets wherever they may be, unless I can get my delegate to accept liability for them.”
The delegate will say, “okay, I can probably live with that for my own affiliates, but what about unaffiliated subcustodians in weirdo jurisdictions? All, kinds of crazy stuff can go on there.” It may even start mumbling about incurring capital charges if it takes on liability for third party entities, but is unlikely to be specific because it isn’t clear whether there would be any[1], and no-one wants to have to enter the netherworld of dialog with the financial reporting folk, to find out. One is never the wiser after a conversation with financial reporting.
The depositary says, “well, do your freaking job would you? You are meant to be a professional custodian. You are meant to be able to control these things. It is your sub-custody network. Put some controls in place. At least you have the contractual privity to exercise controls. I don’t even have that.”
This is liable to go on for a long time. In any other context, they will both agree that the person least able to argue about it — namely, the client — should wear the risk of random sub-custody failure (hey — its their asset after all!) but, alas and alack, that is not an option under UCITS (Art. ) or AIFMD (Art. 21(12)). You can’t stiff the client with liability for your subcustodian failures.
The JC’s sympathy here is with the depositary.