The Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Excluded Activities and Prohibitions) Order 2014
In accordance with section 142Z of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, a draft of this Order has been laid before Parliament and approved by a resolution of each House of Parliament.
PART 1GENERAL
Citation, commencement and interpretation1.
(1)
This Order may be cited as the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Excluded Activities and Prohibitions) Order 2014.
(2)
This article, articles 2 and 3 and the Schedule to this Order come into force on 1st January 2015.
(3)
The other provisions of this Order come into force on 1st January 2019.
(4)
In this Order—
“the Act” means the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000;
“alternative investment fund manager” means an AIFM within the meaning of Article 4(1)(b) of the Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2011 on alternative investment fund managers;
“commodity” means any goods of a fungible nature that are capable of being delivered including metals and their ores and alloys, agricultural products, and energy such as electricity;
“conduit vehicle” of a ring-fenced body means an undertaking which satisfies the conditions set out in article 17(2) for the relevant financial institution described as D;
“correspondent banking” means an arrangement between two credit institutions pursuant to which one credit institution provides payment services to the clients of the other credit institution on behalf of that credit institution;
“covered bond vehicle” means a body corporate, partnership or unincorporated association—
(a)
which is a party to a capital market arrangement, or a transaction in pursuance of a capital market arrangement, and
(b)
whose business consists (apart from incidental activities) only of—
- (i)
providing guarantees, and
- (ii)
acquiring, owning and managing assets directly or indirectly forming the whole or part of the security for a capital market arrangement;
“credit institution” has the meaning given in Article 4.1(1) of the prudential requirements regulation;
“default risk”, in relation to a ring-fenced body, means the risk that—
(a)
one or more persons will default under a transaction with a ring-fenced body or with a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body or will become unlikely, unwilling or unable to pay or repay sums owing at law or in equity to the ring-fenced body or to a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body,
(b)
an obligation to pay or repay sums owing at law or in equity to the ring-fenced body or to a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body will be restructured so as to reduce or postpone the payments due as principal, interest or fees resulting in a loss to the ring-fenced body or to its subsidiary undertaking, or
(c)
the value of any security or collateral taken by the ring-fenced body or a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body in connection with one or more transactions entered into by the ring-fenced body or its subsidiary undertaking will be insufficient to meet the obligations of the counterparty to the transaction when the security is enforced or the collateral is sold;
and for the purposes of paragraph (b), “restructuring” includes restructuring through a voluntary arrangement made with creditors, by court order or through the exercise of powers under the Banking Act 2009 or in equivalent legislation in other countries)
“derivative instrument” includes any of the instruments listed in paragraphs (4) to (10) of Section C of Annex 1 to the markets in financial instruments directive;
“exposure” means—
(a)
an asset referred to in Part Three, Title II, Chapter 2 of the prudential requirements regulation, or
(b)
without applying the risk weights or degrees of risk set out in the prudential requirements regulation;
“financial holding company” means a financial institution which is not a mixed financial holding company, the subsidiary undertakings of which are either exclusively or mainly credit institutions, investment firms or financial institutions and which has at least one subsidiary undertaking which is a credit institution or investment firm, and for the purposes of this definition, a financial institution is an undertaking other than a credit institution, the principal activity of which is to acquire holdings or to pursue one or more of the activities listed in points 2 to 12 and 15 of Annex I to the credit institutions directive;
“financial institution exposure” means an exposure to a relevant financial institution or an exposure to securities or other financial instruments issued by a relevant financial institution, but does not include an exposure where the sole or main purpose for which the ring-fenced body incurs the exposure to the relevant financial institution is to provide for—
(a)
the safeguarding and administration of assets of the ring-fenced body by that financial institution, or
(b)
client money or client assets to be held for the ring-fenced body by that relevant financial institution;
“global systemically important insurer” means an insurance undertaking, third country insurance undertaking, reinsurance undertaking or third country reinsurance undertaking which is included on the list of global systemically important insurers published by the Financial Stability Board on 18 July 2013, or on any updated version of that list or supplementary list of such undertakings published by the Financial Stability Board;
“interest rate swap” has the meaning given in article 10(2)(c);
“liquid assets” means assets which qualify towards the liquidity coverage requirement provided for in Article 412 of the prudential requirements regulation as further specified in delegated acts adopted by the European Commission under Article 460 of that regulation;
“liquidity risk” means the risk that the ring-fenced body does not have, or is unable to obtain, sufficient financial resources to enable it to meet its financial obligations as they fall due;
“own funds” means own funds as defined in Article 4.1(118) of the prudential requirements regulation;
“payment exposures” means—
(a)
in the case of foreign exchange transactions, exposures incurred in the ordinary course of settlement;
(b)
in the case of transactions for the purchase or sale of securities, exposures incurred in the ordinary course of settlement;
(c)
exposures arising from the provision of money transmission including—
- (i)
the execution of payment services,
- (ii)
clearing and settlement in any currency, and
- (iii)
correspondent banking; and
(d)
