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s e le c t e d fr e n ch ba nki ng 2013 a n d fi n a n c i a l regu l at i ons CCLRF COMITÉ CONSULTATIF DE LA LÉGISLATION ET DE LA RÉGLEMENTATION FINANCIÈRES SELECTED FRENCH BANKING AND FINANCIAL REGULATIONS Updated 21 January 2013 The following English translation of the selected French Banking and Financial Regulations in force as at 21 January 2013 has been prepared by the Banque de France for information purpose only It is not binding in law CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................................... 9 THE COMPILATION OF “SELECTED FRENCH BANKING AND FINANCIAL REGULATIONS” ................... 9 1. TEXTS RELATING TO THE EXERCISE OF BANKING AND FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES ...................... 11 1.1. CONDITIONS OF EXERCISE OF BANKING AND FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES ........................................... 11 1.1.1. AUTHORISATION AND REVOCATION OF AUTHORISATION ..................................................... 11 1.1.1.1. Credit institutions ............................................................................................................................. 11 Regulation 96-13 of 20 December 1996, relating to the revocation of authorisation and the striking off of credit institutions ............................................................................................. 11 1.1.1.2. Investment firms other than portfolio management companies ....................................................... 13 Regulation 96-14 of 20 December 1996, relating to the revocation of authorisation and the striking off of investment firms other than portfolio management companies ....................... 13 Order of 2 July 2007 on investment firms other than portfolio management companies with a single manager ........................................................................................................................ 14 1.1.1.3. Payment institutions ......................................................................................................................... 14 Order of 29 October 2009 relating to the prudential regulation of payment institutions ...................... 14 1.1.1.4. Electronic money and electronic money institutions............................................................................. 25 Regulation 2002-13 of 21 November 2002, relating to electronic money and electronic money institutions .............................................................................................................................. 25 1.1.1.5 Associations and foundations............................................................................................................ 28 Order of 18 July 2012 relating to associations and foundations authorised to advance certain loans and implemented for the application of Articles R. 518-59 and R. 518-62 of the Monetary and Financial Code................................................................................................. 28 1.1.2. MINIMUM CAPITAL ............................................................................................................................. 28 1.1.2.1. Credit institutions ............................................................................................................................. 28 Regulation 92-14 of 23 December 1992, relating to the minimum capital of credit institutions .......... 28 1.1.2.2. Investment service providers............................................................................................................ 30 Regulation 96-15 of 20 December 1996, relating to the minimum capital of investment service providers ................................................................................................................................. 30 1.1.3. CHANGES IN THE SITUATION OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES ...................................................................... 31 Regulation 96-16 of 20 December 1996, relating to changes in the situation of credit institutions and of investment firms other than portfolio management companies ................ 31 1.1.4. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SINGLE MARKET .............................................................................. 35 1.1.4.1. Credit institutions ............................................................................................................................. 35 Regulation 92-12 of 23 December 1992, regarding the provision of banking services abroad by credit institutions and financial institutions having their registered office in France ............. 35 Regulation 92-13 of 23 December 1992, relating to the provision of banking services in France by institutions having their registered office in other Member States of the European Union ...................................................................................................................... 37 1.1.4.2. Investment service providers............................................................................................................ 39 Excerpt from Monetary and Financial Code: Articles R. 532-20 to R. 532-29, relating to the right of establishment and freedom to provide services for investment services providers in other States party to the European Economic Area Agreement ......................... 39 1.1.5. DEPOSIT GUARANTEES ...................................................................................................................... 42 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 3 Regulation 99-05 of 9 July 1999, relating to the guarantee of deposits and other repayable funds received by credit institutions having their headquarters in France or in the Principality of Monaco............................................................................................................ 42 Regulation 99-06 of 9 July 1999, relating to the resources and operation of the deposit guarantee fund ......................................................................................................................... 45 Regulation 99-07 of 9 July 1999, relating to the guarantee of deposits or other repayable funds received by the branches of credit institutions ........................................................................ 53 Order of 6 November 2012, relating to the total amount of contributions to the deposit guarantee fund ......................................................................................................................... 55 Order of 29 September 2010, relating to special contributions to the deposit guarantee fund .............. 56 1.1.6 SECURITIES GUARANTEES ................................................................................................................. 56 Regulation 99-14 of 23 September 1999, relating to the guarantee of securities .................................. 56 Regulation 99-15 of 23 September 1999, relating to the resources and operation of the securities guarantee scheme .................................................................................................... 59 Regulation 99-16 of 23 September 1999, relating to the guarantee of securities held on behalf of investors by a branch established on the territory of the French Republic and of the principality of monaco of a credit institution or investment firm having its headquarters in another country. ............................................................................................. 66 Order of 6 november 2012, relating to the total amount of contributions to the securities guarantee mechanism for 2012. .............................................................................................. 68 Order OF 6 NOVEMBER 2012 CONCERNING THE EXCEPTIONAL CONTRIBUTION TO THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE MECHANISM ............................................................... 69 1.1.7. GUARANTEES OF BANK GUARANTEES .......................................................................................... 69 Excerpt from Monetary and Financial Code: Articles D. 313-26 to D. 313-31, relating to the guarantees of bank guarantees................................................................................................. 69 Regulation 99-12 of 9 July 1999, relating to the conditions and time limits for compensation through the guarantee mechanism ........................................................................................... 70 Regulation 2000-06 of 6 September 2000, relating to the membership and resources of the guarantee mechanism .............................................................................................................. 71 1.1.8. INTERNAL AUDITING .......................................................................................................................... 74 Regulation 97-02 of 21 February 1997, relating to internal control in credit institutions and investment firms ...................................................................................................................... 74 Order of 13 December 2010 amending various regulatory requirements relative to the monitoring of the incomes perceived by the persons whose functions may have an impact on the risk profile of credit institutions and investment firms as well as various prudential provisions ............................................................................................................... 93 1.1.9. REPRESENTATIVE OFFICES ............................................................................................................... 94 Circular of 22 February 1990 as amended relative to the opening and functioning of representative offices of credit institutions ............................................................................. 94 Circular of 26 March 1999 as amended relative to the opening and functioning of representative offices of investment companies ...................................................................... 95 1.2. DETAILS OF OPERATIONS CARRIED OUT BY CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS ........................................................................................................................................................... 96 1.2.1. SETTLEMENT FINALITY IN PAYMENT AND SECURITIES SETTLEMENT SYSTEMS ............. 96 Excerpt from Monetary and Financial Code: Articles R. 330-1 to R. 330-3, adopted with a view to transposing Articles 6 and 10 of Directive 98/26/CE of the European Parliament and Council concerning settlement finality in payment and securities settlement systems .................................................................................................................................... 96 1.2.2. EQUITY PARTICIPATIONS .................................................................................................................. 96 Regulation 90-06 of 20 June 1990, relating to equity holdings in the capital of enterprises ................. 96 Regulation 98-04 of 7 December 1998, relating to equity interests taken by investment firms other than portfolio management companies and investment firms which have neither funds nor securities belonging to their customers and which only provide the 4 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 investment service mentioned in Article L. 321-1.1 OF the monetary and financiel code in existing or new undertakings ..................................................................................... 97 1.2.3. VIGILANCE VIS-A-VIS MONEY LAUNDERING .............................................................................. 98 Regulation 2002-01 of 18 April 2002, relating to obligations of vigilance with regard to cheques in order to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism ....................... 98 Order of 2 September 2009, implementing Article R.561-12 of the Monetary and Financial Code and defining the information relating to knowing the customer and the business relationship for the purposes of assessing the risks of money laundering and the financing of terrorism ........................................................................................................... 101 Order of 27 July 2011, relating to the list of equivalent third countries with respect to combating money laundering and the financing of terrorism referred to in 2°, section II of Article L. 561-9 of the Monetary and Financial Code .................................................. 102 1.2.4. NEGOTIABLE DEBT SECURITIES.................................................................................................... 102 Order of 13 February 1992, implementing Amended Decree n° 92–137 of 13 February 1992 and defining the mandatory references for financial documentation compiled by issuers of negotiable debt securities ..................................................................................... 102 Order of 31 December 1998, relating to the requirements that issuers of negotiable debt securities must comply with referred to in 2° to 10° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code............................................................................................... 103 Order of 16 February 2005 implementing Article 1, Section III of Decree 92-137 of 13 February 1992 as amended on the terms and conditions for the issuance of negotiable debt securities by investment firms, credit institutions and the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations ....................................................................................................................... 104 1.2.5. CLEARING OF CHEQUES .................................................................................................................. 105 Regulation 2001-04 of 29 october 2001, relating to cheque clearing ................................................. 105 1.2.6. NON BANKING ACTIVITIES OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS ........................................................... 106 Regulation 86–21 of 24 November 1986, relating to the exercise of non banking activities ............. 106 1.2.7. CREDIT OPERATIONS AND ACTIVITIES OTHER THAN INVESTMENT SERVICES OF INVESTMENT FIRMS ................................................................................................................................... 106 Regulation 98–05 of 7 December 1998, relating to the credit operations of investment firms .......... 106 Order of 5 September 2007 relative to activities other than investment services and related services that may be carried out by investment companies other than portfolio management companies....................................................................................................... 107 1.2.8. SEGREGATION OF FUNDS OF INVESTMENT FIRMS’ CUSTOMERS ........................................ 108 Order of 2 July 2007 on the segregation of funds of investment firms’ customers ............................ 108 1.2.9. INTERBANK MARKET ....................................................................................................................... 110 Regulation n° 85-17 of 17 December 1985, relating to the interbank market .................................... 110 1.3. MANAGEMENT STANDARDS FOR CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS .................... 111 1.3.1. OWN FUNDS ........................................................................................................................................ 111 Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990, relating to own funds ........................................................... 111 1.3.2. CAPITAL ADEQUACY ....................................................................................................................... 118 Regulation 97-04 of 21 February 1997, relating to the management standards applicable to investment firms other than portfolio management companies ............................................ 118 Order of 20 February 2007 relating to capital requirements for credit institutions and investment firms ................................................................................................................... 119 1.3.3. OWN FUNDS AND PERMANENT CAPITAL RATIO ...................................................................... 259 Order of 2 July 2007 on minimum capital, own funds and internal control of market undertakings ......................................................................................................................... 259 1.3.4. SOLVENCY .......................................................................................................................................... 260 Regulation 91-05 of 15 February 1991, relating to the solvency ratio ............................................... 260 Regulation 93-05 of 21 December 1993, on supervising large exposures .......................................... 268 1.3.5. LIQUIDITY ........................................................................................................................................... 273 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 5 Order of 5 May 2009 on the Identification, Measurement, management and control of Liquidity Risk ....................................................................................................................................... 273 1.3.6. LIMITS ON INTERBANK RISKS ........................................................................................................ 283 Regulation 90-07 of 20 June 1990, relating to the monitoring of interbank risks. .............................. 283 Regulation 99-10 of 9 July 1999, relating to Mortgage and Public Loan Companies and home loan companIES .................................................................................................................... 284 2. ACCOUNTING REGULATIONS FOR CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS ............287 2.1. ORGANISATION OF THE ACCOUNTING SYSTEM , PREPARATION AND PUBLICATION OF THE ACCOUNTS ........................................................................................................................................ 287 Regulation 91-01 of 16 January 1991, relating to the preparation and publication of the annual individual accounts of credit institutions............................................................................... 287 Regulation 91–03 of 16 January 1991, relating to the preparation and publication of the quarterly financial statements, and to the individual and consolidated statement of half-year operations and results of credit institutions and securities houses ......................... 312 Regulation 97-03 of 21 February 1997, relating to the preparation and publication of the accounts of investment firms other than portfolio management companies ......................... 316 Regulation 2002-02 of 12 December 2002 of the Comité de la réglementation comptable, relating to the audit of investment firms by a sole auditor .................................................... 319 Regulation 2002-04 of 12 December 2002 of the Comité de la réglementation comptable, relating to the individual financial statements of investment firms....................................... 319 Regulation 2002-05 of 12 December 2002 of the Comité de la réglementation comptable, relating to the consolidated financial statements of investment firms ................................... 341 Regulation 2009-08 of 3 december 2009 of the Comité de la Réglementation Comptable, relating to the accounts of payment institutions .................................................................... 355 2.2. CONSOLIDATION RULES .......................................................................................................................... 356 Regulation 99-07 of 24 November 1999 of the Comité de la Réglementation Comptable, relating to the consolidation rules ......................................................................................... 356 Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000, relating to prudential supervision on a consolidated basis....................................................................................................................................... 394 2.3. ACCOUNTING RULES ................................................................................................................................ 403 Regulation 88-02 of 22 February 1988, relating to the accounting treatment of interest-rate financial futures operations ................................................................................................... 403 Regulation 89-01 of 22 June 1989, relating to the accounting treatment of foreign currency operations .............................................................................................................................. 404 Regulation 89-07 of 26 July 1989, relating to the accounting treatment of asset disposal or securitization transactions ..................................................................................................... 406 Regulation 90-01 of 23 February 1990, relating to the accounting treatment of securities operations .............................................................................................................................. 409 Regulation 2005-01 of 3 November 2005 of the Comité de la réglementation comptable relating to the accounting treatment of securities .................................................................. 416 Regulation 90-15 of 18 December 1990, relating to the accounting treatment of interest-rate or currency swaps ...................................................................................................................... 416 Regulation 93-06 of 21 December 1993, relating to the accounting treatment of securitization operations .............................................................................................................................. 419 Regulation 2002-03 of 12 December 2002 of the Comité de la réglementation comptable, relating to the accounting treatment of credit risk ................................................................. 421 APPLICATION FORMS FOR BANKING LICENCES AND OTHER AUTHORISATIONS ......................427 CHRONOLOGICAL INDEX ......................................................................................................................431 6 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 INTRODUCTION THE COMPILATION OF “SELECTED FRENCH BANKING AND FINANCIAL REGULATIONS” The Monetary and Financial Code (code monétaire et financier) was published for the first time in 2000. This Code includes the main legal provisions (laws and decrees) relating to the currency as well as to banking and financial activities. Its English translation is available at: http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/Traductions/en-English/Legifrance-translations. Thus, the compilation of "Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations" only contains those texts established by way of delegated legislation (i.e. ministerial orders). The power to regulate the banking and financial sector is devoted to the Minister of Finance, assisted by the Comité Consultatif de la Législation et de la Réglementation Financières (Advisory Committee on Financial Legislation and Regulation – CCLRF) whose advisory missions cover all regulation and legislation applying to the financial sector (banks, insurance companies, investment firms ...). This compilation takes into account recent changes to the legal framework for banking and financial activities. These changes are a consequence of international agreements and provisions adopted by the European Union. They also reflect France’s proposals to improve the functioning of credit institutions and capital markets, and to increase the transparency, efficiency, stability and security of the banking and financial system. As regards accounting matters, the Autorité des normes comptables, which replaced the Comité de la Réglementation Comptable, is in charge of laying down accounting regulations, including the accounting rules with which credit institutions, investment firms, financial holding companies and, more recently, payment services institutions must comply. The compilation includes the texts relating to credit institutions and investment firms. This compilation of regulations is divided into two parts: • part one includes decrees and regulations that are deemed to be of special interest as regards the conditions governing banking, financial and payment activities, the details of certain operations carried out by credit institutions, investment firms and payment institutions along with the management standards applying to these regulated entities; • part two contains various texts concerning the accounting rules applying to credit institutions, investment firms and payment institutions. Further information on all these issues and on the present compilation may be obtained from the Direction des Agréments, des Autorisations et de la Réglementation of the General Secretariat of the Autorité de Contrôle prudentiel (ACP) as well as on the Website of the ACP: www.acp.banque-france.fr The annual report of the CCLRF can be obtained on the website of the CCLRF (www.cclrf.fr) or from the Banque de France - Service de la documentation et des relations avec le public – 9 rue du colonel Driant - 75049 PARIS Cedex 01 (telephone: +33.1.42.92.39.08; website: www.banque-france.fr). Fabrice PESIN Secretary General of the Comité consultatif de la législation et de la réglementation financières Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 9 1.TEXTS RELATING TO THE EXERCISE OF BANKING AND FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES takes effect, shall be refunded and redeemed at a date prior to the expiry of said period, which shall also be set by the Autorité. 1.1.CONDITIONS OF EXERCISE OF BANKING AND FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES Article 6 All institutions whose authorisation has been revoked shall immediately inform all persons who hold on its books repayable funds as defined by Article L. 511-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code, or a securities account and other financial instruments or who benefit from a commitment from them of this decision by a registered letter sent with return receipt requested or by a letter personally delivered against a receipt. When the decision is accompanied by conditions precedent, these persons shall be advised when the conditions stipulated are met. 1.1.1. AUTHORISATION AND REVOCATION OF AUTHORISATION 1.1.1.1.CREDIT INSTITUTIONS REGULATION 96-13 OF 20 DECEMBER 1996, RELATING TO THE REVOCATION OF AUTHORISATION AND THE STRIKING OFF OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS as amended by Regulation 2000-05 of 6 September 2000 and Order of 29 October 2009 Article 1 The revocations of authorisation decided by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article L. 511-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be published monthly in the Official Bulletin of said Autorité with, where appropriate, indications of the date on which they take effect. However, the revocations of authorisation that are due to the transfer of ownership of all the assets and liabilities arising on the banking activities of the institution concerned to one or several other authorised credit institutions shall be published quarterly in said Bulletin. Article 2 The credit institutions struck off by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article L. 511-17 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be published monthly in the Official Bulletin of said Commission with, where appropriate, indications of the date of liquidation of the legal person. Article 3 Institutions in the process of having their authorisation revoked or of liquidation shall be mentioned in the appendices to the list of credit institutions drawn up pursuant to Article L. 612-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code and published in the Journal Officiel de la République Française. Where relevant, they shall also be mentioned in the list of investment service providers operating in France set forth in Article 76 of Act 96–597 of 2 July 1996 aforesaid. Article 4 The revocation of authorisation takes effect at the end of a period specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Article L. 511-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code, which shall not exceed two years. Article 5 The funds or securities mentioned Article L. 511-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code due to be repaid after the expiry of the period set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Article L. 511-15 of said Code, at the end of which the revocation of authorisation Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 This letter shall specify, where necessary, the date at which the funds or securities mentioned in Article L. 511-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code will be refunded or redeemed when they mature after the expiry of the period set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. It shall contain a reminder of the possibility for the customer to obtain the transfer of the assets and commitments mentioned in Article L. 511-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code to another authorised institution. Article 7 Where, pursuant to Article L. 511-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code, an institution in the process of having its authorisation revoked is led to refund or redeem early the funds or securities, at the date set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, it is required, in the absence of written stipulations accepted by the co-contracting party when the deposit was made or the security purchased, to restitute the current value at that date of the sums due calculated according to the compound interest method. The annual rates that shall be used as references for this calculation are: – for funds received on deposit, the yield to maturity of rising-rate Treasury bills in force at the date of the repayment applicable for an investment with a maturity equal to the residual maturity, which is deemed to be at least equal to one year; – for securities issued by the institution, the most recent average at the day of repayment of the negotiable debt securities market rates published by the Banque de France, corresponding to the residual maturity of the securities redeemed and their nature or otherwise the status of the issuer. Article 8 The transfer of the assets held in the form of housings savings plans and accounts, business savings passbooks, "people’s" savings plans and passbooks, personal equity plans and of customer liabilities under letter of credit and guarantees per contra may be effected on the books of one or several other credit institutions authorised to receive such assets, if it suits the owner or beneficiary. The transfer shall be made free of charge for the giver of the instruction and without prejudice to the rights and commitments arising on the transferred operations. The institution to which the transfer is made shall inform in writing the owner or beneficiary of the completion of the transfer. 11 When the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel revokes an institution’s authorisation at its request, it shall state the names of credit institutions, which must be at least two in number, that have reached an agreement with the institution making the request under the terms of which they have declared that they accept to take over all the assets and commitments mentioned in the preceding paragraph. The provisions of the first paragraph above shall also apply to financial instruments other than those mentioned in Article L. 511-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code registered on accounts with the institution whose authorisation has been withdrawn. They may also be transferred to an investment firm authorised to receive such assets or to the legal person issuer of the instruments. Where necessary, the transfer shall be made in liaison with the clearing house(s) having registered the financial instruments transferred. Article 9 If, at the repayment date set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Article 5 above, the institution still owes sums or securities mentioned in Article L. 511-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the institution is required to immediately transfer, under the conditions of Article 7 of this Regulation where relevant, the equivalent value to another authorised institution with which it has signed an agreement to this effect and which will keep this sum on deposit on behalf of the owner. At the same date or, if the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has not fixed a date, at the end of the authorisation revocation period, the other financial instruments still held by the institution on behalf of third parties shall be transferred by the institution to another investment service provider which has previously accepted to keep them on behalf of their owners under the terms of an agreement. Copies of these agreements shall be forwarded to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. In the absence of any agreement or if, in order to safeguard the interests of creditors or owners, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel opposes these transfers, the sums and securities shall be paid to the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations. Article 10 The credit operations that the institution has entered into or committed itself to entering into before the decision to revoke its authorisation may be carried through to their initially agreed maturity. However, the corresponding claims may be assigned to one or more credit institutions authorised to conduct such operations. Without prejudice to the provisions applicable to the other methods of transfer of claims provided for by law, the assignments thus effected shall be binding on third parties in accordance with the provisions of Article L. 511-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code: – if the debtor has given prior written consent, a copy of which shall be forwarded to the transferring institution so that it may provide proof of this agreement at any time; – if they have been the subject of a decision of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel as soon as notice of this 12 decision is given by the assignor to the assignee and to each assigned debtor, by means of a simple letter. Article 11 All institutions whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked may only conduct the banking operations and, where relevant, the investment services provided for by its authorisation and the payment services strictly necessary to clear up the accounts. As an exception to the provisions of the preceding paragraph, a legal person that has obtained authorisation as an investment firm in place of that which it had as a credit institution may develop the investment services provided for by the authorisation in the process of being revoked and compatible with its new authorisation as well as the services related to these authorisations, in compliance with the regulations applying to the provision of these services. As an exception to the provisions of the first paragraph of this Article, a legal person that has obtained authorisation as a payment institution in place of that which it had as a credit institution may develop the payment services provided for by the authorisation in the process of being revoked and compatible with its new authorisation as well as the services related to these authorisations, in compliance with the regulations applying to the provision of these services. Article 12 An institution whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked may continue to carry on the operations related to its business, as defined by Article L. 311-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, other than those that constitute the provision of investment services referred to Article L. 321-1 of said Code or of payment services mentioned at Article L. 314-1, II of the same Code, which it carried on previously as its regular business. The monthly amount of all income from activities authorised pursuant to the preceding paragraph shall not however exceed one quarter of the income recorded in the course of the last year closed before the decision to revoke authorisation, except when an exception is granted by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 13 An institution whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked may take or hold equity interests in undertakings in the conditions set forth by Article L. 511-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code and by Regulation 90-06 of 20 June 1990 issued for its enactment. It may also continue to carry on non-banking activities referred to in Article L. 511-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code, in the conditions set forth by Regulation 86-21 of 24 November 1986 aforesaid. Article 14 If, in accordance with the provisions of Article 100-2 of Act 84-46 of 24 January 1984 aforesaid [This provision is now aimless. As a result, it has not been inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code], the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel notes that an institution whose authorisation has been revoked by the Comité des Établissements de Crédit prior to the entry into force of the Act of 2 July 1996 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 aforesaid [inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code], still owes repayable funds received from the public, on expiry of the six-month period provided for by said Article 100-2 it shall so inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, which shall set a new period at the end of which the institutions will lose its credit institution status. During this new period, the institution shall be subject to the provisions of Articles 4 to 13 of this Regulation. Article 15 The institutions that have been struck off the list of credit institutions by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel by way of a disciplinary sanction may only carry out the operations strictly necessary for the winding-up of their business, as soon as the decision to strike off enters into force, whether these are banking operations, the provision of investment services, related operations, acquisitions of equity interests or non-banking operations. The provisions of paragraphs 1 and 3 of Article 8 above relating to the transfer of certain balance sheet and off-balance-sheet elements and financial instruments registered in accounts shall also apply to these institutions. They may also assign, in the conditions set forth by Article 10 of this Regulation, the claims they hold to one or more other credit institutions authorised to handle such operations. 1.1.1.2.INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES REGULATION 96-14 OF 20 DECEMBER 1996, RELATING TO THE REVOCATION OF AUTHORISATION AND THE STRIKING OFF OF INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES Article 1 The revocations of authorisation decided by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article L. 532-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be published monthly in the Official Bulletin of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with, where appropriate, indications of the date on which they take effect. However, the revocations of authorisation that are due to the transfer to one or more other authorised investment services providers of the ownership of all the assets and liabilities arising on the investment service provider activities of the undertaking concerned shall be published quarterly in said Bulletin. Article 2 The investment firms struck off by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article L. 532-7 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be published monthly in the Official Bulletin of said Commission. Article 3 Firms whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked or in the process of being liquidated shall be mentioned in the appendices to the list of investment service providers drawn up pursuant to Article L. 612-2 of Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 the Monetary and Financial Code and published in the Journal Officiel de la République Française. Article 4 The revocation of authorisation takes effect at the end of a period specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Article L. 532-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code, which shall not exceed two years. Article 5 Any securities issued by the firm that are not traded on a regulated market, mentioned in Article L. 532-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code, and that mature subsequent to the end of the period specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with said Article L. 532-6, at the end of which the revocation of authorisation takes effect, shall be redeemed prior to the end of the aforesaid period at a date which shall also be specified by the Autorité. Article 6 All firms whose authorisation has been revoked shall immediately inform all persons who hold on its books a securities account and other financial instruments of this decision by a registered letter sent with return receipt requested or by a letter personally delivered against a receipt. When the decision is accompanied by conditions precedent, these persons shall be advised when the conditions set forth are met. This letter shall specify, where necessary, the date at which the securities issued by the firm which are not traded on a regulated market will be redeemed, where their maturity is subsequent to the end of the period specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. It shall state the possibility for the customer to obtain the transfer of the other financial instruments and, where relevant, of the funds waiting to be allotted or withdrawn, pursuant to Article L. 532-8 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Article 7 Where, pursuant to Article L. 532-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code, a firm whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked is led to redeem early, at the date set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, the securities issued by it which are not traded on a regulated market, it is required, in the absence of written stipulations accepted by the co-contracting party when the security was purchased, to restitute the current value at that date of the sums due calculated according to the compound interest method. The annual rate that shall be used as the reference for this calculation is the most recent average at the day of repayment of rates on the negotiable debt securities market published by the Banque de France, corresponding to the residual maturity of the securities redeemed and their nature. Article 8 During the authorisation revocation period or, where relevant, until the repayment day specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, all owners of financial instruments other than the securities issued by the firm which are not traded on a regulated market registered on the books of said firm, may request the transfer thereof to one or more other 13 investment service providers authorised to receive such assets, as well as, where relevant, the transfer of related funds. The transfer shall be made free of charge for the giver of the instruction. The firm to which the transfer is made shall inform the owner in writing of the completion of the transfer. The provisions of Article 8 above relating to the transfer of registered financial instruments shall also apply to these firms. Where necessary, the transfer of the financial instruments mentioned in the above paragraph shall be made in liaison with the clearing house(s) having registered said instruments. ORDER OF 2 JULY 2007 ON INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES WITH A SINGLE MANAGER Article 9 If, at the repayment date specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Article 5 above, the firm still owes securities issued by it which are not traded on a regulated market, the firm is required to immediately transfer, where relevant under the conditions of Article 7 of this Regulation, the equivalent value to another investment service provider authorised to receive such assets with which it has signed an agreement to this effect and which will keep this sum on deposit on behalf of the owner. At the same date or, if the Comité has not specified a date, at the end of the authorisation revocation period, the other financial instruments still held by the firm on behalf of third parties as well as, where relevant, the related funds shall be transferred by said firm to another investment service provider authorised to receive such assets which has previously accepted under the terms of an agreement to keep them on behalf of their owners. Copies of these agreements shall be forwarded to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. In the absence of any agreement or if, in order to safeguard the interests of creditors or owners, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel opposes these transfers, the sums and securities shall be paid to the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations. Article 10 An investment firm whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked may conduct investment services and related services only if they are necessary for the winding-up of its investment services. Article 11 An investment firm whose authorisation is in the process of being revoked may take or hold equity interests in undertakings, in accordance with Article L. 531-5 of the Monetary and Financial Code, and continue to carry on the activities referred to in Article L. 531-7 of said Code, in the conditions specified for firms in business. Article 1 In accordance with Article L.532.2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, investment firms other than portfolio management companies may ask for a derogation from the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with a view to be managed by a single manager. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel grants this derogation when the following conditions are met: a) the investment firm does not hold any funds or securities of the public; b) the net banking income and the balance sheet total of the investment firm are lower than EUR 10 million; c) the executive board or the decision-making body has appointed within the investment firm or within the group to which it belongs a person who shall immediately replace and take over all of the manager’s functions should the latter be unable to carry them out. Article 2 The present Order enters into force on 1 November 2007. Article 3 The present Order will be published in the Official Journal of the French Republic. 1.1.1.3.PAYMENT INSTITUTIONS ORDER OF 29 OCTOBER 2009 RELATING TO THE PRUDENTIAL REGULATION OF PAYMENT INSTITUTIONS Article 1 The payment institutions mentioned in Article L. 522-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, hereinafter referred to as "supervised institutions", are required to comply with the provisions of this order. Article 12 Investment firms that have been struck off the list of investment service providers by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel by way of a disciplinary sanction may only carry out the operations strictly necessary for winding-up their business as soon as the decision to strike them off enters into force, whether these operations are the provision of investment services, related operations, acquisitions of equity interests or other operations. 14 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 TITLE I Conditions for access to the payment services business Chapter III Change in the situation of payment institutions Chapter I Information to be provided to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with a view to obtaining authorisation as a payment institution Section 1 Changes subject to prior authorisation by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel Article 2 Authorisation as a payment institution is conditional on submitting an application to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel which must be framed in accordance with the model drawn up by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and published in the Official Bulletin of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 3 On receiving an application, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall verify that it complies with the model provided for in Article 2 and, if so, shall process it. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may ask the applicant for any additional item of information it needs to process the application. Such request shall suspend the period provided for in the following paragraph until the requested information has been received. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the applicant of its decision within three months at most as of the date on which it receives the application in compliance with the model mentioned in Article 2. Chapter II Minimum capital of payment institutions Article 4 The minimum capital of a supervised institution shall be: • €20,000 if it is authorised to provide the service mentioned in Article L. 314-1-II-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code; • €50,000 if it is authorised to provide the service mentioned in Article L. 314-1-II-7 of said Code; • €125,000 if it is authorised to provide at least one of the services mentioned in Article L. 314-1-II, 1 to 5 of said Code. Article 5 For the purposes of the preceding article, the following are deemed to constitute capital: the share capital of supervised institutions incorporated as commercial companies, reserves that may not be distributed and sums that may be treated in the same way. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 6 Planned changes to the situation of supervised institutions relating to the following elements are subject to prior authorisation by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel: • the legal form; • the identity of the shareholder(s) with unlimited liability for the supervised institution’s debts; • the type of payment services for which a supervised institution has been authorised; • the conditions to which authorisation was subject. Article 7 With the exception of transactions performed within a group, any acquisition, extension or disposal of an equity interest, direct or indirect within the meaning of Article L. 233-4 of the Commercial Code, in a supervised institution is subject to prior authorisation by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel where it enables a person or a group of persons acting in concert within the meaning of Article L. 233-10 f the Commercial Code: • to cross in either direction the threshold of 10%, 20% or 33⅓% of the voting rights; • to acquire or relinquish, alone or jointly, effective control over the firm’s management. For the purposes of this article, voting rights are calculated according to the provisions of Article 4 of CRBF Regulation 96-16 of 20 December 1996 relating to changes in the situation of credit institutions and of investment firms other than portfolio management companies. Section 2 Changes that must be notified to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, which may oppose them Article 8 Where a transaction performed between persons governed by the law of another country transfers effective control of a company located outside France which directly or indirectly owns 10%, 20% or 33⅓% of the capital or voting rights of a supervised institution or has effective control over a supervised institution as provided for in Article 7, the supervised institution is required to inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of the transaction within one month. The Committee shall re-examine the supervised institution’s situation in the light of the elements taken into 15 consideration at the time of authorisation, in particular in accordance with Articles L. 522-6 to L. 522-8 of the Monetary and Financial Code. • the rules for calculating voting rights; • the membership of the board of directors or supervisory board and executive board of supervised institutions; • the conditions for the exercise of general management, in accordance with the provisions of Article L. 225-51-1 of the Commercial Code; • the organisation of the powers of management and supervision entrusted to an executive board and a supervisory board in accordance with the provisions of Article L. 225-57 of said Code. Article 9 The appointment of any new person to perform the functions mentioned in Article L. 522-6-II-b of the Monetary and Financial Code in a supervised institution shall be notified to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within five working days. The Committee may oppose the appointment having regard to the criteria of Article L. 5226-II-b of the Monetary and Financial Code. The Committee may decide to call the person concerned to a hearing. Article 10 Supervised institutions shall promptly inform the Committee of any administrative, disciplinary, civil or criminal sanctions ordered or of any disciplinary or legal proceedings pending against them or against any of the persons mentioned in Article L. 522-6-II-b aforesaid of which they are aware and which may call into question the Committee’s assessment of those persons’ integrity, experience and competence. Such notice shall be accompanied by all elements enabling the importance of the facts to be assessed. Where facts that may call into question the conditions of integrity and competence and appropriate experience for performance of the functions mentioned in Article L. 5226-II-b of the Monetary and Financial Code come to the Committee’s attention, it may ask the institution what conclusions it intends to draw from such facts with regard to the person performing the functions in question. The person concerned shall be invited to make his observations known to the Committee. In the light of the information and observations transmitted in accordance with the abovementioned procedures, the Committee may decide to initiate a procedure to withdraw the supervised institution’s authorisation or to pass the case on to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Section 3 Changes that must be merely declared to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel Planned changes to the situation relating to foreign exchange services and the granting of credit mentioned in Article L. 522-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code must be declared beforehand. Section 4 General provisions Article 13 The applications for authorisation, notifications and declarations provided for in this chapter should include all relevant information to advise the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel about the causes, aims and effects of the change concerned. Additional information may be requested if necessary. In such case, the periods provided for in this section shall be suspended until such information is received. If the Committee does not respond to an application submitted in compliance with the provisions of this article within the time-limit defined in this section, the requested authorisation or notified change shall be deemed to have been respectively granted or approved. Article 14 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall take a decision within two months of receiving the application for authorisation or the notification provided for in this chapter or, if the application or notification is incomplete, within the same time-limit as of receiving all the necessary information for it to take its decision. Article 15 Article 11 Cessation of the functions mentioned in Article L. 522-6-IIb of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be declared to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within five working days. Article 12 A supervised institution that has obtained authorisation to change its situation under the terms of Article 7 shall, within eight days of making such change, send the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel a letter in which one of the persons mentioned in Article L. 522-6-II-b of the Monetary and Financial Code informs it of the date of the operation and certifies that it complies with the authorisation given. Changes to the following shall be declared to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within one month: 16 • the company name; • the trade name; • the address of the registered office; • the amount of the capital of fixed-capital companies; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Chapter IV Provision of payment services in a Member State other than France or in France by an institution from another Member State Section 1 Freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services on the territory of other Member States of the European Community Article 16 Any supervised institution having its registered office on the territory of metropolitan France, in the overseas départements, in Saint-Martin or in Saint-Barthélemy that wishes to establish a branch or operate under the freedom to provide services for the first time in another Member State of the European Community or in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area in order to provide payment services in accordance with the provisions of Article L. 522-13-I of the Monetary and Financial Code shall provide the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with the following information: 1. 2. its company name and the address of its registered office; the country in which it intends to operate and the type of payment services it intends to provide on the territory of the country in question; Article 18 The payment institution shall promptly inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any change to the information mentioned in Article 16, stating when it occurred. The Committee shall inform the host country competent authority and, if necessary, shall amend the list mentioned in Article L. 612-2 of the aforementioned Code. Section 2 Freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services in France Article 19 Before a payment institution having its registered office in another Member State of the European Community or another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area may create a branch, use an agent or operate under the freedom to provide services with a view to providing payment services on the territory of metropolitan France, in the overseas départements, in Saint-Martin or in Saint-Barthélemy in accordance with the provisions of Article L. 522-13-II of the Monetary and Financial Code, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel must have received the following information from the home country competent authority, accompanied by certified translations into French: 1 the company name and the address of the payment institution’s registered office or, where relevant, central administration; 2 the type of payment services the institution intends to provide on the territory of metropolitan France, in the overseas départements, in SaintMartin or in Saint-Barthélemy; and, for branches: 3 the address of the branch; 4 the identity of the persons responsible for managing the branch; and, for branches: 3 the address of the branch; 5 the organisational structure of the branch; 4 6 a description of the internal control mechanism, including a description of the anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing arrangements applicable to the branch. the identity of the persons responsible for managing the branch; 5 the organisational structure of the branch; 6 a description of the internal control mechanism, include a description of anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing arrangements; The information shall be accompanied by a certified translation into the official language of the host country. Article 17 In the month following receipt of all the information mentioned in Article 16, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall transmit it to the host country competent authority, inform the institution concerned that it has done so and include the branch or register the declaration under the freedom to provide services in the list mentioned in Article L. 612-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The institution may then operate under the freedom to provide services. In the context of declarations under the freedom of establishment, the institution shall be informed that it may start operations as soon as the competent authority of the host State has acknowledged receipt of the information mentioned in Article 16. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 and, for agents: 7 the agent’s surname and first names, if a natural person, or company name, if a legal entity; 8 the agent’s address; and, for agents established in France: 9 the identity of the senior managers and the persons responsible for managing the agent; 10 a description of the agent’s organisational structure; 17 11 a description of the internal control mechanism implemented to ensure that agents comply with anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing obligations; The Committee shall promptly advise the home country competent authority and the institution in question of receipt of this information. Chapter V Withdrawal of authorisation and striking off of payment institutions Section 1 Publication of decisions to withdraw authorisation from or strike off payment institutions Article 20 Withdrawals of authorisation ordered by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article L. 522-11-I of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be published monthly, where relevant stating the date on which they take effect, in the Official Bulletin of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 21 Striking-offs ordered by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article L. 522-11-IV of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be published monthly in the Official Bulletin of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and Autorité de contrôle prudentiel Article 22 Institutions whose withdrawal of authorisation or liquidation is pending shall be mentioned in an annex to the list of payment institutions drawn up pursuant to Article L. 612-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code and published in the Official Journal. Section 2 Return of funds to users of payment services Article 23 Withdrawal of authorisation shall take effect on expiry of a period set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Article L. 522-11-II of the Monetary and Financial Code, which may not be longer than fifteen months and during which funds collected with a view to providing payment services must be returned before a date set by the Committee. Where the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has given notice of the opening of disciplinary proceedings, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall suspend its consideration of the request for withdrawal of authorisation until the decision that closes the proceedings initiated by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. 