Narrowly-tailored credit event: Difference between revisions

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{{a|cdd|}}[[Narrowly-traded credit event]] or [[NTCE]] refers to a buried whoopsie in the [[2014 ISDA Credit Derivative Definitions]] that reared its little button nose during a refinancing in 2017 by that scion of the New York Stock Exchange, [[Hovnanian Enterprises]].
{{a|cdd|}}{{narrow credit event capsule}}
 
Hovnanian intentionally withheld a debt payment to an [[affiliate]] as part of a non-stressy refinancing. Though it was financially sound and ''able'' to make the payment, as a “[[Reference Entity]]” in the argot of the [[2014 ISDA Credit Derivative Definitions| credit derivative definitions]] not doing so would technically constitute a [[failure to pay]] — a [[credit event]], by any lights, although a false flag in the context of [[credit derivatives]], which are meant to track credit deterioration.
 
This could trigger the unwind of credit protection, market disruption, panic on the streets and a slew of [[tedious]] [[silver circle law firm|silver circle]] client bulletins.<ref>But nowhere near so [[tedious]] as their mountainous bulletins on [[regulatory margin]]. Enough already, guys!</ref>
 
The answer was to build into the {{cddprov|Failure to Pay}} definition the requirement for “credit deterioration”. This is what the [[2019 Narrowly Tailored Credit Event Supplement to the 2014 ISDA Credit Derivatives Definitions]], which can be retrofitted to older models by means of the [[ISDA 2019 NTCE Protocol]], does. Implementation date expected to be 13 January 2020.


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Latest revision as of 09:23, 24 April 2023

Credit Derivatives Anatomy™


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Narrowly-traded credit event, or NTCE, refers to a buried whoopsie in the 2014 ISDA Credit Derivative Definitions that reared its little button nose during a refinancing in 2017 by that scion of the New York Stock Exchange, Hovnanian Enterprises.

Hovnanian intentionally withheld a debt payment to an affiliate as part of a non-stressy refinancing. Though it was financially sound and able to make the payment, as a “Reference Entity” in the argot of the credit derivative definitions not doing so would technically constitute a Failure to Pay — a Credit Event, by any lights, although a false flag in the context of credit derivatives, which are meant to track credit deterioration.

This could trigger the unwind of credit protection, market disruption, panic on the streets and a slew of tedious silver circle client bulletins.[1]

The answer was to build into the Failure to Pay definition the requirement for “credit deterioration”. This is what the 2019 Narrowly Tailored Credit Event Supplement to the 2014 ISDA Credit Derivatives Definitions, which can be retrofitted to older models by means of the ISDA 2019 NTCE Protocol, does. Implementation date expected to be 13 January 2020.

See also

References

  1. But nowhere near so tedious as their mountainous bulletins on regulatory margin. Enough already, guys!