“reinsurance undertaking” has the meaning given in article 13(4) of the solvency II directive;
“relevant financial institution” has the meaning given in article 2;
“securitisation undertaking” has the meaning given in article 3(1)(a);
“security interest” means any legal or equitable interest created or otherwise arising by way of security including—
(a)
a pledge,
(b)
a mortgage,
(c)
a fixed charge,
(d)
a floating charge,
(e)
a lien;
“sell”, in relation to any investment, includes disposing of the investment for valuable consideration, and for these purposes “disposing of” includes—
(a)
in the case of an investment consisting of rights under a contract—
- (i)
surrendering, assigning or converting those rights, or
- (ii)
assuming the corresponding liabilities under the contract,
(b)
in the case of an investment consisting of other arrangements, assuming the corresponding liabilities under the arrangements,
(c)
in the case of any other investment, issuing or creating the investment or granting the rights or interests of which it consists;
“shares” include any investment of the kind specified by article 76 of the Regulated Activities Order 2001;
“sponsored structured finance vehicle” means a structured finance vehicle which satisfies the conditions in article 3(2);
“structured finance vehicle” means a securitisation undertaking or a covered bond vehicle;
“third country insurance undertaking” has the meaning given in Article 13(3) of the solvency II directive;
“third country reinsurance undertaking” has the meaning given in Article 13(6) of the solvency II directive;
“title transfer collateral arrangement” means an agreement or arrangement, including a repurchase agreement, evidenced in writing, where—
(a)
the collateral provider transfers legal and beneficial ownership in the collateral to a collateral-taker on terms that when the relevant financial obligations are discharged the collateral-taker must transfer legal and beneficial ownership of the collateral (or equivalent collateral) to the collateral provider, and
(b)
the purpose of the agreement or arrangement is to secure or otherwise cover the relevant financial obligations owed to the collateral-taker;
“UCITS” has the meaning given in Article 1.2 of the UCITS directive;
“undertaking” includes a company, body corporate, partnership or unincorporated association.
Relevant financial institution2.
(1)
For the purposes of this Order, a “relevant financial institution” is an institution which falls within one of the classes listed in paragraph (2), and which is not within one of the exceptions set out in paragraph (3).
(2)
The classes are—
(a)
credit institutions;
(b)
investment firms;
(c)
structured finance vehicles;
(d)
global systemically important insurers;
(e)
UCITS (wherever established) and alternative investment funds;
(f)
management companies or alternative investment fund managers; and
(g)
financial holding companies and mixed financial holding companies.
(3)
The exceptions are—
(a)
ring-fenced bodies;
(b)
building societies;
(c)
bodies corporate—
(i)
whose purpose, or principal purpose, is that of making loans which are secured on residential property and which are funded substantially by their members, and
(ii)
which are incorporated under the law of an EEA state other than the United Kingdom;
(d)
credit unions and other institutions referred to in Article 2.5 of the credit institutions directive (other than investment firms);
(e)
(f)
(g)
(i)
is not permitted to carry on any excluded activities (and for these purposes “excluded activities” do not include anything which does not fall within the definition of excluded activities in relation to a ring-fenced body by virtue of articles 4 to 12 of this Order) or
(ii)
to do anything that a ring-fenced body is prohibited from doing under articles 14 to 20 of this Order,
by reason of requirements, limitations or other conditions imposed on the credit institution by the FCA or the PRA or (in the case of an EEA firm) by its home state regulator; or by EU law or the national law to which the credit institution is subject;
(h)
each of the institutions listed in the Schedule to this Order.
Securitisation companies and structured finance vehicles: definitions3.
(1)
In this Order—
(a)
“securitisation undertaking” means—
(i)
an asset holding company,
(ii)
a commercial paper funded company,
(iii)
an intermediate borrowing company,
(iv)
a note-issuing company, or
(v)
a warehouse company; and
(b)
(i)
“company” includes any body corporate, partnership or unincorporated association, and
(ii)
the requirements in section 83(3)(b) of the Finance Act 2005 and regulation 5(3) of the Taxation of Securitisation Companies Regulations 2006 shall not apply.
(2)
For the purposes of this Order, a structured finance vehicle is a sponsored structured finance vehicle of a ring-fenced body where the only assets held by the structured finance vehicle consist of any of—
(a)
money provided by the ring-fenced body or a subsidiary of the ring-fenced body;
(b)
assets, or an interest in assets, created by, or otherwise originated by, or comprising claims against, any one or more of the following—
(i)
the ring-fenced body,
(ii)
a securitisation undertaking, provided that the only assets held by the securitisation undertaking are assets created or otherwise originated by the ring-fenced body or any of its subsidiary undertakings, and assets within sub-paragraphs (c) to (h) below, or
(iii)
a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body, provided that the assets concerned are assets which the ring-fenced body itself could hold;
(c)
liquid assets, investments or facilities acquired by or made available to the structured finance vehicle to enable it to limit the extent to which its business may be adversely affected by any of the factors referred to in article 6(2);
(d)
sums lent by the structured finance vehicle in connection with a capital market arrangement;
(e)
rights arising under derivative instruments entered into with any person for the purpose of the protection of the structured finance vehicle against any difference between any rate, index or price and any other rate, index or price;
(f)
rights arising under contracts with the ring-fenced body or with any other person for the provision of services to the structured finance vehicle;
(g)
rights arising under a contract with another sponsored structured finance vehicle of the ring-fenced body;
(h)
sums derived from any of the assets referred to in sub-paragraphs (a) to (g) above, including rights in relation to any current account, payment account or deposit account to which such sums are credited or paid.
