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Structured investment vehicle (SIV) meaning

What does Structured investment vehicle (SIV) mean?
A structured investment vehicle (SIV) is an insolvency‑remote special purpose vehicle that buys a diversified portfolio of mainly highly rated debt securities (for example, asset‑backed securities and senior bank or corporate debt) and funds those assets by issuing asset‑backed commercial paper and medium‑term notes. The structure seeks to earn the spread between asset yields and (shorter‑dated) funding costs, creating a maturity transformation that makes liquidity support and robust risk limits critical. “SIV” is a market term rather than a concept defined in UK or Irish legislation or case law. In practice, SIVs are typically sponsored or managed by a bank or asset manager, grant security over their assets to a trustee, operate a contractual priority of payments, and may have liquidity and repo facilities and hedging. Capital or junior notes absorb first losses. Accounting consolidation and prudential capital treatment depend on the sponsor’s role and applicable standards. Usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland. Irish SIVs are commonly established as Section 110 TCA companies; English‑law documentation is frequently used for note programmes. Following the 2007–2009 financial crisis, SIVs became less common, and structures are scrutinised under the UK/EU securitisation framework, prospectus and market abuse regimes.
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View the related Practice Notes about Structured investment vehicle (SIV)

PRACTICE NOTES
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PRACTICE NOTES
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