18 Article 24 Any institution whose authorisation has been withdrawn shall immediately advise any person on its books holding funds collected with a view to providing payment services within the meaning of Article L. 522-4-II of the Monetary and Financial Code of the decision, by means suited to the nature of its customers, stating the date before which the funds will be returned under the terms of Article 23. Section 3 Transfers of funds to a credit institution or to another payment institution or to the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations Article 25 The payment institution shall inform its customers of the terms and conditions of the transfer to a credit institution or to another payment institution of funds collected with a view to providing payment services. Such transfer shall be made without charge to the user of payment services. Article 26 Funds still in the possession of the payment institution at the date set by the Committee pursuant to Article 23 shall be transferred to the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations. The transfer of funds collected shall be made without charge to the user of payment services. The supervised institution shall advise fundholders of the transfer. TITLE II The management and organisation of payment institutions Chapter I Own funds Article 27 For the purposes of this chapter, own funds shall be determined in accordance with Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990 on own funds. Section 1 Own funds requirements relating to payment services (three methods) Article 28 For the purposes of Article L. 522-14 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the supervised institution shall use one of the three methods provided for in Articles 29 to 31 to calculate the amount of own funds it must hold. Where the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel considers that the method chosen by the supervised institution is unsuited to the risks arising from the institution’s activities or is liable to adversely affect the quality of the institution’s supervision, Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 it may at any time require the institution to use another of the methods provided for in Articles 29 to 31 of this order to calculate the own funds requirements set forth in this chapter. The supervised institution may ask the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for permission to change the method for calculating its own funds requirements so that they are calculated according to one of the other two methods provided for in Articles 29 to 31 of this order. In support of its request, the supervised institution shall provide the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with all information that will enable it to compare the results obtained with the new method and those obtained with the method used in the preceding two accounting periods and to verify that the requested method is more relevant with regard to the imperatives of prudential supervision. Any change of method shall be applied as of the accounting period following the one in which the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel accepted the institution’s request or insisted on it. The supervised institution may not ask to change method again until three financial years have elapsed after the one as of which the new method was applied. d) 0.5% of the slice of PV above €100,000,000 up to €250,000,000; e) 0.25 % of the slice of PV above €250,000,000. The scaling factor k shall be: a) 0.5 where the supervised institution provides only the payment service mentioned in Article L. 314-1-II-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code; b) 0.8 where the supervised institution provides the payment service mentioned in Article L. 314-1-II-7 of the Monetary and Financial Code; c) 1 where the supervised institution provides one of the payment services mentioned in Article L. 314-1-II, 1 to 5 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Where the supervised institution has not completed a full year’s business at the calculation date, the projections in its business plans may be used, unless the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel requires an adjustment to that plan. Article 31 Article 29 Method C. Method A. The amount of own funds shall at all times be greater than or equal to 10% of the previous year’s fixed overheads. For the purposes of this chapter, overheads include personnel costs, wage-related taxes, other taxes and outside services as defined by the accounting rules applicable to supervised institutions. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may adjust this requirement if there is a significant change in activity in comparison with the previous year. Where the supervised institution has not completed a full year’s business at the calculation date, the amount of own funds must be at least equal to 10% of the corresponding fixed overheads as projected in its business plan, unless the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel requires an adjustment to that plan. Article 30 Method B. The amount of own funds shall at all times be greater than or equal to the sum of slices of the payment volume calculated as set forth below and multiplied by the scaling factor k defined below. The payment volume represents one-twelfth of the total amount of payment transactions performed by the supervised institution in the previous year: The amount of own funds shall at all times be greater than or equal to the indicator defined in point (a), multiplied by the factor p defined in point (b) and by the factor k defined in Article 30 of this order. a) The relevant indicator is the sum of the following: • interest income; • interest expenses; • commissions and fees received, and • other operating income. Each item as defined by the accounting rules applicable to supervised institutions shall be included in the sum with its positive or negative sign. Income from extraordinary or irregular items may not be used in the calculation of the relevant indicator. Expenditure on the outsourcing of services rendered by third parties may reduce the relevant indicator if it is incurred by another supervised institution or by another payment services provider. The relevant indicator is calculated on the basis of the twelve-monthly observation at the end of the previous year. Where the figures used are not taken from published financial statements, estimates may be used unless the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel requires an adjustment to them. The amount of own funds calculated according to this method may not fall below 80% of the average of the previous three financial years for the relevant indicator. a) 4.0% of the slice of PV up to €5,000,000; b) 2.5% of the slice of PV above €5,000,000 up to €10,000,000; • 10% of the slice of the relevant indicator up to €2,500,000; c) 1% of the slice of PV above €10,000,000 up to €100,000,000; • 8% of the slice of the relevant indicator from €2,500,000 up to €5,000,000; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) The multiplication factor p shall be: 19 • 6% of the slice of the relevant indicator from €5,000,000 up to €25,000,000; • 3% of the slice of the relevant indicator from €25,000,000 up to €50,000,000; • 1.5% of the slice of the relevant indicator above €50,000,000. Article 32 Where an evaluation of the supervised institution’s risk management processes, loss risk data bases and internal control mechanisms so warrant, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may, under the conditions set forth in Article L. 613-16 of the Monetary and Financial Code, decide that the supervised institution should be required to hold an amount of own funds that is up to 20% higher than the amount that would result from application of the method in accordance with Articles 28 to 31. accounts shall mention the allocation of the sums deposited in them. The funds may also be invested in financial instruments kept in accounts opened specially for the purpose with a person mentioned in Article L. 542-1, paragraphs 2 to 5 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Such instruments may only be securities issued by a qualifying money market fund as defined by the order of 2 July 2007 relating to the segregation of funds of investment firms’ customers. It must be possible at any time to furnish proof of compliance with this requirement. Section 1 Protection of customers’ funds Article 35 The cover required in Article L. 522-16-I-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code results: Under the same conditions and if the situation so warrants, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise the payment institution to be subject to an own funds requirement that may be up to 20% lower than the amount that would result from application of the method in accordance with Articles 28 to 31. Section 2 Own funds relating to credit transactions Article 33 Supervised institutions that grant the credit mentioned in Article L. 522-2-II of the Monetary and Financial Code must at all times hold an amount of own funds as determined for the standard credit risk approach in the order of 20 February 2007 relating to capital requirements for credit institutions and investment firms, having regard to the total amount of credit granted. Chapter II Protection of the funds of payment institutions’ customers Section 1 Segregation and investment rules Article 34 Supervised institutions shall place funds received for the execution of a payment transaction in one or more accounts opened specially for the purpose, identified separately from any other account used to hold funds belonging to the supervised institution, with a credit institution authorised in a Member State of the European Community or in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. The funds shall be placed in sight accounts. The title of the 20 • either from a written undertaking from an authorised credit institution that does not belong to the same group as the payment institution; • or from a written undertaking from an insurance company authorised for the purpose that does not belong to the same group as the payment institution. Payment institutions shall provide the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with proof that such cover has been taken out and of the amount thereof, and that it is updated annually. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require a revaluation of the amount of the cover if it seems insufficient in relation to the volume of the institution’s business in the previous year or projected for the following year. The document certifying that cover has been taken out, where it consists in an on-demand guarantee, shall comply with the model contained in Annex 1 and, where it consists in a suretyship undertaking, shall comply with the model contained in Annex 2. Chapter III Use of agents Article 36 I. ― Any supervised institution that intends to provide payment services through an agent must submit an application in accordance with the model declaration drawn up by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and published in the Official Bulletin of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, containing the following information: a) the given name, customary name, first names, date and place of birth of agents who are natural persons; b) the company name and, where relevant, SIREN number of agents that are legal entities; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 c) the business address for natural persons or the address of the registered office for legal entities and, if different, the address where the activity is exercised on the payment service provider’s behalf; d) the nature of the operations for which the agent is mandated; e) for agents that are legal entities, the identity of the natural persons empowered to manage or administer the entity and, where such agent exercises an activity other than payment services as a regular business, the identity of the person to whom responsibility for the agent activity is delegated; f) proof that the agents or individuals mentioned in (e) are fit and proper persons; g) on a supervised institution’s first application to register one or more agents, a description of the internal control mechanism implemented to ensure that agents comply with anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing requirements. For subsequent applications, the supervised institution must provide a description of the internal control mechanism only if there has been a material change. For the purposes of (e), the supervised institution must provide: 1 2 a curriculum vitae justifying that the agents or persons mentioned at (e) are fit and proper to exercise a payment services activity, either as a result of training that enables them to perform accounting or financial functions or at least two years’ experience of such functions, or as a result of having had trader status for two years; a document in which the supervised institution certifies that it has verified the accuracy of the information in the curriculum vitae of the agents or persons mentioned at (e) and the integrity of such person or persons, in particular by having received a certificate from the agent stating that he is not liable to the prohibitions or sanctions set forth in Article L. 523-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Agents who are natural persons and persons transmitted by the supervised institution are presumed to be fit and proper persons if they: • have money-changer status and have obtained the authorisation mentioned in Article L. 524-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code; or • are included in the register mentioned in Article L. 512-1-I of the Insurance Code; or • have senior manager status as set forth in Articles L. 511-13, L. 532-2, L. 522-6-II-b or L. 524-3-c of the Monetary and Financial Code or are managers of companies as set forth in Article L. 310-2, paragraphs 1, 3 and 4 of the Insurance Code, of mutual societies or institutions as set forth in Article L. 310-12-I, paragraph 1 of the Insurance Code or of insurance intermediaries as Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 set forth in Article L. 511-1 of the Insurance Code. II. ― Where a supervised institution as mentioned in Article 16 wishes to use an agent in order to provide payment services in another Member State of the European Community or another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, it shall provide the information set forth in point I of this article to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, stating the type of payment services planned. III. ― Where a supervised institution as mentioned in Article 16 wishes to operate in another Member State or another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area by using an agent that it has already registered in the register of agents, it shall make an additional change of activity declaration, stating the type of payment services that the agent may provide in the State concerned. Such information shall be accompanied by a certified translation into the official language of the host country. Article 37 I. ― In the month after duly receiving the information mentioned in Article 36-II or III from the supervised institutions mentioned in Article 16, the Committee shall transmit the following information to the host country competent authority: – for an agent established in the host country in question, the information mentioned in Article 36-I (a) to (e) and (g), in addition to the declaration under the freedom of establishment made by the payment institution in accordance with Article 16; – for an agent not established in the host country in question, the information mentioned in Article 36-I (a) to (d), in addition to the declaration under the freedom to provide services made by the payment institution in accordance with Article 16. II. ― After duly receiving the information, the Committee has two months at most in which to register the agent or one month in which to register the additional declaration provided for in Article 36-III. III. ― For agents of supervised institutions using the procedure provided for in Article 16, the Committee may take account, until expiry of the registration deadlines set forth in the preceding paragraph, of the opinion of the host country competent authority provided for in Article L. 52213-I-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. IV. ― The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall assign a registration number to every agent on registration in the agents register. No agent may have more than one registration number. V. ― Non-registration of the agent or of the abovementioned change of activity declaration by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel on expiry of the deadline set forth in point II above is deemed to constitute a refusal. The Committee shall refuse to register a person in the agents register or to register the above-mentioned change of activity declaration if the information mentioned in Article 36 21 proves to be incomplete, inconsistent, erroneous or irrelevant, or on account of the information mentioned in Article L. 522-13-I-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code transmitted by the host country competent authorities. Article 38 The agents register shall contain the following information: a) the agent’s registration number; b) the company name of the service provider(s) for which the agent exercises his activity and whether the service provider is authorised as a credit institution or as a supervised institution; c) the information mentioned in Article 36-I (a) to (d) and, where relevant, the type of payment services that may be provided in the country or in each country concerned. Such information shall be placed online on the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel website and shall be freely accessible to the public, with the exception of the date and place of birth of agents who are natural persons. Article 39 Supervised institutions shall ensure that all their appointed agents provide customers and the public, by all appropriate means and in a visible and legible fashion, with the following information: • the company name, address and trade name of the appointing institution; • the registration number and the address of the agents register where such registration can be verified. deemed to constitute a refusal. Supervised institutions shall ask the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to strike their agent off the agents register: • if the agent ceases his activity for whatever reason; • where they consider that an agent or person mentioned in Article 36-I-e no longer meets the fit and proper person conditions which they had to justify on applying for registration. If an agent struck off the register exercised activities in other Member States or States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall promptly inform the relevant host country competent authorities that the agent has been struck off. Information removed from the register pursuant to the preceding two paragraphs or amended as a result of changes affecting the conditions of exercise of the agent’s activity shall be kept on any lasting medium for ten years as of the date of the striking-off or change. Article 41 Pursuant to Article 38, paragraph 3 of Act 78-17 of 6 January 1978 (the French Data Protection Act), the right of opposition does not apply to the agents register. The rights of access and rectification provided for in Articles 39 and 40 respectively of the aforementioned Act may be asserted with the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and the supervised institutions that appointed the agents. Chapter IV Supervision on a consolidated basis Article 40 The appointing institution shall promptly inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any change to the information mentioned in Article 36-I (a) to (d) and (g), stating the date at which the change occurred. The appointment of any new person as defined in Article 36-I-e and the information mentioned in Article 36-I-f must be declared within five working days. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the competent authorities concerned under the conditions set forth in Article 37-I of any change to the information mentioned in Article 36-I (a) to (d) and (g) concerning an agent authorised to operate in one or more other Member States or States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. The Committee shall amend the agents register if necessary. For the changes mentioned in Article 36-I-e, the Committee has two months at most in which to register the identity of the new person. Until expiry of the two-month deadline, the Committee may take account, where relevant, of information transmitted by the host country competent authority. Non-registration on expiry of the two-month deadline is 22 Article 42 Payment institutions that are subsidiaries of a credit institution, investment firm, financial holding company or mixed financial holding company included within the scope of consolidation as defined in Regulation 2000-03 aforesaid are not required to comply on an individual or, where relevant, sub-consolidated basis with the own funds requirements defined in Article 28 of this order, provided that they fulfil the conditions of Article 4.1 of said regulation. Chapter V Activities other than payment services exercised as a regular business and hybrid institutions Article 43 Payment services and the ancillary services mentioned in Article L. 522-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code provided by an institution exercising a hybrid activity are subject to prudential supervision in accordance with Chapters 1, 2 and 4 of this title. In accordance with Article L. 613-8, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall be Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 provided with the documents and information it needs to perform its assignment under conditions set by an instruction. Article 44 Article 49 See Regulation 90-05 of 11 April 1990 as amended, relating to the national database on household credit repayment incidents. Article 50 The control system for operations and internal procedures defined in Article 5 of Regulation 97-02 aforesaid shall include verification of the obligations provided for in Article L. 522-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code and in this chapter. See Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 as amended, relating to prudential supervision on a consolidated basis and supplementary supervision is amended as follows: Supervised institutions’ internal control mechanisms must enable them to ensure compliance with the provisions of this chapter at all times. See Regulation 97-02 of 21 February 1997 as amended, relating to internal control is amended as follows: Article 51 Article 52 Article 45 For the purposes of Articles L. 522-14 and L. 522-17 of the Monetary and Financial Code and Chapters 1 and 2 of this title, supervised institutions exercising activities of a hybrid nature shall evaluate the portion representing funds received for the execution of future payment transactions by constructing the ratio, on a quarterly basis, between the amount of funds actually used to execute payment transactions and the amount of funds received for the execution of future payment transactions that can also be allocated to services other than payment services. They shall make the calculation on a revolving basis for the last four quarters and use the highest figure. Where the supervised institution has not completed a full year’s business at the calculation date, it shall take, for the first quarter to come, the figure in its business plan plus 30%, then the figure for the first elapsed quarter plus 20%, then the highest of the figures for the first two quarters plus 20% and the highest of the figures for the first three quarters plus 10%. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may adjust these requirements if the situation so warrants. TITLE III Miscellaneous provisions CRBF Regulation 96-13 of 20 December 1996 as amended, relating to the revocation of authorisation and the striking off of credit institutions is amended as follows: Article 53 Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990 as amended, relating to own funds is amended as follows: Article 54 See The order of 20 February 2007, relating to capital requirements is amended as follows: Article 55 See Regulation 99-09 of 9 July 1999, relating to transfers made within the European Economic Area is revoked. Article 56 This order shall take effect on 1 November 2009. Article 57 This order shall be published in the Official Journal of the French Republic. Article 46 The provisions of Article 36-I, Article 37-II, IV and V, Article 38, Article 39, Article 40 except for the third, fifth and penultimate paragraphs and Article 41 of this order shall apply where a credit institution authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel uses an agent. Article 47 See Regulation 2001-04 of 29 October 2001 as amended, relating to cheque clearing. Article 48 See Regulation 2002-01 of 18 April 2002 as amended, relating to obligations of vigilance with regard to cheques in order to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 23 Annex 1 to the order relating to the prudential regulation of payment institutions setting out the model certificate for constitution of a guarantee provided for in Article 35 where it consists of an on-demand guarantee 3.2. Renewal The guarantee is renewed by tacit agreement on the same terms as set forth herein, unless the Guaranteed Institution serves notice of its intention to terminate the guarantee at least ..... (7) months before the expiry date. The institution ...... (1) registered in the ...... Trade and Companies Register as no. ...... represented by ...... duly authorised by virtue of ...... (2); 4. Article 4 Whereas it has been informed that: ...... (3), hereinafter referred to as the "Guaranteed Institution", has asked the above-mentioned institution, hereinafter referred to as the "Guarantor" to give it its on-demand guarantee, If the Guaranteed Institution is unable to meet its financial obligations arising from its payment service activities, the minister for the economy may call this guarantee by registered letter with acknowledgment of receipt sent to the Guarantor at the address given above. Hereby declares, pursuant to Article L. 522-17 of the Monetary and Financial Code and Article 35 of the order of [date] relating to payment institutions, that it will act as Guarantor, waiving benefit of division and discussion, for the Guaranteed Institution under the terms and conditions set forth below. 1. Article 1 of the annex to the order of [date] Purpose of the guarantee This guarantee is a purely financial undertaking. It excludes any obligation to do and is granted up to the maximum amount set forth in Article 2 with a view to covering the funds received by the Guaranteed Institution in its capacity as a payment institution, either from users of payment services or through another payment services provider for the execution of payment transactions, should the Guaranteed Institution not be able to meet its financial obligations. This guarantee does not cover compensation payable by the Guaranteed Institution to third parties that could suffer harm as a result of poor performance or non-performance of an obligation arising from the Guaranteed Institution’s activity. 2. Article 2 of the annex to the order of [date] Amount 2.1. Amount The maximum amount of the guarantee is (4). 2.2. Updating Calling the guarantee 5. Article 5 Governing law This guarantee is governed by French law, jurisdiction being attributed to the French courts. Done at (8) on (9). (1) Name, form, share capital and registered office of the credit institution or insurance undertaking and, where relevant, address of the branch subscribing the guarantee. (2) Power of attorney or authorisation, stating the date. (3) The future payment institution (full designation). (4) Amount in figures and words. (5) Effective date of the guarantee. (6) Expiry date of the guarantee. (7) Notice period. (8) Place of issue. (9) Date. Annex 2 to the order relating to the prudential regulation of payment institutions setting out the model certificate for constitution of a guarantee provided for in Article 35 where it arises from a suretyship undertaking The institution or undertaking ...... (1) registered in the ...... Trade and Companies Register as no. ...... represented by ...... duly authorised by virtue of ...... (2); Whereas it has been informed that: ...... (3), hereinafter referred to as the "Secured Institution", has asked the above-mentioned institution or undertaking, hereinafter referred to as the "Surety" to stand surety for it, 3. Article 3 of the annex to the order of [date] Hereby declares, pursuant to Article L. 522-17-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code and Article 35 of the order of [date] relating to payment institutions, that it will stand surety, jointly and severally, within the meaning of Articles 2288 et seq. of the Civil Code, for the Secured Institution under the terms and conditions set forth below. Term 1. Article 1 of the annex to the order of [date] 3.1. Term Purpose of the surety This guarantee undertaking takes effect as of ..... (5). It expires at 6.00 p.m. on (6). This surety is a purely financial undertaking. It excludes any obligation to do and is granted up to the maximum amount set forth in Article 2 with a view to covering the funds received by the Secured Institution in its capacity as The maximum amount of the guarantee may be updated annually in order to comply with the conditions relating to the minimum amount of the guarantee stipulated in Article 35 of the order. 24 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a payment institution, either from users of payment services or through another payment services provider for the execution of payment transactions, should the Secured Institution not be able to meet its financial obligations. This surety does not cover compensation payable by the Secured Institution to third parties that could suffer harm as a result of poor performance or non-performance of an obligation arising from to the Secured Institution’s activity. 1.1.1.4. Electronic money and electronic money institutions REGULATION 2002-13 OF 21 NOVEMBER 2002, RELATING TO ELECTRONIC MONEY AND ELECTRONIC MONEY INSTITUTIONS as amended by the Orders of 20 February 2007 and 29 October 2009 2. Article 2 of the annex to the order of [date] TITLE I Amount 2.1. Amount The maximum amount of the surety is (4). Any payment made by the Surety shall reduce the total amount of the surety by the same amount. 3. Article 3 of the annex to the order of [date] Term 3.1. Term This suretyship undertaking takes effect as of ..... (5). It expires at 6.00 p.m. on (6). 3.2. Renewal The suretyship undertaking is renewed by tacit agreement on the same terms as set forth herein, unless either party serves notice of its intention to terminate the arrangement at least ..... (7) months before the expiry date. GENERAL PROVISIONS RELATING TO ELECTRONIC MONEY CHAPTER I DEFINITIONS AND GENERAL PRINCIPLES Article 1 Electronic money consists of units of value, called electronic money units. Each unit constitutes a claim stored on an electronic device and accepted as a means of payment, within the meaning of Article L. 311-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code, by third parties other than the issuer. Electronic money is issued against the remittance of funds. It cannot be issued for a value in excess of that of the funds received in exchange. 5. Article 5 Article 2 Within the meaning of this Regulation, a credit institution that is the debtor of the claim stored on the electronic device is deemed to be an institution issuing electronic money, called an issuing institution. A credit institution that offers its customers a charge, recharge or cashing service is deemed to be a distributing institution, called a distributing institution. Issuing and distributing institutions are governed by the provisions of Title I of this Regulation and, if they limit their activity to issuing, making available to the public and administering electronic money, by the provisions of Title II. Institutions that limit their activity to issuing, making available to the public and administering electronic money are called electronic money institutions. Governing law Article 3 This guarantee is governed by French law, jurisdiction being attributed to the French courts. 1. − The issuing institution shall redeem unused electronic money units during their entire period of validity under the conditions set forth in the contract by which it is bound to the bearer of electronic money. 4. Article 4 Calling the surety If the Secured Institution is unable to meet its financial obligations arising from its payment service activities, the minister for the economy may call this surety by registered letter with acknowledgment of receipt sent to the Surety at the address given above. Done at (8) on (9). (1) Name, form, share capital and registered office of the credit institution or insurance undertaking and, where relevant, address of the branch giving the undertaking. (2) Power of attorney or authorisation, stating the date. (3) The future payment institution (full designation). (4) Amount in figures and words. (5) Effective date of the surety. (6) Expiry date of the surety. (7) Notice period. (8) Place of issue. (9) Date. The contract must set out clearly the conditions and time limit for redemption of unused electronic money units. In particular, the contract must state: (i) that electronic money units are redeemed at par value free of charges other than those strictly necessary to carry out the operation; (ii) the amount, nature and breakdown of such charges. However, the contract may stipulate that electronic money units with a value less than 10 euro will not be redeemed. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 25 2. − Within two months at most of an application for revocation of authorisation for cessation of activity sent by an institution to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or of an automatic revocation of authorisation decision issued by the Committee or of a decision to strike off an institution taken by said Autorité, the issuer shall redeem the unused electronic money units held by each bearer of electronic money. The issuer shall inform bearers of such cessation of activity by means suited to the nature of its customers. distinct transactions, the issuing institution shall ensure that all transactions carried out are traceable for two years. Distributing institutions shall provide the issuing institution with the necessary support ensure such traceability. On expiry of the two-month period, the issuing institution shall continue to be required to reimburse funds received in exchange for electronic money until they are transferred under the conditions set forth in Regulation 96-13 aforesaid to another authorised institution or to the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations, without prejudice to application of Article L. 27 of the State Property Code. Article 7 The internal control system set forth at Article 1(a) of Regulation 97-02 aforementioned shall include verification of the identification measures and the technical characteristics set forth in this Title, the results of which shall be included specifically in the report provided for at Article 42 of the above-mentioned Regulation. 3. − The redemptions referred to at points 1 and 2 above shall be made in coins and banknotes or by transfer to an account at the bearer’s discretion. Article 8 Issuing and distributing institutions shall introduce an automatic system for monitoring unusual transactions that use electronic money. Distributing institutions shall advise the issuing institution of any identified anomalies connected with the circulation of electronic money. The issuing institution may take steps to ensure that distributing institutions apply the defined standards of security and vigilance. 4. − If a person who is not a customer identified by an issuing institution or a distributing institution requests redemption in cash of electronic money units for a value in excess of 30 euro, the redeeming institution shall make a note of the person’s identity and keep it at the disposal of the other issuing or distributing institutions concerned, the banking supervisory authorities and the department referred to at Article L. 562-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code for two years. Article 4 The contracts referred at Article 3.1 shall include an undertaking by bearers of electronic money to use the devices entrusted to them to make payments or transfers of electronic money solely to persons or undertakings bound by contract to the issuing institution or distributing institutions under the conditions set forth, where applicable, in those contracts. Article 5 The electronic money units stored on a device that does not permit the bearer to be identified may not at any time exceed 150 euro. The contracts concluded with bearers and acceptors shall provide that unit or fractional payments made using this type of instrument may not exceed 30 euro per transaction. An issuing or distributing institution that charges or recharges such an instrument for cash for an amount in excess of 30 euro shall make a note of the identity of the person requesting the operation, unless that person is a customer of the institution in question. The institution shall keep the note of the person’s identity at the disposal of the issuing or distributing institutions concerned, the banking supervisory authorities and the department referred to at Article L. 562-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code for two years. Article 6 Issuing institutions shall ensure that uploads and downloads of electronic money units are traceable for two years. They shall ensure that they have the means to ensure the traceability of suspect transactions in the event that the security of all or some of the system should be compromised. If the arrangements in place allow for the same electronic money units to be used successively for 26 CHAPTER II INTERNAL CONTROL AND ANTI-MONEY LAUNDERING ARRANGEMENTS Article 9 The written internal rules referred to at Article 2(a) of Regulation 91-07 aforesaid shall stipulate the measures to be taken when identified anomalies may be of interest with regard to the prevention of money laundering, taking into account the knowledge that each institution must have of its customers. The monitoring system referred to at Article 2(b) of Regulation 91-07 aforesaid shall include verification of these measures. A report of anomalies identified pursuant to the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall be prepared at least monthly and sent to the persons referred to at Articles 2 and 5 of Decree 91-160 aforesaid. TITLE II PRUDENTIAL REQUIREMENTS OF ELECTRONIC MONEY INSTITUTIONS CHAPTER I PRUDENTIAL REQUIREMENTS OF ELECTRONIC MONEY INSTITUTIONS Article 10 Except where this Regulation expressly provides otherwise, Regulations 86-17, 86-21, 88-01, 88-10, 90-06, 91-05, 93-05 and 95-02 aforesaid and the Order of 20 February 2007 relating to own funds requirements applicable to credit institutions and investment firms do not apply to electronic money institutions. Article 11 The commercial activities of electronic money institutions are limited to the provision of services in connection with issuing, making available to the public and administering Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 electronic money and with storing data on electronic media on behalf of other legal persons. Article 12 Without prejudice to the provisions of Article 11 of this Regulation, an electronic money institution may not have any holdings in other undertakings except where such undertakings perform operational or other ancillary functions related to the electronic money issued or distributed by the institution concerned. Article 13 The own funds of electronic money institutions within the meaning of Regulation 90-02 aforesaid shall at all times be equal to or more than 2% of the higher of the following two amounts: − the daily amount of financial liabilities related to outstanding electronic money; − the average amount, calculated on the basis of the daily amounts for the preceding six months, of the total financial liabilities related to outstanding electronic money. Electronic money institutions that have not completed a six-month period of business since the effective date of authorisation shall calculate the average amount of their financial liabilities related to electronic money according to their programme of operations, subject to any adjustment required by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 14 1 − Electronic money institutions shall have investments in an amount no less than their financial liabilities related to outstanding electronic money in the following assets only: a) assets which according to the second indent of Article 4.2.2 and indents 1, 2 and 5 of Article 4.2.1 of Regulation 91-05 aforesaid attract a zero credit risk weighting and are sufficiently liquid; b) sight deposits held with Zone A credit institutions within the meaning of Article 2 of Regulation 91-05 aforesaid; the situation promptly. To this end, and for a temporary period only, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may allow the institution concerned to back its financial liabilities related to outstanding electronic money by assets other than those referred to in paragraph 1 up to an amount not exceeding the lower of 5% of these liabilities or the institution’s total amount of own funds. Article 15 For the purpose of hedging market risk arising from the issuance of electronic money and from the investments referred to at Article 14.1 of this Regulation, electronic money institutions may use sufficiently liquid interest-rate and foreign-exchange-related off-balance sheet items in the form of exchange-traded derivative instruments where they are subject to daily margin requirements or foreignexchange contracts with an original maturity of fourteen calendar days or less. In addition, such financial futures must meet the conditions stated at Article 4 of Regulation 88-02 or at Article 2.1(b) or (c) or Regulation 90-15 aforesaid. Article 16 The investments referred to at Article 14.1(b) and (c), net of provisions assigned to the hedging thereof, if any, may not exceed twenty times the electronic money institution’s own funds. Article 17 All electronic money institutions are required, under the conditions set forth in Regulation 93-05 aforesaid, to comply at all times with the maximum ratio of 25% between all the weighted risk they incur on account of their operations per beneficiary, net of the amount of provisions assigned to the hedging thereof and the amount of pledges or guarantees referred to at Articles 5 and 6 of Regulation 93-05 aforesaid, if any, and the amount of their own funds. Article 18 The elements included in the calculations designed to verify electronic money institutions’ compliance with Articles 13, 14, 16 and 17 of this Regulation shall be taken from electronic money institutions’ company accounts. c) debt securities: i) not covered by paragraph 1(a); ii) that are eligible within the meaning of Article 2.2 of Appendix II to Regulation 95-02 aforesaid; iii) that are issued by undertakings other than undertakings which have a qualifying holding, within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 90-06 aforesaid, in the electronic money institution concerned or which must be included in the consolidated accounts of undertakings that have such a qualifying holding. 2. For the purpose of applying paragraph 1, securities shall be valued at their acquisition price, net of necessary provisions, if any, or at their market value, whichever is the lower. 3. If the value of the assets referred to in paragraph 1 falls below the amount of financial liabilities relating to outstanding electronic money, the electronic money institution concerned must take appropriate steps to remedy Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 CHAPTER II EXEMPTIONS Article 19 1. − See paragraph (d), Article 1 of Regulation 92-14. 2. − The electronic money institutions, the total amount of whose financial liabilities related to outstanding electronic money does not exceed 5 million euro under normal circumstances and 6 million euro under any circumstances may be exempted from the provisions of Articles 14 to 18 of this Regulation as well as Regulations 86-17 and 88-01 aforesaid. The exemption shall cease three months after the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel finds that the conditions set forth in this Regulation are no longer met. 3. − Exempt institutions may not carry on their business on the territory of other States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area pursuant to Articles L. 511-27 and L. 511-28 of the Monetary and Financial Code. 27 4. − The above-mentioned institutions shall provide the Banque de France with at least an annual report on their activities, stating in particular the total amount of financial liabilities related to outstanding electronic money. CHAPTER III MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS Article 20 Without prejudice to the provisions of Article 14.3, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may grant a reporting electronic money institution a temporary derogation from the provisions of this Regulation, setting a time limit for rectifying the situation. Article 22 Credit institutions governed by this Regulation that were authorised before it took effect shall have six months in which to comply with its provisions. Article 23 The provisions of this Regulation shall apply in the principality of Monaco, with the exception of Article 9. 1.1.1.5 ASSOCIATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS ORDER OF 18 JULY 2012 RELATING TO ASSOCIATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS AUTHORISED TO ADVANCE CERTAIN LOANS AND IMPLEMENTED FOR THE APPLICATION OF ARTICLES R. 518-59 AND R. 518-62 OF THE MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE Article 1 – The minimum number of credit files mentioned in the third paragraph of Article R. 518-59 of the Monetary and Financial Code is fixed at fifty. Article 2 – The default rate on unprovisioned loan outstandings mentioned in the second paragraph of Article R. 518-62 of the Monetary and Financial Code is fixed at 30% in the absence of verifiable data on the average statistical default rate observed on loans granted over the previous three years. If the association or the foundation possesses verifiable statistical data for the previous three-year period, the rate applied to reserve funds, as a percentage, is calculated according to the following formula: 1.5 × the observed default rate defined above. This default rate cannot be less than 10% nor greater than 30%. The Autorité de contrôle prudential may, where appropriate, raise this rate depending on the specific situation of the association or foundation concerned. Article 3 – The percentage rate mentioned in the third paragraph of Article R. 518-62 of the Monetary and Financial Code must be at least 12%. 28 Article 4 – The own funds and similar resources mentioned in the fourth paragraph of Article R. 518-62 of the Monetary and Financial Code include own funds, contributions and front-end fees, public and private investment subsidies, gifts and donations as well the reserve funds. Article 5 – For compliance with the conditions related to the maturity matching of resources mentioned in the last paragraph of Article R. 518-62 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the association or foundation shall ensure, at all times, that the average maturity of the resources is greater than or equal to the average maturity of the loans granted in the framework of the authorisation delivered in application of Article R. 518-58 of the same Code. The average loan duration is calculated by dividing the total amount of outstanding loans (after weighting each loan for residual maturity expressed in days remaining) by the total nominal amount of outstanding loans granted. The average resource duration is calculated by dividing the total amount of resources (after weighting each resource for residual maturity expressed in days remaining) by the aggregate nominal amount of total resources recorded on the liability side of the balance sheet. Own funds and resources without any defined maturity are considered repayable after seven years. Public subsidies are considered to have a residual maturity of seven years. Article 6 – The Order of 3 July 2002 for the application of Decree no. 2002-652 of 30 April 2002 relating to the authorisation of the non-profit associations mentioned in paragraph five of Article L. 511-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code is abrogated. Article 7 – This Order will be published in the Journal officiel de la République française. 1.1.2. MINIMUM CAPITAL 1.1.2.1. CREDIT INSTITUTIONS REGULATION 92-14 OF 23 DECEMBER 1992, RELATING TO THE MINIMUM CAPITAL OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS as amended by Regulations 94-04 of 8 December 1994, 98-06 of 7 December 1998, 2000-10 of 8 December 2000, 2002-13 of 21 November 2002 and the Orders of 9 February 2006 and 29 October 2009 Article 1 Credit institutions having their headquarters within the territory of the French Republic shall have a paid-up capital or paid-up endowment capital at least equal to: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a) 5 million euro for banks, mutual or cooperative banks, savings and provident institutions, municipal credit banks other than those referred to under b) and c) below and specialised financial institutions. For the purposes of this provision, the balance sheets of regional or federal Crédit Agricole, Crédit Mutuel or Crédit Mutuel Agricole et Rural banks shall be consolidated with those of the local banks affiliated to them or that are affiliated to the same regional federation, pursuant to Article 14 of the above-mentioned Decree of 24 July 1984; the balance sheets of mutual or cooperative banks shall be consolidated with that of the mutual guarantee insurance companies, when they have been granted a collective authorisation under the conditions referred to in the above-mentioned Decree as amended by the above-mentioned Decree of 25 June 1993; the balance sheet of the Société Centrale de Crédit Maritime Mutuel shall be consolidated with those of the regional banks or the Union de Crédit Maritime Mutuel, pursuant to Article 16 of the above-mentioned Decree of 19 October 1976 as amended; b) 2.2 million euro for municipal credit banks which undertake under the terms of their articles of association not to collect funds from the public and to restrict their lending to the granting of loans secured by tangible collateral and credits to individuals, and financial companies other than those referred to under c) and d) below; c) d) 1.1 million euro for those municipal credit banks which confine their activity to lending against physical collateral, financial companies whose authorisation is confined to the provision of guarantees and those financial companies whose banking activity is confined to leveraged spot foreign-exchange transactions. 1 million euro for electronic money institutions, as defined by Article 2 of Regulation 2002-13. The value of electronic money units stored on a device issued by such institutions may not exceed 150 euro at any time Article 2 For the application of the present Regulation, capital in addition to the capital of institutions subject to the present Regulation that are constituted in the form of commercial companies, shall be deemed to include the sums that take the place thereof or that are equivalent thereto, under the legislation in force, in the accounts of the institutions governed by special Articles of association, in particular permanent endowments of funds or fixed or variable capital represented by actually paid-up "parts sociales" or by "certificats coopératifs d’investissement." Reserves not eligible for distribution and funds of a similar nature shall be added to the items referred to in the preceding paragraph. Article 3 a) Pursuant to Article L. 511-40, indent 2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, credit institutions authorised prior to 31 December 1992 and whose assets do not effectively exceed their liabilities to third parties by an amount at least equal to the minimum capital laid down herein, may continue to pursue their business, subject Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 to compliance with the provisions of the following paragraph. The actual surplus of assets over liabilities towards third parties of the institutions referred to in the preceding paragraph may in no circumstances remain or fall below the highest amount reached by this surplus in the period from 30 December 1989, nor below the minimum capital applicable at 31 December 1992. b) In the event of a merger between two or more institutions referred in the first indent of this Article, the resulting institution shall comply with Article 1 above. However, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise this institution to pursue its business under the conditions laid down in the second indent of point a) of this Article. In that case, the actual surplus of the said institution’s assets over its liabilities to third parties may not, moreover, fall below the sum of the surpluses of each of the merged institutions at the date of the merger. c) The institutions referred to in points a) and b) of this Article shall cease to qualify for the foregoing provisions as soon as the effective power of control is no longer held by the shareholder or shareholders which held it at 31 December 1992. In that case, they must immediately hold the minimum capital laid down under Article 1 above. Article 4 In any case, credit institutions authorised prior to 31 December 1992 shall be required to comply with the minimum capital requirement laid down in Article 1 of the present Regulation as from 1 January 1998, with the exception of financial companies whose authorisation is limited to the provision of guarantees, in which case the date shall be extended to 1 January 2000. At the dates referred to in the preceding paragraph and in Article 7 below, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may, in exceptional and temporary cases, allow the institution a further period for it to bring its situation into compliance. Article 5 In the overseas territories, the collectivité départementale de Mayotte or the Principality of Monaco, branches of credit institutions with their headquarters in another Member State of the European Communities shall be required to show an endowment capital employed in France of an amount at least equal to the minimum capital required of comparable credit institutions governed by French law. Article 6 Branches of credit institutions with their headquarters in another State that is not a Member State of the European Communities shall be required to show an endowment capital employed in France of an amount at least equal to the minimum capital required of comparable credit institutions governed by French law. Article 7 The branches referred to in Articles 5 and 6 of the present Regulation having received their authorisation prior to 29 31 December 1992 are not required to comply with the new requirements laid down herein until 1 January 1998. Until that date, they shall be required to hold endowment capital of an amount at least equal to that laid down by the Regulations applicable to them at 31 December 1992. Whatever the case, they shall be required to comply with the new requirements as of such time as effective control of the institutions concerned is no longer exercised by the shareholder or shareholders which held such power at 31 December 1992. Article 3 Institutions subject to this Regulation shall have paid-up capital at least equal to EUR 1.1 million when they hold funds belonging to their clients and carry out Article 7 bis As of the date of the entry into force of the Agreement on the European Economic Area and for the purposes of Articles 5, 6 and 7 of the present Regulation, credit institutions with their headquarters in the other States that are parties to the said Agreement shall have the same status as those having their headquarters in another Member State of the European Union. This amount shall however be reduced to EUR 1.1 million when the service provider holds neither funds nor securities belonging to customers. Article 8 The present Regulation shall apply as of 1 January 1993, at which date the above-mentioned Regulations 84-05, 88-06 and 92-01 shall be repealed. 1.1.2.2. INVESTMENT SERVICE PROVIDERS REGULATION 96-15 OF 20 DECEMBER 1996, RELATING TO THE MINIMUM CAPITAL OF INVESTMENT SERVICE PROVIDERS as amended by Regulation 2000-10 of 8 December 2000 and Orders of 15 May 2006, 20 February 2007 and 16 January 2008 Article 1 Investment service providers defined in Article L. 531-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code other than portfolio management companies defined in Article L. 532-9 of said Code and persons referred to in Article L. 440-2, point 4 and Article L. 542-1, point 5, of said Code hereinafter referred to as institutions subject to this Regulation, must prove they have minimum capital as provided herein. Article 2 Institutions subject to this Regulation shall have paid-up capital at least equal to EUR 3.8 million when they engage in the business of custody and administration of financial instruments. Where the laws and regulations oblige an institution subject to this Regulation to limit the scope of its business to the custody and administration of financial instruments linked to employee savings schemes, the paid-up capital shall be at least equal to EUR 150,000, provided that the institution subject to this Regulation is under the sole or joint control of one or several institutions that are subject to the requirements under the first indent of this article and have given notice that they shall be jointly and severally liable for the commitments of the subsidiary. Institutions subject to this regulation shall have paid-up capital at least equal to EUR 3.8 million when they engage in the business of clearing financial instruments as a member of a clearing house. 30 Trading for own account. Underwriting. Placing, Article 3 a Institutions subject to this Regulation shall have paid-up capital at least equal to EUR 125,000 when they exclusively provide one or more of the following investment services: • Reception and transmission of orders on behalf of third parties. • Execution of orders on behalf of third parties. • Portfolio management on behalf of third parties. • Investment advice. This amount shall however be reduced to EUR 50,000 when the service provider holds neither funds nor securities belonging to customers. Article 3b Institutions subject to this Regulation other than those mentioned in Articles 2, 3, 3a shall paid-up capital at least equal to EUR 730 000. Article 4 For the purposes of this Regulation, capital shall be deemed to include, in addition to the registered capital of the institutions subject to this Regulation that are constituted in the form of commercial companies (sociétés commerciales), the sums that take the place thereof or that are equivalent thereto, under the legislation in force, in the accounts of the institutions governed by special Articles of Association, in particular permanent endowments of funds or fixed or variable capital represented by actually paid-up "parts sociales", by "certificats coopératifs d’investissement" or by "certificats coopératifs d’associés". Reserves not eligible for distribution and funds of a similar nature shall be added to the items referred to in the preceding paragraph. Article 5 Deleted. Article 6 Deleted. Article 7 Deleted. Article 8 Deleted. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 1.1.3. CHANGES IN THE SITUATION OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES REGULATION 96-16 OF 20 DECEMBER 1996, RELATING TO CHANGES IN THE SITUATION OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND OF INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES as amended by Regulation 2001-05 of 29 October 2001 and Orders of 16 January 2008, 2 November 2009 and 25 August 2010 Article 1 The credit institutions and investment firms authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, hereafter referred to as undertakings subject to this Regulation, are required to submit to said Autorité the changes to be made to their capital structure and to the other elements taken into account when they were authorised, as provided herein. CHAPTER I CONDITIONS RELATING TO THE ACQUISITION OF OR INCREASE IN A QUALIFYING HOLDING EQUITY INTEREST IN AN UNDERTAKING SUBJECT TO THIS REGULATION Article 2 2.1. Any transaction that enables a person acting alone or in concert with other persons, as defined at Article L. 23310 of the Commercial Code, to acquire, increase, reduce or cease to have, directly or indirectly, as defined at Article L. 233-4 of the Commercial Code, a holding in an undertaking subject to this Regulation must be notified by such person or persons to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel before it is concluded, where either of the following two conditions is met: ― the fraction of voting rights held by such person or persons exceeds or falls below one tenth, one fifth, one third or half; ― the undertaking subject to this Regulation becomes or ceases to be the subsidiary of such person or persons. 2.2. Transactions to acquire or increase a qualifying holding are subject to prior authorisation by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel under the following conditions: 1. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall give the candidate acquirer written acknowledgment of receipt within two working days of receiving notice and all the requisite documents. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel then has sixty working days at most as of the date of the written acknowledgment of receipt within which to evaluate the transaction. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The written acknowledgment of receipt shall state the date at which the evaluation period expires. 2. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may, during the evaluation period, if necessary, and at the latest on the fiftieth working day of the evaluation period, ask for additional information it requires to complete the evaluation. Requests shall be made in writing and state the additional information required. The Committee shall furnish the candidate acquirer with written acknowledgment of receipt within two working days of receiving the additional information. The evaluation period is suspended during the period between the date on which the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel makes its information request and the date on which it receives the candidate acquirer’s response to the request. The suspension may not exceed twenty working days. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may make other requests for additional information or clarifications but they may not cause the evaluation period to be suspended. 3. