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Unclassified COM/STD/DAF(2012)28 COM/STD/DAF(2012)28 Unclassified Organisation de Coopération et de Développement Économiques Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development 24-Sep-2012 English - Or. English Directorate for Financial and Enterprise Affairs Statistics Directorate Working Party on Financial Statistics Identifying holding companies and SPEs in the wake of the ESA 2010 implementation:a contribute from Banco de Portugal Common day To be held on 3 October 2012 OECD Conference Centre Beginning at 9:00 a.m. This document has been prepared by Ana Margarida Almeida (Bank of Portugal) and will be presented under item 4 of the draft agenda The complete document is only available in PDF format English - Or. English JT03326718 Complete document available on OLIS in its original format This document and any map included herein are without prejudice to the status of or sovereignty over any territory, to the delimitation of international frontiers and boundaries and to the name of any territory, city or area.

COM/STD/DAF(2012)28 2

OECD Working Party on Financial Statistics and Working Party on National Accounts, October 2012 Identifying holding companies and SPEs in the wake of the ESA 2010 implementation: a contribute from Banco de Portugal Ana M. de Almeida Deputy-Director Statistics Department

Outline 1. New international manuals methodological guidance for sector breakdowns 1.1 The institutional sectors 1.2 Head-offices, holdings and SPEs 1.3 A decision tree for the sector classification of SPEs 1.4 The sub-sector of Captive financial institutions and money lenders 2. The Portuguese experience 2.1 The institutional responsibilities for sector classifications 2.2 Analysing holding companies 2.3 Analysing SPEs 3. Conclusions and way forward 2

S.11 1. New international manuals methodological guidance for sector breakdowns 1.1 The institutional sectors ESA 95 ESA 2010 Non-financial corporations (including non-financial holdings) S.11 S.12 Non-financial corporations Financial corporations S.12 Financial corporations S.121: CB S.121: CB S.122: OMFI S.122: OMFI S.123: MMF S.124: Non-MMF IF S.13 S.14 S.15 S.123: OFI (including financial holdings) S.124: FA S.125: ICPF General government Households Non-profit institutions serving households S.13 S.14 S.15 S.125: OFI S.126: FA S.127: Captive FI and money lenders S. 128: IC S.129: PF General government Households Non-profit institutions serving households 3

1.2 Head-offices, holdings and SPEs From ESA 2010 (version of August 2012): Head offices and holding companies 2.14 Head offices and holding companies are institutional units. The two types are: a) A head office is a unit that exercises managerial control over its subsidiaries. Head offices are allocated to the dominant non-financial corporations sector of their subsidiaries, unless all or most of their subsidiaries are financial corporations, in which case they are treated as financial auxiliaries (S.126) in the financial corporations sector. Head offices are described under International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities Revision (ISIC Rev. 4),class 7010 (NACE Rev. 2). b) A holding company that holds the assets of subsidiary corporations but does not undertake any management activities is a captive financial institution (S.127) and classified as a financial corporation. Holding companies are described under ISIC Rev.4, class 6420 (NACE Rev. 2). 4

1.2 Head-offices, holdings and SPEs Special Purpose Entities 2.18 There is no common definition of an SPE, but the following characteristics are typical: a) They have no employees and no non-financial assets; b)they have little physical presence beyond a brass plate confirming their place of registration; c) They are always related to another corporation, often as a subsidiary; d) They are resident in a different territory from the territory of residence of the related corporations. In the absence of any physical presence an enterprise's residence is determined according to the economic territory under whose laws the enterprise is incorporated or registered; e) They are managed by employees of another corporation which may or may not be a related one. The SPE pays fees for services provided to it and in turn charges its parent or other related corporation a fee to cover these costs. This is the only production the SPE is involved in, although it will often incur liabilities on behalf of its owner and will usually receive investment income and holding gains on the assets it holds. 5

1.2 Head-offices, holdings and SPEs Special Purpose Entities 2.19 Whether a unit has all or none of these characteristics, and whether it is described as an SPE or some similar designation or not, it shall be treated in the same way as any other institutional unit by being allocated to sector and industry according to its principal activity unless the SPE has no independent rights of action. 2.28 In summary, the accounts of Special Purpose Entities with no independent rights of action are consolidated with the parent corporation, unless they are resident in a different economy from that of the parent. There is one exception to this general rule, and that is when a non-resident SPE is set up by government (rerouting). 6