PART 2EXCLUDED ACTIVITIES AND EXCEPTIONS
Excluded activities: dealing in investments as principal4.
The activity of dealing in investments as principal described in article 14 of the Regulated Activities Order 2001 is an excluded activity even where it is not a regulated activity by virtue of articles 15, 19 or 20 of that Order, except where it is carried on in accordance with any of articles 6 to 12 of this Order.
Excluded activities: commodities trading5.
(1)
Dealing in commodities is an excluded activity, except where it is carried on in accordance with this article, or any of articles 6, 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12.
(2)
A ring-fenced body may deal in commodities where the commodities in question are required for its own use or consumption or for use or consumption by a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body.
(3)
A ring-fenced body may deal in commodities in order—
(a)
to take a security interest over those commodities or to realise a security interest held over those commodities (including by selling the commodities), or
(b)
to enter into a title transfer collateral arrangement in relation to commodities, or acquire and hold equivalent commodities in accordance with the arrangement or enforce that arrangement (including by selling the commodities which are subject to that arrangement).
(4)
For the purposes of this article, “dealing” means buying or selling commodities as principal.
Excluded activities: general exceptions6.
(1)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by entering into a transaction with another person (including a structured finance vehicle) if the sole or main purpose for which the ring-fenced body entered into the transaction, either by itself or in combination with other transactions, is that of limiting the extent to which—
(a)
the ring-fenced body,
(b)
any subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body,
(c)
any sponsored structured finance vehicle of the ring-fenced body,
(d)
any conduit vehicle of the ring-fenced body, or
(e)
any combination of the undertakings referred to in sub-paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d),
will be adversely affected by any of the factors specified in paragraph (2).
(2)
The factors specified in this paragraph are—
(a)
changes in interest rates, exchange rates or commodity prices;
(b)
changes in any index of retail prices or of residential or commercial property prices;
(c)
changes in any index of the price of shares;
(d)
default risk;
(e)
liquidity risk.
(3)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by—
(a)
buying, selling or subscribing for investments which are liquid assets for the purpose of managing its liquidity, or
(b)
buying or subscribing for investments to provide collateral in connection with a transaction falling within paragraph (1), or selling investments acquired for that purpose.
(4)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by—
(a)
acquiring shares, debentures or instruments giving an entitlement to shares or debentures from an issuer where—
(i)
the shares, debentures or instruments concerned are issued by the issuer, and
(ii)
the consideration for the acquisition is the release by the ring-fenced body or by a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body of part or all of a debt owed by the issuer or by another undertaking within the same group as that issuer to the ring-fenced body or the subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body;
(b)
dealing in—
(i)
debentures or instruments giving an entitlement to shares or debentures issued by the ring-fenced body or by a subsidiary of the ring-fenced body, or
(ii)
(c)
acquiring a debenture where—
(i)
the debenture is acquired from the issuer, and
(ii)
the debenture relates to any loan, credit, guarantee or other similar financial accommodation made by the ring-fenced body or a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body to the issuer or to an undertaking in the same group as the issuer;
(d)
acquiring shares in a company—
(i)
which is, or following such acquisition becomes, a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body, or
(ii)
(5)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by selling shares, debentures or instruments giving an entitlement to shares or debentures acquired or held by the ring-fenced body in accordance with paragraph (4)(a), (b) or (d).
(6)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by—
(a)
taking or granting a security interest over investments, or realising a security interest held over investments (including selling the investment over which the security is held), or
(b)
entering into a title transfer collateral arrangement in relation to investments, acquiring equivalent investments in accordance with the arrangement or enforcing the arrangement (including by selling the investments which are subject to that arrangement).
Excluded activities: securitisation and covered bonds7.
(1)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by selling investments to or buying investments from a sponsored structured finance vehicle of the ring-fenced body, or from a conduit vehicle of the ring-fenced body.
(2)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by acquiring any instrument creating or acknowledging indebtedness issued by one or more of its sponsored structured finance vehicles.
Excluded activities: central bank exemption8.
(1)
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity where—
(a)
it enters into a transaction with a central bank, or with a wholly owned subsidiary of a central bank, in the course of carrying on the activity specified in article 14 (dealing in investments as principal) of the Regulated Activities Order 2001, or which would fall within that activity if the transaction took place in the United Kingdom; or
(b)
it sells commodities to, or buys commodities from, a central bank, or a wholly owned subsidiary of a central bank.