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may increase the suspension mentioned in the preceding paragraph to thirty working days: a) if the candidate acquirer is established outside the Community or is governed by nonCommunity regulations; b) or if the candidate is a person not subject to supervision pursuant to European directives 2006/48/EC, 85/611/EEC, 92/49/EEC, 2002/83/EC, 2004/39/EC or 2005/68/EC. 4. If the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel decides, on completing the evaluation, to oppose the planned acquisition, it shall inform the candidate acquirer in writing within two working days and without exceeding the evaluation period, giving the reasons for its decision. The undertaking subject to this Regulation shall also be informed. At the candidate acquirer’s request, the Committee shall publish the reasons for its decision on the site mentioned at Article R. 511-3-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code. 5. If, on expiry of the evaluation period, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has not opposed the planned acquisition in writing, it is deemed to have been approved. [This indent is not applicable to 6. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may set a deadline for conclusion of the planned acquisition and extend it where appropriate. 7. Where several of the notifications provided for at Article L. 511-12-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code concerning the same credit institution or the same investment firm have been referred to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, it shall consider them jointly under conditions that ensure equal treatment for all the candidates. 31 By way of an exception to the foregoing provisions, transactions between companies placed directly or indirectly by equity links under the effective control of a single undertaking are merely brought to the immediate attention of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, unless the effect of such transactions is to transfer effective power of control or ownership of all or some of the above-mentioned rights to one or more persons not governed by the law of a State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. Where, by statute or by law, the number or distribution of voting rights is limited in relation to the number or distribution of shares to which they are attached, the percentages provided for in this chapter and the provisions set forth at Article 4 below are calculated and implemented respectively in terms of shares. 2.3. Within two days of receiving notice of a disposal, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall give the declarant written acknowledgment of receipt. The Committee has sixty working days in which to inform the declarant and the undertaking subject to this Regulation that, in view of the need to guarantee sound and prudent management, the transaction calls into question the conditions on which authorisation was granted. 2.4. Pursuant to Article L. 511-12 of the Monetary and Financial Code, where an undertaking governed by the law of a State that is neither a member of the European Community nor a party to the agreement on the European Economic Area seeks, under the terms of this article, to take a qualifying holding in an undertaking subject to this Regulation which has the effect of making that undertaking its subsidiary, and where the European Commission has found that credit institutions or investment firms having their registered office in a Member State do not have access to the market of the third country in question or do not benefit from the same treatment as credit institutions or investment firms that have their registered office there, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall: ― inform the European Commission of the planned acquisition submitted to it, if the Commission has asked to be informed of any project originating in the third country in question; ― where relevant, suspend or limit its decision at the request of the Council or the European Commission. The period provided for in Article 16 herein shall then also be suspended. Article 3 In addition, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may request that undertakings subject to this Regulation provide it with the names of their partners or shareholders who have declared that they hold a proportion of the voting rights that is less than 5% but greater than 0.5% or a percentage that is greater than the figure set by the Articles of Association pursuant to Article L. 233-7 of the Commercial Code. Article 4 For the purposes of this chapter, voting rights are calculated according to the provisions of Article L. 233-7 I and IV and Article L. 233-9 of the Commercial Code. No account is taken of voting rights that credit institutions or investment firms hold as a result of the underwriting or placing of financial instruments as defined at Article D. 321-1-6-1 and 6-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, as long as such rights are not exercised or otherwise used to intervene in the issuer’s management and provided that they are disposed of within one year of acquisition. Article 5 Undertakings subject to this Regulation, other than credit institutions that are affiliated to a central body, are required to file financial information on each person owning at least 10% of their capital with the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel each year. They shall also file the same information on each of their partners when constituted as a general partnership, or on each of the general partners when constituted in the form of a limited partnership. However, these obligations do not apply to partners or shareholders that are themselves undertakings subject to this Regulation, or that are credit institutions or investment firms authorised by another State that is party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. For each partner or shareholder, the above-mentioned financial information shall indicate: a) in the case of a legal person making public offerings: all of the documents covered by its public disclosure obligations; b) in the case of a legal person not making public offerings: the certified corporate accounting documents, where appropriate consolidated, for the last completed financial year together with the appended notes to the financial statements and all other information pertaining to facts liable to have a significant effect on its financial condition; c) in the case of a natural person: all relevant information regarding the person’s financial situation. Article 6 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may ask any undertaking subject to this Regulation to provide it with all the financial information necessary for it to discharge its duties pertaining to its ten largest partners or shareholders each holding less than 10% but more than 0.5% of the capital or more than the corresponding figure set by the Articles of Association pursuant to Article L. 233-7 of the Commercial Code. CHAPTER II OTHER ELEMENTS TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT FOR THE GRANTING OF AUTHORISATION Article 7 The prior authorisation of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel must be sought for changes to the situation of undertakings subject to this Regulation affecting: – 32 legal form, Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 – registered name, – trading name, – the type of banking operations that a credit institution is authorised to conduct, – the investment services or financial instruments, – the membership of a general partnership, – the identity of the general partner(s) in a limited partnership, Article 8 The following shall be reported to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within one month: a) changes to: – the amount of the capital of fixed-capital companies, – the rules used to calculate voting rights, – the composition of boards of directors or supervisory boards of undertakings subject to this Regulation other than credit institutions affiliated to a central body, – the address of the registered office; b) the signature or revision of any agreement made between partners or shareholders relating to the items referred to in Articles 4 and 9 herein; c) the adoption of or changes to stipulations made in application of Article L. 233-7 of the Commercial Code. Investment firms intending to hold funds belonging to their clients shall send notice to the CECEI, at least one month prior to the date when they start business, and indicate the measures taken in this respect, in particular those concerning the internal control and the segregation of the funds. Investment firms that hold funds belonging to their clients at the date when the Order of 16 January 2008 enters into force, shall give notice to the CECEI. within three months as from the entry into force of this Order, where their authorisation does not mention such business. CHAPTER III APPOINTMENT AND REMOVAL OF MANAGERS Article 9 The appointment of any new person called upon to be responsible for the effective direction of the business policy of an undertaking subject to this Regulation, under the terms of Article L. 511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code or of Article L. 532-2 of said Code, shall be notified immediately to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. This notification shall be accompanied by all the documents and information required to assess the integrity and experience of the person concerned. Where the undertaking subject to this Regulation is an investment service provider, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the Autorité des Marchés Financiers within five working days. The Autorité des Marchés Financiers shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and the undertaking subject to this Regulation Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 within one month as from the report that the appointment referred to in the first paragraph of this Article is not compatible with the approval previously given to the business programme. Without prejudice to the provisions of the preceding paragraph, when the undertaking subject to this Regulation is a credit institution, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall also have a period of one month, as from either the report made to it pursuant to the first paragraph of this Article, or from the end of the period referred to in the second paragraph of this Article, in which to notify the supervised institution that the appointment is not compatible with the authorisation granted previously. Article 10 In any undertaking subject to this Regulation, the removal or departure of persons discharging the duties referred to in Article 9 above shall be immediately notified to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel Where relevant, the Autorité shall immediately inform the Autorité des Marchés Financiers. Article 11 The amendment of the Articles of Association of a supervised institution in the form of a public limited liability company to insert or delete any stipulation relating to the organisation of the powers of management and control, entrusted to a management board and to a supervisory board in accordance with the provisions of Articles L. 225-57 to L. 225-93 of the Commercial Code, shall immediately be reported to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. This notification shall, where appropriate, be accompanied by the information required under Article 9 above. CHAPTER IV GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 12 Financial institutions other than investment firms and payment institutions having their registered office in France and that effectively control directly or indirectly one or more credit institutions or investment firms subject to this Regulation shall report immediately to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel changes to their situation relating to: a) registered name, b) the membership of a general partnership, c) the identity of the general partner(s) in a limited partnership, d) the rules used to calculate voting rights, e) the agreements between partners or shareholders relating to the items referred to in Article 4 herein, f) the stipulations made pursuant to Article L. 233-7 of the Commercial Code, the address of the registered office. 33 Article 13 The branches of credit institutions having their registered office abroad are not subject to the provisions of Chapters I and II herein. However, the branches of credit institutions having their registered office in a State that is not party to the agreement on the European Economic Area are subject to the following provisions: a) The identity of persons who have acquired or relinquished effective control over the management of the foreign undertaking or crossed the thresholds mentioned at Article 2.1 of this Regulation in either direction shall be notified to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within one month, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may inform the reporting undertaking that, given the need to guarantee sound and prudent management of undertakings subject to this Regulation, this operation is liable to entail a re-examination of the authorisation granted for the branch concerned. b) The prior authorisation of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel is required for changes in their situation relating to: – the type of banking operation authorised by the Autorité, – the investment services or financial instruments that were approved by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers. c) The following changes shall be notified to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within one month: – the business name of the foreign institution, – the trading name of the foreign institution, – the amount of its capital, – the addresses of registered office of the foreign credit institution and of its principal business office in France. Article 14 Applications for authorisation and the notifications provided for herein shall contain all of the details necessary to inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and, where relevant, the Autorité des Marchés Financiers of the causes, aims and consequences of the changes to be made. Article 15 The decisions of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel made pursuant to this Regulation shall be notified to the applicants and to the undertakings concerned. The authorisation of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel concerning a change to the situation of an investment service provider relating to the investment services or financial instruments having been approved by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers shall be deemed to be granted two months after these authorities, which shall have been immediately notified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, have informed the Comité and the undertaking subject to this Regulation that the change is compatible with the programme of operations previously approved pursuant to Articles L. 532-1 and L. 532-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Where the Autorité des Marchés Financiers remains silent for more than two months, the said change shall be deemed to have been approved. Article 17 The changes made to the composition of the boards of directors and supervisory boards of credit institutions affiliated to a central body must be reported to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel once a year though the central body. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall be notified through the central body of changes made to the list of local branches benefiting from a collective authorisation granted pursuant to Article 14 of Decree 84–708 of 24 July 1984 aforesaid within one month. Prior authorisation from the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel is required for any change affecting the collective authorisation granted to a mutual or cooperative bank for itself and one or more mutual guarantee companies pursuant to the amended Article of said Decree, or to the Société Centrale de Crédit Maritime Mutuel for itself and one or more mutual maritime credit unions or regional branches pursuant to Article 16 of the amended Decree 76-1011 of 19 October 1976 aforesaid. Article 18 Regulation 90-11 of 25 July 1990 relating to changes in the situation of credit institutions as amended by Regulations 92-11 of 23 December 1992 and 94-11 of 8 December 1994 is hereby repealed. In Article 11 of the amended Regulation 92-12 of 23 December 1992 relating to the provision of banking services abroad by credit institutions and financial institutions having their registered office in France, the reference to Regulation 90-11 aforesaid is replaced by a reference to this Regulation. Undertakings subject to this Regulation shall ensure that their partners or shareholders comply with the terms of this Regulation, notably by requesting all relevant supporting documents from them. Article 16 Where an authorisation is required pursuant to this Regulation and the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel remains silent for more than three months concerning an application made in compliance with Article 14 above, the said authorisation is deemed to be granted, subject to the provisions of Article 2 of this Regulation and of the following paragraph. 34 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 1.1.4. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SINGLE MARKET 1.1.4.1. CREDIT INSTITUTIONS REGULATION 92-12 OF 23 DECEMBER 1992, REGARDING THE PROVISION OF BANKING SERVICES ABROAD BY CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS HAVING THEIR REGISTERED OFFICE IN FRANCE as amended by Regulations 94-04 of 8 December 1994, 96–16 of 20 December 1996, 99–01 of 21 June 1999, 2002-03 of 15 July 2002, and the Order of 20 February 2007 CHAPTER 1 CREDIT INSTITUTIONS Article 1 A credit institution having its registered office within the territory of the French Republic and wishing to establish a branch in another Member State of the European Communities for the purpose of providing banking services, as defined in Article L. 511-21 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall give prior notification of its plan to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, and shall provide the following information when effecting the said notification, called a freedom of establishment notification: 1. the name of the Member State within territory of which it plans to establish a branch, 2. a programme of operations setting out inter alia the types of business envisaged and the structural organisation of the branch, 3. the address of the branch to which the authorities of the Member State referred to in point 1. above shall apply for information in order to perform their appointed tasks, 4. the names of those responsible for the management of the branch. The notification required in the preceding paragraph shall be accompanied by all the relevant information for the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to assess the adequacy of the administrative structure or financial situation of the credit institution to the proposed plan, notably with respect to the system of internal control of the branch and the experience, fitness and properness of the managers placed in charge of it. The Comité may also request details regarding deposit-guarantee schemes intended to protect depositors in the branch. Article 2 When, pursuant Article L. 511-27 of the Monetary and Financial Code and in the light of the plan submitted to it, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has no grounds for doubting the adequacy of the administrative structures or financial situation of the institution concerned, it shall communicate the information referred to in points 2.,3. and 4. of Article 1 to the competent authority of the Member State referred to in point 1. within three months of due receipt of the said information, and it shall inform the institution concerned. It shall further communicate the last available evaluation of the capital and the solvency ratio of the credit institution, together with details, where appropriate, regarding the deposit-guarantee scheme intended to ensure the protection of the depositors in the branch. If the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel refuses to communicate the information referred to in the first indent, it shall inform the institution concerned of its reasons for doing so within the time period specified in the first indent. Article 3 Credit institutions with their registered office within the territory of the French Republic that have branches in one or more Member States of the European Communities established prior to 1 January 1993, shall provide the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with the information referred to in points 1.,2.,3. and 4. of Article 1 herein relating to the said branches before 31 March 1993. Article 4 In the event of an intention to change any of the information or evaluation particulars communicated to the Comité or brought to its knowledge, the institution concerned shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of the said change at least one month before it takes effect. The notification shall be accompanied by all relevant details in order to enable the Comité to determine whether the said change is consistent with the conditions laid down in the second indent of Article L. 511-27 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Where necessary, the institution shall take such measures as the Comité may deem necessary to ensure that its administrative structures or financial situation remain appropriate to the activities carried on or which it proposes to conduct. The freedom of establishment notification and the information referred to in points 1. to 4. of this Article shall be accompanied by certified authentic translations thereof in the official language of the host Member State. Article 5 A credit institution with its registered office within the territory of the French Republic that wishes to provide banking services under the freedom to provide services in another Member State for the first time shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel thereof, indicating the name of the Member State and the nature of the banking services that it proposes to provide. For the application of this Regulation, any number of places of business opened in a single Member State shall be regarded as a single branch. The said declaration shall be accompanied by a certified authentic translation thereof in the official language of the host Member State. The credit institution shall, moreover, transmit to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, at its request, all Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 35 information regarding procedures for the conduct of the proposed activities under the freedom to provide services. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall transmit to the Member State concerned the freedom to provide services declaration mentioned in the first indent of this Article within one month of its due receipt. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall be notified immediately of any changes in the particulars previously communicated to it. Article 6 Credit institutions that already conduct business through branches in one or more States that are not members of the European Communities, with the exception of the Principality of Monaco, prior to 1 January 1993, shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel thereof before 31 March 1993. A credit institution which commences or ceases an activity in one of the States referred to in the preceding paragraph shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel thereof. Article 7 For the purpose of the application of Article 23, points 2 to 7 of the Directive of 20 March 2000, and to ensure fair access to markets, credit institutions shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any general difficulties encountered by them in providing banking services in a State that is not a member of the European Communities. CHAPTER II FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS Article 8 A financial institution as defined in Article L. 511-21 of the Monetary and Financial Code must meet the following conditions before it may establish a branch or carry on business in other Member States of the Community under the freedom to provide services, in accordance with the mutual recognition procedures laid down in Article L. 511-28 of said Code: – – – at least 90% of the voting rights attached to the stock or shares in the financial institution must belong to one or more credit institutions authorised in France; the parent undertaking must demonstrate that its subsidiary is managed prudently and must, with the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, declare that it jointly and severally guarantees the commitments entered into by the said subsidiary; the financial institution must effectively provide banking services of the same nature within the territory of the French Republic and it must be included, with regard to these activities notably, in the supervision on a consolidated basis of its parent undertaking. When a financial institution meets these conditions, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall deliver a certificate to that effect at its request. 36 Article 9 A financial institution that has obtained the certificate mentioned in Article 8 herein and which wishes to establish a branch in another Member State for the purpose of providing banking services under the freedom of establishment, shall follow the procedures laid down in Articles 1 and 4 herein. When, pursuant to Article L. 511-28 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has no grounds, on the basis of the plan notified to it, for doubting the adequacy of the administrative structures or financial situation of the financial institution, it shall communicate the information provided under Article 1 above, together with the certificate referred to in Article 8, as laid down in Article 2. The amount of the capital communicated shall be that of the financial institution. The solvency ratio communicated shall be the consolidated ratio of the parent credit institution. Article 10 A financial institution that has obtained the certificate referred to under Article 8 herein and which wishes to carry on business for the first time within the territory of another Member State, under the freedom to provide services, shall follow the procedure laid down in Article 5 herein. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall communicate the declaration referred to in the said Article, together with the certificate referred to in Article 8. Article 11 Financial institutions having followed the procedures stipulated herein for the provision of banking services in other Member States of the European Communities shall be subject to the following Regulations: – 90-06 of 20 June 1990, relating to holdings in undertakings; – 90-07 of 20 June 1990, relating to the supervision of interbank risks; – the Order of 20 February 2007, relating to own funds requirements applicable to credit institutions and investment firms. – 93-05 of 21 December 1993 on controlling large exposures – 96-16 of 20 December 1996, relating to changes in the situation of credit institutions and investment firms other than portfolio management companies; – 97-02 of 21 February 1997, relative to internal control in credit institutions Their capital resources may not fall below the minimum amount required in order to commence their activities, as required by their legal status. CHAPTER III MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS Article 12 This Regulation does not apply to institutions having their registered office in the French overseas territories, in Nouvelle Calédonie, in the territorial unit (collectivité Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or in the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte. Article 12 bis As from the date of entry into force of the Agreement on the European Economic Area, the provisions of this Regulation shall be extended to credit institutions and financial institutions having their registered office within the territory of the French Republic, other than those referred to in Article 12 above, and wishing to conduct their business through branches or the free provision of services within the territory of States other than the Member States of the European Union that are parties to the Agreement. The credit institutions referred to in the previous paragraph that have opened branches in one or more States that are parties to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, other than the Member States of the European Union, before the date of entry into force of the Agreement shall communicate the information referred to in points 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Article 1 to the Comité des Établissements de Crédit before 31 December 1994. Article 13 This Regulation shall take effect from 1 January 1993 REGULATION 92-13 OF 23 DECEMBER 1992, RELATING TO THE PROVISION OF BANKING SERVICES IN FRANCE BY INSTITUTIONS HAVING THEIR REGISTERED OFFICE IN OTHER MEMBER STATES OF THE EUROPEAN UNION as amended by Regulations 93-03 of 19 March 1993, 94-02 of 27 July 1994, 94-04 of 8 December 1994, 95-01 of 21 July 1995, 98-08 of 7 December 1998, 99-07 of 9 July 1999 2001-04 of 29 October 2001, 2002-01 of 18 April 2002, 2002-03 of 15 July 2002, 200402 of 15 January 2004 and the Order of 16 February 2005 Article 1 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel must have received prior communication of the following information from the competent authority of the Member State concerned in order that a credit institution having its headquarters in another Member State of the European Communities may open a branch for the purpose of providing banking services within the territory of the French Republic, with the exception of the overseas territories, the Nouvelle Calédonie, the territorial unit (collectivité territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon and the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte, as provided in Article L. 511-22 of the Monetary and Financial Code: 1. a programme of activities setting out inter alia the types of operations envisaged and the structural organisation of the branch; 2. the address from which documents may be requested in France; 3. the names of the managers responsible for the branch; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 4. the amount of the own funds and the solvency ratio of the credit institution; 5. details regarding any deposit-guarantee scheme intended to ensure the protection of depositors. Upon due receipt of the information, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall issue an acknowledgement of receipt to the competent authority concerned and shall inform the institution in question thereof. It shall also communicate to the institution those measures taken in application of the above-mentioned amended Act 84-46 [inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code], notably the Regulations referred to in Article 5 herein, which it must comply with. The branch may commence its activities upon receipt of the communication referred to in the preceding paragraph, or when a period of time set by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has elapsed, or in any event after a period of two months from the date of due receipt of the said information has elapsed. For the purpose of application of the present Regulation, if more than one place of business is opened within the territory of the French Republic, with the exception of the overseas territories, the Nouvelle Calédonie, the territorial unit (collectivité territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon and the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte, they shall be regarded as a single branch. Article 2 In order that a credit institution having its headquarters in another Member State of the European Communities may provide services, under the freedom to provide services, within the territory of the French Republic, with the exception of the overseas territories, the Nouvelle Calédonie, the territorial unit (collectivité territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon and the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte, in accordance with Article L. 511-22 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel must have received prior communication from the competent authority of the Member State concerned of the notification by the institution indicating its identity and the banking services which it proposes to provide within the French territory. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall immediately issue an acknowledgement of receipt of the said communication to the competent authority, and to the institution concerned. The institution concerned may then commence its activities. Article 3 In order that a financial institution having its headquarters in another Member State of the Communities may establish branches for the provision of banking services or act under the freedom to provide services within the territory of the French Republic, with the exception of the overseas territories, the Nouvelle Calédonie, the territorial unit (collectivité territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon and the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte, pursuant to Article L. 511-23 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel must have received prior communication, from the competent authority of the Member State concerned, of a certificate to 37 the effect that the institution meets the conditions laid down by it in order to qualify for the regime provided for credit institutions. maintained in 2 August 1984; for the creation of a branch: the information required in the first paragraph of Article 1 of the present Regulation. The amount of capital communicated shall be that of the financial institution. The solvency ratio communicated shall be the consolidated ratio of the parent credit institution. The procedures referred to in second and third paragraphs of Article 1 shall then apply; – for the exercise of the freedom to provide services, the information required under Article 2. The procedures referred to in the second paragraph of Article 2 shall then apply. by Regulation 84-01 of – amended Regulation 85-01 relating to reserve requirements in the French overseas departments1; – Regulation 85-17 relating to the interbank market; – amended Regulation 86-08 relating to the central database on payment incidents; – amended Regulation 86-09 relating to the central database on risks; – amended Regulation 86-13 relating to the interest on funds received by credit institutions; – amended Regulation requirements; – Regulation 86-20 relating to conditions governing the opening of passbook accounts; The said certificate shall be accompanied by: – force 86-14 relating to reserve – Regulation 86-21 relating to non-banking activities; Article 4 Any proposed change in the particulars communicated to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article 1, with the exception of point 4, shall be notified, in French, to the Committee by the headquarters or branch of the institution concerned at least one month prior to the date when it comes into effect. – amended Regulation 86-22 relating to the opening of branches; – Regulation 87-09 relating to the hedging of transactions in securities and financial products; – Regulation 87-11 amending the standard form for a preliminary offer to lease; Any modification in the information communicated to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Article 2 shall immediately be notified, in French, to the said Committee. – amended Regulation 89-06 relating to the interest margin required by clearing houses in regulated markets; – Regulation 90-05 relating to the FICP; – Regulation 90-12 relating to the time-stamping of orders; – Regulation 90-13 relating to the conditions governing the receipt and execution of customer orders transmitted via professional intermediaries; – Regulation 91-07 relating to vigilance with regard to money laundering operations; – Amended Regulation 93-03 of 19 March 1993 relating to securities account agreements between credit institutions and their clients; – Regulation 94-02 relating to accounting of customers’ securities by credit institutions; – Regulation 98-08 relating to negotiable debt securities; – Regulation 99-07 relating to the guarantee of deposits or other repayable funds received by the branches of credit institutions; – Regulation 2001-04 relating to cheque clearing. – Regulation 2002-01 relating to obligations of vigilance with regard to cheques in order to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism, – Order of 16 February 2005 taken in implementation of Article 1 of decree 92-137 of 13 February 1992 as amended relative to the issuance of negotiable debt 1 The Act 93-980 of 4 August 1993 as amended relating to the Banque de France statute [inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code] made these regulations null and void. Article 5 The branches of credit institutions or financial institutions referred to, respectively, in Articles 1 and 3 herein shall be subject to amended Regulation 88-01 relating to liquidity and Articles 31-1, 43 paragraph 3 and 44 of amended Regulation 97-02 of 21 February 1997 relating to internal control in credit institutions and investment firms. Without prejudice to the laws and regulations applicable to the activity carried on, credit and financial institutions which conduct business in the form of a branch shall comply with the following additional general interest provisions: – – the amended Conseil National du Crédit Decisions 69-02, 69-03, 69-04 and 69-05, relating to conditions governing the receipt of funds by banks and financial institutions in metropolitan France and the overseas departments; Conseil National du Crédit Decision 72-05 relating to the conditions governing the payment of interest on French-franc accounts opened by non-residents; – Conseil National du Crédit Decision 74-07 relating to procedures for calculating interest on financial assets offered to the public; – Conseil National du Crédit Decision 76-02 relating to the management of securities redeemable by lot; − Conseil National du Crédit Decision 79-05 relating to the clearing of cheques: (abrogated since 30 June 2002) 38 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 securities by investment firms, credit institutions and the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations. Institutions operating under the freedom to provide services shall also be required to comply with the provisions referred to in the preceding paragraph with regard to those of their operations which are subject to mandatory provisions of French law. Article 6 Credit institutions having their headquarters in another Member State of the European Communities and wishing to provide banking services within the territory of the Principality of Monaco must apply for authorisation in accordance with the conditions laid down in Article L. 511-10 of the Monetary and Financial Code and shall be bound by all of the provisions of the said Act. Article 6 bis As from the date of entry into force of the Agreement on the European Economic Area, credit institutions and financial institutions having their headquarters in States that are parties to the Agreement shall be considered to be equivalent to credit institutions and financial institutions having their headquarters in a Member State of the European Union, other than France. Article 7 The present Regulation 1 January 1993. shall take effect as of 1.1.4.2. INVESTMENT SERVICE PROVIDERS EXCERPT FROM MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE: ARTICLES R. 532-20 TO R. 532-29, RELATING TO THE RIGHT OF ESTABLISHMENT AND FREEDOM TO PROVIDE SERVICES FOR INVESTMENT SERVICES PROVIDERS IN OTHER STATES PARTY TO THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AREA AGREEMENT RIGHT OF ESTABLISHMENT AND FREEDOM TO PROVIDE SERVICES IN FRANCE Article R. 532-17 The Autorité des marchés financiers receives notifications of free establishment and free provision of services by investment service providers referred to in Articles L. 53218 and L. 532-18-1. It shall immediately inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. The Autorité des marchés financiers also receives notifications of free establishment and free provision of services by management companies referred to in Article L. 532-20-1. Article R. 532-18 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel informs, where appropriate, the investment service providers referred to in Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article L. 532-18-1 of the provisions in the general interest they must comply with when providing banking services. Right of Establishment and Freedom to provide Services in other States that are Party to the European Economic Agreement Right of Establishment Right of Establishment: services providers other than portfolio management companies Article R. 532-20 I. Any investment service provider, other than a portfolio management company subject to Article L. 532-9 of the Monetary and Financial Code, having its registered office within metropolitan France or its overseas departments ruled by Article 73 of the Constitution that intends to set up a branch to provide investment services in another State that is party to the European Economic Area Agreement shall give prior notice of its plans to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, which shall refer the matter to the Autorité des marchés financiers within five working days. The Autorité des marchés financiers transmits its comments on this project to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel within one month. The notification of establishment provided for in the preceding paragraph shall be accompanied by the following information: 1) the State within the territory of which the firm or institution plans to establish a branch; 2) the programme of operations setting out inter alia the types of investment and related services envisaged and the organisational structure of the branch and specifying whether the branch intends to have recourse to related parties as referred to in Article L.545-1; 3) the address of the branch from which the authorities of the State referred to under 1) may request documents in order to exercise their powers; 4) the names of the senior managers of the branch. At the request of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or the Autorité des marchés financiers, the investment service provider shall also supply all information necessary to enable the authorities to assess the adequacy of its administrative structure or financial position for the activities envisaged, as well as any information regarding the compensation or equivalent scheme intended to protect the branch’s customers. The notification of establishment provided for in the first paragraph may be addressed by the firm to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel at the same time as its application for authorisation. Article R. 532-21 Unless the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or the Autorité des marchés financiers have decided that the administrative structure or the financial position of the investment service provider preclude the establishment of a branch, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel transmits the notification and the information communicated under 2°, 3° and 4° of I of Article R. 532-20 to the authority of the host State 39 referred to in 1° of Article R. 532-20 which has been designated as contact point in the meaning of Article L. 532-23, within three months of receipt. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel also transmits to this authority information on the compensation or equivalent scheme intended to protect the branch’s customers. It shall inform the Autorité des marchés financiers as well as the firm or institution concerned of such transmission. In addition to the information referred to in Article R. 53220, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall provide the authority of the host State designated as contact point with detailed information on the investor compensation system to which the investment service provider has subscribed in accordance with Article L. 322-1. Should any of this information change, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall notify that authority. Where an investment service provider intends to exercise its right to act as a global custodian under the freedom to provide investment services in another State that is party to the European Economic Area Agreement, it shall, without prejudice of the conditions requested by the competent authority of the host country, have been agreed to exercise this service in France. Article R. 532-22 Where the Autorité des marchés financiers, in the case of the exercise of the service mentioned in 4° of Article L. 321-1, refuses to have the information referred to in Article R. 532-21 transmitted to the competent authority of the host State referred to in the 1° of Article R. 532-20, which has been designated as contact point, it shall give the reasons for its refusal to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel as well as to the firm or institution concerned within three months as provided in Article R. 532-21. Where the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel refuses to transmit the information referred to in Article R. 532-21, it shall inform the Autorité des marchés financiers as well as the firm or institution concerned in the same conditions and within the same deadline as specified in the preceding paragraph. Article R. 532-23 Where a change is planned to any of the particulars given under points 2°, 3° and 4° of Article R. 532-20 or to any of the information communicated to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, the firm or institution concerned shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudential of this change at least one month before it is implemented. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall within five working days refer the matter to the Autorité des Marchés Financiers. It shall also inform the authority of the host State which has been designated as contact point. Where the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or, in the case of the exercise of the service mentioned in Article L. 321-1, 4°, the Autorité des marchés financiers deem that the firm or institution must take steps to adapt its administrative structures or financial position to existing or planned activities, they shall request the taking of such steps in a registered letter sent to the firm with return receipt requested. Article R. 532-24 I. Any portfolio management company subject to Article L. 532-9 of the Monetary and Financial Code and having its registered office in metropolitan France or its overseas departments of Saint Barthélemy and Saint Martin, that wishes to establish a branch to provide investment services or manage an investment fund authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009 in another State that is party to the European Economic Area Agreement shall give prior notice of its plans to the Autorité des marchés financiers. The notification of establishment provided for in the preceding paragraph shall be accompanied by the information listed in the second paragraph of Article R. 532-20. The portfolio management company shall also provide the information specified in the seventh paragraph of said article if so requested by the Autorité des marchés financiers. For the management of investment funds authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009, the programme referred to in 2° of Article R. 532-20 also includes a description of the risk management process set up by the portfolio management company and a description of the procedures and arrangements for handling complaints. The portfolio management company may send to the Autorité des marchés financiers the notification of establishment provided for in the first paragraph and its request for an agreement together. II. Unless the Autorité des marchés financiers has determined that the administrative structures or the financial position of the portfolio management company preclude the establishment of a branch, it shall transmit the notification and the information communicated under 2°, 3° and 4° of Article R. 532-20 to the competent authority of the host State mentioned in 1° of the same article, which has been designated as contact point, within three months of receipt. This timeframe is two months when the planned activity is managing investment funds authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009. Where appropriate, the Autorité des marchés financiers also transmits information on the compensation or equivalent scheme intended to protect the branch’s customers and informs the company concerned thereof. III. Where the Autorité des marchés financiers refuses to communicate the information referred to in Article R. 53221 to the competent authority of the host State mentioned in 1° of Article R. 532-20, which has been designated as contact point, it shall give reasons therefore to the company concerned within the three month period provided for in Article R. 532-21. This timeframe is two months when the planned activity is managing investment funds authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009. Right of establishment: portfolio management companies 40 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 IV. Where a portfolio management company wishes to manage investment funds authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009, the Autorité des marchés financiers includes in the documentation sent to the competent authorities of the Member State hosting the portfolio management company a certificate confirming that the said company has been authorised in accordance with the provisions of this directive, a description of the scope of the authorisation granted and details on any restriction on the types of investment funds that the company is authorised to manage. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or the Autorité des Marchés Financiers may request that the investment service provider referred to in the first paragraph supply all information on the conditions in which it intends to carry out the activities concerned under the freedom to provide services. Article R. 532-25 Where a portfolio management company plans to change any of the particulars referred to in 2°, 3° and 4° of Article R. 532-20 and in the third paragraph of I of Article R. 53224 or any of the information transmitted to the Autorité des marchés financiers, it shall inform the Autorité des marchés financiers of this change at least one month before it is implemented. The Autorité des marchés financiers shall notify this to the authority of the host State that has been designated as contact point. II. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall transmit the notification of the provision of services provided for in the first paragraph of I of this Article to the competent authority of the host State, that has been designated as contact point, within one month of its receipt. Where the firm or institution has been requested to supply additional information, this deadline is suspended until the information has been received. Should there be any changes to the information provided under the first paragraph of II of Article R. 532-24, the Autorité des marchés financiers shall notify the competent authorities of the host Member State of the portfolio management company accordingly. The Autorité des marchés financiers shall update the information contained in the certificate referred to in IV of Article R. 532-24 and shall inform the competent authorities of the host Member State of the portfolio management company of any changes in the scope of the authorisation granted to that company or in the particulars concerning any restrictions on the types of investment funds that the company is authorised to manage. Where the Autorité des marchés financiers deems that the portfolio management company must take steps to adapt its administrative structures or financial position to its existing or planned activities, it shall request the taking of such steps in a registered letter sent to the company with return receipt requested. The notification of the provision of services referred to in the first paragraph may be addressed by the applicant to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel at the same time as the authorisation application. Where an investment service provider intends to exercise its right to act as a global custodian under the freedom to provide investment services in another State that is party to the European Economic Area Agreement, it shall, without prejudice of the conditions requested by the competent authority of the host country, have been agreed to exercise this service in France. Where the investment service provider intends to have recourse to related parties, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall communicate, at the request of the competent authority of the host Member State and within a reasonable timeframe, the identity of the related parties that the provider intends to use in that Member State. Article R. 532-27 Any planned changes regarding the information notified under the provisions of the first paragraph of I of Article R. 532-26 are communicated to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel before these changes become effective. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall notify the Autorité des marchés financiers within five working days. It shall also notify the authority of the host State that has been designated as contact point. Freedom to provide investment services Freedom to provide services: services providers other than portfolio management companies Article R. 532-26 I. Any investment service provider having its registered office in metropolitan France or the overseas departments, of Saint Barthélemy and Saint Martin that intends to exercise its right to provide investment services for the first time in another State that is party to the European Economic Area Agreement shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of its plans. It shall indicate the State concerned and describe the type of investment services it contemplates providing and whether it intends to have recourse to related parties. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall within five working days forward this notification to the Autorité des marchés financiers. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Freedom to provide services: portfolio management companies Article R. 532-28 I. Any portfolio management company having its registered office in metropolitan France or in overseas departments of Saint Barthélemy and Saint Martin, that intends to provide investment services or manage an investment fund not governed by French law authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009 for the first time under the freedom to provide services in another State that is party to the European Economic Area Agreement shall notify the Autorité des Marchés Financiers of its plans. It shall indicate the State concerned and describe the type of investment services it intends to provide. As regards the management of investment funds not governed by French law authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 41 13 July 2009, the notified project also includes a description of the risk management process set up by the portfolio management company and a description of the procedures and arrangements for handling complaints. At the request of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, the portfolio management company shall provide all information on the conditions in which it carries out its activities under the freedom to provide services. The notification of freedom to provide services set out in the first paragraph may be addressed, by the interested portfolio management company, to the Autorité des marchés financiers together with its application for authorisation. II. The Autorité des Marchés Financiers shall forward the declaration of provision of services made pursuant to I of this Article to the State concerned within one month of its receipt. III. Where a portfolio management company wishes to manage one or more investment funds not governed by French law authorised under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009, the Autorité des marchés financiers adds to the documentation sent to the competent authorities of the host Member State of the portfolio management company, a certificate confirming that the company has been authorised in accordance with the provisions of directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and the Council of 13 July 2009, a description of the scope of the authorisation granted to the portfolio management company and particulars regarding any restriction on the types of investment funds that this company is authorised to manage. Article R. 532-29 The Autorité des Marchés Financiers and the authorities of the relevant State party to the European Economic Area Agreement must receive prior notice of any changes in the particulars provided pursuant to the first paragraph of I of Article R. 532-28. The Autorité des marchés financiers shall update the information contained in the certificate referred to in III of R. 532-28 and inform the competent authorities of the host Member State of the portfolio management company of any changes in the scope of the authorisation granted to that company or the particulars of any restriction on the types of investment funds that the company is authorised to manage. 1.1.5. DEPOSIT GUARANTEES REGULATION 99-05 OF 9 JULY 1999, RELATING TO THE GUARANTEE OF DEPOSITS AND OTHER REPAYABLE FUNDS RECEIVED BY CREDIT INSTITUTIONS HAVING THEIR HEADQUARTERS IN FRANCE OR IN THE PRINCIPALITY OF MONACO As amended by Regulations-99-14 of 23September 1999 and 2002-04 of 15 July 2002 and Order of 29 September 2010 Article 1 The deposit guarantee fund referred to at Article L. 312-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall compensate, under the conditions set forth herein, the deposits and other repayable funds received by credit institutions authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 1.1 – Credit institutions having their headquarters in metropolitan France or in the overseas departments and regions shall be members of the deposit guarantee fund. Credit institutions having their registered office in SaintPierre-et-Miquelon and Mayotte or in the Principality of Monaco shall be members of the deposit guarantee fund. Credit institutions having their registered office in French Polynésie, in Nouvelle Calédonie and the islands of Wallis and Futuna shall be members of the deposit guarantee fund. TITLE I GUARANTEED DEPOSITS AND OTHER REPAYABLE FUNDS Article 2 Deposits and other repayable funds guaranteed pursuant to Article L. 312-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code and this Regulation, hereinafter referred to as the "deposits", shall mean any credit balance resulting from funds left in an account or from temporary situations deriving from normal banking transactions which a credit institution must repay under the legal and contractual conditions applicable, particularly in clearing arrangements. The deposits thus defined shall include guarantee deposits, when they become repayable, and sums due on production of interest-bearing notes and payment media of any kind issued by the institution and cash deposits, including those made to guarantee or cover positions taken on a market in financial instruments, when such deposits relate to an investment service or to the clearing or custody of financial instruments provided by such institution. For the credit institutions referred to in the first paragraph of Article 1.1, the deposits referred to in the preceding paragraph shall include those in the books of their secondary establishments located on the territory of the French Republic or in the Principality of Monaco and in those of their branches established in other States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. For the credit institutions referred to in the second and third paragraphs of Article 1.1, the deposits referred to in the 42 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 first paragraph shall include those in the books of their secondary establishments located on the territory of the French Republic or in the Principality of Monaco. f) deposits in currencies other than those of States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, with the exception of the CFP franc. Article 3 The following shall be excluded from repayment by the guarantee fund: Article 4 Deposits held when an institution’s authorisation is revoked or when an institution is struck off shall continue to be covered by the guarantee fund. 1. Deposits made by the following: a) credit institutions and investment firms on their own behalf and for their own account, b) insurance undertakings, c) collective investment organisations, d) pension organisations and funds, e) persons referred to in Article L. 518-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, f) members with personal liability and limited partners holding at least 5% of the credit institution’s capital, directors, members of the executive board and supervisory board, managers and statutory auditors of the institution and any depositor having similar status in other companies in the same group, g) third parties acting on behalf of the persons referred to in f) above, h) companies which have direct or indirect shareholding links giving one of the linked undertakings effective control over the others, i) other financial institutions within the meaning of Article L. 511-21, point 4 of the Monetary and Financial Code; 2. Deposits arising out of transactions in connection with which the depositor has been convicted for the crime of money laundering under the terms of Articles 222-38, 324-1 or 324-2 of the Penal Code or Article 415 of the Customs Code; 3. Deposits for which the depositor has, on an individual basis, obtained from the same credit institution rates and financial concessions which have helped to aggravate its financial situation; TITLE II MAXIMUM COMPENSATION Article 5 5.1 - The limit on compensation for each depositor shall be € 100,000. 5.2 - For the credit institutions referred to in the first paragraph of Article 1.1, this limit shall apply to all of the same depositor’s deposits with the same credit institution, irrespective of the number of deposits, the location on the territory of the French Republic, in the Principality of Monaco or in the European Economic Area and, subject to the provisions of Article 3.4(f), the currency concerned. 5.3 – For the credit institutions referred to in the second paragraph of Article 1.1, this limit shall apply to all of the same depositor’s deposits with the same credit institution, irrespective of the number of deposits, the location on the territory of the French Republic or in the Principality of Monaco and, subject to the provisions of Article 3.4(f), the currency concerned. 