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Security agent meaning

What does Security agent mean?
A security agent is the entity appointed in secured and syndicated financings to hold, administer and enforce security for all lenders and other secured creditors through a single point of control. It is not generally defined by statute; it is a contractual label. Documents may call the officeholder a security agent or security trustee, and it will act as agent and/or trustee according to the express terms. Core functions include taking, perfecting, maintaining, releasing and enforcing security interests; entering and managing intercreditor arrangements; receiving enforcement proceeds and applying them under the agreed waterfall; and acting on majority-lender instructions. Usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland, but local law dictates how particular security must be granted, perfected and enforced. In England & Wales and Northern Ireland, the role commonly operates via a trust so security is held for a changing lender group without retaking security. In Scotland and Ireland the role is equally recognised; documentation typically caters for local formalities and, in cross-border deals, may include agency-and-trust mechanics or a parallel debt to support consistent enforcement.
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View the related Checklists about Security agent

CHECKLISTS
English law debt securities terms and conditions: practitioners' review and negotiation checklist for first-time issuers, covering secured/unsecured, trustee or fiscal agent, bearer or registered, and mini-bonds

What this checklist covers This checklist sets out the principal matters a solicitor guiding a first time issuer must verify and, where appropriate, propose changes to, when reviewing English law terms and conditions governing an issue of debt securities...

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CHECKLISTS
Lenders’ checklist for borrower‑initiated permanent amendments to facility agreements (bilateral and syndicated): fees, consents, guarantees and security, intercreditor, documentation, conditions precedent and post‑completion

This Checklist This Checklist outlines key considerations for lawyers (external or in-house) acting for the lender(s) when responding to a borrower led amendment request. It concentrates on permanent amendments rather than one off waiver or consent requests. For guidance on those, see Practice Note: Waivers and consents. In a syndicated transaction, the borrower will ordinarily deliver a written amendment request to the facility agent, which typically includes: the rationale for seeking the amendment, the specific clauses impacted, the applicable consent thresholds, and any snooze and lose provisions. The Loan Market Association (LMA) has published a helpful guide to the amendment process on a syndicated transaction. On a bilateral deal, a borrower’s amendment request to the lender may take a less formal form. This Checklist also references provisions in the Loan Market Association investment grade multicurrency term and revolving facilities agreement incorporating backward-looking compounded rates and forward-looking term rates (the LMA Investment Grade Facility Agreement) and Precedent: Facility...

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NEWS
Weekly local government law round-up: case law, regulations and policy across procurement, governance, education, housing, social care, health, finance, environment and planning—26 June 2025

In this issue: Public procurement Governance Education Social housing Children's social care Social care Healthcare Local government finance Environmental law and climate change Planning Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content Public procurement Damages are an adequate remedy in a procurement dispute despite no sufficiently serious breach (Millbrook Healthcare Ltd v Devon County Council) In Millbrook Healthcare Ltd v Devon County Council, the Technology and Construction Court (TCC) determined that, at the interim stage of a procurement claim, whether a breach is “sufficiently serious” is not directly relevant to the question of adequacy of damages; damages can still be the proper remedy. The TCC reviewed established authorities confirming that damages are available in procurement challenges only where the contracting authority’s breach is “sufficiently serious”, a test grounded in EU law. The issue was recently examined in Braceurself v NHS England, where the TCC held that the “sufficiently serious” assessment...

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NEWS
Equity of redemption and receivers’ sale contracts: EWHC grants brief injunction delaying completion to allow potential redemption in Lexham Securities v Earlsfort

Lexham Securities Ltd and another v Earlsfort Capital Partners Ltd and others [2023] EWHC 909 (Ch) What are the practical implications of this case? This decision confirms that a mortgagor may still exercise the equity of redemption even after a receiver has concluded a contract on their behalf. Historically, it has been accepted that the equity of redemption is, for a period, put on hold between the making of a sale contract by the mortgagee and the subsequent completion of that contract (see Property and Bloodstock Ltd v Emerton [1968] Ch. 94). The situation is, in practice, different where the sale contract is made by a receiver. Although the receiver is appointed by the mortgagee, the receiver acts as the owner/mortgagor’s agent, not the mortgagee’s. That almost invariably follows from the provisions of the original loan agreement; agreed at the outset, at a time when the mortgagor hopes and expects to comply with the loan terms. Consequently, in National Westminster Bank plc v Hunter [2011] EWHC 3170 (Ch) (‘Hunter’),...

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NEWS
Weekly environmental law update: COP30 outcomes; consultations, judgments and regulatory changes across climate, energy, permitting, ESG, marine, biodiversity, waste and water (4 December 2025)

In this issue: COP30 Key developments Air emissions and climate change Energy for environmental lawyers Environmental assessment Environmental information Environmental permits and consents ESG and sustainability Hazardous substances and chemicals Marine Nature, biodiversity and habitat conservation Waste Water, flooding and drainage LexTalk®Environment: a Lexis®Nexis community Daily and weekly news alerts New and updated content COP30 COP30’s Global ‘Collective Effort’—Fragments of progress By the Saturday morning when COP30 in Brazil should have concluded, negotiators secured an accord: ‘Global Mutirão: Uniting humanity in a global mobilisation against climate change’. Drawn from the Tupi-Guarani language, ‘Global Mutirão’ echoed a summit presented as one of action and delivery. The resulting text deliberately preserved the multilateral process and offered glimmers of progress, yet avoided any explicit mention of fossil fuels or of forests—despite the meeting taking place in the Amazon. This piece highlights the principal outcomes from COP30. Written by Estelle Dehon...

