ISDA®
ISDA - INTERNATIONAL SWAPS AND
DERIVATIVES ASSOCIATION, INC.
NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release, Thursday,
July 15, 2010
For More Information, Please
Contact:
Cesaltine Gregorio, ISDA New York,
+1 212-901-6019, cgregorio@isda.org
Rebecca O'Neill, ISDA London, +44
203 088 3586, roneill@isda.org
ISDA Files Amicus Brief in Swedbank
v. Lehman
NEW YORK, Thursday, July 15, 2010 –The International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc.
(ISDA) today filed an amicus brief in the US
District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) in respect of the May 5, 2010 Bankruptcy Court judgment in
the case of Swedbank AB v. Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc.
In
the submission, ISDA offers its perspective on the history and purpose of the
financial contract “safe harbor” provisions of the Bankruptcy Code, and urges the
District Court—regardless of how it resolves this particular dispute—to reject
the unduly narrow reading of those provisions in the Bankruptcy Court.
“The narrow construction of the Bankruptcy Code endorsed by the Bankruptcy Court threatens to inject significant uncertainty and disruption into the financial markets,” said Katherine Darras, General Counsel, Americas, ISDA. “That is precisely the danger Congress sought to avoid when it enacted the safe-harbor provisions.”
According
to ISDA, the safe-harbor provisions should be read to mean exactly what they
say: the exercise of any contractual
right to set off payment amounts arising in connection with the termination or
liquidation of a swap agreement shall not be stayed, avoided, or otherwise
limited by operation of any provision of the Bankruptcy Code.
While
the ISDA brief does not take a position on whether the judgment of the Bankruptcy
Court in the specific dispute between these parties should be affirmed or
reversed, ISDA suggests that if the District Court affirms the bankruptcy
court’s judgment, it should limit the Bankruptcy Court’s decision to the particular
facts of this case—the restriction against setting off post-petition debts
against pre-petition claims where the setoff clause is silent as to this aspect
of mutuality.
The brief is available
on ISDA’s website, www.isda.org.
About ISDA
ISDA, which represents participants
in the privately negotiated derivatives industry, is among the world’s largest
global financial trade associations as measured by number of member firms. ISDA
was chartered in 1985, and today has over 820 member institutions from 57
countries on six continents. These members include most of the world’s major
institutions that deal in privately negotiated derivatives, as well as many of
the businesses, governmental entities and other end users that rely on
over-the-counter derivatives to manage efficiently the financial market risks
inherent in their core economic activities. Information about ISDA and
its activities is available on the Association's web site: www.isda.org.
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Association, Inc.