(2)
For the purposes of this article—
(a)
an undertaking is to be regarded as wholly owned by a central bank at any time if at that time—
(i)
it is an undertaking of which no person other than the central bank or a nominee of the central bank is a member, or
(ii)
it is a wholly owned subsidiary of an undertaking within paragraph (i);
(b)
an undertaking (“A”) is a “subsidiary” of another undertaking (“B”) if B—
(i)
holds a majority of the voting rights in A,
(ii)
is a member of A and has the right to appoint or remove a majority of A’s directors, or
(iii)
is a member of A, and controls alone, pursuant to an agreement with other members, a majority of the voting rights in A;
(c)
A is a subsidiary of B if it is a subsidiary of an undertaking that is itself a subsidiary of B.
Excluded activities: derivatives9.
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity by entering into transactions with any one or more of its account holders if—
(a)
the transaction satisfies the requirements listed in article 10 or 11(1), (2), or (3), and
(b)
all the conditions set out in article 12 are satisfied.
Derivatives: forward contracts and swaps10.
(1)
The requirements listed in this article are that the transaction is—
(a)
a currency swap,
(b)
an interest rate swap, or
(c)
a forward contract relating to currencies or commodities, where the relevant contract specifies—
(i)
the description and amount of the currency or commodity concerned;
(ii)
the date when delivery will be made or when settlement will be made in cash; and
(iii)
the exchange rate or commodity price which will apply.
(2)
For the purposes of this article—
(a)
“currency swap” means a transaction under which—
(i)
one person (“A”) agrees with another person (“B”) that A will at a specified date pay to B a specified amount in one specified currency, and B will pay A that amount in another specified currency, calculated by reference to a specified exchange rate, and
(ii)
the amount concerned may consist of a specified principal amount and interest calculated at a specified fixed or floating rate;
(b)
“forward contract” means a contract for the sale of a commodity, currency or property of any description (including futures, whether or not traded on an exchange or trading venue) under which delivery is to be made at a future date and at a price agreed on when the contract is made;
(c)
“interest rate swap” means a transaction under which—
(i)
one person (“A”) agrees with another person (“B”) that A is liable to pay to B an amount equal to interest calculated by reference to an interest rate on a specified notional sum over a specified period, and that B is liable to pay to A an amount equal to interest calculated by reference to a different interest rate on that notional sum, and
(ii)
the interest rates in question are either specified (in the case of a fixed interest rate), or determined in relation to a specified reference rate (in the case of a floating interest rate);
(d)
“reference rate” means a foreign exchange or interest rate which is offered on an inter-bank market, or which is set out in an index published by any person who is not one of the parties to the contract;
(e)
“specified” means specified in the transaction agreement.
Derivatives: options and swaptions11.
(1)
The requirements listed in this paragraph are that—
(a)
the transaction is an option exercisable by a customer (“X”) of the ring-fenced body requiring the ring-fenced body to buy or sell foreign currency or commodities, and
(b)
the contract in which the option is granted specifies—
(i)
the currency or commodity concerned;
(ii)
the amount of currency or commodity which may be bought or sold under the option;
(iii)
a single date on which the option may be exercised (which must be no later than 3 years from the date on which the contract is entered into); and
(iv)
the exchange rate or commodity price which will apply to the transaction.
(2)
The requirements listed in this paragraph are that—
(a)
the transaction consists of a cap or floor (or both) under which—
(i)
in respect of a cap, the ring-fenced body must pay X an amount equal to A minus B (provided that amount is a positive number), where “A” is the interest payable in relation to a specified notional amount at the interest rate prevailing during the specified calculation period (“the floating interest rate”), and “B” is the interest payable on that notional amount at the interest rate specified in the agreement (“the fixed interest rate”), or
(ii)
in respect of a floor, X must pay the ring-fenced body an amount equal to C minus D (provided that amount is a positive number), where “C” is the interest payable in relation to a specified notional amount at the interest rate specified in the agreement (“the fixed interest rate”), and “D” is the interest payable in relation to that notional amount at the interest rate prevailing during the specified calculation period (“the floating interest rate”), and
(b)
the agreement relating to the cap or floor specifies—
(i)
the notional amounts and the fixed and floating interest rates referred to in sub-paragraph (a)(i) and (ii); and
(ii)
the calculation period.
(3)
The requirements listed in this paragraph are that—
(a)
the transaction consists of an option for the customer to enter into an interest rate swap;
(b)
the agreement granting the option specifies—
(i)
a single date on which the option may be exercised (which must be no later than 5 years from the date on which the agreement is entered into);
(ii)
the terms which will apply to the interest rate swap, including the interest rates to which the swap applies; and
(iii)
the notional amount on which the swap payments are to be calculated.
Derivatives: general conditions12.
