2004-01-28
The Office of the Registrar of Banks mandates that all banks must ensure their set-off and netting agreements strictly satisfy the legal enforceability requirements of Regulations 12 and 23 of the Regulations Relating to Banks. Banks and their boards of directors bear full responsibility for verifying that these contractual arrangements will withstand legal scrutiny across all relevant jurisdictions, as reliance on standard market templates like ISDA agreements does not automatically guarantee compliance with prudential capital relief provisions. This directive confirms that meeting these minimum legal standards is mandatory for banks to legitimately net transactions for capital-adequacy purposes and aligns domestic prudential rules with international Basel Committee guidelines.
2004-05-27 TO ALL BANKS, BRANCHES OF FOREIGN BANKS AND MUTUAL BANKS BANKS ACT CIRCULAR 9/2004 SET-OFF AND NETTING UNDER REGULATION 12 AND 23 OF THE REGULATIONS RELATING TO BANKS
2 per se, since ISDA and ISMA agreements may or may not be recognised and/or enforceable, from time to time, in terms of the laws and regulations in force in different countries. Furthermore, the requirements of regulation 23 of the Regulations relating to Banks (“the Regulations”) do not in any way conflict with the 1988 Capital Accord. The Regulations are consistent with the minimum requirements to which the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision agreed and which were subsequently incorporated into the 1988 Capital Accord. In line with the 1988 Capital Accord, regulation 23 of the Regulations prescribes minimum requirements that have to be met at all times, instead of allowing or disallowing certain types of netting agreements developed by market participants. Each bank that wishes to apply netting has to determine whether a particular type of netting agreement meets the said requirements. The objectives of regulations 12 and 23 of the Regulations are largely consistent, in the sense that both regulations are aimed at ensuring that a bank has a well-founded legal right to apply set-off or netting and would either have a claim to receive, or an obligation to pay, only the net sum of the individual transactions covered by the setoff or netting agreement. The abovementioned regulations, however, often apply to different situations. Regulation 12 deals with situations in which a client maintains both debit and credit balances with a bank and when such balances are denominated in the same currency and are due and payable on the same date and the client and the bank have entered into an agreement in terms of which a legal right to apply setoff in respect of such balances exists at all times. When a right to set-off exists, the amount payable by one person to another may be reduced by the size of the other’s debt, leaving a net amount, or no amount, payable. Regulation 23, however, deals with situations in which gross claims between a bank and its counterparty in respect of unsettled transactions exist and the said bank and its counterparty enter into a netting agreement. Whether the netting agreement will be legally enforceable is a legal question. In this regard, it should be noted that: • If a bank and its counterparty are situated in different jurisdictions, the situation is more complex than when both parties are situated in the same jurisdiction. • If a netting agreement provides for netting by novation, obligations between a bank and its counterparty to deliver a given amount on a given date are automatically amalgamated with all other obligations to deliver on the same value date. This type of agreement is very similar to the situations regulated by regulation 12 and provides more legal certainty than most other forms of netting. • If a netting agreement provides for close-out netting, all outstanding transactions between the counterparties that are subject to the netting agreement are combined and reduced to a single payable sum. Normally, the process has three stages, namely, termination, close-out and netting. Termination is typically caused by the occurrence of an event such as liquidation or bankruptcy. The loss or cost to each party is calculated and often relates to the cost of replacing the transaction in the market at the prevailing time. The sums due are converted into a single currency and netted to one single payment. In the last mentioned case, the following play a critically important role.
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