5.4 - The limit on compensation for depositors who are customers of the credit institutions referred to in the third paragraph of Article 1.1 is equal to the equivalent value in CFP francs of the amount set forth at Article 5.1, obtained by applying the parity defined pursuant to Article L. 712-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. This limit shall apply to all of the same depositor’s deposits with the same credit institution, irrespective of the number of deposits, the location on the territory of the French Republic or in the Principality of Monaco and, subject to the provisions of Article 3.4° f), the currency concerned. 4. Because of their specific nature: a) deposits made by government administrative authorities, and central b) liabilities forming part of the institution’s own funds as defined in Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990 as amended on own funds, c) non-nominative deposits other than sums due against payment media of all types issued by the institution, d) the negotiable debt securities referred to at Article L. 213-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code as amended containing various economic and financial provisions, e) other debt securities issued by the same credit institution and liabilities arising out of own acceptances and promissory notes, Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 6 The share of each depositor in a joint account shall be taken into account in calculating the limit mentioned in the preceding Article. In the absence of special provisions, such account shall be divided equally amongst the depositors. Deposits in an account to which two or more persons are entitled as shareholders or members of an association or any similar grouping not having legal personality shall be aggregated and treated as if made by a single depositor for the purpose of calculating the same limit. When the depositor is not entitled to the sums deposited in the account, it is the person entitled to them who is covered by the guarantee, provided that such person has been identified or is identifiable before the date on which it is determined that the deposits are unavailable. If several 43 persons are entitled, the share of each under the arrangements subject to which the sums are managed shall be taken into account when the limit referred to in the preceding Article is calculated. TITLE III TERMS AND TIME LIMITS FOR COMPENSATION Article 7 Except in cases where reorganisation or liquidation proceedings are initiated, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, determines that deposits are unavailable five working days at the latest after first having established that a credit institution has not repaid a due and payable deposit for reasons that may be related to its financial situation and that it appears unlikely that repayment will be made soon. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel brings immediately the matter before the deposit guarantee fund under the terms of the first paragraph of Article L. 312-5 of the Monetary and Financial Code and shall notify the credit institution that it has been struck off. Article 8 The credit institution concerned shall transmit to the deposit guarantee fund any necessary information and document as soon as possible and at the latest five days as from the date at which the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel sets out the observations of facts mentioned at Article 7 of this regulation. On the basis of such information and documents, the guarantee fund shall verify depositors’ claims in respect of the unavailable deposits and shall promptly inform them by registered letter with acknowledgment of receipt that the deposits are unavailable. On the basis of this letter, the deposit guarantee fund shall inform each depositor of the amount and nature of deposits covered by the deposit guarantee and of claims that are excluded from compensation under the terms of Articles 3 and 5 of the present Regulation. It shall inform depositors that they have seven days in which to make known all remarks relevant to their compensation or to challenge the proposed breakdown and, where relevant, to choose the currency in which they wish the compensation to be paid. On expiry of this deadline, the guarantee fund shall begin paying compensation under the conditions set forth at Article 9. The letter mentioned in the first paragraph shall inform depositors of the terms and conditions and of the procedures to be followed, if reorganisation or liquidation proceedings have been initiated with respect to the defaulting credit institution, in order to submit claims excluded from compensation by the deposit guarantee fund to the creditors’ representative or to the liquidator appointed by the commercial court. The guarantee fund may not invoke the time limits laid down in the second and fourth paragraphs above to deny benefit of the guarantee to any depositor. Article 9 9.1 – The compensation of the depositors of the credit institutions referred to in the first and second paragraphs of Article 1.1 shall be paid in euro. Deposits in CFP francs shall be converted into euro at the parity in effect on the date on which the deposits became unavailable. Deposits in foreign currency shall be converted into euro at the rate applying on the date on which the deposits became unavailable. Depositors domiciled in the geographical zones referred to in the third paragraph of Article 1.1 may ask to be compensated in CFP francs. 9.2 – The compensation of depositors of the credit institutions referred to in the third paragraph of Article 1.1 shall be paid in CFP francs. Deposits in euros shall be converted into CFP francs at the parity in effect on the date on which the deposits became unavailable. Deposits in foreign currency shall be converted into CFP francs at the rate applying on the date on which the deposits became unavailable. Depositors domiciled in the geographical zones referred to in the first paragraph of Article 1.1 may ask to be compensated in euros. 9.3 – Notwithstanding the time limits laid down in the fifth paragraph of Article 8, when the depositor or any other person having entitlement to or an interest in sums held in an account is under investigation on suspicion of money laundering under the terms of Articles 222-38, 324-1 or 324-2 of the Penal Code or Article 415 of the Customs Code, the guarantee fund shall suspend the corresponding payments pending the court’s final decision. Article 10 If a reorganisation or liquidation procedure has been initiated with respect to a credit institution and the deposit guarantee fund has intervened with respect to the same credit institution, the fund shall provide the creditors’ representative or the liquidator appointed by the commercial court with a detailed list for each depositor of the claims it has paid and of claims that have not been paid under the terms of Articles 3 and 5 of the present Regulation. The fund shall compensate the claims it has admitted in respect of the guarantee within twenty days of the action brought before it by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. When the circumstances so warrant, the guarantee fund may apply to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for an extension of this time limit, which may not exceed ten working days. 44 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 TITLE IV INFORMATION PROVIDED TO DEPOSITORS Article 11 Credit institutions subject to the present Regulation shall furnish depositors and any other person making such request with all relevant information about the deposit guarantee mechanism, including in particular the level and scope of the cover provided. Depositors shall be informed of any changes. Credit institutions subject to the present Regulation may not use such information for advertising purposes. Article 12 Depositors may obtain further information about terms or time limits for compensation and about the formalities for obtaining compensation from the guarantee fund on request. Article 13 Information intended for depositors and documents relating to the conditions to be met and formalities to be accomplished in order to benefit from a payment under the deposit guarantee arrangements shall be provided in French, in a detailed manner that is readily comprehensible to any depositor. TITLE V SUNDRY PROVISIONS Article 14 Credit institutions that manage a mutual guarantee fund shall inform persons asked to participate in such fund of the conditions under which their contributions will be repaid. The institutions shall also inform the depositor when such sums become repayable, under the terms of the guarantee fund’s by-laws. Managing institutions shall state the conditions under which such sums are covered by the deposit guarantee fund, and in particular shall specify that contributions are covered by the above-mentioned fund only when they have become repayable. Article 15 Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 9 of the present Regulation, until 31 December 2001 depositors may ask to be compensated in French francs. Article 16 The present Regulation shall take effect immediately. Until the guarantee fund has been finally put in place, in the event of an incident the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall cause the credit institution concerned to take appropriate steps to identify and verify claims. In accordance with Article 75-III of the above-mentioned Act of 25 June 1999, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 decide how to allocate the contributions it has called up; compensation shall be paid on behalf of the guarantee fund, under the conditions laid down in the present Regulation, by the Treasury, which is responsible for collecting and managing the above-mentioned contributions. All elements of the calculation specific to each member are covered by a professional secrecy obligation. REGULATION 99-06 OF 9 JULY 1999, RELATING TO THE RESOURCES AND OPERATION OF THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND as amended by Regulations 2000-07 of 6 September 2000, 2002-04 of 15 July 2002, 2002-08 of 21 November 2002, 2003-04 of 12 November 2003 and by the Orders of 20 February 2007, 19 October 2007, 7 March 2008 and 29 September 2010 TITLE I THE FUND’S FINANCIAL RESOURCES Article 1 Credit institutions that belong to the deposit guarantee fund provided for at Article L. 312-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code and that are authorised in France must subscribe a certificate of association before 31 December 1999 and pay a contribution in two equal parts, one before that date and the other before 31 December 2000, the amount of which shall be determined using the calculation method described in the appendix to the present Regulation. At 31 December 1999, the total overall amount of the certificates of association subscribed in this way shall be five hundred million euro. It shall be increased by the contributions of institutions authorised after that date and reduced by the repayments provided for at Article 9. Article 2 The certificates of association shall be remunerated at an annual rate determined by the deposit guarantee fund when it closes its accounts. Such rate may not exceed the average yield as determined by the Banque de France on ten-year government bonds issued in the calendar year in which the certificates are subscribed. The rate shall be replaced at ten-year intervals by the rate for the bonds issued during the year in which the previous reference stock is reimbursed. Such remuneration shall be cancelled if the fund finds that members’ contributions will be insufficient to cover charges resulting from the interventions provided for at Article L. 312-5 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The fund shall inform the Minister for Economic Affairs and the Governor of the Banque de France, acting as chairman of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, of this situation. Article 3 The amount of contributions shall be determined in such a way as not to endanger the stability of the banking system. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall transmit to the Minister the total amount of the eligible deposits as well as the amount of the deposits covered within the meaning of 45 Articles 2, 3 and 5 of Regulation 99-05 of the CRBF, at 31 December of each year. Contributions, apportioned between the members as set forth in the appendix to this Regulation, shall be paid in a single annual instalment unless it is necessary to increase the contribution during a calendar year by augmenting the annual contribution or calling up an exceptional contribution. Article 4 The guarantee fund shall collect the amount of contributions due. Member institutions must pay contributions or make deposits fifteen days at the latest after receiving notice to do so as set forth in the appendix to the present Regulation. The fund shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any delay or difficulty in collecting a contribution. Article 5 New members authorised in France must subscribe a certificate of association and pay a supplementary contribution, in addition to the amount of the annual contribution, for five years in accordance with the provisions of the appendix to the present Regulation. Article 6 A member institution is not required to pay one hundred per cent of the total amount of an annual contribution provided that the institution: - - undertakes to pay at the fund’s request the unpaid fraction of contributions for five years from the due date for payment of the contribution. To execute this commitment, the guarantee fund shall deduct such amount from the guarantee deposit constituted in accordance with the conditions defined hereinafter and notify the institution concerned of this; constitutes in the fund’s books at the due date for payment of the contribution a guarantee deposit frozen for five years, in an amount equal to the unpaid fraction of the contribution. The remuneration of guarantee deposits may not exceed the yield on government bonds with a maturity of five years at issue as determined by the Banque de France on 16 October, the date as of which members are liable for payment of the amount of the contribution for which the deposit is constituted, or on the next working day as applicable. Such remuneration shall be cancelled if the resources obtained by investing the fund’s assets on behalf of the deposit guarantee prove insufficient to cover charges resulting from the interventions provided for at Article L. 312-5 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Should an institution cease to be a member, the amounts contained in the guarantee deposit constituted by this member shall be transformed, as of right and without any other formality, into contributions. Guarantee deposits may be remunerated until the date of such transformation as of right. Such remuneration shall be equal to the interest paid on a hypothetical interbank deposit constituted on the first day of the year during which the decision takes effect and for which an interbank rate is ascertained, maturing at the date closest to the date of such transformation unless, before that date, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has asked or proposed that the deposit guarantee fund should intervene. 46 Article 6-1 Once the fund’s operating costs, the remuneration of the certificates of association, as well as any remuneration on the guarantee deposits have been covered, recoveries of all types on claims on incidents settled by the fund on behalf of the deposit guarantee, as well as the income from investing all the assets held on behalf of the deposit guarantee, shall be set aside for the deposit guarantee fund. Article 7 The losses shall first be charged against the amounts set aside on behalf of the deposit guarantee then against the amount of contributions paid up till the end of the current year for an amount equal to € 200 million or the available amount if it is lower. Beyond such amount, the fund shall call up unpaid fractions or contributions up to half the amount of the uncovered losses, by order of priority according to the due date for the payment of the contribution. The remainder of the losses shall be charged first against the balance of contributions paid, then against the balance of the unpaid fractions of the contributions, in the same order, before being charged against the remuneration then against the par value of the certificates of association. The fund may not call up unpaid fractions of the contribution after five years have elapsed from the time the above-mentioned guarantees are constituted. As of such date, institutions may freely dispose of their guarantee deposits. The present Regulation shall consider as losses the fraction of charges, including calculated charges, which exceed all income of the current year, before any remuneration of the guarantee deposits. Article 8 If the fund finds that the losses exceed all the fund’s resources other than the certificates of association, it shall reduce the par value of each certificate of association in proportion. The guarantee fund’s auditors shall decide on the amount of the provisions taken into account in order to make such reduction. The fund’s decision shall be notified to members within fifteen days. Article 9 When the decision to revoke an institution’s authorisation takes effect, its certificate of association shall be reimbursed, at the latest by the end of the month following the notification to the deposit guarantee fund by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of the date at which the revocation of authorisation takes effect, at its par value minus any reductions made under the terms of Article 8. This reimbursement is made at par value plus any accrued remuneration as at the date of such reimbursement. Such remuneration shall be equal to the interest paid on an interbank deposit which, on the one hand, shall be constituted on the first day of the year in the course of which the decision takes effect and for which an interbank rate is found and which, on the other hand, shall fall due at the date closest to the reimbursement date of the certificate, unless the fund, prior to this date, has found that the resources, described in Article 2, are insufficient and does Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 not then, under the terms of said article, have to pay such remuneration. On the take-over of one member institution by another member institution or the transfer of the business of one member institution to another member institution entailing a revocation of authorisation without the transferor institution being dissolved, the income from the reimbursement of the certificate shall be added to the amount of the certificate of the institution which has carried out the take-over or to the transferee institution. In these cases, the remuneration is not reimbursed, but the new amount of the certificate serves as a basis for the calculation of the remuneration accruing to the institution which has carried out the take-over or to the transferee institution, as from the start of the year under consideration. However, if the deposit base of the institution taken over or of the institution whose entire business has been transformed is nil, the income from the reimbursement of his certificate is paid to the institution which has carried out the take-over institution or to which the business is transferred under the terms and conditions set forth in the first paragraph of the present article. By way of an exception to the last paragraph of Article 6, the guarantee deposit of the institution taken over or of the institution whose entire business has been transferred shall also be added to the guarantee deposit of the institution which has carried out the take-over (transferee institution). TITLE II APPOINTMENT OF MEMBERS OF THE SUPERVISORY BOARD Article 10 The members of the fund’s supervisory board shall be individuals who are accountable managers within the meaning of Article L. 511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code of one or more member institutions. They shall be either appointed directly by an institution referred to in Article 13-1 or elected on the proposal of a member institution in accordance with the provisions of Article 132. Article 11 The members of the supervisory board shall be appointed or elected for a four-year term of office. Should a member of the supervisory board resign or be prevented from carrying out his duties, the member institution which appointed him or put him forward may appoint another individual to replace the indisposed or resigned person until his term of office expires. Such person must also be a manager, as defined by Article L. 511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code, of one or more member institutions. Should a member of the supervisory board cease to occupy a managerial post in an institution affiliated to the same network or a part of the same mixed or financial group, within the meaning of Article L. 511-20 of the Monetary and Financial Code, he shall be deemed by the present Regulation to be prevented from carrying out his duties, unless said institution confirms his appointment or the maintenance of his Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 representative mandate at the latest by the end of the month in which the member was prevented from carrying out his duties. The member’s appointment or authority may be confirmed only in the event of the member continuing to hold a managerial position in one or more member institutions. Article 11-1 Within the meaning of this Article, a directly represented institution is an institution that has appointed a member of the supervisory board or put forward a candidate who has been elected. If an institution directly represented on the supervisory board loses it right to be represented, a new appointment shall be made under the following conditions for the remainder of the member’s term of office, unless the institution in question has lost its right as a result of restructuring without a change of control. The management board of the deposit guarantee fund shall, within three months at most, call a meeting of the college comprising all the credit institutions concerned except for those represented directly or automatically under the terms of Article 13.1 of this regulation. The election shall take place on a relative majority basis. Credit institutions that are members of the college may, within one month following the election, advise the deposit guarantee fund if they wish the newly elected member to represent them. However, if the event giving rise to a new appointment occurs within a 12-month period preceding the expiry of a term of office, the supervisory board shall, within three months at most, choose the institution that appoints a new member from among the institutions forming the college referred to in the preceding paragraph. The new member shall dispose of the votes of the institution he represents. Article 12 Members shall have the right to exercise a number of votes proportionate to the sum of the certificates of association they hold, contributions actually paid during the ten years preceding the year of the election of members of the supervisory board and the outstanding amount of guarantee deposits actually constituted in the Deposit Guarantee Fund’s books at the end of the preceding year. The voting rights of all members belonging to the same consolidation scope are aggregated and exercised by the member parent company or failing which, by the central body if the consolidation scope includes institutions affiliated to this central body. The parent company or central body automatically represents all of the member institutions that belong to their consolidation scope. When the parent company of a financial or mixed group is affiliated to a network, the aggregation of the group’s voting rights is added to that of the network. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the Deposit Guarantee Fund of the composition, at 31 December of each year, of each consolidation scope mentioned in the preceding Article, such as declared by the parent company. Article 13-1 The right to appoint an ex officio member of the supervisory board is acknowledged on the basis of the total of votes that might be aggregated, as stipulated in Article 47 12, and which a member, a member parent company or a central body has at their disposal. In the three months that precede the appointment of ex officio members, and at the latest one month before the date set for their appointment, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall notify members that have the highest aggregated votes, as stipulated in Article 12, of their capacity to appoint ex officio members. At the same time, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the French Association of Credit Institutions and Investment Firms (Association française des établissements de crédit et des entreprises d’investissement – AFECEI) and the Deposit Guarantee Fund. These members shall notify the Deposit Guarantee Fund of the name of their representative one month before they are due to take office, at the latest. The voting rights held by members who have not given this notification are exercised by the appointed or elected member of the supervisory board with the highest number of votes. Article 13-2 The other members of the supervisory board are elected by the college of member institutions that are automatically not represented, as stipulated in Article 12. Candidatures are presented to the Deposit Guarantee Fund by the member institutions of this college that wish to, at the latest by 31 January of the year the election of members is to take place. The college of member institutions, mentioned in the first paragraph, is convened by the Deposit Guarantee Fund’s executive board before 1 March of the same year. The convocation comprises the list of candidates and the number of votes that each member has the right to exercise. The ballot is public. The candidates who obtain the greatest number of votes shall be deemed to have been elected. On the supervisory board, they represent the members that have voted for them. Members that have not taken part in the election or have not voted for an appointed or elected candidate are informed of the electoral results by the executive board. These members may inform the executive board, within two weeks, of the name of the elected or appointed candidate that they have chosen to represent them when the supervisory board votes, during his term of office. The voting rights of members who have not given this notification are exercised by the appointed or elected member of the supervisory board with the highest number of votes. The representation mandate can only be revoked in the event of a change of control of the institution that has appointed or presented the representative member’s candidature. In this case, the Deposit Guarantee Fund shall notify the institutions concerned that they have one month in which to appoint a new representative chosen amongst the other appointed or elected members of the supervisory board, with the absence of an appointment being as good as an acceptance of the member replacing the previous one as representative. 48 For each year, the votes that the members of the supervisory board have the right to exercise are those ascertained at 31 December preceding the year in question, pursuant to the provisions of Article 12. Article 14-1 Within the meaning of this Article, a directly represented institution is an institution that has appointed a member of the supervisory board or put forward a candidate who has been elected. If an institution directly represented on the supervisory board loses its right to be represented, a new appointment shall be made under the following conditions for the remainder of the member’s term of office, unless the institution in question has lost its right as a result of restructuring without a change of control. The Deposit Guarantee Fund’s executive board shall, within three months, call a meeting of the college of member institutions mentioned in Article 13, by stating the name of the candidate/s and the number of votes held by each member. The ballot is public and the election shall take place on a relative majority basis. If there is only one candidate, this candidate is declared elected. The college member credit institutions have the right, within one month of the election, to notify the Deposit Guarantee Fund of the name of their new representative chosen amongst the other appointed or elected members of the supervisory board, with the absence of notification being as good as an acceptance of the newly elected member as representative. However, if the event giving rise to a new appointment occurs within a 12-month period preceding the end of a term of office, the supervisory board shall, within three months, choose the institution that shall appoint a new member from among the institutions forming the college referred to in Article 13-2. The new member has the right to exercise the votes of the institution he represents. Article 14-2 Member institutions or the central bodies that have appointed an ex oficio member or put forward a candidate who has been elected but has recently been prevented from fulfilling his mandate or has resigned, can appoint, within one month, as a replacement for the duration of the initial mandate, a senior manager of an institution pursuant to Article L511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The replacement can be the same person as long as he is no longer the manager of an institution, as ascertained at the outset, the institution or the central body that has appointed him or put him forward as candidate, confirms, within one month, the upholding of the appointment or representation by this person who is manager of another member institution. If, one month following the request for a replacement by the Deposit Guarantee Fund, nobody has been appointed pursuant to the preceding paragraph, the election of a new member shall be conducted, pursuant to Article 14-1. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 14-3 Institutions whose membership is established during a mandate are represented by the elected or appointed member of whom the Deposit Guarantee Fund has been notified upon their first contribution payments. Member institutions that no longer belong to a consolidation scope referred to in Article 12, shall announce the allocation of their voting rights to an elected or appointed member of the supervisory board, within one month of the request from the Deposit Guarantee Fund when the latter is informed of their withdrawal from the consolidation scope. If the institutions mentioned in the first and second paragraphs of the present Article have not informed the Deposit Guarantee Fund, within the stipulated period, of the allocation of their votes, the latter shall be exercised by the elected or appointed member of the supervisory board with the highest number of votes. » and Futuna or in Mayotte will be asked to make a single contribution in the second half of 2002. The amount of the subscription, calculated as set forth in the Appendix to this Regulation on the basis of data as at 30 June 2002, shall be doubled for that instalment. These institutions shall subscribe a certificate of association, calculated as set forth in the present Appendix to this Regulation on the basis of data as at 30 June 2002. By way of an exception to Article 5 of the present Regulation, credit institutions having their headquarters in French Polynésie, in Nouvelle Calédonie and the islands of Wallis and Futuna or in Mayotte that were authorised before 1 January 2002 are not required to pay the additional subscription. APPENDIX CALCULATING THE APPORTIONMENT OF CONTRIBUTIONS BETWEEN MEMBERS TITLE III TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS Article 15 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall make the first calculation relating to the subscription of certificates of association and the payment, in a single instalment, of the first annual contribution to the guarantee fund one month at the latest after the present Regulation takes effect, on the basis of the data provided for in the appendix to the present Regulation available at such date, established as at 31 December 1998. Authorised institutions dispensed from providing documents drawn up as at that date shall immediately pay the minimum contribution and subscribe a certificate of association in the minimum amount. Where appropriate, they shall subsequently pay contributions adjusted to take account of any sums they ought to have paid, under the conditions set forth in the appendix to the present Regulation. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall call the first meeting of fund members. Called to appoint the supervisory board, it shall be held two months at the latest after notification of the results of the initial calculation. The appointments shall be made by applying the provisions of Article 12 to the amount of certificates of association and contributions due for 1999. The term of office of the members appointed in this way shall expire on 31 March 2004. Funds earmarked for the paid-up share in 1999 of the subscription to certificates of association and for the annual contribution for 1999 must have been paid before the first meeting into a special account opened for the purpose with the Banque de France. Certificates of association shall be deemed to have been subscribed and may bear interest as set forth at Article 2 of the present Regulation once the fund’s rules of procedure have been approved. Article 16 For 2002, credit institutions authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel having their registered office in French Polynésie, in Nouvelle Calédonie or in the islands of Wallis Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 1. Principles The amount of certificates of association and annual contributions, hereinafter referred to as "members’ contributions", shall be calculated in accordance with the provisions of this Appendix. 1.1 Calculating ordinary contributions Each member’s contribution shall be equal, for each instalment, to the product of the variable overall amount of the instalment and the net share of risk attributed to it for such instalment; however, the contribution may not be less than 4,000 euro for the contribution and 4000 euro for the subscription of certificates of association. The variable overall amount of each instalment is equal to the overall amount of the instalment minus the product of the minimum contribution multiplied by the number of members whose deposit base is nil. The deposit base is equal to the amount of deposits and other repayable funds. The calculation includes the following euro- or CFP francs-denominated liabilities with regard to non-financial customers payable on the territory of the French Republic and in the Principality of Monaco: demand deposits, available factoring accounts, regulated savings accounts, time deposits, interest bearing notes and savings certificates and all liabilities relating to the accounts of non-financial customers. The accounts of credit institutions and investment firms, insurance and capitalization undertakings, unit trusts and of the persons mentioned at Article L. 518-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code are deducted from this total, the same applies to the companies which have direct or indirect capital links with the credit institution that confer on one of the linked undertakings effective control over the others, as well as deposits made by central governments, social security bodies and other financial establishments within the meaning of Article L. 511-21-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Liabilities forming part of the institution’s own funds as defined in Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990 amended on own funds. 49 A member’s net share of risk is the ratio between its net risk amount and the sum of all members’ net risk amounts. Each member’s net risk amount is equal to the deposit base, increased or reduced according to the financial situation indicators described in point 2 of the present Appendix. If the deposit base cannot be calculated on the basis of reliable information established at the scheduled date because member institutions are late or deficient in providing the necessary information, the base calculated for the previous instalment shall be increased, for each instalment where such deficiencies exist, by 10% for the fraction of the gross base below three billion euro and by 5% for the fraction of the gross base above three billion euro, unless the institution can prove that it was prevented from duly providing the necessary information by reasons of force majeure. In such case, the deposit base shall be the average of the three preceding bases. In the event of a member institution taking over another member institution or acquiring the business of another member institution, entailing a revocation of authorisation without the transferor institution being dissolved between the date at which information necessary for calculating the contribution is established and the date at which the contribution is due, such institution shall pay the contribution owed by the institution that has been taken over or by the institution whose entire business justifying membership of the guarantee fund has been transferred, unless the deposit base of the latter is nil. By way of an exception to the provisions of the first paragraph, member institutions struck off pursuant to Article L. 312-5 I of the Monetary and Financial Code are exempted from contributing. 1.2 New members’ specific contributions 1.2.1 Certificate of association The amount of the certificate of association of institutions authorised after the present Regulation takes effect shall be equal to the product of the total amount of certificates of association and the member’s net share of risk, calculated for the first instalment after joining the fund for which the documents used to calculate contributions must be provided. The certificate must be paid up in full at the latest at the same time as the contribution for the corresponding instalment. indicator of another member institution, a new member’s supplementary contribution shall be reduced by the share attributable to the amount of the assets concerned if the member makes such request and provides the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with the data for the calculation of this reduction at the latest by the end of the sixth month following the date at which the data for the calculation of the contribution instalment is established. 1.3 The increases relating to the supplementary contributions of new members, which are linked to mistakes in declarations referred to in point 4 of the Appendix, as well as those arising on the minimum amount of the contribution shall be added to the overall yearly amount of the contribution 2. Indicators of the financial situation, calculation of the net risk amount In order to calculate the net risk amount, the deposit base shall first be increased where relevant by the gross risk indicator described in point 2.1 of the present Appendix, then weighted by a minimum factor of 0.75 and a maximum factor of 1.25 by a linear transformation of the synthetic risk indicator described in point 2.2 of the present Appendix. The minimum and maximum factors shall be 0.85 and 1.15 respectively for calculations made in 1999. 2.1 Gross risk indicator The gross risk indicator shall be equal to one third of outstanding loans, up to a ceiling equal to the amount of the deposit base. It shall include the net amount of provisions for loans to non-financial customers held in France, including leasing and similar transactions, non-allocated securities, bad debts and related receivables. If the deposit base cannot be calculated on the basis of reliable information established at the scheduled date because member institutions are late or deficient in providing the necessary information, the base calculated for the previous instalment shall be increased by 10% for each instalment where such deficiencies exist, unless the institution can prove that it was prevented from duly providing the necessary information by reasons of force majeure. In such case, the gross risk indicator shall be the average of the three preceding bases. The increase shall be 5% for the fraction of the gross indicator in excess of one billion euro. 2.2 Synthetic risk indicator 1.2.2 Supplementary contributions New members must pay a supplementary contribution in addition to the contribution set forth at point 1.1 of the present Appendix for five instalments after joining the fund. The amount of the supplementary contribution is equal, for each instalment, to 20% of the product of the total amount, net of any charges, of contributions actually paid to the fund by the other members up to the instalment in question multiplied by the new member’s net share of risk. This supplementary contribution shall be paid only if it is above or equal to 100 euro. In the event of a merger, scission, total or partial business takeover or any other transaction that entails the transfer of assets previously included in the deposit base or gross risk 50 A synthetic risk indicator shall be calculated for all institutions whose deposit base is not nil at the closing date used as a basis for calculating a contribution. The synthetic risk indicator shall be the arithmetic mean of the following scores: - a score relating to solvency, - a score relating to risk diversification, - a score relating to operating profitability, - a score relating to maturity transformation, where relevant. Scores shall be given on a scale of 1 to 3; the higher the score, the lower the quality. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 If it is not possible to calculate one or more of these scores because member institutions are late or deficient in providing the necessary information, a score of 3 shall automatically be assigned in each case, unless the institution can prove that it was prevented from duly providing the necessary information by reasons of force majeure. In such case, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall use the average of the three preceding scores for the score or scores concerned. If a credit institution is required to comply with the above-mentioned Regulation 93-05 exclusively on a consolidated basis, the score shall be calculated, for all institutions included in the scope of consolidation, on the basis of own funds and risks established on a consolidated basis. If an institution is also required to comply with such regulations on an individual or sub-consolidated basis, the score shall be calculated on an individual or sub-consolidated basis. 2.2.1 Score relating to solvency 2.2.3 Score relating to operating profitability A score of 1 shall be assigned to institutions whose original own funds as defined by the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02, from which shall be deducted, to the extent of the portion which exceeds the supplementary own funds, the equity holdings and subordinated claims as defined by Article 6 of said Regulation are at least equal to 112.5% of the total capital adequacy requirements set forth in Article 2-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007. A score of 1 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is lower than 65%. A score of 2 shall be assigned to institutions whose original own funds as defined by the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02, from which shall be deducted, to the extent of the portion which exceeds the supplementary own funds, the equity holdings and subordinated claims as defined by Article 6 of said Regulation are at least equal to 75% of the total capital adequacy requirements set forth in Article 2-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007. A score of 2.5 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is greater than or equal to 75% but lower than 85%. A score of 3 shall be assigned to all other institutions. If a credit institution is required to comply with the solvency ratio exclusively on a consolidated basis, the score shall be calculated, for all institutions included in the scope of consolidation, on the basis of own funds and risks established on a consolidated basis. If an institution is also required to comply with such regulations on an individual or sub-consolidated basis, the score shall be calculated on an individual or sub-consolidated basis. 2.2.2 Score relating to risk diversification A score of 1 shall be assigned to institutions for which the sum of the ten largest exposures not eligible for refinancing by the European system of central banks is less than 30% of original own funds as defined by the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02, from which shall be deducted, to the extent of the portion which exceeds the supplementary own funds, the equity holdings and subordinated claims as defined by Article 6 of said Regulation. A score of 2 shall be assigned to institutions for which the sum of the ten largest exposures not eligible for refinancing by the European system of central banks is less than 60% of original own funds within the meaning of Article 2 of the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02. A score of 3 shall be assigned to all other institutions. Large exposures taken into account for calculating these scores shall be calculated in accordance with the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulation 93-05; the ten largest exposures shall be used irrespective of the proportions in relation to own funds set forth in Article 1 of the above-mentioned regulation. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 A score of 1.5 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is lower than 70%. A score of 2 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is lower than 75%. A score of 3 shall be assigned to all other institutions. The operating coefficient within the meaning of the present Regulation is the ratio between the sum of overheads, depreciation provisions and net provisions for tangible and intangible assets on the one hand and the sum of income from banking operations, ancillary income and sundry other income minus charges from banking operations, interest on bad debts and sundry charges. Overheads shall include personnel costs, taxes and outside services appearing on the profit and loss account. The sum of the following items is included in the denominator: income from banking operations, recoveries of provisions for depreciation of investment securities, ancillary income and reinvoiced expenses and the share of non-banking operations carried out jointly. Charges from banking operations, provisions for depreciation of investment securities, interest on bad debts and income paid back to co-suppliers are deducted from the above-mentioned sum. Shares of non-banking operations carried out jointly and headquarters expenses attributable to institutions shall be added to income, shares attributable to other participants shall be deducted. The reinvoiced expenses attributable to the items included in the numerator shall be deducted from the numerator and the denominator of the operating coefficient as from the first half-yearly instalment of 2001. 2.2.4 Score relating to maturity transformation The score relating to maturity transformation shall be calculated for institutions for which the assets and liabilities used to calculate the indicator represent at least 20% of the institution’s total assets and liabilities, adjusted for suspense accounts and sundry debtors and creditors. For the purposes of the present Regulation, the maturity transformation indicator is the ratio between, in the numerator, the actual transformation, and, in the 51 denominator, the own funds referred to at Article 2 of the above-mentioned Regulation 91-01. The actual transformation is the difference between the amount of part of the assets with a residual maturity of more than one year plus bad debts and other capitalised securities and part of the signature commitments on the one hand, and the amount of liabilities with a residual maturity of more than one year plus part of the sight deposits and the amount of own funds. − the deposit base is the sum of the affiliated institutions’ deposit bases; − the gross risk indicator is the sum of the affiliated institutions’ gross indicators; − the synthetic risk indicator is the arithmetic mean of the network’s overall scores calculated for each of the items set forth at point 2 of the present Appendix; − the network’s overall score shall be calculated, for each item included in the calculation of the scores described in point 2 of the present Appendix, by regarding all the members of the network as defined in Articles L. 511-30 and L. 511-31 of the Monetary and Financial Code (Code monétaire et financier) as a single entity, by summing up their individual data, where necessary after adjustment to make them homogenous and eliminating reciprocal transactions. Nevertheless, up till the closing of accounts on 31 December 2004, the overall score may be established by summing up and eliminating the reciprocal items without carrying out the necessary adjustments to make them homogeneous; − for the score relating to risk diversification, the ten largest exposures non eligible for the refinancing of the European system of central banks of the network shall not include commitments on non-affiliated subsidiaries consolidated under the terms of Regulation 93-05 aforesaid; the central body shall ensure that the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel is informed of all of the ten largest exposures determined as such and common to all the institutions affiliated to the network; − the numerator derived from calculating the network’s overall solvency score is used to calculate the maturity transformation indicator; − when institutions affiliated to a central body collect reimbursable funds entirely or partially on behalf of the central body, the deposit base is increased by advances received from such central body in respect of deposits collected on its behalf. The central body’s deposit base is similarly reduced by the total amount of such advances. − to determine the network’s synthetic indicator of overall risk, the scores relating to solvency and risk diversification shall be calculated on a consolidated basis according to the method set forth in points 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 of the present Appendix, the consolidating body being the single body defined in the fourth indent. The central body shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of this choice, which shall then be applied, without distinction, to the two scores mentioned above, at the latest by the closing of the accounts serving as a basis for calculating the next instalment. The following are included in assets with a residual maturity of more than one year: the time deposits and fixed-term loans of institutions referred to at Article 5 of the above-mentioned Regulation 88-01, the time deposits and fixed-term loans of financial customers, financial loans and repurchase agreements, loans with an initial term of more than one year, the financial outstanding of leasing and similar transactions and financial rental transactions, and subordinated loans. The following are included in liabilities with a residual maturity of more than one year: the time accounts and fixed-term borrowings of institutions referred to at Article 5 of the above-mentioned Regulation 88-01, the time deposits and fixed-term borrowings of financial customers, reverse repurchase agreements, securitised debt, housing savings plans and savings deposits with saving-lending institutions, people’s savings plans, time deposits, interest-bearing notes and savings certificates, earmarked public funds, net latent reserves and subordinated debt. The part of signature commitments shall be 50% for financing commitments in favour of customers, 5% for guarantee commitments given on behalf of customers and 20% of financing commitments in favour of other credit institutions. The part of sight deposits shall be equal to 70% of the following: demand deposits, available factoring accounts and regulated savings accounts other than people’s savings plans and accounts, "A" passbook savings accounts, housing savings plans and savings deposits with saving-lending institutions. A score of 1 shall be assigned to institutions for which the average maturity transformation indicator established on the basis of data for the last three instalments is less than or equal to 100%. A score of 2 shall be assigned to institutions for which the average maturity transformation indicator established on the basis of data for the last three instalments is greater than 100% but no more than 200%. A score of 3 shall be assigned to other institutions for which such score is calculated. 3. Institutions affiliated to a central body For institutions affiliated to a central body, an overall contribution for the network shall first be calculated. For the purposes of calculating this contribution, all affiliated institutions are regarded as a single institution to which the provisions of points 1 and 2 of the present Appendix are applied, with the following amendments: 52 The network’s overall contribution is then apportioned between the affiliated institutions in proportion to their contribution to the network’s overall exposure, defined as the quotient of its net risk amount and the sum of the net risk amounts of all affiliated institutions. 4. Notification of calculations The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall make all the calculations provided for in the present Regulation on the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 basis of data established as at 31 December. It shall notify member institutions of the amount of their contributions due as from 16 October, together with the elements used to make the calculations described in points 1 and 2, by ordinary mail at the latest by 15 October of each year. It shall notify member institutions of the amount of their contributions due as from 26 May and 26 November, together with the elements used to make the calculations described in points 1 and 2, by ordinary mail respectively at the latest by 26 May and 26 November of each year Any credit institution may ask the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to rectify the calculation of its contribution within two months following receipt of notification. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may also rectify its calculation during the five years following payment of the contribution in the light of information brought to its knowledge subsequent to the date on which the calculations were sent, after seeking the institution’s comments. As long as the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel does not rectify the calculation, the fund shall use it to collect outstanding contributions. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall rectify the calculation if there seem to be grounds for changing an institution’s contribution by more than 10% of the sums it has paid. The fund shall make such rectification on notification from the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. If a rectification entails a change of more than 1.5% of total amount of the half-yearly contribution or if algebraic sum of all changes exceeds this amount in contribution of the institution making the request, Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall recalculate outstanding contributions and charge the differences to next instalment. the the the the all the If a member institution has made a mistake in declaring its assessment base or elements used to determine its synthetic risk indicator, the rectified contribution shall be increased by 10% of the amount of the variation in the contribution. If the mistake alone has entailed a general recalculation, the supplement shall be 20%. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the guarantee fund of the amount of each member’s contribution by ordinary mail before 1 November of each year. The fund shall issue payment notices to members before 15 November of each year. 5. Transitional provisions For the first calculation relating to the certificates of association subscribed in 1999 and to the contribution for that year, the score described in point 2.2.2 of the present Appendix shall not be calculated. It shall not be calculated for the half-yearly instalment based on data established as at 31 December 1999, nor for the half-yearly instalment based on data established as at 30 June 2000. As from the calculation of the first half-yearly instalment of 2001, the score described in point 2.2.2 of the present Appendix shall be incorporated into the synthetic risk indicator for each member. The amount of their certificates of association set forth in point 1 of the Appendix of the present Regulation shall be recalculated at this due date Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 taking into account the net share of risk determined for this instalment. For each member, the difference between the amount thus calculated and the amount of the certificates of association released on its behalf shall, if it is negative, be reimbursed by the guarantee fund, or if it is positive, be paid by the member together with its contribution for the first half-yearly instalment of 2001 and under the same terms and conditions. The remuneration of a member’s certificate of association shall be calculated as from 30 June 2001 based on the new amount of said certificate. For each member, the total amount of contributions called up starting from the first instalment of contributions which said member pays shall be recalculated on the basis of the net share of risk set for the first half-yearly instalment of 2001. The difference between the amount thus calculated and the amounts actually paid or lodged as collateral under the terms of Article 6 of the present Regulation, by the member concerned, shall, if it is negative be deducted from the sum due from this member for the first half-yearly instalment of 2001, or if it is positive, added to this sum and settled under the terms and conditions governing the rest of the contribution. The maximum rates set forth at Articles 2 and 6 of this Regulation shall be, for the amounts called up from September 1999 to June 2001, those applicable to the contributions called up in the first halfyear of 2001. REGULATION 99-07 OF 9 JULY 1999, RELATING TO THE GUARANTEE OF DEPOSITS OR OTHER REPAYABLE FUNDS RECEIVED BY THE BRANCHES OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS as amended by Regulations 2002-05 of 15 July 2002, 2002-08 of 21 November 2002, 2003-04 of 12 November 2003 and the Orders of 20 February 2007 and 29 September 2010 Article 1 The deposit guarantee fund referred to at Article L. 312-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall compensate, under the conditions set forth in this Regulation, the deposits and other repayable funds received by the branches of credit institutions authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and, in the situations set forth in Title II below, by the branches established in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments and regions of credit institutions having their registered office in another State of the European Economic Area. TITLE I BRANCHES REQUIRED TO JOIN THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND Article 2 Branches of credit institutions having their headquarters in a State that is not party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, established on the territory of the French Republic or in the Principality of Monaco shall be governed by the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulations 99-05 and 99-06, without prejudice to the provisions of Articles 4 and 5 of the present Regulation. 53 Article 3 Branches of credit institutions having their headquarters in a State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area other than France, established in French Polynésie, Nouvelle Calédonie and in the islands of Wallis and Futuna, in Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or Mayotte or in the Principality of Monaco shall be governed by the provisions of the present Regulation under the same conditions as the branches referred to in the preceding Article. Article 4 If a branch referred to at Article 2 or 3 above benefits through its headquarters from coverage at least equivalent in scope and amount to the coverage offered by the deposit guarantee fund on the territory of the French Republic, the deposit guarantee fund may define, by way of an agreement with the system of the country of origin, the conditions under which the French fund compensates the depositors of the branch in accordance with the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-05. If an agreement has been concluded within the framework set forth in the preceding paragraph, the branch is dispensed from contributing to the deposit guarantee fund. Failing such an agreement, for the purposes of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-06, contributions shall be calculated on the basis of information concerning the branches’ financial situation provided to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. However, if pursuant to a decision of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel the above-mentioned branches are not required to comply with the Order of 20 February 2007 relating to the own funds requirements applicable to credit institutions and investment firms, and the competent authorities of the country of origin agree to provide the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel re with information concerning the own funds and exposure of the institution as a whole, assessed on a company or consolidated basis according to the standards of the country of origin, the elements relating to solvency shall be calculated on the basis of the data thus provided. If the information needed to make such calculation is not available to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, the synthetic risk indicator referred to in the Appendix to the above-mentioned Regulation 99-06 shall be equal to 3. Article 5 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall assess the equivalence referred to at Article 4 of the present Regulation at the guarantee fund’s request. TITLE II BRANCHES THAT ARE MEMBERS OF THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE SCHEME ON A SUPPLEMENTARY BASIS Article 6 Branches established in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments and regions by credit institutions having their headquarters in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area may, insofar as the guarantee system in their country of origin is less favourable, join the deposit guarantee fund on a supplementary basis. 