(1)
The conditions in this article are that—
(a)
the position risk requirement attributable—
(i)
to all transactions entered into which meet the conditions in articles 9 to 11, and
(ii)
to any investments traded by the ring-fenced body under article 6(1) for the purpose of hedging risks arising in relation to the transactions referred to in paragraph (i) (provided that those investments are hedged separately from any other investments entered into by the ring-fenced body under article 6(1)),
is at all times less than 0.5% of the ring-fenced body’s own funds;
(b)
the sum of the position risk requirements attributable to each individual transaction with an account holder under articles 9 to 11 is at all times less than 25% of the credit risk capital requirement of the ring-fenced body; and in calculating the sum of the position risk requirements, no position risk requirement may be set off against any other position risk requirement;
(c)
the sum of the position risk requirements attributable to the transactions entered into by the ring-fenced body under article 11 is at all times less than 20% of the sum of the position risk requirements attributable to the transactions entered into by the ring-fenced body under articles 9 to 11;
(d)
(e)
at the time the transaction is entered into, the investments traded under article 10 or 11 fall within a class of derivatives that are traded on—
(i)
a trading venue in the EEA, or
(ii)
(2)
For the purposes of this article—
(a)
the position risk requirement shall be calculated in accordance with Chapter 2 of Title IV of Part Three of the prudential requirements regulation as if the positions associated with those investments are all held in the trading book of the ring-fenced body,
(b)
“credit risk capital requirement” means the own funds requirements set out in Article 92.3(a) of the prudential requirements regulation, excluding the risk-weighted exposure amounts determined in accordance with Title II of Part Three of that regulation for counterparty risk arising from positions which are not included in the trading book;
(c)
(d)
“position risk requirement” means the capital requirements for position risk calculated in accordance with Chapter 2 of Title IV of Part Three of the prudential requirements regulation; and
(e)
“trading book” has the meaning given in Article 4.1(86) of the prudential requirements regulation.
PART 3PROHIBITIONS AND EXCEPTIONS
Prohibitions: inter-bank payment systems13.
(1)
A ring-fenced body (“A”) is prohibited from entering into any transaction enabling it to use services provided through an inter-bank payment system unless—
(a)
A is a direct participant in the system, or
(b)
where A is not a direct participant in the system, at least one of the conditions set out in paragraph (2) is satisfied.
(2)
The conditions set out in this paragraph are—
(a)
the intermediary through which A accesses the services provided by the inter-bank payment system is another ring-fenced body which—
(i)
is a direct participant in that payment system, and
(ii)
is a member of the same group as A;
(b)
A is not eligible to become a direct participant in the inter-bank payment system concerned under the rules governing that payment system;
(c)
should the intermediary through which A accesses the services of the inter-bank payment system concerned cease to be able to provide access to those services, A would be able to make the payments it proposes to make through that inter-bank payment system—
(i)
through another intermediary, or
(ii)
through another inter-bank payment system or by other means; or
(d)
the PRA has, following an application made by A in accordance with paragraph (3), granted permission in accordance with paragraph (4) for A to access the services provided by the inter-bank payment system in question through the intermediary proposed by A.
(3)
An application by A for permission under paragraph (2)(d) must be made in such manner and accompanied by such information as the PRA may direct.
(4)
The PRA may only grant permission under paragraph (2)(d)—
(a)
where it considers that the ring-fenced body needs to be able to access the services provided by the inter-bank payment system in question due to exceptional circumstances; and
(b)
after it has published a statement under paragraph (9).
(5)
The PRA shall keep any permission granted under paragraph (2)(d) under review, and shall withdraw that permission if it considers that the exceptional circumstances in question no longer apply, after following the procedure set out in paragraphs (6) and (7).
(6)
If the PRA proposes—
(a)
to refuse an application for permission under paragraph (2)(d), or
(b)
to withdraw a permission granted under paragraph (2)(d),
it must give the ring-fenced body a warning notice, stating why it considers that the exceptional circumstances do not apply (if sub-paragraph (a) applies), or no longer apply (if sub-paragraph (b) applies).
(7)
If the PRA has decided, after consideration of any representations received in writing from the ring-fenced body in response to the warning notice—
(a)
to refuse an application for permission under paragraph (2)(d), or
(b)
to withdraw permission granted under paragraph (2)(d),
it must give the ring-fenced body a decision notice.
(8)
If the PRA decides—
(a)
to refuse an application for permission under paragraph (2)(d), or
(b)
to withdraw permission granted under paragraph (2)(d),
the ring-fenced body may refer the matter to the Tribunal, and Part 9 of the Act applies to any proceedings before the Tribunal in relation to the matter.
(9)
The PRA must, before 1st July 2019, publish a statement containing guidance on what is meant by “exceptional circumstances” for the purposes of granting a permission under paragraph (2)(d) in a way appearing to the PRA to be best calculated to bring it to the attention of the public.
(10)
Part 26 of the Act applies to any notices given by the PRA under this article.
(11)
In this article—
“direct participant” means an institution which is able to provide services for the purpose of enabling the transfer of funds using the inter-bank payment system as a result of an arrangement made between the institution and the operator of the payment system;
(a)
(b)
arrangements made by A with another credit institution for correspondent banking;
(c)
arrangements made to facilitate the physical transfer of money between financial institutions, including the Note Circulation Scheme set up by the Bank of England.
Prohibitions: financial institution exposures14.
