Repackaging programme: Difference between revisions

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{{fwmd|Repack Programme}}
{{fwmd|Repack programme}}
A secured [[medium term note]] programme created by an [[espievie]] captive to the demands of a [[broker/dealer]] and used to sell [[securitized]] [[structured products]], securities [[par asset swap]]s, [[credit-linked notes]] and all that good stuff.
A secured [[medium term note]] programme created by an [[espievie]] captive to the demands of a [[broker/dealer]] and used to sell [[securitized]] [[structured products]], securities [[par asset swap]]s, [[credit-linked notes]] and all that good stuff.



Revision as of 12:29, 17 January 2019

Top Trumps®
Financial Weapons of Mass Destruction®


Repack Programme.png


Repack Programme


It’s exotic, it’s Caribbean, it’s transformative — but somehow just not that exciting any more.


Docs Propectus, agreements, supplements, swaps, global notes, side letters galore. Most exciting part: limited recourse. Yes: that exciting. 2
Amendability Bugger all, because of the trust structure. What? You think the Trustee’s going to take a view? 7
Collateral Fully funded. Note is fully collateralised. 4
Transferability In theory unlimited: cleared, dematerialised bearer notes. In practice? Forget about it. No-one wants your home-made espievie notes. 7
Leverage Not really. 3
Fright-o-meter CAYMAN ISLANDS DUDE! In reality, depends what you put in it, but mostly tame. 5

A secured medium term note programme created by an espievie captive to the demands of a broker/dealer and used to sell securitized structured products, securities par asset swaps, credit-linked notes and all that good stuff.

The best ever repackaging programme was Goldman Sachs International's “MaJoR” Multi-Jurisdiction Repackaging Programme which, as its name suggests, was (and as far as I know, still is) as cool as Jon and Ponch.

You know, the ones from TV’s “CHiPs[1]

References