54 Branches that avail themselves of the option provided for in the preceding paragraph shall be governed by the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulations 99-05 and 99-06, without prejudice to the provisions of Articles 8, 9 and 10 of the present Regulation. Branches that do not avail themselves of the option shall nevertheless be governed by the provisions of Title IV of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-05. Article 7 Branches established in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments and regions by credit institutions having their headquarters in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any change in the coverage extended to them. Article 8 If a branch referred to at Article 6 above applies to join the deposit guarantee fund with a view to benefiting from a supplementary guarantee, the guarantee fund shall define terms and conditions for compensating depositors with the system to which the credit institution belongs in the State where it has its headquarters. The deposit guarantee fund shall allow applications for supplementary compensation on the basis of a statement of non-availability of funds issued by the competent authorities of the State where the institution has its headquarters. Article 9 If a branch that has availed itself of the supplementary membership option set forth at Article 6 of the present Regulation fails to fulfil its obligations as a member of the deposit guarantee fund intervening on a supplementary basis, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the competent authorities that authorised the branch of the fact so that, in cooperation with the guarantee fund, they can take all appropriate steps to ensure compliance with such obligations. If, despite such steps, the branch fails to comply with the obligations referred to in the preceding paragraph, the guarantee fund intervening on a supplementary basis may exclude the branch, with the consent of the authorities that authorised it and with not less than one year’s notice. Deposits made before the exclusion date shall continue to benefit from the supplementary cover until their due date. The branch shall immediately inform depositors that the supplementary cover has been revoked. Article 10 For the purposes of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-06, the amount of contributions shall be proportional to the ratio between the supplementary cover provided and the total cover provided by the French system, without prejudice to any provisions to the contrary contained in an agreement with the guarantee system of the country of origin. Data concerning own funds shall relate to the institution as a whole, assessed on a company or consolidated basis according to the standards of the country of origin, and may be provided or confirmed by the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 competent authorities of the country of origin. Data concerning exposure shall relate to the business in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments and regions of the institution in question, without prejudice to any provisions to the contrary contained in an agreement with the guarantee system of the country of origin. If the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel does not have the information it needs to calculate the synthetic risk indicator referred to in the Appendix to the above-mentioned Regulation 99-06, it shall be equal to 3. TITLE III AUTHORISATION FOR THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND TO CONCLUDE AGREEMENTS WITH THE GUARANTEE SYSTEMS OF OTHER STATES CONCERNING THE COVERAGE OF FOREIGN BRANCHES OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS HAVING THEIR HEADQUARTERS ON THE TERRITORY OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC OR IN THE PRINCIPALITY OF MONACO Article 11 The deposit guarantee fund may conclude an agreement setting out the conditions governing its compensation of the depositors of a branch established in a State not party to the agreement on the European Economic Area by a credit institution having its registered office on the territory of the French Republic or the Principality of Monaco, in liaison with the guarantee system to which the above-mentioned branch belongs. Article 12 The deposit guarantee fund may conclude an agreement setting out the conditions governing its compensation of the depositors of a branch established in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area by a credit institution having its registered office in French Polynésie, in Nouvelle Calédonie and in the islands Wallis and Futuna, in Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or Mayotte as well as in the Principality of Monaco, in liaison with the guarantee system to which the above-mentioned branch belongs. Article 13 The conclusion of such agreements is subject to the condition that the cover afforded by the deposit guarantee fund is at least equivalent in both amount and scope to the cover afforded by the guarantee system of the country concerned, and that the foreign guarantee system bears the cost, if any, of compensating the depositors of branches established on the territory of the French Republic or in the Principality of Monaco by the members of such system under the conditions set forth at Article 4 of the present Regulation. The gross deposit base within the meaning of Regulation 99-06 shall include the deposits covered within the framework of the above-mentioned agreements. TITLE IV SUNDRY AND TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS Article 14 The deposit guarantee fund may represent, in France, a foreign deposit guarantee scheme and act on behalf of its principal under the terms of a cooperation agreement made with this purpose. The fund may authorise the foreign deposit guarantee scheme to represent it and to act on its behalf under the terms of said agreement. Article 15 For as long as they are not covered by a guarantee system in their State of origin in accordance with the above-mentioned directive 94/19/EC, the branches in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments of credit institutions having their headquarters in a State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area other than France are required to join the deposit guarantee fund under the same conditions as credit institutions authorised in France. The branches referred to in the first paragraph above shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and the deposit guarantee fund as soon as they are covered by the guarantee system of their State of origin. Article 16 Until 31 December 1999, neither the level nor the scope of cover proposed by the branches in France of credit institutions that have their headquarters outside France and are members of a guarantee system in their country of origin may exceed the maximum level and scope of the cover proposed by the deposit guarantee fund. Article 16.1 For contributions relating to 2002, the branches referred to at Articles 2 and 3 are subject to the provisions of Article 16 of Regulation 99-06 aforesaid. Article 17 The present regulation shall take effect immediately. ORDER OF 6 NOVEMBER 2012, RELATING TO THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND Article 1 The total amount of the annual contribution for 2012 is EUR 300 million. Article 2 This Order shall be published in the Journal officiel de la République française. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall assess the equivalence and reciprocity referred to in the first paragraph above at the guarantee fund’s request. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 55 ORDER OF 29 SEPTEMBER 2010, RELATING TO SPECIAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND Article 1er. – A special contribution of 270 million euro shall be paid by the members of the deposit guarantee Fund. This contribution is payable in instalments of 90 million euro in 2010, 2011 and 2012 under the terms of Regulation 99-06 of 9 July 1999 relating to the resources and operation of the deposit guarantee scheme, with the exception of Article 6. Article 2. – This Order shall be published in the Journal officiel de la République française. 1.1.6 SECURITIES GUARANTEES REGULATION 99-14 OF 23 SEPTEMBER 1999, RELATING TO THE GUARANTEE OF SECURITIES held on the behalf of investors by credit institutions and investment firms, intermediaries authorised by the Conseil des Marchés Financiers [read: Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, Article L. 542-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code] and members of clearing houses having their registered office on the territory of the French Republic as amended by Regulation 2002-07 of 21 November 2002 and the Orders of 15 May 2006 and 18 December 2009 Article 1 The investor guarantee mechanism referred to at Article L. 322-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall compensate, under the conditions set forth in the present Regulation, claims arising from the inability of one of its members to return to investors financial instruments held on their behalf or their cash deposits when they relate to an investment service or to the clearing or custody of financial instruments provided by the member institution, and do not fall within the scope of the deposit guarantee fund established by Article L. 312-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Article 1.1 Investment services providers other than portfolio management companies and intermediaries authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to have custody of and administer financial instruments or members of a clearing house, having their registered office in metropolitan France or the overseas departments and territories shall be members of the investor guarantee mechanism. Credit institutions or investment services providers and intermediaries authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to have custody of and administer financial instruments or members of a clearing house, having their registered office in the territorial unit (collectivité 56 territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or in the departmental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte or in the principality of Monaco shall be members of the investor guarantee mechanism. Credit institutions or investment services providers, intermediaries authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to have custody of and administer financial instruments or members of a clearing house, having their registered office in the overseas territories or in New Caledonia (Nouvelle Calédonie) shall be members of the investor guarantee mechanism. Credit institutions or investment services providers, intermediaries authorised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to have custody of and administer financial instruments or members of a clearing house having their registered in French Polynésie, in New Caledonia or in the Wallis and Futuna islands shall be referred to hereinafter as "member institutions". TITLE I SCOPE OF THE GUARANTEE Article 2 The claims of investors guaranteed under the terms of Article L. 322-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code and the present Regulation, hereinafter referred to as the "securities", are those relating to any financial instrument referred to in Article L. 211-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code held on an investor’s behalf that the member institution is required to return under the legal and contractual conditions that apply, especially with regard to clearing. Subject to the provisions of Article 3, point 4 (b) of the present Regulation, the securities defined in this way shall include cash deposits with a member institution that is not a credit institution, including deposits made to guarantee or cover positions taken on a market in financial instruments, when such deposits relate to an investment service or to the clearing or custody of financial instruments provided by such institution. For credit institutions, investment firms and financial institutions referred to in Article L. 511-28 of the Monetary and Financial Code and mentioned in the first paragraph of Article 1.1, for the persons referred to at Article L. 442-2, point 4 of said Code and for the persons referred to in Article L. 542-1, point 5 of said Code, the securities thus defined shall include those in the books of their secondary establishments located on the territory of the French Republic and in those of their branches established in other Member States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. For the member institutions referred to in the second and third paragraphs of Article 1.1, the securities thus defined shall include those in the books of their secondary establishments located on the territory of the French Republic. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 TITLE II MAXIMUM COMPENSATION Article 3 The following are excluded from the guarantee: 1. Securities deposited by the following: a) credit institutions, investment firms, the persons referred to at Article L. 440-2, points 3 and 4 of the Monetary and Financial Code and the persons referred to at Article L. 542-1, points 4 and 5 of said Code, b) insurance undertakings, c) collective investment organisations, d) pension organisations and funds, e) persons referred to in Article L. 518-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, f) members with personal liability and limited partners holding at least 5% of the member institution’s capital, directors, members of the executive board and supervisory board, managers and statutory auditors of the institution and any investor having similar status in other companies in the same group, g) third parties acting on behalf of the persons referred to in f) above, h) companies which have direct or indirect shareholding links with the member institution giving one of the linked undertakings effective control over the others, i) other financial institutions within the meaning of Article L. 511-21, point 4 of the Monetary and Financial Code; 2. Securities arising out of transactions in connection with which the investor has been convicted for the crime of money laundering under the terms of Articles 222-38, 324-1 or 324-2 of the Penal Code or Article 415 of the Customs Code; 3. Securities held on behalf of an investor who, on an individual basis, has taken advantage of facts concerning the member institution which have caused its financial difficulties or helped to aggravate its financial situation; 4. Because of their specific nature: a) securities held on behalf of supranational institutions, governments and central administrative authorities; b) cash deposits in a currency other than those of States party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, with the exception of the CFP franc. Article 4 Securities held when authorisation is revoked, an investment services provider is struck off or an institution loses its authorisation to have the custody, the administering or the clearing of financial instruments shall continue to be covered by the securities guarantee mechanism. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 5 5.1 The limit on compensation per investor shall be 70,000 euro as regards the financial instruments mentioned in the first paragraph of Article 2 and 70,000 euro as regards the deposits mentioned in the second paragraph of Article 2. 5.2 For the member institutions referred to in the first paragraph of Article 1.1, each of these limits shall apply to all of the same investor’s assets with the same member institution, irrespective of the number of accounts, their location on the territory of the French Republic or in the European Economic Area and, subject to the provisions of Article 3, point 4 (b), the currency concerned. 5.3 For the member institutions referred to in the second paragraph of Article 1.1, each of these limits shall apply to all of the same investor’s assets with the same member institution, whatever the number of accounts, their location on the territory of the French Republic and, without prejudice to the provisions of Article 3, point 4 (b), the currency concerned. 5.4 The limits on compensation of investors who are customers of the member institutions referred to in the fourth paragraph of Article 1.1 shall be equal to the equivalent value in CFP francs of the amounts stated in Article 5.1 above, obtained by applying the parity defined pursuant to Article L. 712-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Each of these limits shall apply to all of the same investor’s assets with the same member institution, whatever the number of accounts, their location on the territory of the French Republic and the Principality of Monaco, without prejudice to the provisions of Article 3, point 4 (b), the currency concerned. Article 6 The share of each investor in a joint investment shall be taken into account in calculating the limit mentioned in the preceding Article. In the absence of special provisions, the account shall be divided equally amongst the investors. Claims on a joint investment to which two or more persons are entitled as shareholders or members of an association or any similar grouping not having legal personality shall be aggregated and treated as if made by a single investor for the purpose of calculating the same limit. When the investor in whose name the account has been opened is not entitled to the securities held by a member institution, it is the person entitled to them who is covered by the guarantee provided that such person has been identified or is identifiable before the date on which it is determined that the securities are unavailable. If several persons are entitled, the share of each under the arrangements subject to which the securities are managed shall be taken into account when the limit referred to in the preceding Article is calculated. 57 TITLE III TERMS AND TIME LIMITS FOR COMPENSATION Article 7 Except in cases where reorganisation or liquidation proceedings are initiated, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, after determining that securities are unavailable because a member institution is unable to return securities held for reasons that may be related to its financial situation and that it appears unlikely that the securities will be returned soon, shall, after seeking the opinion of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, ask the deposit guarantee fund to intervene under the terms of the first paragraph of Article L. 322-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code and shall notify the member institution that it has been struck off. Article 8 On the basis of documents furnished by the member institution concerned or, where reorganisation or liquidation proceedings have been initiated, those furnished for the purposes of Article L. 431-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the guarantee fund shall verify investors’ claims in respect of the unavailable securities and shall promptly inform them by registered letter with acknowledgment of receipt of the amount and nature of securities covered by the securities guarantee mechanism and of claims that are excluded from compensation under the terms of Articles 3 and 5 of the present Regulation. It shall inform investors that they have fifteen days in which to make known all remarks relevant to their compensation or to challenge the proposed breakdown, established on the basis of the market value of the financial instruments covered as at the date they became unavailable, and to choose, where applicable, the currency in which the compensation will be paid. On expiry of this deadline, the guarantee fund, on behalf of the investor guarantee mechanism, shall begin paying compensation under the conditions set forth at Article 9. The letter mentioned in the first paragraph shall inform investors of the terms and conditions and of the procedures to be followed, if reorganisation or liquidation proceedings have been initiated with respect to the defaulting member institution, in order to submit claims excluded from compensation under the securities guarantee to the creditors’ representative or to the liquidator appointed by the commercial court. The fund shall compensate the claims it has admitted in respect of the securities guarantee mechanism within three months of the request made by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. When the circumstances so warrant, the deposit guarantee fund may apply to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for an extension of this time limit, which may not exceed three months. Article 9 9.1 – The compensation of investors who are customers of the member institutions referred to in the first and second paragraphs of Article 1.1 shall be paid in euros. Securities denominated in CFP francs shall be converted into euros at the parity in effect on the date on which the securities become unavailable. Securities denominated in foreign currency shall be converted into euros at the rate applying on the date on which the securities become unavailable. Investors having their domicile in the geographical zones referred to in the third paragraph of Article 1.1 may ask to be compensated in CFP francs. 9.2 – The compensation of investors who are customers of the member institutions referred to in the third paragraph of Article 1.1 shall be paid in CFP francs. Deposits in euros shall be converted into CFP francs at the parity in effect on the date on which the deposits become unavailable. Investors having their domicile in the geographical zones referred to in the first paragraph of Article 1.1 may ask to be compensated in euros. 9.3 – The deposit guarantee fund may also offer all investors compensation in securities identical to those whose unavailability has been determined under the conditions set forth in Article L. 431-6 of the Monetary and Financial Code, within the maximum limit set forth at Article 5 above and on the basis of their market value at the date they became unavailable. Investors shall inform the fund whether or not they accept the offer within the 15-day time limit mentioned in Article 8 above. Investors who fail to reply before such deadline shall be deemed to have refused the offer, without prejudice to the provisions of the last paragraph of Article 8 above. 9.4 – Notwithstanding the time limits laid down in the fifth paragraph of Article 8, when the investor or any other person having entitlement to or an interest in securities held in an account is under investigation on suspicion of money laundering under the terms of Articles 222-38, 324-1 or 324-2 of the Penal Code or Article 415 of the Customs Code, the guarantee fund shall suspend the corresponding payments pending the court’s final decision. Article 10 If a reorganisation or liquidation procedure has been initiated with respect to a member institution and the deposit guarantee fund has intervened with respect to the securities guarantee mechanism, the fund shall provide the creditors’ representative or the liquidator appointed by the commercial court with a detailed list for each investor of the claims it has paid and of claims that have not been paid under the terms of Articles 3 and 5 of the present Regulation. The deposit guarantee fund may not invoke the time limits laid down in the preceding paragraphs above to deny benefit of the securities guarantee mechanism to any investor who furnishes proof that he was unable to assert in time his claim to payment under a guarantee. 58 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 TITLE IV INFORMATION PROVIDED TO DEPOSITORS Article 11 Member institutions shall furnish investors and any other person making such requests with all relevant information about the securities guarantee mechanism, including in particular the level and scope of the cover provided. They shall also state that the purpose of the securities guarantee mechanism is to compensate claims resulting from the unavailability of financial instruments deposited with a member institution and not to guarantee the value of such instruments. Depositors shall be informed of any changes. Member institutions subject to the present Regulation may not use such information for advertising purposes. Article 12 Investors may obtain further information about terms or time limits for compensation and about the formalities for obtaining compensation from the deposit guarantee fund on request. Article 13 Information intended for investors and documents relating to the conditions to be met and formalities to be accomplished in order to benefit from a payment under the securities guarantee mechanism shall be provided in French, in a detailed manner that is readily comprehensible to any depositor. TITLE V SUNDRY PROVISIONS Article 14 See Regulation 99-05, Article 2. Article 15 Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 9 of the present Regulation, until 31 December 2001 depositors may ask to be compensated in French francs. Article 16 Chapter IV, Title I of the General Regulation of the Conseil des Bourses de Valeurs is rescinded. Until the deposit guarantee fund has been finally put in place, in the event of an incident the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall cause the member institution concerned to take appropriate steps to identify and verify claims. In accordance with Article 75-III of the above-mentioned Act of 25 June 1999, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall decide how to allocate the contributions it has called up; compensation shall be paid on behalf of the securities guarantee mechanism, under the conditions laid down in the present Regulation, by the Treasury, which is responsible for collecting and managing the above-mentioned contributions. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 REGULATION 99-15 OF 23 SEPTEMBER 1999, RELATING TO THE RESOURCES AND OPERATION OF THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE SCHEME as amended by Regulations 2000-08 of 6 September 2000, 2002-09 of 21 November 2002, 2003-05 of 12 November 2003, 2004-03 of 15 January 2004 and by the Orders of 20 February 2007 and 7 March 2008 TITLE I THE FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE SCHEME Article 1 Institutions that belong to the securities guarantee mechanism provided for at Article L. 322-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code and that are subject to the provisions of Regulation 99-14, hereinafter referred to as the "members", must subscribe a certificate of association, as soon as the fund decides to issue them, payable in two instalments, one of 25% upon subscription and the other before 31 December 2000, the amount being determined using the calculation method described in the appendix to the present Regulation. At 31 December 1999, the total amount of the certificates of association subscribed in this way may be ten million euros. It shall be increased by the contributions of institutions joining after that date and reduced by the repayments provided for at Article 10. Article 2 The certificates of association shall be remunerated at an annual rate determined by the deposit guarantee fund on behalf of the guarantee mechanism when it closes its accounts. Such rate may not exceed the average yield as determined by the Banque de France on ten-year government bonds issued in the calendar year in which the certificates are subscribed. The rate shall be replaced at ten-year intervals by the rate for bonds issued during the year in which the previous reference stock is reimbursed. Such remuneration shall be cancelled if the fund finds that the contributions of members of the securities guarantee fund will be insufficient to cover charges resulting from the interventions provided for at Article L. 322-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The fund shall inform the Minister for Economic Affairs and the Governor of the Banque de France, acting as chairman of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, of this situation. Article 3 The total amount of contributions shall be determined in such a way as not to endanger the stability of the banking and financial system. Contributions, apportioned between the members as set forth in the appendix to this Regulation, shall be paid in a single annual instalment unless it is necessary to increase the contribution during a calendar year by augmenting the annual contribution or calling up an exceptional contribution. All elements of the calculation specific to each member are covered by a professional secrecy obligation. 59 Article 4 The guarantee fund shall collect the amount of contributions due. Members of the mechanism must pay contributions or make guarantee deposits fifteen days at the latest after receiving notice to do so as set forth in the appendix to the present Regulation. The fund shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any delay or difficulty in collecting a contribution. Article 5 New members must subscribe a certificate of association and pay a supplementary contribution, in addition to the amount of the annual contribution, for five years in accordance with the provisions of the appendix to the present Regulation. Members not authorised for the administration and custody of financial instruments are exempted from the supplementary contribution referred to in the preceding paragraph. Article 6 A member institution is not required to pay the total amount of an annual contribution provided that the institution: − − undertakes to pay at the fund’s request the unpaid fraction of contributions for five years from the due date for payment of the contribution. To carry out this commitment, the guarantee fund can withdraw this amount from the deposit in guarantee constituted under the conditions mentioned hereafter. It notifies the concerned institution; constitutes in the fund’s books at the due date for payment of the contribution a guarantee deposit frozen for five years, in an amount equal to the unpaid fraction of the contribution. The remuneration of guarantee deposits may not exceed the yield on government bonds with a maturity of five years at issue as determined by the Banque de France on 16 October, the date as of which members are liable for payment of the amount of the contribution for which the deposit is constituted, or on the next working day where applicable. Such remuneration shall be cancelled if the resources obtained by investing the assets of the securities guarantee mechanism prove insufficient to cover charges resulting from the interventions provided for at Article L. 322-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. In the event of an institution no longer qualifying as member, the amount of contributions collected by the guarantee fund are transformed into contribution as of right and without any further formalities. Guarantee deposits may be remunerated until the date of such transformation as of right. Such remuneration shall be equal to the interest paid on a hypothetical interbank deposit constituted on the first day of the year during which the decision takes effect and for which an interbank rate is ascertained, maturing at the date closest to the date of such transformation unless, before that date, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has asked or proposed that the guarantee fund should intervene on behalf of the securities guarantee mechanism 60 Article 7 Pecuniary sanctions imposed by the Conseil des Marchés Financiers shall be paid into the fund under the terms of Article L. 622-16, III of the Monetary and Financial Code, for which they shall constitute income set aside in a reserve earmarked for the mechanism as well as the return on investment of all assets held under the securities guarantee scheme, once the operating costs have been covered and the remuneration of the certificates of association and, if need be, that of the guarantee deposits. Recoveries on claims paid by the fund on behalf of the mechanism shall also be set aside in a reserve earmarked for the mechanism. Article 8 Losses are charged against the amounts set aside in a reserve earmarked for the securities guarantee scheme, then against the contributions paid up to the amount of € 30 millions or the available amount if it is lower. Beyond this amount, the fund shall call up unpaid fractions up to half of the amount of the losses to be covered, by order of priority according to the due date for payment of the contribution. The remaining losses are charged against the contributions paid, then against the unpaid fractions, in the same order of priority, before any charge is made against the remuneration, then against the par value of the certificates of associations. The fund may not call up unpaid fractions of the contribution after five years have elapsed from the time the above-mentioned guarantees are constituted. As of such date, institutions may freely dispose of their guarantee deposits. Losses within the meaning of the present Regulation are the fraction of charges, including calculated charges, which exceeds the total income from operating the securities guarantee scheme, prior to the remuneration of guarantee deposits. Article 9 If the fund finds that the losses exceed all the mechanism’s resources, other than the certificates of association, it shall reduce the par value of each certificate of association in proportion. The guarantee fund’s auditors shall decide on the amount of the provisions taken into account in respect of the mechanism in order to make such reduction. The fund’s decision shall be notified to members within fifteen days. Article 10 When a decision to revoke a member’s authorisation takes effect, its certificate of association shall be reimbursed, at the latest by the end of the month following the notification to the deposit guarantee fund by the competent authority of the date at which the decision takes effect, at its par value minus any reductions made under the terms of article 9. Repayment is at par value, plus any remunerations due as at the date of reimbursement. Such remuneration is equal to the interests accruing to an interbank deposit, which on the one hand would be set up the first day of the year in which the decision takes effect and for which an interbank rate is determined, on the other, would fall due as close as possible to the date of reimbursement of the certificate, except if the fund has ascertained prior to this date that resources referred to at Article 2 are insufficient and is not required to pay a remuneration under the terms of the said Article. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 On the take-over of one member by another or the transfer from one member to another of the business justifying membership of the mechanism, entailing a revocation of authorisation or approval without the transferor institution being dissolved, the income from the reimbursement of the certificate is added to the amount of the certificate of the member carrying out the take-over or to which the business is transferred. In such cases, the remuneration is not reimbursed, but the new amount of the certificate is used as a basis for calculating the remuneration due to the member carrying out the take-over or to which the business is transferred from the start of the year under consideration. Should the assessment base of the member being taken over or of the member whose total business justifying membership of the mechanism has been transferred be nil, the income from the reimbursement of his certificate is paid to the institution carrying out the take-over or to which the business is transferred, in accordance with provisions in paragraph 1 of the present Article. By way of an exception to the last paragraph of Article 6, the guarantee deposit of the member being taken over or of the member whose entire business justifying membership of the mechanism has been transferred is also added to the guarantee deposit of the member carrying out the take-over or of the member to which the business is transferred. TITLE II Appointment of the Supervisory Board members (Order of 7 March 2008) Article 11 The two representatives on the supervisory board of the deposit guarantee fund of non-credit institution investment firms that are members of the investors’ guarantee mechanism are natural persons with senior manager status as defined in Article L. 532-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code in one or more member institutions. They shall be elected after being proposed by a member institution, in accordance with the provisions of Article 13. Article 11.1 The members of the supervisory board mentioned in Article 11 shall be elected for four years. Article 12 The number of a member’s voting rights shall be based on the sum, on the previous 31 December, of certificates of association held, of contributions actually paid during the ten years preceding the year in which the election of the supervisory board members is scheduled and of the outstanding amount of guarantee deposits actually constituted in the deposit guarantee fund’s books. When two or more non-credit institution members belong to the same consolidation scope, their voting rights are aggregated and exercised by the member with the highest number of voting rights. They are represented by the supervisory board member to whom the aggregated voting rights are allocated. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The voting rights of a credit institution member of investors’ guarantee mechanism are attributed accordance with the same rules as those pursuant to amended CRBF Regulation 99-06 of 9 July 1999 deposit guarantee fund operations and resources. the in the on The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the deposit guarantee fund of the composition, at 31 December of each year, of each consolidation scope mentioned in the second paragraph of this Article, as declared by the member with the highest number of votes. Article 13 The two supervisory board members mentioned in Article 11 above shall be elected by the college of member investment firms that are not credit institutions. The members of this electoral college called upon to vote are member investment firms that do not belong to any consolidation scope or, if they do, that have the highest number of votes, pursuant to the second paragraph of Article 12 above. Candidacies are proposed to the deposit guarantee fund by the member institutions of this college that wish to do so, at the latest by 31 January of the year in which the election of members of the supervisory board is to take place. The electoral college mentioned in the first paragraph above is convened by the deposit guarantee fund’s executive board before 1 March of the same year. The convocation shall include a list of candidates and the number of votes held by each member of the electoral college. The election shall be conducted by means of an open ballot. The two candidates who receive the highest number of votes shall be declared elected. On the supervisory board, they shall represent the members that have voted for them. Members that did not take part in the election or did not vote for one of the elected candidates shall be informed of the electoral results by the executive board. These members then have two weeks to notify the executive board of the candidate elected or appointed (pursuant to the aforementioned CRBF Regulation 99-06 or elected in application of Article 13 of this regulation) to represent them when the supervisory board votes during its term of office. The voting rights of member institutions belonging to the electoral college mentioned in the first paragraph who do not make this notification shall be exercised, pursuant to this Article, by the elected member of the supervisory board representing the largest number of voting rights. The representation mandate can only be revoked in the event of a change of control of the institution that has proposed the representative supervisory board member’s candidacy. In this case, the deposit guarantee fund shall notify the institutions concerned that they have one month to appoint a new representative from amongst the other appointed or elected members of the supervisory board, and that the absence of any further appointment shall be interpreted as acceptance of the already elected member as the new representative. 61 Pursuant to the provisions of Article 12, the supervisory board members’ voting rights for each year are calculated on the basis of their situation on the previous 31 December.. Article 14.1 Within the meaning of the present Article, a directlyrepresented non-credit institution member of the electoral college is an institution that has presented the candidature of an elected member. If a directly-represented electoral college member on the supervisory board loses its right to be represented, a new appointment shall be made under the following conditions for the remainder of the member’s term of office, unless the institution in question has lost its right to be represented as a result of a restructuring operation that did not involve a change of control. Within three months of the loss of the institution’s right to be represented, the deposit guarantee fund’s executive board shall convene a meeting of the college of member institutions, mentioned in Article 13, stating the name of the candidate/s and the number of votes held by each member. The election shall be conducted by means of an open ballot and the election result is decided on a relative majority basis. If there is only one candidate, this candidate shall be declared elected. The electoral college member institutions referred to in the first paragraph of Article 13 have one month from the date of this election to notify the deposit guarantee fund of the name of their representative chosen from the two members elected (pursuant to Article 13 of the present Regulation) of the supervisory board. The absence of any such notification shall be interpreted as acceptance of the already elected member as the new representative. However, if the event that would normally justify a new election occurs within a 12-month period preceding the end of a term of office, the supervisory board shall designate, within three months of that event, one of the institutions from among those forming the electoral college referred to in the first paragraph of Article 13 to appoint a new member. This new member is entitled to exercise the voting rights of the institution he represents. Article 14.2 Non-credit institution members that have proposed an elected candidate who subsequently resigns or is prevented from pursuing his duties, may, within one month, appoint a replacement senior manager of an institution (as defined in 4 of Article L532-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code) for the residual term of the unfinished mandate. If the original elected candidate became ineligible by ceasing to be an Accountable Manager of a member institution, the institution that proposed his original candidature may, within one month, designate the same person as their replacement representative if that person becomes eligible after becoming an Accountable Manager of another member institution. If, one month following the deposit guarantee fund’s request for a replacement representative to be designated, 62 no-one has been appointed pursuant to the preceding paragraph, the election of a new member shall be conducted, pursuant to Article 14-1. Article 14.3 Non-credit institution members whose membership is established during the course of a mandate and which do not belong to a consolidation scope mentioned in the second paragraph of Article 12, shall be represented by one of the members elected under the terms of Article 13 above, whose name they shall notify to the deposit guarantee fund at the moment of payment of their first contributions. Members that no longer belong to a consolidation scope mentioned in Article 12 above shall announce the allocation of their voting rights to one of the two supervisory board members elected under the terms of Article 13 above within one month of the request formulated by the deposit guarantee fund following the latter’s cognisance of their withdrawal from the consolidation scope. If the institutions mentioned in the first and second paragraphs of this Article do not inform the deposit guarantee fund within the stipulated period of the allocation of their voting rights, the latter shall be exercised by the member elected of the supervisory board with the highest number of votes, pursuant to Article 13 above (Order of 7 March 2008). TITLE III TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS Article 15 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall make the first calculation relating to the subscription of certificates of association and the payment, in a single instalment, of the first annual contribution to the fund in respect of the securities guarantee mechanism as soon as the present Regulation takes effect, on the basis of the data provided for in the appendix to the present Regulation available at such date. By way of an exception to Article 6, the fraction of the contribution that it is possible for members not to pay under the terms of the above-mentioned Article shall be 75%. The data serving as the basis for the calculation shall be those as at 30 June 1999, for the assessment base, and those as at 31 December 1998 for the elements constituting the synthetic risk indicator set forth at Point 2 of the appendix. Members dispensed from providing documents drawn up as at 31 December 1998, or those for which the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel does not have the information required to calculate the assessment base, shall immediately pay the minimum contribution and subscribe a certificate of association in the minimum amount. For 2000, such members shall, where appropriate, pay contributions adjusted to take account of any sums they ought to have paid, under the conditions set forth in the appendix to the present Regulation. Contributions for 2000 shall be paid in a single instalment on the basis of data as at 30 June 2000. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 16 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall call the first meeting of members, to appoint the representatives of the securities guarantee mechanism on the supervisory board of the deposit guarantee fund, as soon as it has carried out the calculations set forth at Article 15. The appointments shall be made by applying the provisions of Article 13 to the amount of certificates of association and contributions paid for 1999. The term of office of the members appointed in this way shall expire on 31 March 2001. The term of office of the members elected in 2001 shall expire on 31 March 2004. Members not represented by a member of the supervisory board must designate their representatives two weeks at the latest after the members have been elected. Until such designation, the voting rights of members that are not credit institutions and not represented shall be exercised by the member of the supervisory board who represents the largest contribution or contributions to the securities guarantee mechanism. The voting rights of members that are credit institutions but are not represented shall be exercised by the ex officio member who represents the largest contribution or contributions. Funds earmarked for the annual contribution for 1999 must be paid before the meeting of members called by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel into a special transactions account opened in the name of the Treasury with the Banque de France until the rules of procedure of the deposit guarantee fund have been approved. They shall subsequently be paid into an account indicated by the chairman of the fund’s management board. Sums earmarked for the paid-up share in 1999 of the certificates of association shall be paid, after the guarantee fund has decided to issue the certificates, into an account opened for the purpose with the Banque de France. Certificates of association issued by the fund and subscribed by members and guarantee deposits may bear interest as set forth at Articles 2 and 6 of the present Regulation once the fund’s rules of procedure have been approved. Article 17 The fund shall be authorised to receive resources originating with guarantee funds prior to the current system established by the above-mentioned Act of 25 June 1999 [inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code] as soon as the present Regulation takes effect. Article 18 For institutions authorised by the Conseil des Marchés Financiers at 1 January 2002 to have custody of and administer financial instruments having their registered office in the overseas territories, in Nouvelle Calédonie or in the departmental unit of Mayotte, the amount of the contribution due in respect of the second half of 2002 shall be equal to half the amount of the contribution due in respect of 2003 and shall be notified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel at the latest by 15 October 2003. By way of an exception to Article 5 of the present Regulation, these institutions shall not be required to pay the supplementary contribution. The institutions referred to in the preceding paragraph shall subscribe a certificate of association calculated on the basis Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 of data as at 31 December 2002 in accordance with the provisions of the Appendix to the present Regulation. For investment services providers with the exception of portfolio management companies which, at 3 August 2003, were not authorised for the administration and custody of financial instruments, the amount of the contribution for 2003 is equal to half the amount of the contribution for 2004. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel will notify the members concerned of the amount thus calculated and the amount of the certificate of association to be subscribed by 15 October 2004 at the latest. Article 19 By way of an exception to Article 13, paragraph 3 of this Regulation, for 2004 the number of votes available to each member having the status of investment firm but not authorised for the administration and custody of financial instruments with regard to the election of the two representatives of members that are not credit institutions to the deposit guarantee fund’s supervisory board is deemed to be equal to 1200. APPENDIX CALCULATING THE APPORTIONMENT OF CONTRIBUTIONS BETWEEN MEMBERS 1. Principles The amount of certificates of association and annual contributions, hereinafter referred to as "members’ contributions", shall be calculated in accordance with the provisions of this Appendix. 1.1 Calculating ordinary contributions Each member’s contribution shall be equal, for each instalment, to the product of the variable overall amount of the instalment and the net share of risk attributed to it for such instalment; however, the contribution may not be less than 800 euro for the contribution and 800 euro for the subscription of certificates of association. However, for institutions that are also members of the deposit guarantee fund, such minimum contribution shall be 200 euro for the half-yearly contribution and 400 euro for the subscription of certificates of association. The variable overall amount of each instalment is equal to the overall amount of the instalment minus the product of the minimum contribution multiplied by the number of members whose assessment base is nil. The assessment base is equal to half the value of financial instruments within the meaning of the above-mentioned Act of 2 July 1996 [inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code] held by the member on behalf of customers and covered by the securities guarantee mechanism plus, for members that are not credit institutions, the amount of deposits and other liabilities with regard to customers covered by the mechanism. The assessment base shall not include financial instruments issued and held by the member, or financial futures that cannot be traded on a regulated market. 63 Financial instruments in the assessment base other than financial futures are valued on the basis of market value; the value of financial instruments traded on a regulated market is the value resulting from the closing price on the date at which the data used in the calculation are established. For financial futures other than options bought by customers, the value of the guarantee deposit constituted by the customer is used. Options bought by customers are valued like financial instruments other than futures. A member’s net share of risk is the ratio between its net risk amount and the sum of all members’ net risk amounts. Each member’s net risk amount is equal to the assessment base, weighted by the synthetic risk indicator set forth in point 2 of the present Appendix. If the assessment base cannot be calculated on the basis of reliable information established at the scheduled date because member institutions are late or deficient in providing the necessary information, the base calculated for the previous instalment shall be increased by 10% per instalment where such deficiencies exist, unless the institution can prove that it was prevented from duly providing the necessary information by reasons of force majeure. In such case, the assessment base shall be the average of the three preceding bases. The rate of increase shall be 5% for the fraction of the assessment base that exceeds one billion euro. Should a member have taken over another member or acquired from another member the entire business justifying membership of the mechanism, entailing a revocation of authorisation or approval without the transferor institution being dissolved between the date at which the data used in the calculation of the contribution are established and the date at which the contribution is due, it shall pay the contribution of the member being taken over or the member whose entire business as set forth above has been transferred, except if the assessment base is nil. By way of an exception to the provisions of the first paragraph, member institutions struck off pursuant to Article L. 322-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code are exempted from contributing to the securities guarantee mechanism. Members not authorised for the administration and custody of financial instruments pay a contribution equivalent to the minimum amount. Such institutions subscribe a certificate of association having the same amount. 1.2 New members’ specific contributions 1.2.1 Certificate of association The amount of the certificate of association of institutions joining after 31 December 1999 shall be equal to the product of the total amount of certificates of association and the member’s net share of risk, calculated for the first instalment after joining. The certificate must be paid up in full at the same time as the contributions for the first instalment after joining. 64 1.2.2 Supplementary contributions New members must pay a supplementary contribution in addition to the contribution set forth at point 1.1 of the present Appendix for ten instalments after joining. The amount of the supplementary contribution is equal, for each instalment, to 20% of the product of the total amount, net of any losses, of contributions actually paid to the fund by the other members up to the instalment in question multiplied by the new member’s net share of risk. For purposes of these provisions, the sole instalment in 2000 is equivalent to two instalments. The amount of the supplementary contribution shall only be paid if it is greater or equal to € 100. In the event of a merger, scission, total or partial business takeover or any other transaction that entails the transfer of assets previously included in the assessment base of another member institution, a new member’s supplementary contribution shall be reduced by the share attributable to the amount of the assets concerned. if the member makes a request and transmits to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel the data used for calculating this reduction at the latest by the end of the sixth month after the date at which the data used in the calculation of the instalment are established. 1.3. The increments linked to the new members’ supplementary contributions, to the mistakes in declarations referred to in point 4 of the appendix, as well as those resulting from the minimum amount of the contribution, are added to the total annual amount of the contribution 2. Indicator of the financial situation, calculation of the net risk amount In order to calculate the net risk amount, the assessment base shall be weighted by a minimum factor of 0.75 and a maximum factor of 1.25 by a linear transformation of the synthetic risk indicator described in point 2.1 of the present Appendix. The minimum and maximum factors shall be 0.85 and 1.15 respectively for calculations made in 1999. 2.1 Synthetic risk indicator A synthetic risk indicator shall be calculated for all institutions whose assessment base is not nil at the closing date used as a basis for calculating a contribution. The synthetic risk indicator shall be the arithmetic mean of the following scores: - a score relating to the own funds requirement, - a score relating to operating profitability. Scores shall be given on a scale of 1 to 3; the higher the score, the lower the quality. If one or both of these scores cannot be calculated because member institutions are late or deficient in providing the necessary information, a score of 3 shall automatically be assigned, unless the institution can prove that it was prevented from duly providing the necessary information by reasons of force majeure. In such case, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall use the average of the three preceding scores for the score or scores concerned. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 2.2 Elements constituting the synthetic risk indicator taxes and outside services appearing on the profit and loss account. 2.2.1 Score relating to capital adequacy A score of 1 shall be assigned to institutions whose original own funds as defined by the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02, from which are deducted, for the part in excess of the additional own funds, the equity holdings and subordinated claims as defined in Article 6 of the aforementioned Regulation are at least equal to 112.5% of the total own funds requirement set forth in Article 2-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007. A score of 2 shall be assigned to institutions whose original own funds within the meaning of the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02, from which are deducted, for the part in excess of the additional funds, the equity holdings and subordinated claims as defined in Article 6 of the aforementioned Regulation, are at least equal to 75% of the total own funds requirement set forth in Article 2-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007. A score of 3 shall be assigned to all other institutions. If a member is subject to the own funds requirements set forth at the second indent of Article 3-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007, the score shall be calculated by replacing the overall own funds requirements set forth in Article 2.1 of the Order of 20 February 2007 with the own funds requirements set forth in the second indent of Article 3-1 of said Order. If a member is required to comply with the solvency ratio or capital adequacy requirement exclusively on a consolidated basis, the score shall be calculated, for all institutions included in the scope of consolidation, on the basis of own funds and risks established on a consolidated basis. If an institution is also required to comply with such regulations on an individual or sub-consolidated basis, the score shall be calculated on an individual or sub-consolidated basis. The sum of the following items is included in the denominator: income from operations, recoveries of provisions for depreciation of investment securities, ancillary income and reinvoiced expenses and the share of operations carried out jointly. Charges from operations, provisions for depreciation of investment securities, interest on bad debts and income paid back to co-suppliers are deducted from the above-mentioned sum. Shares of operations carried out jointly and headquarters expenses attributable to institutions shall be added to income, shares attributable to other participants shall be deducted. The reinvoiced expenses attributable to the elements in the numerator are deducted from the numerator and the denominator of the operating coefficient as from the first half-yearly instalment of 2001. 3. For institutions affiliated to a central body, an overall contribution for the network shall first be calculated. For the purposes of calculating this contribution, all affiliated institutions, whether members or not, are regarded as a single institution to which the provisions of points 1 and 2 of the present Appendix are applied, with the following amendments: − the assessment base is the sum of the affiliated institutions’ assessment bases; − the synthetic risk indicator is the arithmetic mean of the network’s overall scores calculated for both items set forth at point 2 of the present Appendix; − the network’s overall score is calculated, for each item included in the calculation of the scores described in point 2 of the present appendix, by considering all the network’s members, as defined in Articles L. 511-30 and L. 511-31 of the Monetary and Financial Code as a single entity, by summing their individual data after processing them to homogenise them and eliminate the reciprocal operations. However, up till the closing of accounts on 31 December 2004, the overall score can be calculated by summing and eliminating the reciprocal operations, without processing them to make them homogeneous; 2.2.2 Score relating to operating profitability A score of 1 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is lower than 65%. A score of 1.5 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is lower than 70%. A score of 2 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is lower than 75%. A score of 2.5 shall be assigned to institutions whose operating coefficient is greater than or equal to 75% but lower than 85%. A score of 3 shall be assigned to all other institutions. The operating coefficient within the meaning of the present Regulation is the ratio between the sum of overheads, depreciation provisions and net provisions for tangible and intangible assets on the one hand and the sum of income from operations, ancillary income and sundry other income minus charges from operations, interest on bad debts and sundry charges. Overheads shall include personnel costs, Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Institutions affiliated to a central body − to calculate the network’s overall synthetic risk indicator, the score relative to the own funds requirement can be calculated on a consolidated basis in accordance with the provisions in point 2.2.1 of the present Appendix, the consolidating entity being the single entity defined in the third indent. The central body informs the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of this choice at the latest by the accounting date used as a basis for calculation at the next instalment. The network’s overall contribution is then apportioned between member affiliated institutions in proportion to their contribution to the network’s overall exposure, defined as the quotient of its net risk amount and the sum of the net risk amounts of all member affiliated institutions. 4. Notification of calculations The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall make all the calculations provided for in the present Regulation on the 65 basis of data established as at 31 December. It shall notify member institutions of the amount of their contributions due as of 16 October, together with the elements used to make the calculations described in points 1 and 2, by ordinary mail at the latest by 15 October of each year. The maximum rates set forth at Articles 2 and 6 of this Regulation shall be, for the amounts called up from November 1999 to June 2001, those applicable to the contributions called up in the first half-year of 2001 Any member may ask the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to rectify the calculation of its contribution within two months following receipt of notification. