Dispute Resolution - CSA Provision
ISDA 1995 English Law Credit Support Annex
A Jolly Contrarian owner’s manual™ Dispute Resolution in a Nutshell™
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Comparisons
1994 CSA (NY) v 1995 CSA (English): Largely equivalent, as this comparison should tell you. Things that are different are:
In the 1994 NY version: the paragraph formatting is an absolute shower, and for reasons known best to itself, ISDA’s crack drafting squad™ felt compelled to add “(or Swap Transaction)” after the word “Transaction” wherever it appears.
In the 1995 UK version: “Transfer” is not a defined term and there is a “No Event of Default” subclause (seeing as the 1995 CSA is a Transaction under the ISDA, whereas the 1994 NY CSA is not.
1995 CSA v 2016 VM CSA (English law): But for a subsection dealing with what should happen if you are on the 1992 ISDA and not the 2002 ISDA (which in 1995, had not been invented), they are functionally the same. Here is a comparison.
1994 CSA v 2016 NY VM CSA (NY law): But for a similar subsection dealing with what should happen if you are on the 1992 ISDA and not the 2002 ISDA (which in 1995, had not been invented), the OG CSA and VM CSA under NY law are functionally the same. Here is a comparison.
2016 VM CSA v 2018 IM CSD (English law): Similar again, without the agonising over the edition of the ISDA Master Agreement you are using — possibly because it is not a Transaction under either of them?), but yet disowning the possibility of an Event of Default for non-payment in the event of a collateral dispute. So that is a bit flummoxing. But I bet there is a reason. comparison
Basics
In the modern CSAs ISDA’s crack drafting squad™ not only passed up the opportunity to make this unused-in-practice language simpler but, rather, made it worse, by providing extravagant alternatives for 2002 ISDA and 1992 ISDA close-out methodologies.
Disputed Calculations or Valuations is a topic that could unfurl like the flower of a deadly insect-eating nightshade if you let it.
DON’T LET IT. The dispute can be as to the value of one of two things: the posted (or to-be-transferred) Eligible Credit Support, or the Transaction Exposure).
Credit Support Value
Let’s take the easy one first: Eligible Credit Support. If you are on a cash-only single-currency VM CSAm then there’s not really much to talk about here. What is the Value, in the Base Currency, of an amount in that Base Currency?[1]. It’s not exactly a stumper, is it?
If you are still on an Original Gangsta CSA or you have insisted upon posting bonds and whatnot as margin, then — depending on how funky the Eligibility criteria are — you have more or less probability of swinging into a dispute. This is why most counterparties prefer liquid, highly-rated corporate and government debt. There is less to get into an argument about.
Transaction Exposure
The Transaction Exposure has — potentially — a different complexion. You can’t solve for it by just taking observable, liquid collateral: it is inherent in the Transaction itself.
While some asset classes (e.g., FX, equity derivatives) are mainly liquid and observable and, in the same way, there is not much to argue about, others are not. The less liquid a transaction is (a tranched CDO3 anyone?), the more likely the broker is to refuse any dispute rights when carrying out its Calculation Agent function under the ISDA.
The logic runs like this:
“Dude, this transaction is insanely complicated and we are marking to our own model. There’s no way some other guy will understand the trade or accurately value it, and in any case, the valuation relies on our proprietary model which is so amazing we’re not going to share with our competitor anyway.”
This is less common now that swap trading is an unglamorous utility in a trading division which is only really there to support your wealth management offering, of course. And, where you do see it, you have a bigger problem: if it is so complex only this guy’s Excel spreadsheet can possibly understand, that is your oh-oh moment right there: tell me: did he show you any backtesting to get you across the line?
The self-help model, coaches and horses etc.
But doesn’t this “self-help” valuation model drive a coach and horses through the carefully constructed Calculation Agent language about which the dealer has just threatened to die in a ditch?
It may seem so, but in practice no.
- The CSA’s dispute mechanism, while fulsome, reflects the uncynical attitude of yesteryear with its quaint aspirations that third party Reference Market-Makers will be prepared to lift the merest finger to help a fellow market participant out.
- They won’t. If you can find one Reference Market-maker to quote you a price, sing hosannahs: if you get four of the blighters to be looking out for further signs of the Rapture. In providing firm quotations to be dissected, arithmetically averaged and arranged for the delight of all we are relying on the better nature of a professional dealer whom a moment’s reflection should tell you doesn’t have a better nature. No Reference Market-maker will provide a quote, as it brings them no benefit (they can’t get a trade out of it) and saddles them with risk, namely the fear that one’s well-intended helping out is later portrayed as bad faith, negligence or has somehow caused compensatable harm to the interests of another market participant you didn’t even know had an interest.
So all this careful language really boils down to “the party calling for collateral decides” which seems wildly one-sided until you realize that a trading relationship is — well — a relationship, and absent a material risk of outright failure (in which case, the value of mark-to-market exposures are a problem only when your counterpart has failed to honour them), the lure of a continued trading relationship, professional courtesy, and being a good egg — the commercial imperative, that is —are the practical mitigants against unconscionable behaviour.
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References
- ↑ Hint: it’s not a trick question