2023-07-31
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the Financial Markets Authority jointly issued this standard to regulate designated financial market infrastructures under the Financial Market Infrastructures Act 2021. It requires operators to maintain effective rules and procedures that ensure timely action during participant defaults to maintain operational continuity and manage credit or liquidity risks. Operators must also publicly disclose key default procedures, involve stakeholders in testing, and conduct annual reviews to ensure the practicality and effectiveness of these measures.
FMI STANDARD 13: PARTICIPANT-DEFAULT RULES AND PROCEDURES FS13
DOCUMENT VERSION HISTORY 1 March 2024 First issue date INTRODUCTION Application i. This standard applies to every operator of a designated FMI that was specified in its designation notice under section 29(2)(f) of the Financial Market Infrastructures Act 2021 (the Act) as falling within one or more of the following classes of designated FMIs: (a) a pure payment system; or (b) a central securities depository; or (c) a securities settlement system; or (d) a central counterparty. Legal powers ii. Under section 8 of the Act the regulator is defined as the RBNZ and the FMA acting jointly (or the RBNZ acting on its own in relation to pure payment systems). iii. Section 12 of the Act provides the regulator's functions. These include regulating designated FMIs, dealing with designated FMIs that are distressed, and other functions under the Act. iv. Subject to certain statutory prerequisites, section 31 of the Act empowers the regulator to make standards for designated FMIs. v. Section 34 sets out the matters that standards may deal with or otherwise relate to. Section 34(1)(h) provides that a standard may deal with, or otherwise relate to, rules and procedures for managing a participant defaulting on its obligations under the rules of the FMI. Interpretation vi. Words and phrases used in this standard have the same meaning as in the Act. vii. Close out rights means contractual rights that enable a party to terminate or liquidate a contract, or net position under multiple contracts (including through the acceleration or termination of obligations under one or more contracts, or exercising rights to set-off or net financial exposures created under one or more contracts). viii. Close out rules means any rules of the FMI designed to facilitate the exercise of close out rights. Commencement ix. This standard comes into force on 1 March 2024.
REQUIREMENTS