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may also rectify its calculation during the five years following payment of the contribution in the light of information brought to its knowledge subsequent to the date on which the calculations were sent, after seeking the institution’s comments. As long as the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel does not rectify the calculation, the fund shall use it to collect outstanding contributions. REGULATION 99-16 OF 23 SEPTEMBER 1999, RELATING TO THE GUARANTEE OF SECURITIES HELD ON BEHALF OF INVESTORS BY A BRANCH ESTABLISHED ON THE TERRITORY OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC AND OF THE PRINCIPALITY OF MONACO OF A CREDIT INSTITUTION OR INVESTMENT FIRM HAVING ITS HEADQUARTERS IN ANOTHER COUNTRY. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall rectify the calculation if there seem to be grounds for changing an institution’s contribution by more than 10% of the sums it has paid. The fund shall make such rectification on notification from the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. If a rectification entails a change of more than 1.5% of the total amount of the half-yearly contribution or if the algebraic sum of all changes is greater than this amount in the contribution of the institution making the request, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall recalculate all outstanding contributions and charge the differences to the next instalment. If a member institution has made a mistake in declaring its assessment base or elements used to determine its synthetic risk indicator, the rectified contribution shall be increased by 10% of the amount of the variation in the contribution. If the mistake alone has entailed a general recalculation, the supplement shall be 20% The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the guarantee fund of the amount of each member’s contribution by ordinary mail before 1 November of each year. The fund shall issue payment notices to members before 15 November of each year. 5. Transitional provisions As soon as it has made the calculation referred to at Article 15, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform member institutions by ordinary mail of the amount of their contributions and of the amount of the certificates of association, including the data referred to in points 1 and 2 used to make the calculation. In the absence of more accurate information, it may use the value of the securities kept by the central securities depository on the member’s behalf as the basis for calculating the contribution. When calculating the annual instalment for 2000, the instalment for 1999 is recalculated on the basis of the net shares of risk as at 30 June 2000. The amount of the certificates of association is rectified accordingly. If applying such calculation produces negative contributions, the fund shall reimburse excess contributions and, where relevant, shall release the guarantee deposits corresponding to them, then allocate any residual balances to future contributions. 66 as amended by Regulation 2002-06 of 15 July 2002 and by the Orders of 20 February 2007 and 18 December 2009 Article 1 The securities guarantee mechanism referred to at Article L. 322-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall compensate, under the conditions set forth in this Regulation, claims arising from the inability of a branch of a credit institution having its registered office in a State other than the Principality of Monaco that is not party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, to return to investors financial instruments held on their behalf and, in the situations set forth in Title II below, claims arising from the unavailability of financial instruments held on behalf of investors by a branch of a credit institution or investment firm having its registered office in a State other than France that is party to the agreement on the European Economic Area. TITLE I BRANCHES REQUIRED TO JOIN THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE MECHANISM Article 2 Branches of credit institutions having their registered office in a State that is not party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, established on the territory of the French Republic or of the Principality of Monaco shall be governed by the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulations 99-14 and 99-15, without prejudice to the provisions of Articles 4 and 5 of the present Regulation. Article 3 Branches of credit institutions having their registered office in a State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area other than France, established in the territorial unit (collectivité territoriale) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte, in the overseas territories or in Nouvelle Calédonie shall be governed by the provisions of the present Regulation under the same conditions as the branches referred to in the preceding Article. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 4 If a branch referred to at Article 2 or 3 above benefits through its registered office from coverage at least equivalent in scope and amount to the coverage offered by the securities guarantee mechanism on the territory of the French Republic or of the Principality of Monaco, the deposit guarantee fund may define, by way of an agreement with the system of the country of origin, the conditions under which the French fund compensates the investor customers of the branch in respect of the securities guarantee mechanism and, where appropriate, the deposit guarantee, in accordance with the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-14. If an agreement has been concluded within the framework set forth in the preceding paragraph, the branch is dispensed from contributing to the securities guarantee mechanism. Failing such an agreement, for the purposes of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-15, contributions shall be calculated on the basis of information concerning the branches’ financial situation provided to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. However, if pursuant to a decision of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel the above-mentioned branches are not required to comply with the Order of 20 February 2007 relating to own funds requirements applying to credit institutions and investment firms, and the authorities of the country of origin agree to provide the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with information concerning the own funds and exposure of the institutions as a whole, assessed according to the standards of the country of origin, the elements relating to solvency shall be calculated on the basis of the data thus provided. If the information needed to make such calculation is not available to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, the synthetic risk indicator referred to in the Appendix to Regulation 99-15 shall be equal to 3. Article 5 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall assess the equivalence referred to at Article 4 of the present Regulation at the guarantee fund’s request. TITLE II BRANCHES THAT ARE MEMBERS OF THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE MECHANISM ON A SUPPLEMENTARY BASIS Article 6 Branches established in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments by credit institutions and investment firms having their registered office in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, or by a financial institution referred to at Article L. 511-23 of the Monetary and Financial Code may, insofar as the guarantee system in their country of origin is less favourable, join the deposit guarantee fund on a supplementary basis. An application for membership on a supplementary basis of the securities guarantee mechanism submitted by a branch of a credit institution shall imply an application for membership on a supplementary basis of the deposit guarantee fund. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Branches that avail themselves of the option provided for in the preceding paragraph shall be governed by the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulations 99-14 and 99-15, without prejudice to the provisions of Articles 8, 9 and 10 of the present Regulation and, where relevant, to the provisions of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-07. Branches that do not avail themselves of the option shall nevertheless be governed by the provisions of Title IV of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-14. Article 7 Branches established in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments by credit institutions or investment firms having their registered office in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area, or by a financial institution referred to at Article L. 511-23 of the Monetary and Financial Code, shall notify the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any change in the coverage extended to them. Article 8 If a branch referred to at Article 6 above applies to join the securities guarantee mechanism with a view to benefiting from a supplementary guarantee, the deposit guarantee fund shall define terms and conditions for compensating depositors with the system to which the credit institution belongs in the State where it has its registered office. The deposit guarantee fund shall allow, on behalf of the securities guarantee mechanism, applications for supplementary compensation on the basis of a statement of non-availability of securities, within the meaning of Article 2 of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-14, issued by the competent authorities of the State where the institution has its registered office. Article 9 If a branch that has availed itself of the supplementary membership option set forth at Article 6 of the present Regulation fails to fulfil its obligations as a member of the securities guarantee mechanism intervening on a supplementary basis, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the competent authorities that authorised the branch of the fact so that, in cooperation with the guarantee mechanism, they can take all appropriate steps to ensure compliance with such obligations. If, despite such steps, the branch fails to comply with the obligations referred to in the preceding paragraph, the guarantee mechanism intervening on a supplementary basis may exclude the branch, with the consent of the authorities that authorised it and with not less than one year’s notice. Securities, within the meaning of Article 2 of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-14, held on behalf of an investor before the exclusion date shall continue to benefit from the supplementary cover. The branch shall immediately inform depositors that the supplementary cover has been revoked. Article 10 For the purposes of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-15, the amount of contributions shall be in proportion to the ratio between the supplementary cover provided and the 67 total cover provided by the French system, without prejudice to any provisions to the contrary contained in an agreement with the guarantee system of the country of origin. Data concerning capital adequacy and profitability shall relate to the institution as a whole, assessed on a company or consolidated basis according to the standards of the country of origin, and may be provided or confirmed by the authority of the country of origin. The assessment base shall comprise securities held in metropolitan France or in the overseas departments and, for investment firms and financial institutions, deposits located in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments. If the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel does not have information needed to calculate the assessment base or synthetic risk indicator, it shall apply the increases or indicator 3 provided for in the Appendix to above-mentioned Regulation 99-15. the the the the TITLE III AUTHORISATION FOR THE DEPOSIT GUARANTEE FUND, ON BEHALF OF THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE MECHANISM, TO CONCLUDE AGREEMENTS WITH THE GUARANTEE SYSTEMS OF OTHER STATES CONCERNING THE COVERAGE OF FOREIGN BRANCHES OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS HAVING THEIR REGISTERED OFFICE ON THE TERRITORY OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC OR OF THE PRINCIPALITY OF MONACO Article 11 The deposit guarantee fund may conclude, on behalf of the securities guarantee mechanism, an agreement setting out the conditions governing its compensation of investors who are customers of a branch established in a State not party to the agreement on the European Economic Area by a credit institution having its registered office on the territory of the French Republic or of the Principality of Monaco in liaison with the guarantee system to which the above-mentioned branch belongs. Article 12 The deposit guarantee fund may conclude, on behalf of the securities guarantee mechanism, an agreement setting out the conditions governing its compensation of the depositors of a branch established in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area by a credit institution having its registered office in French Polynesia or in Nouvelle Calédonie or in Wallis and Futuna islands or in Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or in Mayotte or in the Principality of Monaco, in liaison with the guarantee system to which the above-mentioned branch belongs. Article 13 The conclusion of such agreements is subject to the condition that the cover afforded by the securities guarantee mechanism is at least equivalent in both amount and scope to the cover afforded by the guarantee system of the country concerned, and that the foreign guarantee system bears the cost, if any, of compensating investors who are customers of branches established on the territory 68 of the French Republic or of the Principality of Monaco by the members of such system under the conditions set forth at Article 4 of the present Regulation. The gross assessment base within the meaning of the above-mentioned Regulation 99-15 shall include the financial instruments and cash deposits covered within the framework of the above-mentioned agreements. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall assess the equivalence and reciprocity referred to in the first paragraph above at the request of the guarantee fund. TITLE IV SUNDRY AND TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS Article 14 For as long as they are not covered by a guarantee system in their State of origin in accordance with the above-mentioned directive 97/9/EC, the branches in metropolitan France and in the overseas departments of credit institutions having their headquarters in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area are required to join the securities guarantee mechanism under the same conditions as credit institutions authorised in France. The branches referred to in the first paragraph above shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and the deposit guarantee fund as soon as they are covered by the guarantee system of their State of origin. Article 15 Until 31 December 1999, neither the level nor the scope of cover proposed by the branches in France of credit institutions or investment firms that have their headquarters outside France or, where applicable, of financial institutions referred to at Article L. 511-23 of the Monetary and Financial Code, and are members of a guarantee system in their country of origin may exceed the maximum level and scope of the cover proposed by the securities guarantee mechanism. ORDER OF 6 NOVEMBER 2012, RELATING TO THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE MECHANISM FOR 2012. Article 1 The total amount of the annual contribution for 2012 is EUR 7.4 million. Article 2 This Order shall be published in the Journal officiel de la République française. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 ORDER OF 6 NOVEMBER 2012 CONCERNING THE EXCEPTIONAL CONTRIBUTION TO THE SECURITIES GUARANTEE MECHANISM Article 1 An exceptional contribution of 4.6 million euro to the Securities Guarantee Mechanism is due from members of the Deposit Guarantee Fund. The provisions of Article 6 of Regulation 99-15 of 23 September 1999 mentioned above are not applicable to this exceptional contribution. Article 2 The present Order will be published in the Journal officiel de la République française. 1.1.7. GUARANTEES OF BANK GUARANTEES EXCERPT FROM MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE: ARTICLES D. 313-26 TO D. 313-31, RELATING TO THE GUARANTEES OF BANK GUARANTEES implementing Article L. 313-50 of the Monetary and Financial Code CHAPTER I OBLIGATORY GUARANTEES COVERED BY THE GUARANTEE MECHANISM Article D. 313-26 Pursuant to article 313-50 of the Monetary and Financial Code (Code monétaire et financier), the guarantee commitments granted by a credit institution authorised in France are covered by the guarantee mechanism by way of: 1 ° Article 1799-1 of the Civil Code, Article 1 of act n° 71584 of 16 July 1971 as amended regulating public procurement guarantees defined by the 3° of Article 1779 of the Civil Code and Article 13-1 and 14° of act n° 751334 of 31 December 1975 as amended relating to outsourcing; 7° Article 3 (2°) of act n° 70-9 of 2 January 1970 regulating the terms and conditions for conducting activities relating to certain transactions on real estate and business assets; 8° The second paragraph of Article 27 of act n° 71-1130 of 31 December 1971 reforming certain judicial and legal professions; 9° I of Article 7-1 of act n° 82-1153 of 30 December 1982 on domestic transport; 10° Article L. 519-4; 11° C of Article L. 212-2 of the Code of Tourism, b of Article L. 213-3 of the same code until the date specified in the first paragraph of Article 4 of Order n° 2005-174 of 24 February 2005, and, after this date, d of Article L. 213-3 and Articles L. 213-5 and L. 213-7 of the same code until the date specified in the first paragraph of Article 4 of Order n° 2005-174 of 24 February 2005; 12° Articles L. 522-11 and L. 522-12 of the Commercial Code; 13° Article 3 of Decree n° 99-752 of 30 August 1999 on road freight; 14° Articles 7 and 14 of Decree n° 90-200 of 5 March 1990 on the profession of forwarding agent; 15° 2° of Article 3 of Decree n° 89-273 of 26 April 1989 implementing the Decree of 9 January 1852 as amended on the practice of sea fishing with regard to the first marketing of the catch and the rules governing the communications of statistical data; 16° 2° of Article 9 of Decree n° 98-58 of 28 January 1998 regarding the attribution of the foreign tradesman’s identity card; 17° Article 331-5 of the General Regulations of the Autorité des marchés financiers; 18° Article 16 of the Order of 6 May 1995 concerning airfields and other locations used by helicopters. Article D. 313-27 Shall be excluded from any compensation or resumption of by the guarantee mechanism: 2° Articles L. 1251-49 to L. 1251-53 and Articles L. 712319, L. 7123-21 and L. 7123-22 of the Labour Code; 1° the guarantee commitments carried out in the interest of the following people: 3° Article L. 530-1 of the Insurance Code; a) Credit institutions and investment firms, on their behalf and for their own account; 4° H of Article L. 222-3, k of Article L. 231-2, g of Article L. 232-1 and Articles R. 222-9 and R. 222-11 of the Construction and Housing Code; b) Insurance companies; 5° D of Article L. 261-11 and Articles R. 261-17 to R. 26124 of the Construction and Housing Code and Articles 6 and 15 of act n° 84-595 of 12 July 1984 defining rentingfirst-time homeownership; 6° Article R. 141-2 of the Country and Sea Fishing Code; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 c) Collective investment undertakings; d) Organisations of retirement and funds of pension; e) Persons mentioned in Article L. 518-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code; f) Associates personally responsible and sleeping partners, holders of at least 5% of the capital of the credit institution, administrators, members of the directory and the board of trustees, senior managers 69 and auditors of the institution, as well as any recipient having the same qualities in other companies of the group; g) Companies having with the credit institution, directly or indirectly, links of capital bringing to one of the linked companies a real power of control on the others; h) Other financial institutions within the meaning of Article L. 511-21-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code; i) Third parties acting on behalf of the persons mentioned above. 2° The guarantee commitments concerning the operations for which a final penal sentence has been ordered against the recipient for money laundering, on the base of articles 222-38, 324-1 and 324-2 of the Penal Code or Article 415 of the Customs Code; 3° The guarantee commitments for which the recipient has been granted by the credit institution, on a purely individual basis, financial advantages which contributed to worsen the financial standing of this institution. CHAPTER II MODES OF INFORMATION OF THE PUBLIC ON THE GRANTED GUARANTEE Article D. 313-28 Credit institutions provide to the beneficiary the guarantee commitments mentioned in Article D. 313-26, as well as to any person who asks for it, all useful information on the guarantee mechanism, in particular on the nature and the extent of the protection offered. Article D. 313-29 The member institutions of the guarantee fund shall insert in the contracts of guarantee which fall into the scope of application of Articles D. 313-26 to D. 313-31 the following mention: " This commitment is covered by the guarantee mechanism instituted in Article L. 313-50 of the Monetary and Financial Code.” Article D. 313-30 The beneficiaries of the guarantee commitments mentioned in Article D. 313-26 may obtain, on a mere request made by the deposit guarantee fund, additional information on the conditions or delays concerning the compensation as well as on the formalities required for reimbursement. Article D. 313-31 Information aimed at the beneficiary as well as the documents relating to the conditions and formalities to fulfil in order to receive a payment on account of the guarantee mechanism shall be written in French language, with details and in an easily understandable way. REGULATION 99-12 OF 9 JULY 1999, RELATING TO THE CONDITIONS AND TIME LIMITS FOR COMPENSATION THROUGH THE GUARANTEE MECHANISM as amended by Regulation 2002-06 of 15 July 2002 Article 1 Except in cases where reorganisation or liquidation proceedings are initiated, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, after determining that a credit institution is no longer able to meet immediately or before long its commitments relative to the guarantees listed in the Decree mentioned in indent 5 of Article L. 313-30 of the Monetary and Financial Code, shall immediately ask the deposit guarantee fund to obtain the intervention of the guarantee scheme under the terms of indent 3 of the above-mentioned Article (L. 313-50). Article 2 As soon as the decision of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has been notified, the deposit guarantee fund shall initiate, for the account of the guarantee mechanism, proceedings for the compensation, withdrawal or transfer of the commitments of the defaulting institution. Within two months of the notification, the deposit guarantee fund lists the beneficiaries of the guarantee commitments granted by the defaulting institution and informs them, via registered letter with acknowledgment of receipt, that the commitment will be taken up. This letter shall also inform the beneficiaries of the formalities to be completed and the documents to be produced in order to ensure be compensation or the taking up of the commitments by the guarantee scheme. It shall also precise the possibility for the beneficiary to choose between a compensation in euros or in francs CFP and the ways to follow to this purpose. When the circumstances so warrant, the deposit guarantee fund may apply to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for an extension of the time limit fixed in the abovementioned second indent. This extension may not exceed two months. At the request of the guarantee fund, the Commission may not grant more than two extensions of the time limit. Article 3 The compensation or the taking up of the commitment by the guarantee scheme shall be carried out in euros and limited to 90% of the expenses which the defaulting institution should have paid under the terms of its commitment. The non compensated fraction shall not be inferior to EUR 3,000. The compensation or the taking up of the commitment is, if necessary, is carried out in francs CFP. In such a case, the amount mentioned at the preceding indent is equal to the value in francs CFP resulting from the use of the parity defined in application of Article L. 712-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Article 4 The disposals mentioned in the above-mentioned article do not apply to the interventions of the guarantee scheme 70 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 where they are carried out under the terms of Article L. 313-51 of the Code Monétaire et Financier. REGULATION 2000-06 OF 6 SEPTEMBER 2000, RELATING TO THE MEMBERSHIP AND RESOURCES OF THE GUARANTEE MECHANISM as amended by Regulations 2002-06 of 15 July 2002, 2002-10 of 21 November 2002 and by the Orders of 10 October 2006 and 15 April 2010 taking, in cooperation with the guarantee fund, all appropriate measures to ensure that such obligations are met. If, despite such measures, the branch in question fails to fulfil the obligations mentioned in the preceding paragraph, the guarantee fund, after informing the authorities that delivered the authorisation and with not less than three months notice, may exclude it. Guarantees granted by such institution before its exclusion shall continue to benefit from coverage until they mature. The branch shall immediately inform the principals of the guarantees that such coverage has been withdrawn. TITLE I TITLE II CONTRIBUTORS TO THE GUARANTEE MECHANISM FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE GUARANTEE MECHANISM Article 1 Credit institutions having their registered office on the territory of the French Republic, in New-Caledonia, in French Polynesia, in the Wallis and Futuna islands, in the overseas departments, in the collectivité territoriale (territorial unit) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, or in the Principality of Monaco whose authorisation in France allows them to issue one or more guarantees required by a law or regulation shall join the guarantee mechanism set forth at Articles L. 313-50 and L. 313-51 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Branches of credit institutions whose registered office are located in a State that is not a party to the agreement on the European Economic Area which are established on the territory of the French Republic and in the Principality of Monaco and whose authorisation in France allows them to issue guarantees shall be governed by the provisions of this Regulation. Branches of credit institutions whose registered office is located on the European Economic Area and whose authorisation allows them to issue guarantees in the overseas territories, in the collectivité territoriale (territorial unit) of Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon or in the departemental unit (collectivité départementale) of Mayotte or in the Principality of Monaco shall be governed by the provisions of this Regulation. Article 2 Branches of credit institutions having their headquarters in another State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area and authorised to issue guarantees in their home country which are established in metropolitan France or in the overseas departments may join the guarantee mechanism if they so wish. Should they do so, such branches shall be governed by the provisions of this Regulation. Article 3 If a branch which has availed itself of the membership option set forth at Article 2 fails to fulfil the obligations incumbent upon it by virtue of its membership of the guarantee mechanism, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the competent authorities which have delivered the authorisation of the fact with a view to Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 4 The total amount of contributions shall be set so as not to imperil the financial stability of the mechanism’s members. The annual contribution shall be paid in a single instalment, shared between the members according to the provisions set forth in the appendix to this Regulation. All elements of the calculation specific to each member shall be covered by a professional secrecy obligation. Article 5 New members joining the guarantee mechanism must for two years pay a supplementary contribution in addition to the amount of the annual contribution according to the provisions set forth in the appendix to this Regulation. Article 6 A member institution shall not be required to pay 100 % of the amount of an annual contribution under the following conditions: a) it undertakes to pay upon request from the fund the unpaid fraction of contributions for a five-year period from the due date for payment of the contribution. For performance of this undertaking, the guarantee fund may deduct such amount from the deposit constituted under the conditions set forth below and shall inform the institution concerned thereof; b) it constitutes on the fund’s books at the due date for payment of the contribution a guarantee deposit frozen for five years, in an amount equal to the unpaid fraction of the contribution, the remuneration of which may not exceed the yield on five-year government bonds as ascertained by the Banque de France on 16 October, the date as of which the members are liable for payment of the amount of the contribution for which the deposit has been constituted, or on the next working day where applicable. In the event of loss of membership, the sums in the deposit constituted by such member shall be transformed automatically and without any other formality into contributions. Guarantee deposits may be remunerated until the date of such automatic transformation. Such remuneration shall be equal to the interest paid on a hypothetical interbank deposit constituted on the first day of the year during which the decision takes effect and for 71 which an interbank rate is ascertained, maturing at the date closest to the date of such transformation unless, before that date, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has asked or proposed that the deposit guarantee fund should intervene on behalf of the guarantee mechanism. However, should loss of membership be due to takeover by another member or the transfer to another member of the entire business for which membership of the guarantee mechanism was required without the transferor institution being dissolved, the amount of the guarantee deposits of the institution that has been taken over or transferred shall be added to that of the acquiring institution if, following the transaction, it no longer carries guarantee commitments referred to in the aforementioned Decree of 8 September 1999 as amended Article 7 The guarantee fund shall collect the amount of outstanding contributions. Member institutions must pay the contributions or constitute the deposits fifteen days at the latest after receiving notice to do so as set forth in the appendix to the present Regulation. The fund shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any delay or difficulty in collecting a contribution. Article 8 Recoveries of claims settled by the fund under the terms of the mechanism and income from investment of the mechanism’s assets, net of the mechanism’s operating expenses and, where relevant, remuneration of the deposits, shall be placed by the fund in a reserve earmarked for the mechanism. If the mechanism’s operating expenses exceed its recoveries and income in a given year, they shall be carried over to subsequent years. Article 9 The mechanism’s losses shall be set off against amounts placed in the reserve earmarked for the mechanism, then against contributions actually paid during the year up to an amount of 10 million euro. Thereafter, the fund shall call up, for half the amount of losses not yet covered, unpaid fractions of contributions by order of priority of the due date for payment of the contribution. Remaining losses shall be set off first against the balance of paid-up contributions, then against the balance of unpaid fractions of contributions, in the same order of priority. The fund may no longer call up unpaid fractions of contributions after five years have elapsed following constitution of the abovementioned deposits. At that date, members may once more freely dispose of their deposits. The fraction of charges, including calculated charges, which exceeds total income for the current year before any remuneration of deposits is deemed to constitute a loss within the meaning of the present Regulation. TITLE III TOTAL AMOUNT OF CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GUARANTEE MECHANISM Article 10 The total amount of the annual contribution for 2010 to 2013 shall be 3.1 million euro. 72 TITLE IV Deleted APPENDIX CALCULATING MEMBERS’ SHARE OF CONTRIBUTIONS 1. Principles The amount of the annual contribution shall be calculated according to the terms of this Appendix. 1.1 Ordinary contributions Each member’s contribution shall be equal, for each instalment, to the product of the variable total amount of the instalment divided by the net share of risk attributed to it for that instalment. The minimum amount of each instalment shall be 4,000 euro. By way of an exception to the provisions of the first paragraph, member institutions struck off pursuant to Article L. 312-5 I of the Monetary and Financial Code are exempted from contributing to the guarantee mechanism The variable total amount of each instalment shall be equal to the total amount of the instalment minus the product of the minimum contribution divided by the number of members whose contribution assessment base is zero. A member’s net share of risk is the ratio between its net risk amount and the sum of all members’ net risk amounts. Each member’s net risk amount is equal to the contribution assessment base, increased or decreased according to the financial situation indicator described at point 2 of this Appendix. The contribution assessment base is equal to the sum of the following amounts: − 70% of the guarantees"; off-balance sheet line "property − 70% of the guarantees"; off-balance sheet line "financial − 80% of the off-balance sheet line "other guarantees in favour of customers". However, for calculation of the contribution payable in respect of 2003, the item "other guarantees on behalf of customers" of the offbalance sheet shall be included at 40%. If the contribution assessment base cannot be calculated from reliable data determined at the given date because members are late or deficient in providing the necessary information, the base calculated for the preceding instalment shall be increased by 10% per defaulting instalment, unless the institution can prove that it was unable duly to provide the information for reasons of force majeure. In such case, the contribution assessment base shall be the average of the preceding three bases. The rate of increase shall be reduced to 5% for the fraction of the gross assessment base in excess of one billion euro. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 If a member institution informs the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel no later than 15 June of a given year that at accounts closing on 31 December of the previous year it did not carry any of the guarantees referred to in the aforementioned Decree of 8 September 1999 as amended, its contribution for the instalment of the year in question shall be equal to the minimum contribution. If a member institution has taken over another member institution or has acquired from another member institution the activity justifying membership of the guarantee mechanism under the conditions set forth in the last paragraph of Article 6 between the deadline for the information needed to calculate the contribution and the date at which the contribution is due, it must pay the target or transferred institution’s contribution unless the latter’s assessment base is zero. 1.2 Supplementary contributions from new members New members must pay a supplementary contribution in addition to the one set forth at point 1.1 above for the two instalments after they join. The amount of the supplementary contribution shall be equal, at each instalment, to 10% of the product of the new member’s net risk amount divided by the total amount, minus any losses, of contributions actually paid to the fund by the other members up to the instalment in question. The supplementary contribution shall be paid only if the amount thereof is greater than or equal to 100 euro. If the new member takes over the elements included in another member’s assessment base as a result of a merger, demerger or total or partial acquisition of the business or any other operation having as its effect the transfer of such elements, the supplementary contribution may be reduced by the share attributable to the amount of the elements taken over, if the member applies to do so and provides the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with the relevant information for calculating the reduction no later than the end of the sixth month after the date at which the figures required for the calculation are determined. 1.3 Allocation of sums that increase the total amount Additional amounts resulting from new members’ supplementary contributions, from mistakes in declarations referred to in point 4 of the appendix above and from the minimum contribution shall be added to the annual total amount of the contribution. 2. Financial situation indicator – Calculation of the net risk amount To calculate the net risk amount, the contribution assessment base shall be weighted between limits of 0.75 and 1.25 by a linear transformation of the solvency rating set forth in the appendix to Regulation 99-06 as amended, under the conditions set forth in Regulation 99-07 for the branches of foreign credit institutions. 3. Institutions affiliated to a central body For institutions affiliated to a central body, a total contribution for the network shall first be calculated. In order to calculate such contribution, all affiliated institutions, whether members or not, shall be regarded as a single institution to which the provisions of points 1 and 2 above shall apply, with the following adjustments: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a) the contribution assessment base shall be the sum of the bases of affiliated institutions; b) the financial situation indicator shall be the solvency rating for the network calculated according to the terms of Regulation 99-06. The network’s total contribution shall then be shared between the affiliated institutions that are members in proportion to their contribution to the network’s total risk, defined as the quotient between its net risk amount and the sum of the net risk amounts of all the affiliated institutions that are members. 4. Notification The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall carry out all the calculations set forth in this Regulation on the basis of figures as at 31 December of each calendar year. It shall notify member institutions of the amount of their contributions due as of 16 October, together with the elements used to make the calculations described in points 1 and 2, by ordinary mail at the latest by 15 October of each year. Any member may ask the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to rectify the calculation of its contribution within two months following receipt of notification. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may also rectify its calculation during the five years that follow payment of the contribution in the light of information that comes to its attention after the date on which the calculations are transmitted, having asked the institution concerned for its observations. Unless the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel rectifies its calculation, outstanding contributions shall be collected on that basis. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall make a rectification when there seems to be good reason to change an institution’s contribution by more than 10% of the sums it has paid. The fund shall make the rectification on the instructions of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. If, as a result of rectification, the contribution of the institution requesting the rectification is adjusted by more than 1.5% of the total amount of the contribution, or when the algebraic sum of all adjustments is greater than that amount, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall recalculate all outstanding contributions and allocate the differences to the following instalment. If a member institution has made a mistake in declaring its assessment base or elements used to determine its synthetic risk indicator, the rectified contribution shall be increased by 10% of the amount of the variation in the contribution. If the mistake alone has entailed a general recalculation, the supplement shall be 20%. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall inform the guarantee fund of the amount of each member’s contribution by ordinary mail before 1 November of each year. The fund shall issue payment notices to members before 15 November of each year. 73 1.1.8. INTERNAL AUDITING REGULATION 97-02 OF 21 FEBRUARY 1997, RELATING TO INTERNAL CONTROL IN CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS as amended by Regulations 2001-01 of 26 June 2001 and 2004-02 of 15 January 2004 and by the Orders of 31 March 2005, 17 June 2005, 20 February and 2 July 2007, 11 September 2008, 14 January 2009, 5 May 2009, two Orders of 29 October 2009, 3 November 2009, 19 January 2010, 25 August 2010 and 13 December 2010 TITLE I size, their establishments and the various types of risk to which they are exposed. Article 2 Supervised institutions consolidated basis shall: a) b) c) PRINCIPLES AND DEFINITIONS Article 1 Supervised institutions within the meaning of this Regulation are: - credit institutions; - the investment firms referred to at Article L. 531-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid other than the portfolio management companies referred to at Article L. 532-9 of the above-mentioned Code; and, exclusively for the provisions relating to the risk of money laundering and terrorist financing, the branches of investment firms mentioned at Article L. 532-18-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code other than the management companies mentioned at Article L. 532-9 of the same Code; - the undertakings referred to at Article L. 440-2, points 3 and 4, of the Monetary and Financial Code; - the undertakings referred to at Article L. 542-1, points 4 and 5 of the Monetary and Financial Code; - payment institutions. Without prejudice to the provisions of the General Regulations and decisions of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, supervised institutions must set up an internal control system according to the conditions set forth in this Regulation. Supervised institutions shall set up an adequate internal control system by adapting the systems provided for in this Regulation to the nature and volume of their activities, their 74 are supervised on a take all measures to ensure that companies under their exclusive or joint control within the meaning of Regulation 2000-03 aforesaid comply with the procedures required to implement this Regulation; ensure that the systems implemented in these companies are consistent with each other so that the exposure to risk can be measured, monitored and controlled on a consolidated level; verify that these companies adopt adequate procedures for the production of the information and data necessary for supervision on a consolidated basis. Supervised institutions shall ensure that the measures, systems and procedures referred to in indents a, b and c above are adapted to the group’s organisation and to the nature of the companies controlled. This Article applies to financial holding companies and mixed financial holding companies that are subject to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel’s supervision in application of Articles 3 and 12 of Regulation 2003-03 aforesaid. These companies shall ensure that the present Regulation is applied in the individual firms that are subject to it and within the group or conglomerate as a whole, and shall take the necessary measures to ensure that the system of internal control is suited to their various activities and the rules governing these different sectors. Article 3 The internal control of supervised institutions affiliated to a central body shall be organised in agreement with that body. Article 4 For the purposes of implementing this Regulation the following definitions shall apply. a) Internal control includes in particular: a control system for operations and internal procedures; the organisation of accounting and information processing systems; risk and result measurement systems; risk monitoring and risk control systems; a documentation and information system; a system for monitoring flows of cash and securities. that b) Executive body: the persons who, in accordance with Articles L. 511-13 and L. 532-2, point 4 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, are responsible for the effective direction of the undertaking and the person who, in a hybrid payment institution, has been declared as having the responsibility for the payment services activities as well as the persons who have the same responsibility within the undertakings referred to in Article L. 440-2, points 3 and 4 and Article L. 542-1, points 4 and 5 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Decision-making body: − the board of directors, supervisory board or partners’ meeting of firms governed by the Commercial Code aforesaid, − the board of directors of the caisses de crédit agricole, the banques populaires, the sociétés de caution mutuelle (mutual loan guarantee banks) and the caisses de crédit mutuel (mutual credit banks), Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 h) − the policy and supervisory boards of the caisses d’épargne (savings banks) and the caisses de crédit municipal (municipal credit banks), − the board of directors or supervisory board of other public institutions, i) − for undertakings having a different legal form, the board of directors, supervisory board or collegiate body that is responsible for supervising the management and situation of the undertaking on behalf of the contributors of capital. j) c) Audit committee: a committee that may be set up by the decision-making body to assist it in the exercise of its functions. The decision-making body shall choose the name of the audit committee and determine its membership, tasks, operating procedures and the conditions in which the statutory auditors and any other person belonging to the institution shall be involved in its work. More particularly, under the responsibility of the decision-making body, the audit committee shall be responsible for: − ensuring that the information provided is clear and assessing the relevance of the accounting methods used to prepare the individual and consolidated accounts, if any, − assessing the quality of internal control procedures, in particular whether the systems for measuring, monitoring and controlling risks are consistent, and recommending further action where appropriate. Under the terms of the Commercial Code, this committee may be the committee in charge of monitoring the drawing up of financial information and monitoring the statutory audit of annual accounts and consolidated accounts or any body with equivalent responsibilities. Members of the executive body may not be members of the audit committee. In the absence of any audit- committee, the decisionmaking body shall carry out its missions. d) e) f) g) Credit operations: all operations referred to at Article L. 313-1 and related operations referred to at Article L. 321-2, point 2 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, applicable to credit institutions and investment firms respectively, effected with any counterparty, including other supervised institutions. Credit risk: the risk incurred in the event of default of a counterparty or of counterparties deemed to constitute a single beneficiary within the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05 aforesaid. Market risks, including foreign-exchange risk: the risks defined in Articles 292-1 and 292-2 of the Order of 20 February 2007 and in chapters 3, 4 and 8 of Title VII of said Order. Overall interest-rate risk: the risk incurred by balance sheet and off-balance sheet transactions in the event of interest-rate fluctuations except, where relevant, transactions subject to the market risks referred to in point f) above. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Liquidity risk: the risk that in a given market situation the institution will not be able to meet its commitments or will not be able to unwind or offset a position within a specified time limit and at a reasonable cost.. Settlement risk: the risk incurred during the period between the time when the payment or delivery order for a financial instrument that has been sold can no longer be unilaterally cancelled and the final receipt of the purchased instrument or corresponding cash. Operational risk: the risk incurred by an inadequacy or failure attributable to internal procedures, or personnel, or internal systems, or to external events, including events with a low probability of occurrence but with a high risk of loss. Operational risk also includes risks of internal and external fraud as defined in Appendix IV of the Order of 20 February 2007. k) Legal risk: the risk of litigation with a counterparty caused by any lack of clarity, inaccuracy or deficiency whatsoever that may be attributed to the institution in the course of its operations. l) Value at risk: the most adverse valuation of the impact of market fluctuations on results during a given period at a given probability rate. m) Intermediation risk: the risk that a principal or counterparty will default in a transaction involving financial instruments for which a supervised institution has guaranteed final settlement. n) Business continuity plan: a set of measures designed to ensure, according to various crisis scenarios including extreme shocks, the continuation of essential services for the institution, where appropriate temporarily in degraded mode, the provision of services or any essential or important operational tasks then the planned resumption of activities. o) Means of payment: means of payment within the meaning of Article L. 311-3 of the above-mentioned Monetary and Financial Code other than bank notes and coin. p) Non-compliance risk: risk of judicial, administrative or disciplinary sanction, of significant financial loss or loss of reputation resulting from failure to comply with the prevailing laws and regulations and professional and ethical standards relating to banking and financial activities or with instructions from the executive body issued in particular pursuant to directives from the decision-making body. q) Outsourced activities: activities for which the supervised institution entrusts the provision of services or other essential or important operational tasks to third parties on a permanent and habitual basis by way of sub-contracting within the meaning of Act 75-1344 of 31 December 1975 or canvassing within the meaning of Articles L.341-1 and 341-4 of the aforesaid Monetary and Financial Code, via recourse to related parties as defined in Articles L. 545-1 et seq. of said Code, via recourse to related parties as defined in Articles L. 523-1 et seq. of said Code or in any other form. r) Providing of services or other essential or important operational tasks: − banking operations within the meaning of Article L. 311-1 of the Monetary, payment services 75 within the meaning of Article L. 314-1, II of said Code and Financial Code aforesaid and investment services within the meaning of Article L. 321-1 of the same Code for which the supervised institution has been authorised; − − services participating directly in the performance of the operations or services referred to at the first two indents above; anomaly or failure in its execution any provision of services the exercise of which may seriously damage the ability of the supervised institution to constantly comply with the conditions and obligations of its authorisation and those relative to carrying out its activities, its financial performances and the continuity of its services and activities. Without prejudice to any other task, the following tasks are not considered as the provision of services or other essential or important operational task as defined in this article: - the provision to the supervised institution of advisory services and other services that do not form part of the activities covered by its authorisation, including the provision of legal advice, staff training, invoicing and the security of the company’s premises and staff; s) t) u) 76 THE CONTROL SYSTEM FOR OPERATIONS AND INTERNAL PROCEDURES the related operations referred to at paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of Article L. 311-2 and paragraphs 1, 2, 5 and 6 of Article L. 321-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid; – any provision for services in the event of an − TITLE II the acquisition of standard services, including services providing market information or data flows on prices. concentration risk: risk arising, directly or indirectly, from credit exposures to the same counterparty, groups of connected counterparties in the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05 or from counterparties operating in the same economic sector, geographic region, as well as from credit exposures associated with the same activity or from the application of credit risks mitigation techniques, including in particular collateral securities issued by the same issuer. Residual risk: the risk that credit risk mitigation techniques recognised for the application of the Order of 20 February 2007 may prove less efficient than expected. Discretionary pension benefits: additional pension benefits that are granted on a discretionary and individual basis by a supervised institution to an employee and are a part of the variable compensation of this employee, but which do not include the rights granted to an employee in accordance with the pension scheme of his company. CHAPTER I GENERAL MEASURES Article 5 The purpose of the control system for operations and internal procedures is to provide optimal conditions in terms of security, reliability and exhaustivity for: a) ensuring that the institution’s operations, organisation and internal procedures comply with relevant laws and regulations, customary business practice and ethics and the business strategy determined by the executive body; b) ensuring strict compliance with decision-making procedures, and risk-taking procedures, whatever the kind of risk, and with the management standards set by the executive body, in particular in the form of limits; c) ensuring the quality of financial and accounting information, whether destined for the executive and decision-making bodies, for the supervisory authorities or for publication; d) verifying the conditions in which such information is assessed, recorded, stored and made available, in particular by ensuring that there is an audit trail as defined at Article 12 of this Regulation; e) ensuring the quality of information and communication systems. f) making sure that the corrective measures decided on are implemented within the supervised institutions within a reasonable timeframe. g) making sure that the compensation policy is in line with the risk control objectives in accordance with the provisions of Title IV, Chapter VI. Article 6 Supervised institutions must, under terms and conditions adapted to their size and the nature of their activities, have staff at operational, central and, where relevant, local levels who carry out permanent or periodic controls in accordance with the provisions set forth below. a) Permanent control of the compliance, security and validation of completed transactions and compliance with other measures related to the missions of the risk function shall be performed, with appropriate resources, by: − certain central and local staff assigned exclusively to that task; − other staff carrying on operational activities. b) Periodic control of the compliance of transactions, the level of risk effectively incurred, compliance with procedures and the effectiveness and appropriateness of the measures described at paragraph a) shall be performed by means of investigations carried out by staff other than those mentioned at paragraph a) above. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 7 1 – The organisation of supervised institutions, and in particular the systems referred to at Article 6.a) above, shall be designed to ensure that units responsible for initiating transactions operate independently of those responsible for validating them, in particular at the accounting level, for settling them and for implementing the missions of the risk function. Such independence may be secured by ensuring that the units report to different management bodies at a sufficiently senior level, or by setting up an organisation in which duties are clearly segregated, or by implementing procedures (which may be computerised) specifically designed for this purpose, in which case the institution must be able to prove that they are appropriate and sufficient. The remuneration of employees in units responsible for validating transactions shall be determined independently of that of the business areas whose transactions they validate or verify and shall be adequate to attract qualified and experienced staff; it shall take account of the achievement of the objectives associated with the function. circumstances, a supervised institution may entrust performance of the controls set forth at Article 6 to outside service providers under the responsibility of the persons appointed pursuant to paragraph 1 of this article and under the conditions set forth at Article 37-2 of this regulation. Article 8 The executive body shall keep the decision-making body informed of the appointment of the officers referred to at paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 7, whose identities shall be communicated to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. The above-mentioned officers shall report on the conduct of their assignments to the executive body. When the executive body or the decision-making body deem it necessary, they shall also report directly to the decisionmaking body or, where appropriate, the audit committee. Article 9 Supervised institutions shall ensure that the number and qualification of the persons mentioned at Article 6 and the resources placed at their disposal, in particular the monitoring tools and risk analysis methods, are adapted to the institution’s activities, size and establishments. Supervised institutions shall appoint one or more officers responsible for the permanent control set forth at the first indent of Article 6.a). Among these officers, those at the most senior level, if they are not members of the executive body, may not carry out any commercial, financial or accounting transaction. The resources allocated to internal control by way of the systems referred to at Article 6.b) above must be sufficient to enable a full audit review of all operations over as few years as possible. A schedule of audit tasks shall be drawn up at least once a year on the basis of the annual internal control objectives set by the executive and the decisionmaking body. If there is more than one officer at the most senior level of permanent control, a member of the executive body shall ensure that permanent control is coherent and effective. Article 9-1 Supervised institutions define procedures to : 2 – Supervised institutions shall also appoint an officer responsible for ensuring the coherence and effectiveness of the assignments referred to at Article 6.b). The staff responsible for the periodic control set forth at Article 6.b) above shall perform their assignments independently of all the entities and services to which their control relate. 3 – When the size of the institution does not justify entrusting the responsibilities) to specially appointed staff, those responsibilities may be entrusted to a single person or to the executive body which, under the control of the decision-making body, shall coordinate all arrangements contributing to performance of that assignment. 4 – When the supervised institution is an investment firm, the functions set forth at Article 6.a) of this regulation may be entrusted to the persons responsible for the controls provided for in the general regulations of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers. The person responsible for such controls may assume the responsibilities set forth at paragraph 1 of this article. 5 – When an undertaking belongs to a group within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 aforesaid or is affiliated to a central body, those responsibilities may be assumed by another undertaking of the same group or affiliated to the same central body, with the consent of the decision-making bodies of both undertakings concerned. 6 – Under the conditions set forth at paragraph 3 of this article, or when such measures are justified by particular Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a) make sure that the corrective measures decided on by the competent persons in the framework of the internal control system are implemented within a reasonable b) enable the officer in charge of the periodic controls to inform directly and on his own initiative the audit committee of the nonimplementation of the corrective measures decided on. Article 10 Supervised institutions shall ensure that the control system is well-integrated into the organisation, methods and procedures of each activity and that the systems referred to at Article 6.b) above apply to the entire institution, including its branches, and to all undertakings under its exclusive or joint control. CHAPTER II COMPLIANCE CONTROL SYSTEM Article 11 Supervised institutions shall appoint an officer responsible for ensuring the coherence and effectiveness of controls of non-compliance risk and shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of the person’s identity. 