(1)
A ring-fenced body is prohibited from incurring a financial institution exposure unless at least one of the exemptions set out in paragraphs (2) to (6) or in articles 15 to 19 applies, and, for the avoidance of doubt, provided that one of these exemptions applies in relation to a particular exposure, it is irrelevant whether the conditions for any other exemption are satisfied by that exposure.
(2)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure if the sole or main purpose of the transaction giving rise to the exposure (by itself or in combination with other transactions) is to limit the extent to which—
(a)
the ring-fenced body,
(b)
any subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body,
(c)
any sponsored structured finance vehicle of the ring-fenced body,
(d)
any conduit vehicle of the ring-fenced body, or
(e)
any combination of the undertakings referred to in sub-paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d),
will be adversely affected by any of the factors specified in paragraph (3).
(3)
The specified factors are—
(a)
changes in interest rates, exchange rates or commodity prices;
(b)
changes in any index of retail prices or of residential or commercial property prices;
(c)
changes in any index of the price of shares;
(d)
default risk.
(4)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure where the relevant financial institution concerned is a member of the same group as the ring-fenced body, provided that—
(a)
the exposure concerned is not prohibited under rules made by the FCA or the PRA under the Act; and
(b)
the exposure arises as a result of—
(i)
a commercial transaction conducted on arm’s length terms, or
(ii)
a holding of shares or other securities issued by a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body.
(5)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure in the course of buying, selling or subscribing for investments for the purposes of a transaction falling within paragraph (2).
(6)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure where—
(a)
the exposure concerned is a payment exposure, and
(b)
the ring-fenced body has complied with any rules made or requirements imposed by the FCA or the PRA under the Act in relation to payment exposures.
Financial institutions exposures: trade finance15.
(1)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure provided that both the following conditions are satisfied—
(a)
the purpose of the transaction giving rise to the exposure is—
(i)
to provide finance or make a payment in connection with the supply of goods or services by or to a person or an undertaking which is not a relevant financial institution; or
(ii)
to guarantee or otherwise provide an indemnity or security for the obligations of a customer of the ring-fenced body or a third party in connection with the supply of goods or services by or to a person or an undertaking which is not a relevant financial institution;
(b)
the ring-fenced body enters into an agreement to give effect to the transaction which specifies—
(i)
the supplies of goods or services to which the transaction relates, and
(ii)
the maximum payments which the ring-fenced body may be required to make under the agreement.
(2)
For the purpose of paragraph (1)(b)(ii), the maximum payments payable under the agreement may be expressed—
(a)
as a defined sum, or
(b)
as a multiple of an average price of a commodity, where the average price is determined by reference to prices quoted on a specified index of prices for that commodity over a specified period, and for these purposes “specified” means specified in the agreement.
Financial institutions exposure: securitisation and covered bonds16.
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure to any sponsored structured finance vehicle of that ring-fenced body.
Financial institution exposures: conduit lending17.
(1)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure to a relevant financial institution (“A”) where—
(a)
the only business of A (apart from incidental activities) is to acquire, hold and manage assets from or for an undertaking which is not a relevant financial institution (“B”); and
(b)
all or part of A’s assets are being used to form the whole or part of the security for a loan or any other finance provided to A by the ring-fenced body or by a conduit vehicle of the ring-fenced body for the benefit of B.
(2)
A ring-fenced body (“C”) may incur a financial institution exposure to a relevant financial institution (“D”) where—
(a)
D was established by, or is operated for the benefit of, C; and
(b)
the only business of D (apart from incidental activities) is—
(i)
to acquire, hold and manage assets from or for C, or
(ii)
to make loans or provide other finance at the direction or on the advice of C using resources provided by C or raised in the financial markets to entities which are not relevant financial institutions, or to relevant financial institutions which satisfy the conditions in paragraph (1)(a) and (b).
Financial institution exposures: repo transactions18.
A ring-fenced body (“A”) may incur a financial institution exposure to a relevant financial institution (“B”) pursuant to an agreement with B—
(a)
for the transfer of its own assets to B on terms—
(i)
imposing an obligation on A to buy those assets, or assets of the same description, from B at one or more subsequent times; or
(ii)
imposing an obligation on B to transfer those assets, or assets of the same description, to A at one or more subsequent times;
(b)
for the transfer of liquid assets from B to A for the purpose of managing A’s liquidity risk on terms—
(i)
imposing an obligation on B to buy those assets, or assets of the same description from A at one or more subsequent times; or
(ii)
imposing an obligation on A to transfer those assets, or assets of the same description, to B at one or more subsequent times.
Financial institution exposures: ancillary exposures19.
(1)
Subject to any rules made by the FCA or the PRA under the Act, a ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure where the exposure concerned—
(a)
arises in any of the circumstances set out in paragraphs (2) to (5), or
(b)
is permitted under paragraph (6).
