“It really is saving us a huge number of hours over the days, weeks and months. Having more relevant support at hand, not having to draft or review documents them from scratch - it all adds up.”
Southampton FCAccess all documents on Financial collateral
This Checklist outlines the principal contractual points within a bundle of construction documents that a construction lawyer should review and report on for a prospective buyer of a property or development. It should be read alongside: Construction due diligence for property purchase-initial review of construction package-checklist. After reviewing the documents and raising enquiries, the purchaser’s construction lawyer will also need to produce a report on the construction documents, see Precedent: Report on construction documentation. The issues below proceed on the basis that construction at the relevant property has been completed. Accordingly, there is no need to scrutinise terms governing the running of the contract during the build, such as payment provisions; these are only relevant where a buyer is acquiring while works are ongoing and step-in rights are being offered. Building contracts Identity of contractor – Confirm the contractor continues to exist and carry out a financial check (for example via Dun & Bradstreet) to ensure it is financially sound. Date of contract –...
The defined terms in the flowchart shall have the following meaning: Appointed Representative Regulations — the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Appointed Representatives) Regulations 2001, SI 2001/1217 Business Order — the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Carrying on Regulated Activities by Way of Business) Order 2001, SI 2001/1177 Exemption Order — the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Exemption) Order 2001, SI 2001/1201 Non-Exempt Activities Order — the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Professions) (Non-Exempt Activities) Order 2001, SI 2001/1227 PRA-regulated activities — denotes regulated activities designated as PRA‑regulated activities under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (PRA‑regulated Activities) Order 2013, SI 2013/556 RAO — the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, SI 2001/544 UCITS qualifier — carries the meaning attributed to it in the Glossary of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) Handbook To determine whether an activity is regulated, follow the flowchart below. Click below to view or print...
Financial services developments ESMA consults on CCP collateral and investment policy standards following EMIR 3 review The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has initiated a public consultation on draft regulatory technical standards (RTS) to amend Commission Delegated Regulation 153/2013, following the European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR 3) review. The call for input invites feedback on: conditions for central counterparties (CCPs) to accept public guarantees, public bank guarantees and commercial bank guarantees as collateral; criteria under which debt instruments qualify as eligible financial instruments within CCP investment policy; highly secured arrangements for emission allowances lodged as margins or default fund contributions. EMIR 3 makes permanent a broader range of guarantees eligible as collateral and extends scope to clients of CCPs that are non-financial counterparties. The consultation closes on 30 April 2026, with ESMA submitting final draft RTS to European Commission by end-2026...
In this issue: Sustainable finance and ESG round–up UK and international sanctions National Security and Investment Act Football Governance Bill Lending Security Aviation finance Sustainable finance Debt capital markets Derivatives Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Useful information Sustainable finance and ESG round–up Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round–up For this week’s overview of Sustainable finance and ESG developments, see: Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round–up—23 May 2024. UK and international sanctions OFSI updates guidance on Russian sanctions and reporting information The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) has refreshed its General, Russia, Counter-Terrorism, and Enforcement and Monetary Penalties guidance. The changes align the materials with amendments introduced by the Sanctions (EU Exit) (Miscellaneous Amendments and Revocations) Regulations 2024, SI 2024/643, and the Sanctions (EU Exit) (Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2024, SI 2024/644. The guidance also now incorporates the new reporting obligations for designated persons under...
In this issue: Sustainable finance and ESG round–up Lending Security Sustainable finance Debt capital markets Derivatives Structured products and securitisation Regulation for derivatives lawyers Restructuring Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Useful information Sustainable finance and ESG round–up Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round–up Sustainable finance and ESG round–up Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round–up For a summary of this week’s Sustainable finance and ESG developments, see: Sustainable finance and ESG weekly round–up—18 April 2024. Lending LMA publishes guidance on primary delayed settlement compensation The Loan Market Association (LMA) has issued guidance on primary delayed settlement compensation, setting out a suggested timetable for stages in the syndication process and embedding fault-based delayed settlement compensation. The note aims to reconcile the differing priorities of stakeholders involved in syndication. See: LNB News 17/04/2024 68. Source: LMA issues Primary Delayed Settlement Compensation Guidelines to promote efficiency...
This Practice Note looks at Term Loan B (TLB) facilities, which often feature as a senior tranche within syndicated loans in leveraged financings. TLBs are long-established in the US market and are increasingly seen in the European lending market for institutional investors. It examines the structure of a typical TLB and how it diverges from traditional European leveraged loans, before setting out the key features. This Practice Note assumes some understanding of leveraged finance. For introductory information, see: Introductory guide to acquisition finance. For explanations of common terms, see Practice Note: Glossary of acquisition finance terms and jargon. What is a Term Loan B? In lending markets, ‘Term Loan B’ or ‘TLB’ (short for Term Loan Bullet) describes a tranche of senior secured credit facilities made available to a borrower and intended to be syndicated in the institutional loan market. They are usually floating-rate term facilities with an actual or implied non-investment grade rating, a five to seven year maturity and either nominal amortisation of 1% per annum...
What is repo? A repo, the market shorthand for a 'repurchase transaction', is an arrangement whereby one party (the seller) sells an asset to another (the buyer) with a simultaneous contractual undertaking that the seller will repurchase the asset from the buyer on a future date for a specified price agreed between both parties in advance. Any asset capable of being transferred from one person to another may, in principle, be the subject of a repo transaction. The assets most commonly used in repos are debt securities (bonds), equity securities (shares) and other financial assets, including loans and commodities. However, commodity repos can raise distinctive documentary, structural and legal issues, which are not addressed in this Practice Note. For guidance on commodity repos, see Practice Note: Commodity repo transactions and true sale considerations...
Scope of this Practice Note This Practice Note outlines the authority a firm may receive to handle a client’s assets, with or without transferring title to those assets. It focuses on the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) requirements in the Client Assets Sourcebook (CASS), specifically chapters 3 (Collateral) and 8 (Mandates). Where a client: authorises a firm, via a mandate, to act in relation to their assets without passing ownership provides a firm with an asset as security to secure an obligation owed to the firm, i.e. supplies collateral the firm is not subject to the client money rules or the custody rules. The applicable provisions in each scenario are uncomplicated, centring on accurate records and exercising the proper rights over the assets. Impact of Brexit on CASS and the FCA’s powers and requirements Following the decision to leave the EU, the UK government ‘onshored’ and retained most EU and EU-derived legislation as it existed immediately before the UK’s departure...