77 The compliance officer, if not a member of the executive body, may not carry out any commercial, financial or accounting transaction. Supervised institutions shall determine whether the compliance officer should report on the performance of his or her assignment to the person responsible for permanent control set forth at Article 7.1, indent 3 or directly to the executive body. When the executive body or the decision-making body deem it necessary, the compliance officer shall also report directly to the decision-making body. When the size of a supervised institution does not justify entrusting such responsibility to a specially appointed person, the person responsible for permanent control shall coordinate all arrangements contributing to performance of compliance control assignments. When an undertaking belongs to a group within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 aforesaid or is affiliated to a central body, that responsibility may be assumed by another undertaking of the same group or affiliated to the same central body, with the consent of the decision-making bodies of both undertakings concerned When the supervised institution is an investment firm, the functions set forth at the first paragraph of this article may be entrusted to the person responsible for controlling compliance with provisions within the competence of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, without prejudice to application of Article 7.4 of this regulation. Article 11-1 Supervised institutions shall draw up specific procedures for assessing compliance, including: − − procedures for systematic prior approval, including a written notice from the compliance officer or a person duly authorised by the compliance officer for the purpose, for new products or changes to existing products with significant implications for the institution or the market; or for the provision of investment services, any system that offers advice and assists those concerned with investment services enabling them to meet their obligations as defined in this chapter. They also provide for control procedures for the transactions executed. Article 11-2 Supervised institutions shall introduce, under terms and conditions that are adapted to their organisation and that take account, where relevant, of their membership of a group within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 200003 aforesaid or affiliation to a central body, of procedures to centralise information relating to possible malfunctions in the effective implementation of compliance obligations. In that regard, they shall ensure that it is possible for any manager or staff member to inform the compliance officer of the entity or line of business to which they belong, or the officer referred to at Article 11, of any concerns they may have about such possible malfunctions. The entire staff shall be informed of the organisational rules adopted. 78 Article 11-3. – Supervised institutions shall introduce procedures that make it possible to monitor and evaluate the effective implementation of actions designed to remedy any malfunction in relation to the obligations and standards defined at Article 4.p) of this regulation. As a rule, the management body shall define procedures that guarantee the segregation of duties in the organisation and the prevention of conflicts of interest. Article 11-4 Supervised institutions shall provide all staff members concerned with training in procedures for controlling compliance, adapted to the operations they perform. They shall introduce a system that will guarantee monitoring on a regular basis and as often as possible of any changes to the rules and regulations applicable to their operations and, in that context, shall immediately inform all staff members concerned. Article 11-5 Supervised institutions shall ensure that their foreign affiliates and branches take steps to ensure that their operations are compliant. Such steps shall include controlling compliance with the local rules that apply to the activity of their affiliates and branches and implementation of this regulation. When local rules are stricter than the provisions of this regulation, a local establishment that complies with them is deemed to comply with the obligations set forth in this regulation. Article 11-6 When the provisions of local regulations hamper application of the rules set forth in this regulation, especially if they prevent the disclosure of information necessary for such application, the local entities concerned shall inform the compliance officer. The supervised institution shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of such cases. CHAPTER III ARRANGEMENTS FOR COMBATING MONEY LAUNDERING AND THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM Article 11-7 1. Supervised institutions shall introduce an organisation, a classification of money laundering and terrorist financing risks, internal procedures and a system for controlling these arrangements. 2.1 Supervised institutions shall ensure that staff whose activity is exposed to money laundering and terrorist financing risks are able to demonstrate a level of vigilance adapted to those risks. To that end, supervised institutions shall ensure that the training and information of such staff as provided for at Article L. 561-33 of the Monetary and Financial Code are adapted to their activities, taking account of the risks identified by the classification and the level of responsibility exercised. Staff training and information shall concern in particular the procedures indicating the transactions in relation to which they must demonstrate particular vigilance with respect to the risks identified by the classification drawn up by the supervised institution. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 2.2 Supervised institutions shall introduce arrangements for monitoring and analysing their business relationships, based on the know-your-customer principle, so that they can notably detect transactions that are anomalous in relation to the business relationship profile and could be the subject of scrutiny as provided for at Article L. 561-10-2 II or the report provided for at Article L. 561-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code. They shall also introduce arrangements adapted to their activities allowing for the detection of any transaction in favour of a person or entity that is the subject of a measure to freeze funds, financial instruments and economic resources. This requirement does not apply to transfers from: - - - a Member State of the European Community or a State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area if the supervised institutions do not know the identity of the payer pursuant to Article 6 of Regulation no. 1781/2006 of the Parliament and of the Council of 15 November 2006 on information on the payer accompanying transfers of funds; an associate country or territory under the terms of Article 17 of Regulation no. 1781/2006 of the Parliament and of the Council of 15 November 2006 on information on the payer accompanying transfers of funds; or Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon, Mayotte, New Caledonia, French Polynesia and the Wallis and Futuna islands if the supervised institutions do not know the identity of the payer pursuant to Article L. 713-5 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The arrangements implemented in this way shall be adapted to the supervised institution’s activities, customer segments and establishments and to the risks identified by the classification. The arrangements for monitoring and analysing transactions must allow for the definition of significance criteria and thresholds specific to anomalies relating to money laundering and terrorist financing. 2.3 Supervised institutions shall ensure, in ways adapted to their size, the nature of their activities and the risks identified by the classification of money laundering and terrorist financing risks, that they have sufficient human resources to analyse anomalies detected by the abovementioned arrangements. They shall ensure that the staff in question have the right experience, qualification, training and positioning to perform their duties. They shall ensure that they have access to the internal information necessary for them to perform their duties. 2.4 Supervised institutions shall introduce, in ways adapted to their organisation that take account, where relevant, of their membership of a group within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 relating to prudential supervision on a consolidated basis or of a network affiliated to a central body, procedures to centralise the analysis of detected anomalies meeting the criteria and thresholds mentioned in the final paragraph of 2.2 above. The procedures shall provide for the transmission of such anomalies to the declarant and Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 correspondent mentioned in Articles R. 561-23 and R. 56124 of the Monetary and Financial Code according to their respective competence. Supervised institutions shall ensure that the declarant and the correspondent have access to all the information necessary for them to perform their duties. They shall provide them with tools and resources so that, according to their respective competence, they can: - make the reports provided for at Article L. 561-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code; and - process information requests from TRACFIN, the national FIU. The above-mentioned declarant and correspondent shall also be informed: - of incidents relating to money laundering and terrorist financing revealed by internal control systems; - of shortcomings found by national and foreign supervisory authorities in the implementation of measures to counter money laundering and terrorist financing. 3. The classification of money laundering and terrorist financing risks: a) shall cover all activities liable to expose the institution to risks in the sphere of money laundering and terrorist financing, including in particular: - transactions with the persons mentioned at Article R. 561-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code; - the activities mentioned at Article R. 561-21 of the Monetary and Financial Code; - wealth management activities; - activities conducted with persons established in countries or territories mentioned by an international authority involved in the fight against money laundering or terrorist financing as being among those whose legislation or practices impede that fight, or through establishments in such countries or territories; - activities conducted with persons established countries or territories mentioned at Article 511-45 of the Monetary and Financial Code through establishments in such countries territories; in L. or or b) shall take account of information and reports circulated by the international authority for consultation on and coordination of the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing of which France is a member and by the minister of the economy; c) shall take account of information received from TRACFIN, the national FIU; 79 d) shall evaluate the risk of the various products and services offered, the particular terms or conditions of transactions performed, the distribution channels used and the characteristics of the target customers; e) shall be updated at regular intervals and following any event that significantly affects the supervised institution’s activities, customer segments or establishments. a) the origin and destination of the sums and the purpose of the transaction; b) the identity of the payer and, where relevant, of the beneficial owner; c) the identity of the beneficiary or beneficiaries or the other party to the transaction (name, address, profession where relevant); 4. Supervised institutions shall introduce procedures relating to the vigilance obligations set forth at Book V, Title VI, Chapters I and II of the Monetary and Financial Code, taking account of the risks identified by the classification provided for at point 3 of this article. The procedures shall concern the following, in particular: d) the characteristics of the transaction (amount, date) and the terms of its execution (especially use of a particular payment system); a) terms and conditions for accepting new customers, especially persons exposed to specific risks on account of the political, jurisdictional or administrative duties they perform or have ceased to perform within the last twelve months; f) relevant information about the business relationship profile. b) terms and conditions for accepting transactions with occasional customers; c) due diligence measures to be taken to identify the customer and, where relevant, the beneficial owner, in particular where they use a service provider to identify and verify their client’s identity under the conditions set forth at Article R. 561-13. II of the Monetary and Financial Code; in such case, the procedures shall stipulate the conditions for application of Articles 37-11 and 37-2, with the exception of points 3a, 3c and 4 of Article 37-2, and the conditions for the transmission by the service provider of all information relevant to the fight against money laundering and the financing of terrorism, while ensuring the confidentiality of such information; d) additional or enhanced due diligence to be conducted for the business relations mentioned at Article L. 56110 and Articles L. 561-10-1 and L. 561-10-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code and the revision of due diligence measures where the customer, in the course of a business relationship, happens to meet the criteria of Article R. 561-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code; e) the necessary elements for a sufficient knowledge of the business relationship and, where relevant, of the beneficial owner, and the frequency with which they are updated, in particular among those mentioned in the order of 2 September 2009 implementing Article R. 561-12 of the Monetary and Financial Code; f) Where supervised institutions use the services of agents, under the conditions set forth at Article L. 5231. I of the Monetary and Financial Code, specific procedures shall stipulate how the vigilance obligations set forth in the Monetary and Financial Code are to be implemented. 5. The procedures shall stipulate the information to be gathered and kept for the transactions mentioned at Article L. 561-10-2. II of the Monetary and Financial Code: 80 e) where relevant, the terms and conditions for operating the account; 6. Where supervised institutions are members of a financial group, a mixed group or a financial conglomerate, the procedures shall define the ways of circulating the information necessary to organise the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing within the group under the conditions set forth at Article L. 511-34 of the Monetary and Financial Code. In particular, they shall stipulate how such information is to be processed in the monitoring and analysis arrangements mentioned at Article 11.7, point 2.2, and ensure that the information is not used for any purpose other than the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing. The procedures shall stipulate the conditions for exchanges of information relating to the existence and the content of the reports provided for at Article L. 561-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code. They shall define, under the conditions set forth at Article L. 561-20 of the Monetary and Financial Code, how to ensure that such information is protected, and in particular that the persons whose amounts and transactions are reported are not informed of the fact. 7. The procedures shall stipulate the conditions for exchanges of information relating to the existence and the content of the reports provided for at Article L. 561-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code, under the conditions set forth at Article L. 561-21. They shall indicate, inter alia: - the persons duly authorised to make such exchanges; - the precautions to be taken to ensure that that the persons whose amounts and transactions are reported are not informed of the fact; - the measures to be taken to ensure that the information is not used for any purpose other than the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing. 8. The procedures shall define the terms and conditions for keeping, in ways designed to ensure confidentiality: a) copies of the identification documents mentioned at Article R. 561-5 of the Monetary and Financial Code or the references thereof; b) where relevant, elements that identify the beneficial owner; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 c) items of information necessary to know the business relationship; d) information, declarations and documents relating to the sums and transactions mentioned at Article L. 561-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code. 9. The permanent control of anti-money laundering and terrorist financing measures shall form part of the compliance control system under the conditions set forth at Chapter II of this title. The compliance control officer shall ensure that the measures and procedures mentioned in this chapter are appropriate, and in particular that they comply with the obligations set forth at Articles L. 561-10-2, L. 561-15 and R. 561-31 of the Monetary and Financial Code. 10. Where supervised institutions use a service provider to identify and verify the identity of their customer under the conditions set forth at Article R. 561-13. II of the Monetary and Financial Code, their control system shall ensure compliance with the provisions of Articles 37-1-1 and 37-2, with the exception of points 3a, 3c and 4 of Article 37-2, of this regulation. may be entrusted to the persons responsible for the controls provided for by the General Regulation of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers. Article 11-9 The risk officer shall ensure that the risk and result measurement and monitoring systems referred to at Title IV and the risk monitoring and risk control systems referred to at Title V are implemented. He shall ensure that the level of risk to which the supervised institution is exposed is compatible with the business plan drawn up by the decision-taking body and the limits mentioned at Article 33. Article 11-10 Supervised institutions shall endow the risk function with sufficient resources in terms of staff, information systems and access to the internal and external information it needs to perform its duties. They shall ensure that risk function staff have sufficient experience and qualifications and the right positioning to perform their duties within the firm. TITLE III ORGANISATION OF ACCOUNTING AND INFORMATION PROCESSING SYSTEMS [Indent 10 takes effect as of 31 October 2010]. CHAPTER IIV SUPERVISION OF THE RISK FUNCTION Article 11-8 Supervised institutions shall appoint a risk officer responsible for the risk function, informing the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of his/her identity. The risk function includes staff and units responsible for measuring, monitoring and controlling risks. Where the risk officer is not a member of the executive body, he shall report directly to it and may not perform any commercial, financial or accounting operation. The risk officer shall report on the performance of his assignment to the executive body and shall alert it to any situation liable to have significant repercussions on risk control. Where the executive body or decision-taking body deems it necessary, he/she shall also report directly to the decision-taking body or to the audit committee if there is one. Where the size of a supervised institution or the circumstances so require, the person responsible for permanent control shall coordinate all the arrangements that participate in the risk function. Where an institution belongs to a group within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 aforesaid or is affiliated to a central body, responsibility for the risk function may be assumed by another institution in the same group or affiliated to the same central body, with the consent of the decision-taking bodies of the two institutions concerned. Where the enterprise is an investment firm, the responsibilities set forth at the first paragraph of this article Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 12 Supervised institutions shall comply with the provisions of Articles 1 to 6 of Decree 83-1020 aforesaid, taking into account the following points. 1. Regarding the information disclosed in the balance sheet, profit and loss account and notes to the financial statements, the organisation must ensure that there is a set of procedures, known as an audit trail, making it possible to: a) reconstruct operations in chronological order; b) support all information with original documents from which it must be possible to trace an operation directly back to the summary document, and vice versa; c) account for changes in balances from one closing date to the next by preserving a record of movements that affect accounting items. In particular, the accounting balances shown in the chart of accounts provided for at Article 4 of the above-mentioned decree shall be related, directly or in aggregate, to balance sheet and profit and loss account items and sub-items and to the information contained in the notes to the financial statements. By way of exception, the balance of an account may be allocated to several items, provided that the institution can justify doing so, that it complies with adequate security and control procedures and that it describes the method used in the document specified at Article 1 of the above-mentioned decree. 2. The accounting information shown in the returns to be transmitted to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, and the information necessary to calculate the management standards prepared in application of Articles L. 611-2, point 6 and L. 533-1 of the Monetary and Financial 81 Code aforesaid and the management standards applicable to the legal persons referred to at points 3 and 4 of Article L. 440-2 and points 3 and 4 of Article L. 542-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid shall comply with at least the first two aspects of the audit trail described in paragraphs a) and b), 1°, of this Article. In particular, it must be possible to verify each amount shown in the returns, in the appended tables, in the statements concerning the management standards and in the other documents transmitted to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, notably on the basis of the detailed components of the amount. Where the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel has authorised information to be supplied in the form of statistics, this information shall be verifiable even if it is not covered by the audit trail. Article 13 Supervised institutions shall ensure that the information and the valuation and accounting methods are exhaustive, of a high standard and accurate, notably by means of: a) regular reviews to ensure that the methods and parameters used by the management systems to value transactions are sufficient and appropriate; b) regular reviews of the relevance of accounting procedures to the overall objectives of security and prudence, and their compliance with the prevailing accounting rules; c) at least monthly reconciliation of the dealing records of transactions giving rise to market risks, including foreign-exchange risks, with the accounting records. These reconciliations shall comply with the prevailing valuation rules, and institutions shall be able to identify and analyze any discrepancies that appear. Article 14 Supervised institutions shall determine the level of computer security deemed necessary with regard to the requirements of their business areas. They shall ensure that this level is maintained and that their information systems are appropriate. In particular, control of information systems shall ensure that: a) regular assessments of information systems security are carried out and corrective action is taken where appropriate; b) back-up procedures are available to allow business operations to continue in the event of serious systems failure. c) In any event, the integrity and confidentiality of the information is preserved. Control of information systems extends to data storage and documents relating to the analysis, programming and execution of data processing. Article 14-I In addition to the provisions set forth at Article 14 of this Regulation, supervised institutions shall: a) 82 have business continuity plans; b) provide for regular assessment of their organisation and the availability of their human, property, technical and financial resources from the standpoint of business continuity-related risks; c) ensure the coherence and effectiveness of business continuity plans in the framework of a master plan which incorporates the objectives defined by the executive body and, where appropriate, the decisionmaking body. Article 15 Supervised institutions shall keep all files containing documentary evidence for the last closing records transmitted to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel until the next closing date. Article 16 Without prejudice to the General Regulations and decisions of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers relating to accounting procedures for financial instruments, accounting or material records must be kept showing inventories, inflows and outflows of assets held by supervised institutions for third parties which are not included in the individual annual accounts. With regard to such assets, a distinction shall be made, if it is significant, between assets held on deposit and assets held as collateral either for a loan granted or for a commitment given for a specific purpose or by virtue of a standing agreement in favour of the depositor. TITLE IV RISK AND RESULT MEASURING SYSTEMS Article 17 Supervised institutions shall set up risk analysis and risk measurement systems that are suited to the nature and volume of their transactions in order to assess the different types of risk to which these transactions expose them, particularly credit risk, market risk, overall interest-rate risk, intermediation risk, settlement risk, liquidity risk and operational risk. Supervised institutions and the financial holding companies mentioned at Article 2 of this Regulation must have risk measurement systems suited to the nature and volume of their transactions that allow them to assess credit risk, market risk, liquidity risk, overall interest-rate risk, settlement risk and operational risk on a consolidated basis. Article 17 a Supervised institutions shall have sound, effective and complete systems and procedures to assess and maintain, on an ongoing basis, the amounts, types and distribution of internal capital that they deem to be appropriate in terms of the nature and level of risk to which they are or might be exposed. These systems and procedures shall be subject to regular internal reviews to ensure that they remain comprehensive and proportionate to the nature, scale and complexity of the activities. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 17 b The risk analysis and measurement systems defined in Article 17 must set forth the criteria and thresholds for identifying as significant the incidents brought to light by the internal control procedures as defined in Article L.51141 of the Monetary and Financial Code. These criteria must be adapted to the activity of the institution and cover the risk of loss, even if none has been incurred. b) Any fraud resulting in a loss or gain exceeding 0.5% of core capital is considered as significant. This amount may not be less than EUR 10,000. e) Article 17 c Supervised institutions shall introduce systems and procedures that enable them to gain an overall understanding of all the risks associated with the institution’s banking and non-banking activities, particularly credit risk, market risk, overall interest-rate risk, intermediation risk, settlement risk, liquidity risk and operational risk. These systems and procedures should enable institutions to draw up a risk map that identifies and evaluates exposure to risk in the light of internal factors (particularly the complexity of the organisation, the nature of the business pursued, the professionalism of staff and the quality of systems) and external factors (particular economic conditions and regulatory developments). The risk map should: a) take account of all exposure to risk; b) be drawn up for each entity and/or business area at the level of which, as appropriate, consolidated or supplementary supervision is exercised; c) assess whether the exposure to risk is consistent with the business plan; d) identify actions to control exposure to risk, by: - strengthening permanent control measures; - implementing the risk monitoring and risk control systems set forth at Title V; - drawing up the business continuity provided for at Article 14-1. plans Article 17 d All the systems referred to at Articles 17 to 17c should be regularly updated and assessed. CHAPTER I SELECTION AND MEASUREMENT OF CREDIT RISK Article 18 Supervised institutions shall have a credit risk selection procedure and a system for measuring this risk that allow them to: a) centralise their balance sheet and off-balance sheet exposure vis-à-vis a counterparty or counterparties deemed to constitute a single beneficiary within the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05 aforesaid; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 c) d) assess different categories of risk using qualitative and quantitative data; this includes intra-day credit risk when it is significant for the activity of the supervised institution; address and control the concentration risk by means of written policies and procedures; address and control the residual risk by means of written policies and procedures; verify whether the diversification of credit portfolios is adequate given their overall credit strategy. Article 19 Subject to the provisions of Article 23 below, assessment of credit risk must take into account elements of the financial position of the beneficiary, in particular his ability to pay, and, where relevant, any security received. For company risk, the assessment must also take account of the analysis of the companies’ environment, the characteristics of the partners or shareholders and managers and the most recent accounting documents. Supervised institutions shall compile credit files that contain all this qualitative and quantitative information and include in a single file information concerning counterparties deemed to constitute a single beneficiary, without prejudice to the application of foreign regulations that may restrict the provision of information. At least once every quarter, supervised institutions shall update the files on counterparties which have unpaid or doubtful debts or which involve significant risks or amounts. Article 20 The selection of credit operations must also take account of their profitability by ensuring that projections of direct and indirect costs and income are as comprehensive as possible and include operating and financing costs, the costs corresponding to the estimated risk of default by the beneficiary during the credit operation, and the cost of remunerating capital. At least once every six months, the executive body shall carry out an ex post analysis of the profitability of credit operations. Article 21 Decision-making procedures for loans or commitments, particularly where they involve delegation of authority, must be clearly formalised and suited to the institution’s characteristics, in particular its size, its organisation and the nature of its activity. Where the nature and scale of transactions so require, supervised institutions shall ensure, within the framework of compliance with any delegation procedures that may have been defined, that loan or commitment decisions are taken by at least two persons and that the credit files are also analyzed by a specialist unit that is independent of operational entities. When loans or commitments are granted to principal managers or shareholders as defined at Article 6b of Regulation 90-02 aforesaid, supervised institutions shall examine the nature of the transactions and the conditions 83 governing them, notably in the light of the provisions of Articles L. 225-38 to L. 225-43 of the Commercial Code and in relation to equivalent transactions customarily carried out with persons other than those referred to above. Article 22 The credit risk measurement systems shall make it possible to identify, measure and aggregate the risk resulting from all balance sheet and off-balance sheet transactions in which the institution is exposed to a risk of counterparty default. For the measurement of credit risk generated by instruments traded on over-the-counter markets or markets assimilated to regulated markets, supervised institutions with significant activity shall use a mark-to-market valuation method that takes into account a future risk factor. Article 23 Supervised institutions that use statistical systems to select and measure their credit risk shall regularly verify their relevance in the light of payment incidents recorded in the recent past and taking into account developments in the economic and legal environment. Article 24 At least every quarter, supervised institutions shall review developments in the quality of their commitments. This review should make it possible to determine, for large transactions, any necessary reclassifications within internal categories for assessing the level of credit risk and, where necessary, any allocations to bad debt items and the appropriate level of provisions. When setting the appropriate level of provisions, supervised institutions shall take account of guarantees. They shall ensure that such guarantees can be called and that a recent valuation exists, carried out on a prudent basis. Article 24 a The risks arising from the securitisation transactions credit institutions that are originators, sponsors or investors shall be assessed and processed using the appropriate procedures, which aim in particular to ensure that the economic substance of the transaction is fully reflected in the risk assessment and management decisions CHAPTER II MEASUREMENT OF MARKET RISK Article 25 Supervised institutions shall have systems for monitoring their own-account transactions that make it possible to: a) record on at least a day-to-day basis foreign-exchange transactions and transactions on their trading book, defined in Articles 298 to 303 of the Order of 20 February 2007 and calculate the results thereof, and determine positions with the same frequency; b) measure at least on a day-to-day basis the risks resulting from trading book positions in accordance with Article 294 of the Order of 20 February 2007 and the adequacy of the institution’s capital. 84 Article 26 For the measurement of market risks, supervised institutions shall ensure that their assessment of the risk is comprehensive and that it specifies every component of the risk. When their activity is significant, supervised institutions shall supplement the measures referred to in the preceding paragraph with an overall measurement of their risk using an approach based on the notion of value at risk. The measurement of market risk must be designed with systems that make it possible to aggregate different product and market positions at the level of the institution or group, in the case of supervised institutions and financial holding companies supervised on a consolidated basis. Article 27 Supervised institutions shall ensure that they regularly assess the risks to which they are exposed in the event of substantial changes in the parameters of a market or, where necessary, of a market segment. The validity and consistency of the parameters and assumptions used in this assessment of market risk must be periodically monitored. The results of these measurements shall be provided to the executive body, which shall inform the decision-making body in order to assess the institution’s risks, particularly with regard to its own funds and results. CHAPTER III MEASUREMENT OF OVERALL INTEREST-RATE RISK Article 28 Supervised institutions shall have a system for measuring overall interest-rate risk, when it is significant, that allows them to: a) b) c) assess certain or foreseeable positions and flows resulting from all balance sheet and off-balance sheet transactions; assess the different overall interest-rate risk factors to which such transactions expose them; periodically assess the impact of these different factors, if they are significant, on their results and own funds. Article 29 Supervised institutions may choose to remove the transactions for which they measure market risk as defined in Chapter II of this Regulation from the scope of overall interest-rate risk measurement. Supervised institutions that are controlled exclusively or jointly by an institution or financial holding company supervised on a consolidated basis may dispense with a system for measuring the overall interest-rate risk. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 30 Supervised institutions shall ensure that they regularly assess the risks to which they are exposed in the event of substantial changes in market parameters or breakdowns in the assumptions used in simulations. The validity and consistency of the parameters and assumptions used in this assessment of overall interest-rate risk must be periodically monitored. The results of these measurements shall be provided to the executive body, which shall inform the decision-making body in order to assess the institution’s risks, particularly with regard to its own funds and results. Supervised institutions must be able to inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel as to the impact on their own funds of a sudden and unexpected change in the interest rates relating to their activities based on assumptions determined by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel CHAPTER IV SELECTION AND MEASUREMENT OF INTERMEDIATION RISK Article 30-1 This Article applies only to providers of investment services who guarantee settlement in transactions involving financial instruments and to the legal persons referred to at Article L. 440-2, points 3 and 4, of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, referred to hereafter as service providers. 1. Service providers must have an intermediation risk selection and measurement procedure that allows them to assess commitments with regard to principals and counterparties and to classify, principal by principal, guarantees in the form of deposits of cash or financial instruments. Service providers must set up formal procedures for initiating transactions, particularly where they involve delegation of authority. 2. The assessment of the service provider’s exposure to each principal must take account of elements of the principal’s financial position and the characteristics of the transactions it transmits. 3. Service providers must have a system for monitoring intermediation transactions that makes it possible to: value of these positions shall be reconciled daily with their transaction value; c) assess at the end of each day the market value of financial instruments provided as collateral by principals; d) record at the end of each day and retrace individually all errors in the acceptance and execution of orders. These positions must be considered, from the standpoint of risk monitoring and control, as own-account market risks. Service providers that are not authorised to provide the own-account trading service shall unwind such positions without delay. When the error exceeds a threshold set by the executive body, each incident must be recorded in a descriptive document brought to the attention of one of the persons in charge of permanent control mentioned at Article 6, a, 1 above. Service providers shall ensure that they are able to reconstruct the chronology of transactions and assess positions taken during the day after the event. When the service provider is a legal person referred to at Article L. 440-2, point 3 or 4, of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, the term principal(s) used in this Article shall be replaced by the term trader(s) if the above-mentioned legal person is not in direct contact with the principal. CHAPTER V MEASUREMENT OF LIQUIDITY AND SETTLEMENT RISK Article 31 Supervised institutions shall have policies and procedures adapted to their size, the nature and complexity of their activities and their exposure to risk for measuring and managing their liquidity risk on an ongoing and forwardlooking basis. Alternative scenarios shall be considered. The assumptions underpinning the management of this risk shall be reviewed regularly. Contingency plans to deal with any liquidity crisis shall be in place. Supervised institutions shall have a system for measuring their exposure to settlement risk. Supervised institutions shall ensure that they assess the different stages in the settlement process for the different instruments they deal in, in particular the deadline for unilateral cancellation of the payment order, the deadline for final receipt of funds relative to the purchased instrument, and the moment when they record final receipt of the funds or non-payment. a) record transactions already completed without delay. Transactions transmitted by principals that are not immediately posted to their accounts or formally accepted by them must be regarded as own-account positions with regard to the monitoring and control of risks; Supervised institutions shall set up procedures that allow them to monitor their current and future exposure to settlement risk as they enter into new transactions and as transactions that have not yet been settled go through the different stages of the settlement process. b) take the necessary measures to be able to calculate at the end of each day the market value of long or short positions of principals who require close monitoring following the assessment referred to in paragraph 2 above. The Article 31-1 This Article applies only to providers of investment services who guarantee settlement in transactions involving financial instruments and to the legal persons referred to at Article L. 440-2, points 3 and 4, of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, referred to hereafter as service providers. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 85 1. Service providers shall have a system for measuring the liquidity risk arising from the performance of investment or clearing services that allows them to assess all flows of cash and securities at the settlement date. In particular, service providers shall take into account certain or foreseeable flows of cash or securities related to futures transactions or transactions involving financial futures. 2. Service providers shall ensure that they assess the different stages of the delivery and payment process for the different instruments they deal in and for each delivery-versus-payment system used. In the event of delay or non-payment, transactions must be monitored until the date at which the position is finally unwound. When transactions are processed by a settlementdelivery system that provides for intra-day final settlement, the measurement system must also identify forecast intra-day flows of cash or securities so as to take account of deadlines for unilateral cancellation of payment or delivery orders. Service providers shall monitor on a daily basis transactions that have given rise to fails and shall ensure that they are cleared as soon as possible. 3. 4. Service providers must have a system for measuring resources in the form of readily available securities or cash that enable them to meet their commitments with regard to counterparties, in compliance with the rules on the segregation of assets laid down by the regulations in force. In this respect, they shall take the necessary measures to ensure compliance with their obligations in connection with delivery-versuspayment systems that provide for intra-day final settlement. At least once a year, service providers shall assess the liquidity and settlement risks to which they are exposed in the event of substantial changes in the parameters of a market or default by principals. The assumptions and parameters applied must be assessed at regular intervals. The results of this measurement shall be provided to the executive body, which shall ensure that the service provider has the necessary resources at its disposal to meet its commitments in all events. The decisionmaking body shall be informed of this measurement and of decisions taken by the executive body to cover liquidity risks. CHAPTER VI THE CONSIDERATION OF RISK IN COMPENSATION POLICY Article 31-2 Supervised institutions shall ensure that total variable compensation does not limit their ability to strengthen their capital base as necessary. 86 To this end, supervised institutions define an appropriate ratio between the fixed and variable components of total compensation. Supervised institutions apply compensation policies and implement procedures with the aim to prevent risks and “conflicts of interest” in accordance with this chapter and in a coherent manner with the professional standards that transpose the principles and measures laid down by the Financial Stability Board. The compensation of the risk personnel is set independently from that of the business areas whose operations they validate and control, and sufficiently high so as to recruit skilled and experienced personnel; it takes account of the achievement of the objectives linked to the function. The compensation of the officers referred to in Articles 11 and 11-8 is directly examined by the compensation committee or, by default, by the decision-making body. Article 31-3 The size of the variable compensation pool and its allocation within the supervised institution should take into account the full range of risks, including the liquidity risk inherent in the activities concerned and the capital required to support the risks taken. In respect of risk control, supervised institutions should be able to significantly reduce the amount of variable compensation allocated in respect of the financial year or years in which losses are reported. Article 31-4 In respect of risk control, supervised institutions shall ensure, as regards staff categories that include risk takers, those persons exercising a control function and any employee who, in view of his total income, is in the same pay bracket, whose professional activities have a significant impact on the risk profile of the supervised institution, as well as for the staff of non reporting subsidiaries within a group supervised on a consolidated basis, whose activities have a significant impact on the risk profile of the group, in a manner and to an extent that is suited to their size and their internal organisation as well as to the nature, scope and complexity of their activities: 1. that a substantial proportion of compensation is variable and paid on the basis of individual, businessunit and firm-wide criteria and indicators that adequately measure performance; 2. that no guaranteed variable compensation is paid, except in the context of hiring, and for a period that does not exceed one year 3. that a substantial proportion of such variable compensations, that may not be under 40% and shall be at least equal to 60% as regards the highest variable compensations, is payable according to performance under deferral arrangements over a period of three years and vests no faster than on a pro rata temporis basis. The time of the deferral shall take into account the economic cycle, the nature of the activities, the risks linked to them and the activities of the employees concerned. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 4. that a substantial proportion of such variable compensation, that may not be under 50%, is awarded in the form of shares, equity-linked instruments, index-linked instruments that create incentives aligned with long-term value creation or, for unlisted companies, other equivalent instruments. They shall ensure that awards in shares or equity-linked instruments are conditional on a minimum retention period. This rule applies to the postponed part as well as to the non-postponed part of the variable compensation 5. that if the business area in question reports a loss, the portion of deferred compensation payable to the employees concerned according to performance in the financial year in which the losses are reported is substantially reduced or not paid. 6. that the discretionary payments in relation to the early termination of a work contract be subordinated to the compliance with the conditions linked to the performance of the beneficiary, assessed in relation to those of the undertaking, subject to the mandatory provisions of French labour law 7. that the pension policy be in compliance with the supervised institution’s risk control objectives. If the employee leaves the supervised institution before retirement, the discretionary pension benefits are allocated by the supervised institution in the form of instruments mentioned in point 4 of Article 31-4 and paid after a period of five years. In the case of an employee who has reached retirement age, the discretionary pension benefits are paid to the employee under the conditions laid down in point 4 of Article 31-4, subject to a retention period of five years. Supervised institutions shall prohibit their employees from using personal hedging strategies or compensation- and liability-related insurance to undermine the risk alignment effects embedded in their compensation arrangements. Supervised institutions shall ensure that the compensation of members of their executive body is allocated and paid in compliance with the principles defined above. TITLE V RISK MONITORING AND RISK CONTROL SYSTEMS They shall set up risk monitoring and risk control systems, in particular with regard to credit risk, market risk, overall interest-rate risk, intermediation risk, settlement and liquidity risk, such systems providing for visible internal limits and means to assess whether compliance with these limits is effective. Supervised institutions and the financial holding companies referred to at Article 2 of this Regulation shall also have systems for monitoring and controlling credit risk, market risk, overall interest-rate risk, settlement and liquidity risk that enable them to assess these risks on a consolidated basis under the conditions set forth at Article 17, paragraph 2 above. Article 32-1 Supervised institutions shall regularly re-evaluate their systems for measuring risk and determining limits in order to verify their relevance in the light of developments in the business, the market environment, the macroeconomic environment in which it operates in relation to the business cycle and analytical techniques. Supervised institutions shall introduce systems and procedures that ensure preliminary and forward-looking analysis of the risks incurred where they decide: a) b) c) d) to carry out operations relating to new products; to make significant changes to a product that already exists for the institution or the market; to carry out internal or external growth operations; to carry out exceptional transactions.. Article 33 Systems for monitoring and controlling credit risk, market risk, overall interest-rate risk, intermediation risk, settlement and liquidity risk must contain overall limits. For market activities, the overall limits must be defined by type of exposure. For intermediation risk, the overall limits must be defined for each legal entity. The executive body and, where appropriate, the decisionmaking body shall set and review overall risk limits as and when necessary, and at least once a year, taking into account the institution’s capital and consolidated capital where appropriate, and giving consideration to whether the distribution of capital within the group is suited to the risks incurred. Operational limits, which may be set for the different organisational entities within the institution, must be consistent with the above-mentioned overall limits. The setting of the various overall and operational limits must be consistent with the risk measurement system. CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 34 Supervised institutions shall set up systems which, according to formal procedures, allow them to: Article 32 Supervised institutions shall provide themselves with suitable means for controlling operational risks including legal risks. constantly ensure compliance with the set procedures and limits; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 87 analyze the causes of any non-compliance with procedures and limits; inform the entities or persons designated for the purpose of the extent to which the procedures or limits have been disregarded or exceeded and of the corrective action proposed or undertaken. Article 35 Where the limits are divided between organisational entities within the institution or between consolidated undertakings and are likely to be reached, the entities concerned must refer to the appropriate level of management within the framework of formal procedures. Where the monitoring of compliance is controlled by a risk committee, its members must comprise not only managers of operational units and representatives of the executive body but also persons chosen for their risk management expertise who are independent of operational units. Article 36 Supervised institutions shall define procedures for informing, at least once every quarter, the executive body and, where appropriate, the risk committee about compliance with risk limits, particularly when the overall limits are likely to be reached. If the supervised institution uses an outside service provider to which the provisions of Article 2.a) of this regulation apply, the provisions set forth at paragraphs a) and b) above shall be integrated into the system for internal control on a consolidated basis. This regulation can include the measure wherein the supervised institution supervises the service provider or may influence its actions. When the supervised institution uses a service provider that is also subject to this Regulation, its system shall take into account the measures actually taken, where appropriate together, by the two supervised institutions to comply with the provisions of this regulation and to enable it to ensure that it satisfies its own obligations on the basis of these measures. Article 37-2 Supervised institutions that outsource a service essential to their activity within the meaning of Article 4.q) and r) of this regulation remain entirely responsible for the compliance with all obligations incumbent upon them. In particular, they shall comply with the following provisions. 1. a) Outsourcing in no way entails the delegation of the executive body’s responsibility; b) The relationship of the supervised institution with its clients and its obligations toward the latter should not be affected; c) The conditions that the supervised institution is obliged to meet in order to receive and maintain its authorisation should not be altered; d) None of the other conditions on which the supervised institution’s authorisation was based should be removed or changed; e) The supervised institution, which must maintain the expertise necessary to effectively control the outsourced services and tasks and manage the risks associated with outsourcing, monitors these services and tasks and controls these risks. 2. The outsourcing of services and tasks shall: a) give rise to a written contract between the external service provider and the supervised institution; b) enter into the framework of the supervision of external service providers as defined by the supervised institution. Appropriate measures must be taken if it appears that the service provider seems unable to perform its tasks efficiently or in compliance with legal or regulatory obligations; Article 37-1-1 Supervised institutions: c) be able to be interrupted, if necessary, without impacting the continuity or quality of the services provided to clients. a) shall ensure that their control system within the meaning of Article 5 of this regulation includes their outsourced activities 3. the supervised institutions guarantee, in their relations with their external service providers, that the latter: a) ensure that the quality of their services is up to standard and, should an incident occur, are able to rely on the contingency mechanisms mentioned in Point c; Article 37 Supervised institutions must draw up suitable summary statements for the monitoring of their operations and in particular for the information to be provided to the executive body, the risk committee referred to at Article 35 of this Regulation, the decision-making body and the audit committee, if any. The statements must contain quantitative and qualitative information, the latter in particular providing details of the scope of the measures used to evaluate the level of exposure to risk and to set limits. CHAPTER II CONDITIONS APPLICABLE TO OUTSOURCING Article 37-1. Supervised institutions shall ensure that any service which substantively contributes to a decision committing the undertaking vis-à-vis its clients to conclude a transaction referred to in the first three indents of Article 4.r) of this regulation is outsourced only to persons approved or authorised to carry on such activities in accordance with the prevailing standards in their country. Where a payment institution intends to outsource a service essential to its activity, it shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel beforehand b) shall set-up arrangements within the meaning of Article 6 of this regulation to control their outsourced activities 88 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) guarantee the protection of confidential information regarding the supervised institution and its clients; TITLE VI c) implement contingency mechanisms in the event of a serious problem affecting the continuity of the service, or factor into their continuity plan the eventuality that an external service provider may fail to carry out its task; DUTY OF THE EXECUTIVE BODY AND OF THE DECISION-MAKING BODY OF THE SUPERVISED INSTITUTION AND OF THE AUTORITÉ DE CONTRÔLE PRUDENTIEL d) cannot impose a substantial change to the service that they provide without the supervised institution’s prior agreement; e) conform to the procedures defined by the supervised institution concerning the organisation and implementation of the supervision of the services that it provides; f) provide them, whenever necessary, with access, on site if need be, to any information on the services made available to them, in accordance with the regulations relative to the disclosure of information; g) inform them of any event liable to have a significant impact on their ability to carry out the outsourced tasks effectively and in compliance with the legislation and regulations in force; h) accept that the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or its foreign equivalents, as defined by articles L. 632-7, L. 632-12 and L. 632-13 of the aforementioned Monetary and Financial Code, may have access to information on the outsourced tasks in order to perform its duties, on site if need be. 4. When an investment services provider uses for it is outsourced activities relating to the portfolio management provided to its non-professional customers an external service provider located in a country that is not a member of the European Community and is not party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, he shall ensure that the following conditions are met: - the service provider is authorised or registered in its home country to provide portfolio management services for third parties and is subject to prudential supervision; - there is an appropriate cooperation agreement between the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel or the Autorité des marches financiers and the service provider’s supervisory authority. If one or both of the aforementioned conditions are not met, the investment services provider may only outsource portfolio management services to service providers located in a country that is not party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area after notifying the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of the outsourcing contract. In the absence of any remark by the Commission within a period of three months from the date of notification, the outsourcing planned by the investment services provider may go ahead. Article 38 The executive body and the decision-making body are responsible for making sure that the supervised institution complies with its obligations under this regulation. In particular, the executive body and the decision-making body have at their disposal relevant information on the risks incurred by the supervised institution. They are obliged to regularly assess and control the effectiveness of policies, systems and procedures set up to comply with this regulation and take the appropriate measures to remedy possible failings. Article 38-1 The decision-making body sets – where appropriate, on the basis of the opinion issued by the central body of the supervised institution – the significance criteria and thresholds mentioned in Article 17b of this regulation used to identify incidents that must be brought to its attention. Significant incidents with regard to the criteria and thresholds mentioned in Article 17b must without delay be brought to the attention of the executive body and the decision-making body and, if necessary, the central body of the supervised institution. Information about significant anomalies detected by the anti-money laundering and terrorist financing monitoring and analysis system and about shortcomings of the system, particularly those found by national and foreign supervisory authorities, must be brought to the attention of the executive body and the decision-making body and, if necessary, the central body of the supervised institution. Article 38-2 Supervised institutions communicate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel the criteria and thresholds mentioned in Article 17b and decided on by the decision-making body. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel checks the relevance of the criteria and thresholds chosen with regard to the situation of the institution and the way in which they are applied. If the situation of the institution warrants it, it may, in accordance with Article L.613-16, request an institution to review its criteria and thresholds as well as the way in which they are implemented. The executive body is in charge of Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, significant incidents with regard thresholds mentioned in Article 17b decision-making body. