From 1 January 2016, EU financial institutions* established in the EU will be required under article 55 of the EU Banking Recovery and Resolution Directive (2014/59/EU) (BRRD), to include contractual terms in any agreements governed by the laws of non-EU Member States, which create certain payment liabilities specifying that those liabilities may be subject to bail-in under the BRRD. ‘Bail-in’ refers to powers exercisable by resolution authorities in the relevant EU Member States to rescue troubled EU banks by writing-down their debt or converting bonds into equity. The bail-in powers and corresponding obligation under article 55 BRRD have already become effective in certain Member States, such as the UK (although The UK’s article 55 BRRD implementation currently only applies to a limited scope of liabilities).

The rationale is to ensure counterparties contracting with EU financial institutions under third country law (i.e. not the law of an EU Member State), acknowledge and agree to the bail-in powers exercisable in the EU.

Generally speaking, the requirement will apply to all liabilities of EU financial institutions governed by the law of a third country and issued or entered into as at the date national law transposing the BRRD gives effect to the article 55 BRRD requirement (1 January 2016 at the latest, but, as in the UK, this may be earlier). This is subject to an exception for those liabilities set out in article 44(2) and 55(1)(b) BRRD which are broadly:

  • deposits protected by national guarantee schemes;
  • deposits that are held for natural persons, and micro, small and medium-sized enterprises and exceed the amount protected by national guarantee schemes;
  • secured liabilities (including covered bonds and liabilities secured by a charge, pledge, lien or collateral arrangements);
  • client assets or client money (including that held for UCITS or AIFs) and liabilities arising under fiduciary relationships;
  • liabilities to other regulated EU banks or CRR investment firms (unless intragroup) with an original maturity of less than 7 days;
  • liabilities to settlement finality systems, their operators or participants, and arising from the participation in such a system, with a remaining maturity of less than seven days
  • liabilities to employees (except variable remuneration such as bonuses);
  • liabilities to commercial trade creditors for goods or services critical to daily operations;
  • tax and social services liabilities (if these are preferred liabilities under the relevant Member State’s law); and
  • liabilities in relation to depositor protection schemes.

This is a very broad spectrum of payment liabilities. It includes any loan agreements, guarantees, swap arrangements and other similar facilities entered into by EU financial institutions and governed by a third country law.

Whilst other liabilities can be excluded from bail-in by a national resolution authority under exceptional circumstances on a case-by-case basis, this does not affect the scope of the article 55 BRRD requirement so is not considered further here. Additionally, whilst it is possible for national resolution authorities to exclude liabilities from article 55 BRRD where their bail-in powers can be exercised pursuant to the law of a third country or under a binding agreement with a third country, given the early stage of international development in this area, this is currently of very limited applicability.

Member States are required under the BRRD to implement the bail-in tool and contractual recognition requirements into national law by 1 January 2016. In the UK, bail-in came into force from January 2015; however, the full scope of the contractual recognition requirements in the PRA Rulebook and FCA Handbook do not come into effect until 1 January 2016 (currently the PRA Rulebook applies to Additional Tier 1 and Tier 2 instruments as well as unsecured liabilities).

The EBA has published final draft regulatory technical standards under article 55 BRRD listing the requirements of such contractual recognition provisions but example drafting has not been provided. Broadly (among other matters), the EBA requires express acknowledgement, agreement and consent by a counterparty that an EU financial institution’s liability to it may be subject to the exercise of write-down and conversion powers by the relevant resolution authority, together with a description of those powers as set out in national law and the potential effects in terms of liability under the agreement.

Various bodies are considering the contents of standard contractual recognition terms, including the Loan Market Association (LMA) in respect of loans. It is likely that as far as loan agreements are concerned, wording produced by the LMA will be adopted by the market. The LSTA (the Loan Syndications and Trading Association in the United States) has already published a provision to include in the US loans market.

In the capital markets sphere, the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) has published a model clause for use by UK-incorporated financial institutions for the issue of debt securities governed by New York Law: http://www.afme.eu/documents/AFME-Model-Clause-for-the-contractual-recognition-of-bail-in/.

In addition, the International Securities Lending Association (ISLA), International Capital Markets Association (ICMA) and International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA), are considering possible protocols in respect of securities lending, repo transaction and derivatives, respectively. Whilst the requirements of article 55 BRRD relate only to transactions entered into after 1 January 2016 (subject to early implementation in particular EU Member States, such as has occurred in the UK), it may not necessarily apply to ISDA, ISLA and ICMA master agreements, since any trades entered into after that date could amount to an amendment of the entire master agreement. One view is that this could trigger a retroactive application of contractual recognition requirements to all trades under the master agreement (including those entered into before that date). ISDA, ISLA and ICMA are currently looking into this.

Drafting for article 55 BRRD in the context of documentary letters of credit and other similar trade finance instruments will be problematic given the unilateral nature of these types of letter of credit and the lack of an express governing law clause.

In the UK, the PRA has transposed Article 55 BRRD into its rules which can be found in the Contractual Recognition of Bail-in Part of the PRA Rulebook. The PRA has phased-in the requirement, making it applicable for:

  • unsecured debt instruments, additional tier 1 instruments and tier 2 instruments (“phase 1” liabilities) from 19 February 2015; and
  • all other relevant liabilities under the scope of the rule, including among other things, trade finance, operational liabilities, liabilities to non-EU financial market infrastructures and uncovered corporate deposits (“phase 2” liabilities) from 1 January 2016.

The requirement applies neither to liabilities excluded from the scope of bail-in by the BRRD, nor to preferred deposits (of natural persons or micro, small or medium-sized enterprises).

On 25 November 2015, the PRA published a modification by consent which dis-applies Contractual Recognition of Bail-in rules 1.2 and 2.1 in circumstances where compliance with them in respect of a phase 2 liability is impracticable. The PRA intends to consult on amending the Contractual Recognition of Bail-in rules in this way. The modification is being provided to delay the rules’ application to phase 2 liabilities where impracticable while the consultation is being prepared and conducted. Firms wanting to take up this modification are instructed by the PRA to read the accompanying direction and then make a request to its Assessment and Monitoring Team. The modification is valid until the earlier of 30 June 2016, or when the relevant rules are amended or revoked.

We will produce a briefing note covering this topic in more detail in due course.

* By “financial institutions” we refer to the undertakings specified at Article 1(1)(a) – (d) BRRD