(2)
The exposure arises in consequence of the provision—
(a)
by the ring-fenced body of payment services to its customers in the United Kingdom or any other country;
(b)
by the ring-fenced body to the relevant financial institution of—
(i)
operational services, including in particular information technology, human resources or payment services, or
(ii)
services as a trustee or agent in connection with a syndicated loan to an undertaking which is not a relevant financial institution; or
(c)
to the ring-fenced body of services from a relevant financial institution which are ancillary to or facilitate—
(i)
the divestment or acquisition by the ring-fenced body of one or more of its subsidiaries or other assets,
(ii)
the continuing operation of a business, entity or assets which have been acquired by the ring-fenced body,
(iii)
an issue of securities by the ring-fenced body, by a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body or by a sponsored structured finance vehicle,
(iv)
the participation by the ring-fenced body in a syndicated loan to an undertaking which is not a relevant financial institution.
(3)
The exposure arises where—
(a)
the ring-fenced body is acting as distributor for a relevant financial institution in connection with the distribution of trade finance or other financial products or investments issued by or services provided by the relevant financial institution, or in respect of which that relevant financial institution is acting as distributor,
(b)
the relevant financial institution is acting as a distributor for the ring-fenced body in connection with the provision by the ring-fenced body of trade finance or other financial products or investments issued by or services provided by the ring-fenced body to or for the benefit of an entity which is not a relevant financial institution.
(4)
The exposure arises in consequence of guarantees, warranties, indemnities or covenants given to the ring-fenced body by a relevant financial institution as part of a permitted acquisition or disposal—
(a)
by the ring-fenced body, or
(b)
by a subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body,
and for the purposes of this paragraph “permitted” means that the acquisition or disposal is not prohibited under the Act, this Order, or any rules made by the FCA or the PRA under the Act.
(5)
The exposure arises in consequence—
(a)
of a breach of a duty owed by the relevant financial institution to the ring-fenced body, or
(b)
of the appointment of the ring-fenced body as executor of the estate of any person or of services provided by the ring-fenced body in that capacity.
(6)
A ring-fenced body may incur a financial institution exposure to a global systemically important insurer where the exposure concerned results from the purchase of insurance by the ring-fenced body for the benefit of the business, directors, officers, employees or other staff of the ring-fenced body or of any subsidiary undertaking of the ring-fenced body.
Prohibitions: Non-EEA branches and subsidiaries20.
(1)
A ring-fenced body must not—
(a)
maintain or establish a branch in any country or territory which is not an EEA member state, or
(b)
subject to paragraph (2), have a participating interest in any undertaking which is incorporated in or formed under the law of a country or territory which is not an EEA member state (a “non-EEA undertaking”).
(2)
A ring-fenced body may, subject to rules made by the PRA under the Act, have a participating interest in a non-EEA undertaking which is an ancillary services undertaking within the meaning of article 4.18 of the prudential requirements regulation, if that undertaking does not carry on any activities that would be regulated activities under the Act if carried on in the United Kingdom.
(3)
For the purposes of this article—
(a)
“branch” means a place of business that forms a legally dependent part of the ring-fenced body and conducts directly all or some of the operations inherent in its business;
(b)
Transitional provision21.
A ring-fenced body does not carry on an excluded activity or contravene a prohibition imposed by this Order by holding or selling any investments on or after 1st January 2019 provided that—
(a)
the investment in question was created or acquired by the ring-fenced body before 1st January 2019, and
(b)
the period remaining until the investment matures is less than two years at 1st January 2019.
SCHEDULE
1.
The European Union.
2.
The European Atomic Energy Community.
3.
The European Financial Stability Mechanism.
4.
The European Financial Stability Facility.
5.
The European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism.
6.
The International Monetary Fund.
7.
The Bank for International Settlements.
8.
The European Investment Bank.
9.
The European Investment Fund.
10.
The Council of Europe Development Bank.
11.
The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
12.
The International Finance Corporation.
13.
The African Development Bank.
14.
The Asian Development Bank.
15.
The Inter-American Development Bank.
16.
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
17.
The Islamic Development Bank.
18.
The International Finance Facility for Immunisation.
19.
The Caribbean Development Bank.
20.
The Nordic Development Bank.
21.
The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency.
This Order defines the circumstances in which ring-fenced bodies will be able to deal with investments as principal by providing for exceptions to the excluded activity set out in section 142D of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 in relation to the management by the ring-fenced body of its own risks or of its liquid assets or the provision of derivatives to its clients. The Order also imposes prohibitions on ring-fenced bodies under section 142E, which (with the exceptions provided for) limit the way in which a ring-fenced body may have access to clearing and settlement services provided by a recognised inter-bank payment system, restrict the exposures a ring-fenced body may have to relevant financial institutions, and ensure that a ring-fenced body may not have a subsidiary or branch in any country outside the EEA (other than operational subsidiaries which do not provide banking services).
Article 1 defines the terms used in the Order.
Article 2 defines relevant financial institution for the purposes of the Order.
Article 3 defines terms used in connection with securitisation companies and structured finance vehicles for the purposes of the Order.
Part 2 provides for an additional excluded activity (commodities trading), and sets out the circumstances in which ring-fenced bodies may engage in dealing in investments as principal, and commodities trading, as exceptions to the excluded activities.
