Canadian Margin Requirements For Uncleared Swaps. December 1, Carol E. Derk and Julie Mansi

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Canadian Margin Requirements For Uncleared Swaps December 1, 2016 Carol E. Derk and Julie Mansi

Background to WGMR In 2011, G20 asked the Basil Committee on Banking Supervision and IOSCO to develop standards for margin requirements for uncleared OTC derivatives Formed Working Group on Margin Requirements (WGMR) Initial proposal in July 2012; final framework in March 2015 Key objectives Reduction of systemic risk, via a defaulter pays technique Promotion of central clearing 2

WGMR National Rules Status Country/Region Regulator/Authority Rules Status USA Prudential Regulators Final rules November 2015 Switzerland Federal Council Final rules November 2015 (Financial Market Infrastructure Ordinance). Update expected to harmonize with EU USA CFTC Final substantive rules January 2016, final cross-border rules May 2016 Canada OSFI Final rules effective September 2016 (Guideline E-22) Canada CSA Consultation paper 95-401 July 2016 Japan JFSA Final rules March 2016 South Africa NT Draft rules June 2015 Hong Kong HKMA Draft rules December 2015 Australia APRA Draft rules February 2016 EU European Supervisory Authorities Draft rules March 2016 Singapore MAS Draft rules May 2016 India RBI Discussion paper May 2016 3

OSFI OSFI Guideline E-22 Published by the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions ("OSFI") on February 29, 2016; effective September 1, 2016 Applies to all non-centrally cleared derivatives except physically settled foreign exchange forwards and swaps For cross-currency swaps, VM applies both components and IM applies to interest rate component Inter-affiliate or intragroup trades are exempt Seeks to establish minimum standards for the mandatory exchange of margin Imposes margin requirements on federally regulated financial institutions and, indirectly, on their in-scope counterparties (covered entities) 4

CSA Canadian Securities Administrators Consultation Paper 95-401 Derivatives Committee of the CSA published a consultation paper in July 2016 with a proposed set of parallel requirements for transactions not covered by Guideline E-22 As a result of substituted compliance, the CSA Proposal is expected to apply to a narrow subset of derivatives transactions involving Canadian local counterparties 5

Guideline E-22: Counterparty Classification Federally Regulated Financial Institutions (FRFIs) OSFI regulated financial institutions Banks, foreign bank branches, bank holding companies, trust and loan companies, cooperative credit associations, cooperative retail associations, life insurance companies, property and casualty insurance companies and insurance holding companies 6

Guideline E-22: Counterparty Classification Covered Entity A financial entity belonging to a consolidated group whose aggregate month-end average notional amount of non-centrally cleared derivatives exceeds CAD$12 billion for March, April and May of 2016 or of any year after implementation 7 A financial entity is a legal entity whose main business includes: the management of financial assets, lending, factoring, leasing, provision of credit enhancements, securitization, investments, financial custody, proprietary trading and other financial services activities. Includes, but not limited to, deposit-taking institutions, insurance companies, pension funds, hedge funds, and asset managers Excluded entities are sovereigns, public sector entities, certain multilateral development banks, BIS, central counterparties, qualifying SPEs, treasury affiliates of commercial entities and funds investing in physical assets and real estate

Guideline E-22: Calculating Aggregate Notional Exposure Aggregate Month-End Average Notional Amount of non-centrally cleared derivatives Average of month-end total notional amounts for March/April/May Include all entities that a part of a consolidated group (i.e., a group of entities for which consolidated financial statements are prepared) Include all non-centrally cleared derivatives, including physically settled FX swap and forwards, but excluding inter-affiliate transactions Dynamic assessment - assess on an annual basis and apply margin requirements from September 1 st in the relevant year (if going above, apply margin requirements to new trades; if falling below, no new or existing trades are subject to margin requirements) 8

Guideline E-22: Entity Scope Covered FRFI (FRFI that meets covered entity threshold) Covered FRFI Margin rules apply Covered Entity Margin rules apply Covered Entity Margin rules apply Margin rules do not apply 9

Guideline E-22: Counterparty Classification Determination Covered FRFIs are expected to self-declare themselves as Covered Entities before transacting Covered FRFIs are responsible for verifying if their counterparties are Covered Entities Determination of Covered Entity status problematic for investment funds Investment funds managed by an investment advisor are considered distinct entities treated separately when applying the threshold so long as the funds are distinct legal entities that are not collateralized by or otherwise supported by other investment funds or the investment advisor in the event of fund insolvency or bankruptcy 10

95-401: Counterparty Classification Financial Entity that is a local counterparty A financial entity whose aggregate month-end average notional amount of non-centrally cleared derivatives, calculated on a corporate group basis, exceeds CAD$12 billion for March, April and May of any year after implementation A financial entity includes: cooperative credit associations, central cooperative credit societies, banks, loan corporations, loan companies, trust companies, trust corporations, insurance companies, treasury branches, credit unions, caisses populaires, financial services cooperatives, pension funds, investment funds, and any person or company subject to registration or exempt from registration under securities law as a result of trading in derivatives 11

Guideline E-22: Substitute Compliance Includes substitute compliance provisions to avoid duplicative and conflicting requirements in cross-border context Foreign Counterparties: FRFI trading with a foreign Covered Counterparty is deemed to be in compliance where the FRFI: Is required to comply with, and has complied with, the margin requirements imposed on the foreign Covered Counterparty by a foreign jurisdiction and Has documentary evidence that the foreign margin requirements are comparable to BCBS-10SCO 12

