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(Created page with "This is what, in the bond world, they call a currency indemnity. It is a part of the boilerplate that is so entrenched, and passeth all understanding, that people seldom ask what it is for ot why it is there. Certainly, do not expect much by way of negotiation on the point, but for the little it is worth, this is what it is all about. Say I borrow from you in in euros. Being an OG in the international capital markets, my business will truck in incomings in all s...")
 
(Replaced content with "This is what, in the bond world, they call a currency indemnity. {{currency indemnity capsule}}")
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This is what, in the bond world, they call a [[currency indemnity]]. It is a part of the boilerplate that is so entrenched, and passeth all understanding, that people seldom ask what it is for ot why it is there. Certainly, do not expect much by way of negotiation on the point, but for the little it is worth, this is what it is all about.
This is what, in the bond world, they call a [[currency indemnity]]. {{currency indemnity capsule}}
 
Say I borrow from you in in [[euro]]s. Being an OG in the international capital markets, my business will truck in incomings in all sorts of currencies. Now, as an OG, I will of course have a sophisticated treasury function which is constantly mindful of my assets, liabilities and obligations, and they will naturally execute such hedges and arrange such facilities so that whenever I need to pay you principal or interest in my loan, I have sufficient euros to do it. That much should not really be a surprise: I borrow in euros, I repay in euros. End of.
 
All this goes somewhat out the window if I go ''[[titten hoch]]'', though. At this point my treasury team would find it hard to execute the necessary hedges and FX conversions, and that is even if they weren’t wandering around outside the building in a daze, woozily clutching [[Iron Mountain]] boxes full of gonks, deal toys, [[Tombstone|tombstones]], pilfered stationery and personal effects.
 
Now the receivers are in, are enforcing security, realising assets, collating cash balances, and these might not, OG, be in euros, right? So there is a disaster scenario we face in which a failed, or failing, debtor, offers up cash in ''non-contractual'' currencies, by way of full or partial satisfaction of a debt.
 
The currency indemnity is the device that, gudgingly, grants that this sort of thing can happen and puts some parameters around what goes down in such a case.

Latest revision as of 10:55, 20 September 2023

This is what, in the bond world, they call a currency indemnity. A currency indemnity is a part of the boilerplate that is so deeply entrenched, a piece of cod that passeth so much understanding, that generations of legal eagles have just abided by it, never asking what it is or why it is there. The young JC was one such eagle.

The currency indemnity just is. You will find in in the ISDA, in loans, bonds, repacks — in fact sprayed wordily over almost any kind of financial instrument; a kind of comfy textual furniture to make it all seem serious and important.

In a nutshell: roll with it

So if you are in a hurry, stop there: a currency indemnity is fine; people don’t usually fiddle with it: leave it; carry on.

Do not expect much by way of negotiation (among others, for the same reason: no-one else knows any better than you do what one should negotiate in a currency indemnity).

For those who remain curious

For those with the time and deep natural curiosity, or who are vexed about the “i” word, we offer the following. Take it with a pinch of salt; after all, we wrote it with one.

Let’s say I borrow from you, in euros.

Being an OG in the international capital markets, in the course of my business I will truck in all kinds of flakey currencies, payments in kind and weird securities — but I will still promise to repay my loan from you, in euros. That is my resting, fundamental contractual obligation. Euros.

Now, being an OG, I will have a sophisticated treasury function to watch lovingly over my cashflows, and it will execute such hedges currency conversions and otherwise work whatever magic I need to meet my outgoings, including the principal and interest I owe you.

This much should not really be a surprise: I borrow in euros, I repay in euros.

But all this goes out the window if — heaven forfend, and all that — I go titten hoch. At this point my treasury team would find it hard to execute the necessary hedges and conversions, even if they weren’t wandering around outside the building, woozily clutching Iron Mountain boxes full of gonks, deal toys, tombstones, pilfered stationery and personal effects. But, alas and alack, they will be. This is the whole of the law.

Now the receivers and administrators will busily be calling in, converting and collecting and liquidating my remaining assets, cash balances and generally figuring out how to best sort out my creditors, of which you are but one. There is a disaster scenario in which a failed, or failing, debtor — me — has no euros and instead offers up cash in non-contractual currencies, by way of full or partial satisfaction of what I owe. This isn’t Local courts which administer my insolvency might oblige them to do this.

No, that isn’t what the contract preferred, but it is a fact of life, so the contract allows it. That is what the currency indemnity does. It gudgingly, grants that this sort of thing can happen and puts some parameters around what goes down in such a case.

Components of a normal currency indemnity

This will boil down to the following:

Limited discharge: A non-contractual currency will only discharge the debt to the value in the contractual currency that the creditor achieves by converting it into the contractual currency in the market on reasonable terms.

No prejudice re the shortfall: If there is a shortfall, the debtor remains immediately liable for the balance: that is, the partial payment in the non-contractual currency doesn’t somehow hamstring the creditor’s legal rights to go after the rest

Reimburse excess: If there is an excess — happy days, right? — the creditor should promptly return it. Ie the non-currency payment is only am unconditional payment to the extent of the debt. This is quite a complicated ontological concept which it is best not to think about, so call this an absolute payment with a contingent reimbursement right.

Court judgments: If you are imprudent to litigate with a capital markets OG in its own jurisdiction, and you are awarded damages in a non-contractual currency (the JC is no litigator but is given to understand local courts can do this sort of thing, whether the victor likes it or not), then the same issue arises, and it is treated the same way.

Separate indemnities: Just to bring home the point, if accepting the non-contractual currency does somehow operate to undermine or waive the primary obligation to pay in full in the contractual currency, then the obligations created by the currency indemnity clause stand as separate indemnity payments. (This, by the way, is “indemnity” in its narrow sense, as “a unilateral obligation to pay a defined sum of money not by way of recompense or damages for some other failure, but just because you have agreed to pay it” and not in its “Help! Help! We are all going to die under a Cardozan excess of indeterminate liability” sense.) This is probably most important in the context of judgment debts, where the debtor might (rightly) complain that it had no choice but to pay in the local currency, and therefore try to argue that that local currency judgment, if paid in full, should discharge the debt ad to hell with the vagaries of the foreign exchange markets. The currency indemnity should put, er, paid to that argument by constructing an entirely independent obligation to pay the balance.

No requirement to actually convert: You may see a rider, as in the ISDA, that one should not have to actually convert the currency you received at a loss to prove a loss: it is okay to keep your money in the tendered currency and not crystallise the position.