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View the related Practice Notes about Security agent

PRACTICE NOTES
UK regulated activity of managing investments: FSMA 2000 RAO article 37—scope, discretion, qualifying investments, exclusions and FCA conduct requirements

This Practice Note addresses the regulated activity of managing investments... Definition Managing investments is a regulated activity under article 37 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001, SI 2001/544 (RAO). It entails exercising discretion over assets that beneficially belong to another person, where those assets consist of, or include, any investment categorised as a ‘security’, a ‘structured deposit’ or a ‘contractually-based investment’. For further detail on what constitutes a ‘security’, a ‘structured deposit’ or a ‘contractually-based investment’, see Securities, structured deposits or contractually-based investments below)... The exercise of discretion This regulated activity only arises where the investment manager exercises discretion. Where portfolio management is non-discretionary—for example, the manager purchases shares strictly on client instructions, or simply receives and forwards client orders—the work is more likely to fall within another regulated activity, such as ‘dealing in investments, either as principal or agent’ (RAO SI 2001/544, arts 14 and 21) or ‘arranging deals in investments’ (RAO SI 2001/544, art 25)...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Scotland: Cross‑Border Banking and Finance—Loan Market, Security, Perfection, Enforcement and Intercreditor Priorities, including Moveable Transactions (Scotland) Act 2023 Reforms

Loan market and developments Overview Broadly, Scotland’s loan market mirrors that of England. Financial services regulation operates on a UK‑wide basis; a substantial body of legislation governing companies and other corporate vehicles (including corporate insolvency) likewise applies across the UK; and all Scottish clearing banks conduct business in every UK jurisdiction, as do their counterparts across the UK. In practical terms, this means English law governed loan documents typically require minimal amendment for UK cross‑border lending transactions. There are, however, some differences in terminology and certain statutory variations that must be allowed for; beyond those matters, an English law loan document and a Scots law loan document are closely aligned. It is commonplace, for example, for English law loan agreements to be deployed in Scottish lending transactions. The principal divergences between the jurisdictions arise in relation to property law and to the law concerning rights in security, where Scots law and English law are notably distinct. Lending Is it necessary to secure any consents or licences to...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Break notices: correct parties, service methods, statutory deeming and interaction with LTA 1954 and HA 1988 (England and Wales)

FORTHCOMING CHANGE : The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent on 27 October 2025 For guidance on the Act’s effect on residential tenancies in England, refer to Practice Note: Renters’ Rights Act 2025—key provisions. That Practice Note details which party must issue a break notice and on whom it must be served, along with the acceptable methods of service. It addresses whether service is permitted or required by contract, the statutory frameworks governing service of notices, and the deeming rules under: section 196 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (LPA 1925) section 23 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1927 (LTA 1927) section 7 of the Interpretation Act 1978 (IA 1978) the common law It further considers how break notices align with statutory security of tenure for assured shorthold tenancies (ASTs) under the Housing Act 1988, and with business tenancies under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 (LTA 1954)...

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View the related Precedents about Security agent

PRECEDENTS
Precedent: bank account charge over blocked accounts (chargor-specific monies) for syndicated facilities (England and Wales)

This Deed is made on [ insert day and month ] 20[ insert year ] Parties [ Insert name of Chargor ], being a company incorporated in England and Wales, with registered number [ insert company number ], and whose registered office is at [ insert address ] (the “ Chargor ”); and 1 [ Insert name of Security Agent ], acting as security agent and trustee for the Finance Parties pursuant to the terms and conditions set out in the [ Facilities Agreement OR Intercreditor Agreement OR Security Trust Deed ] (the “ Security Agent ”). Recitals: (A) The Finance Parties have consented to provide loan facilities subject to the terms and conditions set out in the Facilities Agreement (as defined below). (B) As a condition precedent to the loan facilities becoming available, the Chargor must execute this Deed for the purpose of granting security in favour of the Security Agent in relation to the Secured Obligations (as defined below)...

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PRECEDENTS
Precedent deed: security assignment of insurance policies and proceeds to a security agent under a syndicated facilities agreement, with notice/acknowledgement and deed of accession (England and Wales)

This Deed is entered into on [ insert day and month ] 20[ insert year ], as of that date Parties [ insert name of Assignor ], a company incorporated in England and Wales with company number [ insert company number ], whose registered office is at [ insert address ] (the Assignor); and [ insert name of Security Agent ], acting as security agent and trustee for the Finance Parties pursuant to the terms and conditions contained in the [ [ Facilities Agreement ] OR [ Intercreditor Agreement ] OR [ Security Trust Deed ] ] (the Security Agent). Recitals: (A) The Finance Parties have consented to provide the loan facilities, subject to the terms and conditions set out in the Facilities Agreement (as defined below). (B) A condition precedent to the availability of the loan facilities is that the Assignor enters into this Deed to provide security in favour of the Security Agent in respect of...

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PRECEDENTS
Agency and security agent fee letter for syndicated acquisition finance facilities agreement (English law)

[ To be printed on the headed paper of the agent/security agent ] [ insert date ] To: [ insert full name and address of [ parent ] ] Dear [ insert full name of parent ] 1 We refer to the facilities agreement dated [ insert date of facility agreement ] made between: [ insert full name of the parent ] in its capacity as the Parent; the Parent’s subsidiaries named in [ insert Schedule containing borrowers' details ] as the Original Borrowers; the Parent’s subsidiaries identified in [ insert Schedule containing guarantors' details ] as the Original Guarantors; the financial institutions set out in [ insert Schedule containing lenders details ] as the Original Lenders; [ insert full name of arranger [ s ] ] as the Arranger; [ insert full name of facility agent ] as the Agent; [ insert full name of security agent [ s ] ] as the Security Agent; ...

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