Schedule 6 - GMSLA Provision

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GMSLA Anatomy™


In a Nutshell Clause Schedule 6:

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2010 GMSLA full text of Clause Schedule 6:

Schedule 6. Designated Offices and Addresses for Notices

(a) Designated office of Party A:
Address for notices or communications to Party A:
Address:
Attention:
Facsimile No:
Telephone No:
Electronic Messaging System Details:
(b) Designated office of Party B:
Address for notices or communications to Party B:
Address:
Attention:
Facsimile No:
Telephone No:
Electronic Messaging System Details:

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1995 OSLA: OSLA wikitext | OSLA in a nutshell | GMSLA/PGMSLA/OSLA clause comparison table
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Stock lending agreement comparison: Includes navigation for the 2000 GMSLA and the 1995 OSLA

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Designated Office

Just what significance a Designated Office has to a stock borrower or lender is never made clear in the 2010 GMSLA. It gets a mention in the first line of Clause 1.1 — encouraging, you would think — but then gets no further mention until it is defined, unenlighteningly, as you can see in the panel.

What are we to make of this? “The parties, acting through their Designated Offices, may enter into transactions ...” — that is a common or garden agreement to agree, folks — so is this meant to restrict the parties’ ability to act out of other offices?

Note in the more fulsomely-articulated[1] ISDA Master Agreement the “Multibranch Parties” concept involves the party giving representations as to recourse, and expressly prohibits parties changing their specified Offices during the life of a transaction without the other’s prior written consent.

Details fans will immediately note that, from the point of view of legal and corporate philosophy — a subject dear to every attorney’s heart — the differing offices or branches of a legal entity have no distinct legal personality, any more than does a one’s arm have different personality one’s her leg. So, being a “multibranch” party, or acting out of a designated office, makes no legal difference. If you’re bound, you’re bound.

the main risk of booking out of the wrong entity is a taxation risk.

See also

References

  1. Some would say, “tiresomely”-articulated.