1.2 Head-offices, holdings and SPEs ESA 1995 ESA 2010 Head Offices S.11 (NFC) S.11 (NFC) S.126 (FA) ( 2.14) ( if most of their subsidiaries are financial corporations ) Holdings Financial Holdings (OFI, S.123) Financial (Captive FI, S.127) Non-Financial Holdings (S.11) SPE S.11 (NFC), S.12 (FC). S.11 (NFC), S.12 (FC). 7

1.3 A decision tree for the sector classification of SPEs no Is the SPE a resident unit? The entity should be classified in the nonresident sector (S.2). yes If the entity is a special purpose unit of GG, it should be treated as a separate unit. Any transactions carried out by them abroad are reflected in corresponding transactions with government (rerouting). Is the entity controlled by a foreign institutional unit? yes The entity should be treated in the same way as any other institutional unit and should be allocated to sector according to its principal activity. yes The entity should be treated in the same way as any other institutional unit and should be allocated to sector according to its principal activity. Is the entity controlled by another resident institutional unit? yes Can the entity act independently of its parent? yes The entity is treated as an integral part of GG (S.13) no Is the entity a Special purpose unit of General Government? no The entity is not an institutional unit and is consolidated with the parent resident institutional unit (artificial subsidiaries of corporations ). (S.127) 8

1.4 The institutional sub-sector of Captive financial institutions and money lenders Captive financial institutions and money lenders (S.127) Financial corporations and quasi-corporations which are neither engaged in financial intermediations nor in providing financial auxiliary services and where most of either their assets or their liabilities are not transacted on open markets. (ESA 2010, 2.98) Sovereign wealth fund Trust, Estate, Agency account S.127 Brass plate company SPE Holding Money lender, Pawnshop 9

2. The Portuguese experience The methodological manuals do not provide a common and unique definition of SPE; they present typical characteristics (ESA2010, 2.18) leaving room for interpretation (for instance, in Impact of globalization on national accounts, June 2011) Some guidance is given in order to help countries to identify this type of entities Countries identify such entities according to their own experience: how to identify, in the Portuguese case, the entities that will need to be reclassified from the non-financial corporations sector (S.11) to the financial corporations sector (S.12)? 10

2.1 The institutional responsibilities for sector classifications Institutional sector and economic activity sector (NACE) classifications National Statistics Institute institutional sectors definition and boundaries responsible for validating the NACE code Banco de Portugal financial sector definition and boundaries: financial holdings - information reported quarterly / bi-annually for supervisory purposes to the Prudential Supervision Department; identification of the holding companies moving from the non-financial to the financial sector, assessing the quantitative macro-impact of the sectoral change. 11

2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Holding companies Banco de Portugal tested two hypothesis: Hypothesis 1 Maintaining the NACE attributed at the origin in the Corporate Business Register and reclassifying the entities with NACE 6420 Activities of holding companies to S.127 Captive FI and money lenders ; Hypothesis 2 Analysing which quantitative criteria would be more appropriate in order to reflect the new international manuals methodological guidance. 12

2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Hypothesis 1 NACE Data source: Corporate business register (information on NACE code, corporation identification number, name, registered capital) Strong correlation between economic activity (NACE) and institutional sector Approximately 4 200 holding companies (2011) move from NFC (S.11)to Captive FI(S.127) Reallocation of all the corporations with NACE 6420 from Non-financial corporations (S.11) to Captive Financial Institutions (S.127) Approximately 36% of NFC (S.11) capital shares (2011) shift to Financial sector 13

2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Hypothesis 1 NACE Problems with NACE code: The code is assigned/selected by the company itself when registering and in some cases it may not be the correct one: Some companies with code 6420 are not holding companies; Some companies with other NACE codes are, in fact, holding companies; Small number of companies with head office code (7010) 160. 14