Guideline E-22: Substitute Compliance Foreign Branches: a foreign bank or insurance branch operating in Canada is deemed to be in compliance with E-22 where the branch: Is required to comply with, and has complied with, the margin requirements of the foreign jurisdiction under whose laws the branch is established and Has documentary evidence that the foreign margin requirements are comparable to BCBS-10SCO FRFIs are required to consult with OSFI regarding their documentary evidence and substitute compliance determinations 13

95-401: Substitute Compliance Also includes substitute compliance provisions to avoid duplicative requirements Covered entities that comply with Guideline E-22 do not need to comply with 95-401 Foreign Regulation: Will assess equivalency of rules of foreign jurisdictions; if deemed equivalent, compliance with those rules will relieve covered entity from complying with 95-401 14

Guideline E-22: Variation Margin Full amount necessary to fully collateralize the mark-to-market exposure of the non-centrally cleared derivatives must be exchanged Subject to a minimum transfer amount (MTA) for all margin transfers (combined VM and IM) of no more than $750,000 Should be subject to a single, legally enforceable netting agreement Where a netting agreement is not in place, VM generally must be exchanged on a gross basis VM calculated and called within 2 business days of trade execution; thereafter, VM calculated and called daily VM exchanged (posted/received) on or before 2nd business day after call To address valuation uncertainty, parties must have dispute resolution procedures in place 15

Guideline E-22: Netting Agreement Netting agreement deemed legally enforceable if the following conditions are met by Covered FRFIs: Written agreement creates single legal obligation, covering all transactions subject to netting; one obligation to pay or receive based on net sum of the positive and negative mark-to-market values of all transactions if counterparty fails to perform because of default, bankruptcy, liquidation or similar circumstances Conduct sufficient legal review and have well-founded legal basis to verify that courts would find the exposure to be the net amount under the laws of all relevant jurisdictions Procedures in place to ensure continuing enforceability No walkway clause (non-defaulting counterparty must pay if defaulter is a net creditor) Must maintain all required documentation in their files 16

Guideline E-22: Initial Margin Required amount of IM may be calculated by reference to either a quantitative portfolio margin model or a standardised margin schedule Choice between model- and schedule-based calculations must, unless a counterparty otherwise requires, be made consistently over time for transactions within the same well defined asset class IM calculated and called within 2 business days of trade execution; thereafter, IM calculated and called daily IM exchanged (posted and received) on or before 2nd business day after call Covered FRFIs must have dispute resolution procedures in place IM exchanged on a gross basis 17

Guideline E-22: Treatment of Initial Margin No re-hypothecation of IM; IM can be held in deposit account of custodian in name of posting party IM to be held such that: It is immediately available (i.e., as soon as legally possible) to the collecting party in the event of a counterparty s default and It is subject to arrangements that protect the posting party in the event that the collecting party enters bankruptcy 18

Guideline E-22: Initial Margin Threshold Exchange of IM is subject to a threshold not to exceed $75 million Also subject to the same MTA as VM Threshold is applied at the level of the consolidated group and is based on all non-centrally cleared derivatives between the two consolidated groups When a Covered FRFI transacts with a Covered Counterparty subject to a different IM threshold in its home jurisdiction (and the Covered Counterparty is from a jurisdiction in which the BCBS-IOSCO margin requirements have been implemented and the conditions satisfied), Covered FRFIs can use the IM threshold applicable to the Covered Counterparty 19

Guideline E-22: Eligible Collateral Eligible Collateral for VM and IM: Cash and gold Debt securities rated At least BB- when issued by sovereigns or certain public sector entities At least BBB- when issued by other entities (including banks and securities firms) or At least A-3/P-3 for short-term debt instruments Unrated senior bank debt securities listed on recognized exchange that meet certain conditions Equities, including convertible bonds, included in a main index or listed on a recognized exchange Mutual funds and UCITS if a price is publicly quoted daily it is limited to investing in the above instruments 20

Guideline E-22: Haircuts Margin must be haircutted to account for potential changes in value of the collateral; may be computed using internal model that meets the Guideline requirements Cash VM is not subject to the additional haircut when the currency of the asset differs from the currency of collateral Non-cash VM exchanged in a currency other than the ones agreed in the relevant contract is subject to additional haircut when currency of the asset differs from currency of the collateral; all other non-cash VM not subject to this additional haircut IM exchanged in currency other than the termination currency not subject to additional haircut when currency of the asset differs from currency of the collateral; all other IM subject to additional haircut 21

Guideline E-22: Phase-in Timeline Variation Margin phase-in (FRFIs and Covered Entities meet Condition) C$5 trillion All others September 1, 2016 March 1, 2017 September 1, 2017 September 1, 2018 September 1, 2019 September 1, 2020 C$5 trillion C$3.75 trillion C$2.5 trillion C$1.25 trillion Initial Margin phase-in (FRFIs and Covered Entities meet Condition) All others 22

Contact Us BLG is ranked as the NUMBER ONE LAW FIRM IN CANADA FOR DERIVATIVES (Derivatives Weekly) CANADA LAW FIRM OF THE YEAR (2014, 2015 and 2016 GlobalCapital Americas Derivatives Awards) If you have any questions or require further information, please do not hesitate to contact: Carol E. Derk National Leader, Derivatives 416.367.6181 cderk@blg.com Julie Mansi Partner 416.367.6224 jmansi@blg.com