Template:External event beyond its reasonable control: Difference between revisions

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:''3. Despite rigorous and comprehensive [[due diligence]], it could not have prevented the loss.''
:''3. Despite rigorous and comprehensive [[due diligence]], it could not have prevented the loss.''


The “[[omission]] of a sub-custodian to meet its obligations” — albeit through its [[insolvency]] (and associated failures in internal segregation etc) is thus not an “external event beyond the reasonable control” of the [[depositary]]. Treat this exemption as being limited to genuine [[force majeure]] events — [[acts of God]], war, insurrection, malign operation of the trade winds, etc. The [[depositary]] remains liable for the insolvency of [[sub-custodian]]s. Even un[[affiliate]]d ones. <br>
The “[[omission]] of a sub-custodian to meet its obligations” — albeit through its [[insolvency]] (and associated failures in internal segregation etc) is thus not an “external event beyond the reasonable control” of the [[depositary]]. Treat this exemption as being limited to genuine [[force majeure]] events — [[acts of God]], war, insurrection, malign operation of the trade winds, etc — or peculiarities in the [[insolvency]] law in the [[sub-custodian]]’s jurisdiction which mean the assets are unavoidably tangled up in the insolvency estate.
 
Here’s para 28 of the selfsame opinion:
 
:''28. [...]  where the financial instruments are ‘lost’ following the liquidation of a [[sub-custodian]] despite appropriate [[segregation]] of assets, because the law of the country where the [[financial instrument]]s were held in [[custody]] does not recognise the effects of segregation, [[ESMA]] believes that the loss of those financial instruments should be considered due to be an external event, i.e. the local legal/regulatory framework. [...]''
 
These sutuations aside, the [[depositary]] remains liable for the insolvency of [[sub-custodian]]s. Even un[[affiliate]]d ones. <br>

Revision as of 09:41, 15 October 2019

External event beyond its reasonable control

Both AIFMD (Art 21(12)) and UCITS (Art 24) exempt the depositary for liability from loss arising from “an external event beyond its reasonable control”. So the unexpected insolvency of a delegate or subcustodian is an event beyond the depositary’s reasonable control, right? This was certainly the hopeful expectation of the European Banking Federation in its submissions to that effect of September 2011[1].

Wrong. According to ESMA’s final 500-page bunker-busting advice from 2011[2]:

The depositary will not be liable for the loss of financial instruments held in custody by itself or by a subcustodian if it can demonstrate that all the following conditions are met:
1. The event which led to the loss is not a result of an act or omission of the depositary or one of its sub-custodians to meet its obligations.
2. The event which led to the loss was beyond its reasonable control i.e. it could not have prevented its occurrence by reasonable efforts.
3. Despite rigorous and comprehensive due diligence, it could not have prevented the loss.

The “omission of a sub-custodian to meet its obligations” — albeit through its insolvency (and associated failures in internal segregation etc) is thus not an “external event beyond the reasonable control” of the depositary. Treat this exemption as being limited to genuine force majeure events — acts of God, war, insurrection, malign operation of the trade winds, etc — or peculiarities in the insolvency law in the sub-custodian’s jurisdiction which mean the assets are unavoidably tangled up in the insolvency estate.

Here’s para 28 of the selfsame opinion:

28. [...] where the financial instruments are ‘lost’ following the liquidation of a sub-custodian despite appropriate segregation of assets, because the law of the country where the financial instruments were held in custody does not recognise the effects of segregation, ESMA believes that the loss of those financial instruments should be considered due to be an external event, i.e. the local legal/regulatory framework. [...]

These sutuations aside, the depositary remains liable for the insolvency of sub-custodians. Even unaffiliated ones.

  1. See here.
  2. Which you can find here, at page 182.