Corporate Business Register (CBR) Informação Empresarial Simplificada (IES 2011) Coverage of CBR by IES NACE code Nr. companies Nr. companies Total Nr. Capital Under the IES (2011), data SPE submitted by non-financial SPE Assets Total Total corporations companies are integrated shares in the (RoW) (RoW) (% GDP) 6420 Holdings 7010 Head Offices 2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Comparing with IES (Informação Empresarial Simplificada) Simplified Corporate Information IES is the Portuguese acronym for the simplified reporting system for corporate information, through the electronic submission of accounting, fiscal and statistical information that companies have to remit yearly, on a mandatory basis, to the Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Finance, the National Statistics Institute and the Banco de Portugal. 4 200 100 3 200 60 111% 77% 99% 160 0 130 0 2% 84% 87% 15

2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Hypothesis 2 Using quantitative criteria A holding company that simply owns the assets of subsidiaries is one example of a captive financial institution Entities of this type are commonly managed by employees of another corporation which may or may not be a related one Services provided = 0? Commodities sold = 0? Number of workers 5? Strong financial component Financial Assets/Total Assets 80%? 16

2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Hypothesis 2 Using quantitative criteria (preliminary results from IES 2011). How many Non-financial holding companies to be included in S.127? Different answers according to the quantitative criteria selected Nr. of companies Total Assets (% of GDP) Nr. of companies needed to cover 95% of Total Assets Total non-financial holdings 3 200 111% 780 1) Services = 0 2 300 62% 570 2) Commodities sold = 0 3 180 110% 770 3 a) Workers 5 2 960 60% 900 3 b) Workers 10 3 080 71% 910 Of which workers = 0 2 020 32% 630 4) Financial Assets/Total assets 80% 1 250 38% 450 3 a) + 4) 1 160 21% 500 1) + 2) + 3 b) 2 260 53% 600 Identifying holding Companies and SPEs in the wake of ESA 2010 implementation: a contribute from Banco de Portugal 17

Assessing the impact -Total Assets Different criteria lead to different results which will influence the analysis of S.11 and S.127! ESA 95 2.2 The Portuguese experience in analysing holding companies Hypothesis 1 NACE ESA 2010 Hypothesis 2 Using quantitative measures: 3 a) + 4) ESA 95 ESA 2010 NFC: -11% FC: + 11% (Hyp2 Hyp1) Debt-to-equity ratio 87 % (Hyp2 Hyp1) Debt-to-GDP ratio 49% NFC: - 2% FC: + 2% 18

2.3 The Portuguese experience in analysing SPEs SPEs General criteria to assist compilers to identify SPEs: ( ) ii) The enterprise is ultimately controlled by a non-resident parent, directly or indirectly. ( ) 2008 4th edition of the OECD Benchmark Definition of Foreign Direct Investment, Box 6.2 In practice, it does not seem possible to use quantitative criteria for characterising SPEs different than the ones used for characterising holdings (besides assessing the variable control ) Have links established with other entities (usually their subsidiaries) Existing control?. They are usually resident in territories different from those where are the related entities Controlled by non-residents? 19

2.3 The Portuguese experience in analysing SPEs in bop/iip statistics work in progress 20

3. Conclusions and way forward Portugal Problems with the initial allocation of NACE code Defining procedures for attributing financial NACE codes when a company is registered (BP, ISP, CMVM) Streamline procedures for reviewing the NACE codes by the NSI Quarterly direct reporting from companies? 500 companies represent 95% of the Total Assets (IES 2011)with IES information ; Using as much as possible the information already available with a higher frequency in other databases at Banco de Portugal (Central Credit Register ; Securities Issues and Holding Statistics) Periodically reevaluate the population (holding companies that should be included in S.127), based on the IES information Required joint work between NSI and Banco de Portugal (list of head offices vis-à-vis list of holdings) Disclose the list of holding companies that should be considered in S.127 21

3. Conclusions and way forward And in Europe? Advantages of having an harmonized definition among EU countries for classifying financial holding and head offices Discussing difficult cases: consolidation with the parent company, how to assess lack of autonomy of decision Collaboration among international organisations (ECB, Eurostat, OECD), at the level of the different WG work programs Joint Task-Force (CMFB) Define a periodicity for reviewing the population of financial holdings and head offices Annually or at larger time intervals? Disclose a list of holding companies that should be considered in S.127 in each country Including some information on ISIN codes of securities issued? 22

Thank you for your attention! Questions? 23