Financial Collateral Directive

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A word about credit risk mitigation

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The Financial Collateral Directive (2002/47/EC (EUR Lex)) is a well-intended piece of EU Regulation that, by common consent, didn't quite achieve what it set out to, which was to introduce "a Community framework to reduce credit exposure in financial collateral arrangements. These common rules contribute to the effectiveness and integration of European financial markets, reducing credit losses and thereby stimulating cross-border transactions and competitiveness."

Overview

The directive was designed to simplify and universalise the process of taking security in financial contracts across the EU – for one thing it would mean that any formal registration or perfection requirements which otherwise would be required (registering the security interest with the registrar of companies for example) do not apply.

Contractual Provisions: The Financial Collateral Directive is a little more vague about what counts as a financial collateral arrangement than is ideal, so you may see contractual stipulations that both parties agree their arrangement is intended to be one.

While this is no doubt intended to help, given that, in the final analysis, the person likely to challenge that analysis would be a competing creditor, and the person who would be arbitrating on it would be a liquidqator, if an arrangement were not formally within the definition, then the fact that the parties agreed it was intended to be probably wouldn’t.

What it does

The FCD divides financial collateral arrangements into two mutually exclusive categories:

Appropriation

As well as disapplying certain formalities to effective security interest, the FCD creates a remedy of “appropriation”, a novel remedy certainly as regards shares, Which was previously unknown to English law:

Where a legal or equitable mortgage is the security interest created or arising under a security financial collateral arrangement on terms that include a power for the collateral-taker to appropriate the collateral, the collateral-taker may exercise that power in accordance with the terms of the security financial collateral arrangement, without any order for foreclosure from the courts.

Title transfer collateral arrangements

Title transfer collateral arrangements: TTCAs are not security arrangements of any kind, do not therefore require registration, and therefore the Financial Collateral Directive doesn't really apply to them. But contrast differing styles of agreement that cover the same product:

Interpretation

Helpful Clifford Chance article here

Adoption

See also