Article 4 provides for additional circumstances in which the activity of dealing in investments as principal will be an excluded activity, clarifying the relationship between the excluded activity and the regulated activity of dealing in investments as principal. Under section 142D(2) the regulated activity of dealing in investments as principal, defined in article 14 of the Financial Services and Markets Act (Regulated Activities) Order 2001 (“the Regulated Activities Order”) (and subject to a number of exceptions which are set out in articles 15 to 20 of that Order) is an excluded activity. Article 4 ensures that dealing in investments as principal which falls within the scope of articles 15, 19 or 20 of the Regulated Activities Order 2001, and is not therefore a regulated activity, is made an excluded activity. Dealing in investments as principal which falls within the exemptions from the regulated activity set out in articles 17, 18 or 18A of the Regulated Activities Order 2001 will remain outside the scope of the excluded activity.
Article 5 provides that a ring-fenced body may not engage in commodities trading except in the circumstances set out in that article.
Article 6 provides for exceptions to the excluded activity of dealing with an investment as principal where the ring-fenced body is managing the risks associated with its business, including for example its interest rate risk, exchange rate risk, or liquidity risk (paragraphs (1) and (2)). The ring-fenced body is also permitted to deal in liquid assets or to provide collateral required for derivative transactions entered into as part of its risk management (paragraph (3)). Article 6(4) further permits a ring-fenced body to acquire investments in exchange for a loan write-off (subparagraph (a)), and to acquire debentures issued by itself, one of its subsidiaries or its parent undertaking (subparagraph (b)) (no exception is necessary to permit the ring-fenced body to deal with its own shares, as, by virtue of article 18A of the Regulated Activities Order 2001, this is not an excluded activity). It may also acquire debentures directly from an issuer where the issuer chooses to structure its borrowing in this way (paragraph (4)(c)), and to acquire shares in subsidiaries or companies in which it has a participating interest (paragraph (4)(d)). Paragraph (5) sets out the circumstances in which investments acquired under these provisions may be sold (debentures acquired under paragraph (4)(c) may not be sold – the ring-fenced body must hold them to maturity). Finally, Article 6(6) permits the ring-fenced body to use investments as security.
Article 7 permits a ring-fenced body to deal in investments as principal where the other party to the transaction is a structured finance vehicle sponsored by the ring-fenced body which satisfies the conditions set out in article 3(2). The ring-fenced body may also buy debentures issued by such a structured finance vehicle or by a conduit vehicle of the ring-fenced body.
Article 8 provides for an exception to the excluded activities of dealing in investments as principal and commodities trading where the ring-fenced body is entering into a transaction with a central bank or a wholly owned subsidiary of a central bank.
Articles 9 to 12 set out the conditions which must be satisfied by a ring-fenced body which wishes to deal in derivative instruments with its account holders.
Article 10 permits a ring-fenced body to sell currency and interest swaps, forward contracts (including futures) relating to currency, commodities or other property to its account holders.
Article 11 permits a ring-fenced body to sell certain options to its account holders, including interest rate caps and floors, and interest rate swaptions.
Article 12 sets out the conditions which must be satisfied by derivative transactions between a ring-fenced body and its account holders.
Part 3 imposes a number of prohibitions on ring-fenced bodies, and provides for exemptions to those prohibitions.
Article 13 sets out the circumstances in which a ring-fenced body may use services provided through an inter-bank payment system indirectly by an intermediary.
Articles 14 to 19 set out the circumstances in which a ring-fenced body is permitted to have an exposure to a relevant financial institution.
Article 14 permits exposures arising in relation to transactions entered into by the ring-fenced body for risk management purposes, intra-group transactions and payments exposures.
Article 15 permits exposures arising in relation to trade finance.
Article 16 permits a ring-fenced body to incur exposures to its own sponsored structured finance vehicle (which must satisfy the conditions set out in article 3(2)).
Article 17 permits a ring-fenced body to incur exposures for the purpose of conduit lending to the special purpose vehicle of an undertaking which is not itself a financial institution or to the ring-fenced body’s own special purpose vehicle.
Article 18 permits a ring-fenced body incur exposures arising in the course of repo transactions.
Article 19 permits a ring-fenced body to incur exposures to relevant financial institutions which are ancillary to the provision of the core services by the ring-fenced body.
Article 20 prohibits a ring-fenced body from having a branch or a subsidiary (other than a subsidiary which does not carry out any activities which would be regulated under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 if they were carried on in the UK) in a country or territory outside the EEA.
Article 21 makes transitional provision to ensure that a ring-fenced body is not required to divest itself of investments which have less than two years to maturity when this order comes into force.
An Impact Assessment of the effect of the Financial Services (Banking Reform) Act 2013, and the secondary legislation to be made under it (including this Order) on the costs of business and the voluntary sector has been prepared and is available on HM Treasury’s website (www.gov.uk/treasury) or from HM Treasury, 1 Horse Guards Road, London SW1A 2HQ and is annexed to the Explanatory Memorandum for this Order.