Template:Isda Termination Currency summ

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Compare and contrast with the Base Currency in the CSA. Ideally, you’d want them to be the same. Ten points for style if you can think of a reason for having different ones. Goldman probably could.

So what is this all about, then? Well, swap transactions by nature are likely to have different currencies — cross-currency swaps are, anyway — and if (heaven forfend) you should be closing out a whole portfolio of them, then you will have boil everything down, at some point, to a single currency. Some are better than others — a G7 ones are more liquid and less volatile than others, and each counterparty will have a preference for its own home currency — an investment fund, the base currency of the fund.

The sort of thing you might expect to see specified in the schedule is this:

“{{{{{1}}}|Termination Currency}}” means one of the currencies in which payments are required to be made under a {{{{{1}}}|Terminated Transaction}} selected by the {{{{{1}}}|Non-defaulting Party}} or the {{{{{1}}}|non-Affected Party}}, as the case may be, or where there are two {{{{{1}}}|Affected Parties}}, as agreed between them or, if not agreed, or if the selected currency so is not freely available, [U.S. Dollars][Euro][Pounds Sterling].