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 communicating to the without delay, the to the criteria and and decided on by the 89 Article 38-3 For supervised institutions that are part of a financial group, a mixed group or financial conglomerate, the significance criteria and thresholds as well as the obligations under Articles 38-1 and 38-2 are defined and implemented by the competent executive and decisionmaking bodies of the institutions for which the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel exerts a control of capital requirements defined in the Order of 20 February 2007 or the supplementary supervision under the conditions set forth in Regulation No. 2000-03. associated with the activity and results of the supervised institutions or groups, and particularly the risk distribution provided for in Article 18 as well as the analysis of the profitability of the credit operations provided for in Article 20 of this Regulation; b) of the measures taken to ensure business continuity and the assessment of the effectiveness of the arrangements in place; c) of the measures taken to control outsourced activities and any risks the supervised institution may incur thereby; essential services covered by the first three indents of Article 4.r) of this regulation must be identified in such information. However, the same institutions apply Article 38-1 on an individual basis. Article 38-4 The decision-making body shall determine the principles of the compensation policy in accordance with the provisions of Title IV, Chapter VI and in consistency with the professional standards that transpose the principles and measures laid down by the Financial Stability Board. In order to prepare its decisions, and except where the size of the institution does not warrant such a measure, the decision-taking body shall constitute a remuneration committee comprising a majority of independent members competent to analyse compensation policies and practices in the light of all relevant criteria, including the institution’s risk policy. The president and the members of the remuneration committee are members of the decision-making body who are not members of the executive body of the supervised institution This committee, or the decision-taking body if there is none, shall conduct an annual review of the compensation policy and in particular shall ensure, on the basis of the report submitted to it by general management, that it complies with the provisions of Title IV, Chapter VI and is consistent with the professional standards that transpose the principles and measures laid down by the Financial Stability Board. It shall draw as necessary on internal control units or outside experts. It shall report on its work to the decision-taking body. The minute of the decision-taking body’s debate on compensation policy shall be transmitted to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 39 At least twice a year, the decision-making body assesses the activity and results of the internal control, in particular control of compliance on the basis of the information it receives from the executive body and the officers mentioned in Articles 7 and 11 and the significant incidents brought to light by the internal control procedures in accordance with Article 38-1. The executive body reports to the decision-making body and, if need be, the audit committee on a regular basis and at least once a year. a) 90 of the essential elements and main lessons that may be drawn from the analysis and monitoring of risk When the decision-making body is not involved in setting the limits, the executive body shall inform it and the audit committee, if any, of decisions taken in this respect. It shall inform the decision-making body regularly, and at least once a year, of compliance with the set limits. If the audit committee is distinct from the decision-making body, the provision of information and assessment laid down in this Article may take place only once a year. The documents examined in this context by the decisiontaking body shall be sent to the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel together with excerpts from the minutes of the meetings at which they were examined. Article 40 Supervised institutions shall draw up and regularly update manuals of procedures relating to their various activities. These manuals must describe the methods for recording, processing and retrieving data, accounting procedures and procedures for entering into transactions. Supervised institutions shall draw up, in the same conditions, documents that set out the means intended to ensure that the internal control system operates smoothly, including: a) b) c) d) e) f) g) the various levels of responsibility; the functions and resources allotted to the running of internal control systems the rules that ensure the independence of these systems as set forth at Article 7 of this Regulation; the procedures relating to the security of information and communication systems and to business continuity plans; a description of risk measurement systems; a description of risk monitoring and control systems; for investment service providers and the legal persons referred to at Article L. 442-2, points 3 and 4 and at Article L. 542-1, points 4 and 5 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, cash management arrangements in the context of the performance of investment or clearing services and the conditions in which cash flow forecasts are monitored as well as the procedures set up to ensure compliance with the provisions relating to the segregation of the funds belonging to the customers of investment firms. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Documentation shall be organised in such a way that it can be made available upon request to the executive body, the decision-making body, the statutory auditors, the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and, where appropriate, the audit committee and the central body. 2. Supervised institutions and financial holding companies supervised on a consolidated basis shall also draw up, at least once a year, a report on the conditions in which internal control is carried out at group level. Supervised institutions shall include this group report in the report referred to in the first paragraph of this Article. Article 41 The reports drawn up following controls conducted within the framework of the arrangements referred to at Article 6.b) above shall be provided to the executive body and, upon request, to the decision-making body and audit committee, if any. When the number of the reports and the size of the undertaking can justify doing so, the conclusion of the report accompanied with the main financial statements may be brought to the knowledge of the executive body. 3. When the supervised institution is an investment firm, the report drawn up as set forth in this article may recapitulate the information contained in the report provided for in the General Regulations of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, if the investment firm deems such information to be significant with regard to the matters referred to in paragraph 1) of this Article. When an institution is affiliated to a central body, the reports shall also be provided to the central body. The reports shall be made available to the statutory auditors and to the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 42 At least once a year, supervised institutions shall draw up a report on the conditions in which internal control is conducted. 1. The report shall notably include, for each of the kinds of risks defined in this regulation: a) a description of the main actions carried out in relation to internal control, for the implementation of Article 6, a), and the lessons drawn from these actions; b) an inventory of investigations carried out for the implementation of Article 6, b), identifying the main lessons to be drawn, especially the main shortcomings observed, and the follow-up to the corrective actions taken; c) a description of significant changes made in relation to internal control during the period under review, in particular to take account of developments in activities and risks; d) a description of the conditions in which the procedures in place are applied to new activities; Article 43 At least once a year, supervised institutions and financial holding companies supervised on a consolidated basis shall draw up a report on the measurement and monitoring of their exposure. When the institution is itself responsible for the supervision on a consolidated basis of other supervised institutions, the report shall cover the risks to which the group is exposed. The report shall include the information provided to the decision-making body in accordance with Article 39 of this Regulation. For supervised institutions and financial holding companies, this report shall include an appendix relating to the security of means of payment to be transmitted by the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to the Banque de France as part of its mission defined by Article L. 141-4 of the above-mentioned Monetary and Financial Code. In the appendix, supervised institutions shall describe the assessment, measurement and monitoring of the security of the means of payment they issue or manage with regard to their internal standards, if any, and to the recommendations that the Banque de France or the European System of Central Banks bring to their attention. For institutions subject to the Order relating to the identification, measurement, management and control of liquidity risk, this report shall include an analysis of developments in liquidity cost indicators during the period under review. In the framework of the standard approach for measuring liquidity risk as defined in Title II of the above-mentioned Order, this report shall include: – an appendix describing the assumptions used to prepare the cash flow statement referred to in Title II, Chapter 2, Article 17 of the aforesaid Order as well as, where necessary, the significant changes that have taken place during the period under review; – an analysis of the changes in liquidity gaps calculated in the cash flow statement prepared during the period under review. e) a section relating to the internal control of foreign branches; f) a description of the main initiatives planned in relation to internal control; g) an appendix listing transactions concluded with the principal managers and shareholders as defined at Article 6b of Regulation 90-02 aforesaid; h) an up-to-date description of the classification of money laundering and terrorist financing risks and a description of the analyses on which the classification is based. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 With regard to the monitoring of the liquidity of investment services providers and the legal persons referred to at Article L. 442-2, points 3 and 4 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid, the report shall state, inter alia, the assumptions used. 91 The report shall include : a) b) An appendix containing the assumptions and methodological principles used as well as the results of stress tests performed by supervised institutions in accordance with Articles 116 and 349 of the Order of 20 February 2007. An Appendix indicating the methods, including stress tests, used for identifying the risks resulting from the use of credit risk mitigation techniques recognised for the application of the Order of 20 February 2007, in particular the risk of concentration and the residual risk. The report may be included in the report provided for at Article 42 of this Regulation. Article 43-1 Each year, supervised institutions shall draw up and transmit to the Commission bancaire a report containing the following information about the compensation policy and: of the members of the executive body and the persons whose professional activities have a significant impact on the risk profile of the company : f) the amounts of severance payments awarded during the financial year, number of beneficiaries, and highest such award to a single person. Article 43-2 Supervised institutions shall publish the information mentioned at Article 43-1, paragraphs 1 to 3 annually, in a manner and to an extent that is suited to their size and their internal organisation as well as to the nature, scope and complexity of their activities. To this end, they shall determine the appropriate medium or location and shall endeavour to provide all disclosures in one medium or location. Where relevant, such information shall be published at the level of the group over which the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel exercises supervision on a consolidated or subconsolidated basis. Supervised institutions with fewer than ten employees who are financial market professionals and whose actions have a material impact on their risk exposure are exempt from the requirement to disclose the information about those employees mentioned at Article 43-1, paragraph 3. 1. the decision-taking process used to determine the firm-wide compensation policy, including the composition and the mandate of the remuneration committee, as well as, if need be, the identity of the external consultants whose services are used to define the compensation policy Where they provide evidence that employee anonymity cannot be preserved because of the very small number of employees concerned, supervised institutions may refrain from disclosing all or some of the information about those employees mentioned at Article 43-1, paragraph 3(e). 2. the most important design characteristics of the compensation system, including criteria used for performance measurement and risk adjustment, the linkage between pay and performance, deferral policy and vesting criteria, and the parameters used for allocating cash versus other forms of compensation; Article 43-3 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall examine whether the total variable compensation of supervised institutions expressed as a percentage of net banking income is consistent with the maintenance of a sound capital base. 3. aggregate quantitative information on compensation, broken down by members of the executive body and by employees who are financial market professionals and whose actions have a material impact on the risk exposure of the firm, indicating for each category: Article 44 The reports referred to at Articles 42 and 43 of this Regulation shall be provided to the decision-making body and, where appropriate, the audit committee and the central body. a) amounts of remuneration for the financial year, split into fixed and variable compensation, and number of beneficiaries. Such information shall be communicated for each line of business; The onus to ensure that the supervised institution meets its obligations with respect to these regulations is on the executive and decision-making bodies. b) amounts and forms of variable compensation, split into cash, shares and equity-linked instruments and other; c) amounts of outstanding deferred compensation, split into vested and non-vested; d) e) 92 the amounts of deferred compensation awarded during the financial year, paid out and reduced through performance adjustments; new sign-on and severance payments made during the financial year, and number of beneficiaries of such payments; In particular, the executive and decision-making bodies are obliged to assess and monitor the efficiency of the policies, mechanisms and procedures implemented to meet the obligations of these regulations and to take appropriate measures to deal with any fails. TITLE VII SUNDRY PROVISIONS Article 45 With the exception of the provisions relating to the measurement of liquidity risk set forth in Articles 31, 31-1, 43 paragraph 3 and 44, and of the provisions relating to the money laundering and terrorist financing risks mentioned in Articles 11-7, 38-1 and 42, this Regulation does not apply to branches of institutions having their registered Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 offices either in another Member State of the European Union or in a country that is a signatory to the agreement on the European Economic Area that are referred to at Articles L. 511-21, L. 511-22 and L. 511-23 of the Monetary and Financial Code aforesaid. With the exception of the provisions relating to the money laundering and terrorist financing risks mentioned in Articles 11-7, 38-1 and 42, this Regulation does not apply to branches of investment firms having their registered office in an EU Member State or in a State party to the agreement on the European Economic Area and mentioned in Article 1 of this Regulation. Article 46 The provisions of Articles 11-7, 38-1 and 42 relating to the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing do not apply to institutions and branches authorised to pursue their business in the Principality of Monaco. ORDER OF 13 DECEMBER 2010 AMENDING VARIOUS REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS RELATIVE TO THE MONITORING OF THE INCOMES PERCEIVED BY THE PERSONS WHOSE FUNCTIONS MAY HAVE AN IMPACT ON THE RISK PROFILE OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS AS WELL AS VARIOUS PRUDENTIAL PROVISIONS Article 1 See Regulation 97-02 Article 2 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel ensures that the variable incomes distributed by the supervised institutions that receive an exceptional public intervention is limited when it is not compatible with the maintaining of the own funds of the institution at a sufficient level. It also ensures that the incomes of the members of the deciding body are justified. Article 3 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require that the supervised institutions, in accordance with Article L. 51141-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code restructure their incomes so as to comply with sound risk management and a long-term growth target. Article 4 See Order of 20 February 2007. 2007 Article 5 This Order enters into force on 1 January 2011, with the exception of Article 4, 2° that enters into force on 31 December 2010 1. Article 6 This order shall be published in the Journal officiel de la République française. 1 See point 3 of indent 1 of Article 391 of Order of 20 February 2007 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 93 1.1.9. REPRESENTATIVE OFFICES CIRCULAR OF 22 FEBRUARY 1990 AS AMENDED RELATIVE TO THE OPENING AND FUNCTIONING OF REPRESENTATIVE OFFICES OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS Pursuant to Article L. 511-19 of the Monetary and Financial Code, where credit institutions with their registered office abroad intend to open a representative office in France or in the Principality of Monaco, the opening of such offices shall be notified in advance to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. 1) The official letter of notification shall bear the foreign company letterhead and the signature of one of its senior managers. It shall also state explicitly that the office will restrict its activities to information, liaison and representation, to the exclusion of any transactions regulated by the Monetary and Financial Code. 2) The following information concerning the applicant institution must be provided in support of this notification: • Registered name in the home country and name under which it operates in the country or countries where it carries out its main activities; • Address of its registered office; • Legal form in its home country; • Breakdown of its capital; • Status in its home country (indicating national banking or financial supervisory authorities) and in the country or countries where it carries out most of its activities; • A letter from the supervisory authority of the institution indicating that the opening of the office has already been authorised or that pursuant to the legislation in force such an opening does not require any authorisation. The letter shall be accompanied by an official translation; • Description of its main activities (commercial bank, investment bank, specialised financial institution, underwriting and distributing of bonds and new equity issues) accompanied by the annual report of the Board of Directors to the Annual General Meeting. 3) This information shall be supplemented by information relating specifically to the representative office to which the notification of opening applies, in particular: • The form of establishment and the name that the office intends to use; • Its main functions and, where appropriate, the terms and conditions of establishment; • Date of opening, address and telephone1; • Identity and curriculum vitae of the senior manager of the office; • Number of employees. 4) The information referred to in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 above shall be sent to the : BANQUE DE FRANCE 40-1355 DECEI 75049 PARIS CEDEX 01 which is responsible for processing the application. The applicant institution is entitled to open its representative office upon receipt of a letter from the BANQUE DE FRANCE (DECEI) acknowledging receipt of the required notification. 5) The opening statement shall be accompanied by a letter sent to the supervisory authorities of the reporting country. 6) In order to enable the Committee to keep the list of representative offices up to date, these offices are required to inform the BANQUE DE FRANCE (DECEI) of any change in their main characteristics or those of the institution they represent and, where relevant, of their closing. They shall also provide the above-mentioned department of the BANQUE DE FRANCE with the following information: • an annual memorandum of their activities, including any changes in the number of employees, no later than three months after the end of the year. • the annual report of the institution they represent, as soon as possible. Any new senior manager of the office shall provide a curriculum vitae. 1 This information may be supplied at a later stage, upon receipt of the letter from the Banque de France referred to in paragraph 4 acknowledging receipt of notification. 94 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 CIRCULAR OF 26 MARCH 1999 AS AMENDED1 RELATIVE TO THE OPENING AND FUNCTIONING OF REPRESENTATIVE OFFICES OF INVESTMENT COMPANIES Pursuant to Article L. 532-14 of the Monetary and Financial Code, where investment firms with their registered office abroad intend to open a representative office in France, the opening of such offices shall be notified in advance to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel; this latter shall inform the Autorité des marchés financiers. 1) The official letter of notification shall bear the foreign company letterhead and the signature of one of its senior managers. It shall also state explicitly that the office will restrict its activities to information, liaison and representation, to the exclusion of any investment services such as defined in the Monetary and Financial Code. 2) The following information concerning the applicant institution must be provided in support of this notification: • Registered name in the home country and name under which it operates in the country or countries where it carries out its main activities. • Address of its registered office. • Legal form in its home country. • Breakdown of its capital. • Status in its home country (indicating national banking or financial supervisory authorities) and in the country or countries where it carries out most of its activities. • Breakdown of its capital. • Description of its main activities (annual report of the Board of Directors to the Annual General Meeting). 4) The information referred to in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 above shall be sent to the : BANQUE DE FRANCE 40-1355 DECEI 75049 PARIS CEDEX 01 which is responsible for processing the application. The applicant institution is entitled to open its representative office upon receipt of a letter from the BANQUE DE FRANCE (DECEI) acknowledging receipt of the required notification. 5) The Banque de France makes the opening notification to the supervisory authorities of the reporting country. 6) In order to enable the Committee to keep the list of representative offices up to date, these offices are required to inform the BANQUE DE FRANCE (Direction des établissements de crédit et des entreprises d’investissement) of any change in their main characteristics or those of the institution they represent and, where relevant, of their closing. They shall also provide the above-mentioned department of the BANQUE DE FRANCE with the following information: • an annual memorandum of their activities, including any changes in the number of employees. • the annual report of the institution they represent. 3) This information shall be supplemented by information relating specifically to the representative office to which the notification of opening applies, in particular: • The form of establishment and the name that the office intends to use. • Its main functions and, where appropriate, the terms and conditions of establishment. • Date of opening, address and telephone number2. • Identity and curriculum vitae of the senior manager of the office. • Number of employees. 1 Uptaded 26 July 2005. 2 This information may be supplied at a later stage, upon receipt of the letter from the Banque de France referred to in paragraph 4 acknowledging receipt of notification. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 95 1.2.DETAILS OF OPERATIONS CARRIED OUT BY CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS 1.2.1.SETTLEMENT FINALITY IN PAYMENT AND SECURITIES SETTLEMENT SYSTEMS EXCERPT FROM MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE: ARTICLES R. 330-1 TO R. 330-3, ADOPTED WITH A VIEW TO TRANSPOSING ARTICLES 6 AND 10 OF DIRECTIVE 98/26/CE OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND COUNCIL CONCERNING SETTLEMENT FINALITY IN PAYMENT AND SECURITIES SETTLEMENT SYSTEMS Article R. 330-1 The list of systems for interbank settlement and settlement and delivery of financial instruments notified to the European Commission by the Minister of Finance, in accordance with Article L. 330-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, shall be published in the Journal officiel of the French Republic. Article R. 330-2 The operators of the systems mentioned in Article R. 330-1 shall provide the Banque de France, and, in the case of systems for settlement and delivery of financial instruments, the Autorité des marchés financiers (Act 2003-706 of 1 August 2003, Article 46), with a list of persons that participate in them, whether directly or indirectly, and notify them without delay of any changes to this list. The Banque de France and the Autorité des marchés financiers (Act 2003-706 of 1 August 2003, Article 46) shall make this information, along with the identity and address of the operators of the relevant systems, available to any person that requests it. Article R. 330-3 Anyone with a legitimate interest shall obtain on request from a participant in one of the systems mentioned in Article 1 information on the system in question and the rules governing its functioning with respect to the conditions of and procedures for joining the system, the currencies or financial instruments processed, the transactions carried out, the status of the settlement agent, the risk-management mechanisms in place, and the procedures designed to ensure the irrevocability of instructions for settlement and delivery of financial instruments, as well as of the settlement and delivery of financial instruments themselves. This obligation may, should the case arise, be met by referring to the rules for the functioning of the system published by the Autorité des marchés financiers (Act 2003-706 of 1 August 2003, Article 46). 96 1.2.2.EQUITY PARTICIPATIONS REGULATION 90-06 OF 20 JUNE 1990, RELATING TO EQUITY HOLDINGS IN THE CAPITAL OF ENTERPRISES as amended by Regulations 94-03 of 8 December 1994, 98-03 of 7 December 1998, 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 and the Order of 19 September 2005 Article 1 Credit institutions, hereinafter referred to as institutions subject to this Regulation, may take and hold equity in an undertaking on the terms and within the limits defined below. For the purposes of this Regulation, interests shall be regarded as equity interests when they confer at least 10% of the capital or of the voting rights or enable a significant influence within the meaning of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 to be exerted or have been acquired in order to exert such an influence. Article 2 Equity interests must at no time exceed either of the following two limits: − as regards each equity interest, 15% of the amount of the own funds of an institution subject to this Regulation; − as regards total equity interests, 60% of the own funds of an institution subject to this Regulation. For the purposes of this Article, undertakings to purchase equity interests entered into by an institution for a period exceeding three months shall be treated as equity interests. Conversely, securities in respect of which an undertaking to purchase for a period exceeding three months has been received from another institution subject to this Regulation shall not be regarded as equity interests. Article 3 The following shall not be subject to the limits laid down in Article 2 above: a) equity interests in: − financial undertakings defined in Article in Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000, − insurance companies or reinsurance companies authorised in a Member State of the European Union or another State that is party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area. − insurance companies or reinsurance companies falling under the supervision of the relevant authority of a State that is not a party to the European Economic Agreement, subject to approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. In this case, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel defines the conditions for including this equity interest in the calculation of own funds pursuant to Regulation 90-02 aforementioned and, where necessary, for exercising prudential supervision on a consolidated basis pursuant to Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) equity interests involving: − securities acquired not more than three years previously as a result of a financial assistance operation or for the purpose of reorganising or rescuing an undertaking; − securities held by an institution, under an agreement concluded beforehand with a third party, for account of the latter; − securities classified as trading securities, as defined in Article 2 of the above-mentioned Regulation 90-01; − for a period not exceeding one year, securities that a third party has given an irrevocable undertaking to purchase; − securities held in connection with the underwriting of an issue, for a period of three months from the closing of the issue, or in Unit Trust (Sociétés d’investissement à capital variable - SICAV), for a period of six months from their formation. Article 4 Repealed by Regulation 94–03. Article 5 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise an institution subject to this Regulation to take or hold a particular equity interest even though one of the two limits laid down in Article 2 is exceeded as a result. In this event the amount of such excess shall be deducted from the amount of the institution’s own funds for the purposes of the above Regulation 90-02. If both the limits laid down in Article 2 are exceeded, only the higher of the two excess amounts shall be deducted from own funds in the way just indicated. Article 6 This regulation applies on a consolidated basis to the supervised institutions supervised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel on a consolidated basis pursuant to Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 7 When an institution subject to this Regulation holds equity through holding or investment companies that are not financial undertakings within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000, the limits laid down in Article 2 above shall apply to the equity interests of these companies. Article 8 For the purposes of this Regulation: a) The amount of own funds shall be calculated in accordance with Regulation 90-02 aforesaid; b) Each equity interest shall be included at net book value before any consolidation by the equity method. Article 9 If regional development companies (Sociétés de Développement Régional, SDR) and financial companies the main purpose of which is to provide undertakings with Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 permanent resources and that have been specially authorised by the Comité de la Réglementation Bancaire are not, on the date this Regulation enters into force, observing the limits laid down in Article 2 above, they shall have five years in which to comply. Article 10 When an institution subject to this Regulation does not observe the limits laid down in Article 2, and is unable to avail itself of the provisions of Article 9 or of an authorisation given under Article 5, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may, exceptionally, grant it a period of time to regularise its position by increasing its own funds or by any other means. Article 11 This Regulation shall enter into force on 1 September 1990 and Regulation 85-16 shall be repealed on that date. REGULATION 98-04 OF 7 DECEMBER 1998, RELATING TO EQUITY INTERESTS TAKEN BY INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES AND INVESTMENT FIRMS WHICH HAVE NEITHER FUNDS NOR SECURITIES BELONGING TO THEIR CUSTOMERS AND WHICH ONLY PROVIDE THE INVESTMENT SERVICE MENTIONED IN ARTICLE L. 321-1.1 OF THE MONETARY AND FINANCIEL CODE IN EXISTING OR NEW UNDERTAKINGS as amended by Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 and Orders of 19 September 2005 15 May 2006 and 20 February 2007 Article 1 Investment firms referred to in Article L. 531-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code, other than portfolio management companies referred to in Article L. 532-9 and investment firms which have neither funds nor securities belonging to their customers and which only provide the investment service mentioned in Article L. 321-1.1 hereinafter referred to as firms subject to this Regulation, may take and hold equity interests in an existing or new undertaking on the terms and within the limits defined below. For the purposes of this Regulation, equity interests are interests that give the holder at least 10% of the capital or voting rights or allow the holder to exert a significant influence as defined in the laws and regulations that apply to investment firms in accordance with regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 2 Equity interests must at no time exceed either of the following two limits: – as regards each equity interest, 15% of the amount of the own funds of a firm subject to this Regulation; – as regards total equity interests, 60% of the own funds of a firm subject to this Regulation. 97 For the purposes of this Article, undertakings to purchase equity interests entered into by a firm for a period exceeding three months shall be treated as equity interests. Conversely, securities in respect of which an undertaking to purchase for a period exceeding three months has been received from another firm subject to this Regulation shall not be regarded as equity interests. Article 3 The following shall not be subject to the limits laid down in Article 2 above: a) Equity interests in: – – – financial undertakings as defined in Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000; insurance companies or reinsurance companies authorised in a Member State of the European Union or another country that is party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area; insurance companies or reinsurance companies falling under the supervision of the relevant authority of a state that is not a party to the European Economic Agreement, subject to approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. In this case, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel defines the conditions for including this equity interest in the calculation of own funds pursuant to Regulation 97-04 aforementioned and, where necessary, for exercising prudential supervision on a consolidated basis pursuant to Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 5 This regulation applies on a consolidated basis to the institutions subject to this regulation and which fall under the prudential supervision on a consolidated basis of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel pursuant to Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 6 When a firm subject to this Regulation holds equity interests through holding or investment companies that are not financial undertakings within the meaning of the laws and regulations that apply to investment firms in accordance with Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 shall apply to the equity interests of these companies. Article 7 For the purposes of this Regulation: a) the amount of own funds shall be calculated in accordance with Regulation 97-04 aforesaid; b) each equity interest shall be included at net book value before any consolidation by the equity method. Article 8 When a firm subject to this Regulation does not observe the limits laid down in Article 2, and is unable to avail itself of an authorisation given under Article 4, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may, exceptionally, grant it a period of time to regularise its position by increasing its own funds or by any other means. b) Equity interests involving: – securities acquired not more than three years previously as a result of a financial assistance operation or for the purpose of reorganising or rescuing an undertaking; – securities held by a firm, under an agreement concluded beforehand with a third party, for account of the latter; – securities classified as trading securities, as defined in Article 2 of Regulation 90-01 aforesaid; – for a period not exceeding one year, securities that a third party has given an irrevocable undertaking to purchase; – securities held in connection with the underwriting of an issue, for a period of three months from the closing of the issue, or in open-end investment companies (sociétés d’investissement à capital variable - SICAV) for a period of six months from their formation. Article 4 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise an institution subject to this Regulation to take or hold a particular equity interest even though one of the two limits laid down in Article 2 is exceeded as a result. In this event the amount of such excess shall be deducted from the amount of the firm’s own funds for the purposes of Regulation 97-04 aforesaid. If both the limits laid down in Article 2 are exceeded, only the higher of the two excess amounts shall be deducted from own funds in the way just indicated. 98 Article 9 This Regulation shall enter into force on 1 July 1999. 1.2.3.VIGILANCE VIS-A-VIS MONEY LAUNDERING REGULATION 2002-01 OF 18 APRIL 2002, RELATING TO OBLIGATIONS OF VIGILANCE WITH REGARD TO CHEQUES IN ORDER TO COMBAT MONEY LAUNDERING AND THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM as amended by the Orders of 18 July and 20 December 2002, 9 July 2003 and 15 March 2004, by Regulation 2003-01 of 16 May 2003 and by Orders of 23 September 2004, 31 May 2005 and 29 October 2009 TITLE I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 1 The present Regulation applies to the credit institutions defined in Article L. 511-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, as well as the payment institutions defined in Article L. 522-1 of said Code where they provide for the cashing of cheques. They are referred to hereinafter as "supervised institutions". Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The present Regulation applies to cheques payable in France as defined by the Monetary and Financial Code and to cheques payable in Monaco governed by the provisions of Regulation 2001-04 aforesaid. Article 2 The written internal rules referred to at Article 2 a) of Regulation 91-07 shall describe the specific procedures to be carried out to control cheques for the purposes of preventing money laundering and terrorist financing, without prejudice to the obligations imposed for other purposes by Book I, Title III, Chapter I of the Monetary and Financial Code and the measures taken pursuant to Title V of the aforementioned Book. Article 3 The written internal rules set forth at Article 2 of the present Regulation shall provide for cheques to be examined as the supervised institution deems necessary in accordance with the principles set forth in the present Regulation in order to supplement its knowledge of its customers with a view to fulfilling its obligations of vigilance with regard to the risk of money laundering. To that end, the supervised institution shall define the controls to be carried out on the references appearing on the cheques or addenda that may contain information from which abnormal or unusual characteristics of the transaction may be detected in the light of the institution’s knowledge of its customer. The cheques shall be examined by persons properly trained in anti-money laundering techniques who have access to the information they need in order to carry out the controls incumbent upon them under the terms of the present Regulation. Article 4 Each year supervised institutions shall draw up and perform a cheque control programme in application of the vigilance obligations set forth in the present Regulation. The programme, revised as necessary while in progress, shall include selection criteria defined by the institution according to its particular activities which take account of developments in money laundering typologies and publicly available information, in particular the information circulated by the international consultative and coordinating body for combating money laundering or by the department referred to at Article L. 562-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The correspondents referred to at Articles 2 and 5 of the decree of 13 February 1991 aforesaid shall be informed of the results of the examination of such cheques. After the programme has been carried out, the results shall be brought to the attention of the decision-making body under the conditions set forth at Article 38 of Regulation 97-02 of 21 February 1997 aforesaid. Article 5 Supervised institutions shall adapt their cheque processing system so that the procedures provided for in the present Regulation may be applied. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 6 The monitoring system referred to at Article 2 b) of Regulation 91-07 of 15 February 1991 shall include verification of compliance with the procedures provided for in the present Regulation. TITLE II CHEQUES RECEIVED FOR CASHING AND DISCOUNTING Article 7 For cheques received for cashing or discounting from customers other than those referred to at Article 8 of the present Regulation, the programme set forth (referred to) at Article 4 shall include at least an examination for the purposes of preventing money laundering: a) of cheques for which an examination is deemed necessary in order to supplement analysis of the operation of the account when the supervised institution, while monitoring the payee’s account, observes, where relevant by computerised means, that the account is being operated in an unusual manner; b) of cheques selected on the basis of criteria defined by the institution in accordance with Article 4. To that end, the supervised institution shall examine the references appearing on the cheques or on the addenda that may contain information from which abnormal or unusual characteristics of the transaction may be detected in the light of the institution’s knowledge of the payee, the payee’s economic activity and the usual operation of the account. Article 8 Supervised institutions that offer foreign institutions a cheque cashing or discounting service shall conclude written agreements to that effect. Foreign institutions with which such agreements are concluded are deemed to be clients of the supervised institution for the purposes of the present Regulation. No cheque cashing or discounting service may be offered unless such an agreement has been concluded. The above-mentioned agreements shall commitment by the foreign institution: include a a) before transmitting cheques, to carry out all the verifications of its customers set forth in the recommendations of the international consultative and coordinating body for combating money laundering and the additional anti-money laundering verifications that the French institution may ask the foreign institution to make subsequent to its own controls; b) to remit separately cheques that it has itself received from institutions located in states or territories whose legislation is known to be inadequate or whose practices are deemed by the international consultative and coordinating body for combating money laundering to hinder the fight against money laundering, a list of which is attached as an appendix 99 to the present Regulation and updated by order of the minister for economic affairs; c) to provide the French institution upon request with all information that will enable it to assess whether the procedures and controls carried out comply with its contractual commitments. In the case of agreements concluded with foreign institutions located on the territory of a member of the above-mentioned international body, the supervised institution shall in addition ask its co-contractor to remit separately cheques received from institutions located in states or territories not referred to in paragraph b) above that are not members of the international body. If the co-contractor is not able to remit such cheques separately, the supervised institution shall step up the controls set forth at Article 9 c) below. Article 9 For cheques received for cashing or discounting from a foreign institution as set forth at Article 8 above, the programme set forth at Article 4 shall include at least the examination for the purposes of preventing money laundering: a) b) c) of all cheques received from an institution located in one of the states or territories referred to at Article 8 b) and all cheques that have been remitted separately as set forth therein; of at least 25% of cheques received from all institutions located in states or territories not referred to at Article 8 b) that are not members of the international consultative and coordinating body for the fight against money laundering or remitted separately as set forth at the last paragraph of Article 8. Such percentage shall be reviewed two years at the latest after the present Regulation takes effect; of a sample of the other cheques received by the supervised institution, determined according to its knowledge of its co-contractors’ activity and the measures they take to control them. Such examination shall concern the references on the cheques or addenda that may contain information from which it is possible to detect clear material anomalies with regard to the French rules for using the cheque. Its purpose is to isolate cheques to be transmitted to the drawee pursuant to Article 10 and to ensure that the foreign institution has complied with the obligations set forth at Article 8. When the above-mentioned controls detect such anomalies or failure by the foreign institution to perform its contractual obligations or an indirect remittance by an institution referred to at Article 9 a) or b), the supervised institution shall seek an explanation from its co-contractor or from other institutions in the collection circuit for the cheques in question. If the explanation is not satisfactory, the supervised institution, if it does not terminate the agreement, shall control all cheques remitted by the cocontractor. 100 Article 10 In addition to the procedures set forth at Articles 7 to 9, a supervised institution that has received cheques for cashing or discounting shall transmit the following cheques to the drawee institution, indicating the characteristics of the cheque or cheques that have attracted its attention: a) cheques where controls carried out pursuant to Articles 7 to 9 have brought to light clear anomalies; b) cheques from other countries, when the controls set forth at Article 9 have shown that they originate with an establishment referred to at Article 9 a) or b) and bear more than two endorsements. TITLE III CHEQUES RECEIVED BY THE DRAWEE INSTITUTION Article 11 When cheques are presented for payment under the conditions set forth at Articles 3 or 6 of Regulation 200104 of 29 October 2001 aforesaid, the programme mentioned at Article 4 shall provide for the supervised institution to carry out the anti-money laundering examination of cheques that are forwarded to it in material form. To that end the programme shall provide, as regards cheques drawn on the books of the supervised institution, for individual examination: a) of cheques drawn by customers in respect of whom the declaration set forth at Article L. 562-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code has been made or entering into the framework of a transaction mentioned at Article L 563 - 3 of the Code; b) of cheques for which an examination is deemed necessary in order to supplement analysis of the operation of the account when the supervised institution, while monitoring its customer’s account, observes, where relevant by computerised means, that the account is being operated in an unusual manner; c) cheques selected on the basis of criteria defined by the institution, in particular in accordance with developments in money laundering typologies; d) cheques which are not crossed or do not include the form of words limiting transmission by endorsement set forth at Article L. 131-71 of the Monetary and Financial Code; e) cheques transmitted pursuant to Article 10 of the present Regulation; f) cheques presented directly for payment by an institution referred to at Article 9 a) or b). Where appropriate, the drawee institution shall take the necessary steps to put back into circulation cheques which meet the conditions set forth in the preceding paragraph and have not been transmitted in accordance with the first paragraph of this Article or to obtain communication of them. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The supervised institution shall examine the references appearing on the cheques or on the addenda that may contain information from which abnormal or unusual characteristics of the transaction may be detected in the light of the institution’s knowledge of the drawer, the drawer’s economic activity and the usual operation of the account. TITLE IV SUNDRY AND TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS Article 12 The present Regulation shall take effect on 30 June 2002. However, the cheque processing systems set forth at Article 5 shall be adapted and the agreements set forth at Article 8 shall be proposed by 31 December 2002 at the latest. Article 13 See Regulation Article 5 of Regulation 92-13 of 23 December 1992. Article 14 The procedures and controls set forth in this Regulation shall be implemented by institutions having their headquarters, a branch or an agency in Monaco with a view to detecting, in accordance with the recommendations of the international consultative and coordinating body for the fight against money laundering and the financing of terrorism, abnormal or unusual transactions concerning the territory of the French Republic, without prejudice to application of the provisions of Monacan law relating to the prevention of money laundering in the Principality. The internal control arrangements of such institutions shall include a system for monitoring the procedures and controls set forth in this Regulation. The provisions of the first sentence of the second paragraph of Article 4 do not apply to them. Other supervised institutions shall not consider the institutions referred to in the preceding paragraph to be foreign institutions within the meaning of Article 8. Appendix (As amended by Decrees of 18 July and 20 December 2002, 14 March and 9 July 2003, 15 March 2004, Orders of 23 September 2004 and 31 May 2005) Burma Nauru ORDER OF 2 SEPTEMBER 2009, IMPLEMENTING ARTICLE R.561-12 OF THE MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE AND DEFINING THE INFORMATION RELATING TO KNOWING THE CUSTOMER AND THE BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP FOR THE PURPOSES OF ASSESSING THE RISKS OF MONEY LAUNDERING AND THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM Article 1 Pursuant to Article R. 561-12, the items of information that may be collected during the whole length of the business relationship for the purpose of assessing the risks of money laundering and terrorism financing are: 1° As regards the knowledge of the business relationship: - the amount and nature of the planned transactions; - the origin of the funds; - the destination of the funds; - the economic justification reported by the customer or the planned functioning of the account. 2° As regards the knowledge of the professional, economic and financial situation of the client and, where applicable, the actual recipient: a) For natural persons: - a justification of the up-to-date home address at the time when the elements are collected; - the professional activities currently performed; - the income or any piece of information that may be used for estimating the other resources; - any piece of information that may be used to estimate wealth; - as regards persons referred to in I, II and III of Article R. 561-9, the functions or any element that may be used to assess the nature of the links between these persons; b) For legal persons: - a justification of the head office address; - the statutes; - mandates and powers; - and any evidence to assess the financial position; c) For the management structures of a special purpose fund without legal personality, a trust or a similar legal entity governed by foreign law, a document shall be provided showing the entitlements to the capital or income of the entity in whose name an account has been opened or a transaction has been requested. Article 2 The Head of the Treasury and Economic Policy is responsible for implementing this Order, which shall be published in the Journal officiel of the French Republic. Nigeria Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 101 ORDER OF 27 JULY 2011, RELATING TO THE LIST OF EQUIVALENT THIRD COUNTRIES WITH RESPECT TO COMBATING MONEY LAUNDERING AND THE FINANCING OF TERRORISM REFERRED TO IN 2°, SECTION II OF ARTICLE L. 561-9 OF THE MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE Article 1 The equivalent third countries mentioned under 2° of II of Article L. 561-9 are South Africa, Australia, Brazil, Canada, South Korea, the United States, Russia, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Mexico, Singapore and Switzerland. Article 2 In their systems for assessing and managing risks of money laundering and terrorism financing referred to in Article L. 561-32 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the persons mentioned in Article L. 561-2 of the same code are required to take account of the information and declarations issued by the international consultative and coordinating authority with regard to the fight against money laundering and the financing of terrorism, of which France is a member or by the Minister for the Economy, which may refute the presumption of equivalence set out in Article 1 of this Order. Article 3 The Order of 21 July 2006 regarding the list of equivalent third countries referred to in Article R. 563-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code is abrogated. Article 4 The Head of the Treasury is charged with implementing this Order, which shall be published in the Journal officiel of the French Republic. 1.2.4.NEGOTIABLE DEBT SECURITIES ORDER OF 13 FEBRUARY 1992, IMPLEMENTING AMENDED DECREE N° 92–137 OF 13 FEBRUARY 1992 AND DEFINING THE MANDATORY REFERENCES FOR FINANCIAL DOCUMENTATION COMPILED BY ISSUERS OF NEGOTIABLE DEBT SECURITIES as amended by the Order of 19 October 2004 Article 1 The presentation of the issuance programme referred to in 1° of II of Article 8 of amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid shall include the following: - the ceiling on the outstanding amounts for the year expressed in euro and, where necessary, identification of the currencies in which the issues shall be denominated; - features of the issues that the issuer intends to put out, specifying, inter alia, time slots and coupons; - planned placement methods and, where necessary, identification of the intermediaries that shall be charged with placing the securities; in the case of issuance programmes for negotiable medium-term notes, the issuer shall supply the name of at least one institution established in France charged with providing the Banque de France with information on developments on the securities market; 102 - the domiciling institution(s) selected; - in the case of issuers that have published the ratings assigned to their issuance programmes by specialised agency included on the list referred to in Article 6 of amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid, the ratings report on the issuance programme obtained from this agency; - where necessary, the identity and status of the company that has underwritten the issuance programme as well as a certified copy of the guarantee; - a brief presentation of the issuance programmes of issuers that issue equivalent securities abroad, indicating the markets on which these securities are traded. Article 2 The information sheet referred to in 2° of II of Article 8 of amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid shall include the following: 1o General information on the issuer : - name of the issuing entity, head office and main administrative head office if it is different from the head office; - date of the setting-up of the entity; - summary of the corporate objectives; - trade register (or the equivalent) and registration number on this register; - legal status, legislation applicable to the issuer and competent courts; - Accounting standards used to establish consolidated accounting data; - management structure: names of the main managers and management organisation chart, if this information is not provided in the documents relating to the last two financial years provided to the shareholders listed in the financial presentation report. 2o General information on the issuer’s capital: - amount of the subscribed capital, quantity, types and main features of securities in this capital; - portion of unpaid-up capital; - distribution of capital indicating shareholders that hold at least 5% of capital; - indication, where necessary, of regulated markets on which the issuer’s equity securities are traded. 3° Information on the issuer’s activity. If it does not figure explicitly in the documents relating to the last two financial years referred to in 2° of II of Article 8 of the amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid, the following information shall be provided: I.– For industrial or commercial issuers: - description of the issuer’s main activities, specifying the main categories of products and/or services provided; - amount of turnover made in the last two financial years, by business line and geographical market. II.– For credit and other financial institutions: - identification of the main business lines, distinguishing between loan transactions (credits to customers and financial loans), cash transactions (lending and borrowing), market transactions (spot, forward) and provision of services, with a comparison of data for the last two financial years for which data is known. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The fairness of the accounting information provided in the information sheet shall be vouched for by statutory auditors or any other persons acting in this capacity. Article 3 – repealed by Article 4 of the Order of 19 October 2004 Article 4 – repealed by Article 4 of the Order of 19 October 2004 Article 5 The public sector firms referred to in Article 2 of amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid that are not subject to the plan comptable general (the French chart of accounts), EU institutions and the international organisations referred to in 4° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code, local authorities and local authority groupings, associations governed by the act of 1 July 1901, central governments, special purpose vehicles, referred to in 6°, 7°, 8° and 9° of Article L. 213-3 of the same code, may, with the consent of the Banque de France, adapt the presentation of the documentation referred to in 2° of the second paragraph of Article 8 of the amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid and Article 2 of the present Order in accordance with the specific rules that apply to them. Article 6 Where the issuer can provide specific proof that the information requested in a particular section is not adapted to its specific situation, it may adjust the contents of the report, with the consent of the Banque de France and subject to the provision of said detailed proof. Article 7 The Banque de France shall define the format of the financial presentation report that it receives in order to ensure dissemination pursuant to the provisions set out in Article 14 of the amended Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid. The Banque de France shall define, in accordance with the issuer’s activity, the scope of the financial presentation reports that are disseminated. ORDER OF 31 DECEMBER 1998, RELATING TO THE REQUIREMENTS THAT ISSUERS OF NEGOTIABLE DEBT SECURITIES MUST COMPLY WITH REFERRED TO IN 2° TO 10° OF ARTICLE L. 213-3 OF THE MONETARY AND FINANCIAL CODE as amended by the Orders of 3 September 2001, 16 February 2005, 22 December 2006 and 15 February 2011 Article 1 I. - Commercial paper issued by entities referred to in 2° to 10° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall have, an original maturity of at least one day and a unit value amounting to at least the equivalent of EUR 150,000. Their original maturity shall not exceed one year. II. - Negotiable medium-term notes issued by entities referred to in points 2°, 3°, 4°, 5°, 6°, 7°, 8° and 9° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall have, an original maturity of over one year and a unit value amounting to at least the equivalent of EUR 150,000. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 2 Negotiable debt securities issued by entities referred to in 2°, 3°, 4°, 6°, 7° and 9° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code may be guaranteed by a credit institution authorised by its statutes to provide such guarantees. They may also be guaranteed by an investment firm or entity referred to in points 2°, 3° or 4° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code, which is itself authorised to issue commercial paper, where this firm holds, directly or indirectly, at least 20% of the equity capital of the issuer, or where the issuer holds, directly or indirectly, up to 20% of the capital of the investment firm. Article 3 Issuers of negotiable debt securities referred to in 2°, 3°, 4°, 6°, 7°, 8°, 9° and 10° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall domicile their securities, under the terms and conditions defined in the General Regulations of the Autorité des marchés financiers, with: a) A credit institution authorised in France; b) A branch referred to in Article L. 511-22 of the Monetary and Financial Code; c) An investment firm authorised in France and licensed to hold cash accounts; d) A branch referred to in Article L. 532-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code and licensed to hold cash accounts; e) the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations; f) a legal entity established in France whose main or sole activity is the custody or management of the financial instruments referred to in 5° of Article 542-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Domiciling institutions shall agree to domicile securities only after having verified that the issuer has fulfilled the issuance conditions laid down in Articles L. 213-1 to L 213-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code and the texts implementing these articles. Article 4 Issuers of negotiable debt securities referred to in 2° to 10° of Article L. 213-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall inform the Banque de France of the features of each issue and provide it with information on the daily outstanding amounts of securities issued, as well as on the outstanding amount, for each issuing programme, of the securities purchased and held after their issue and on the early redemption of their securities. The Banque de France shall determine the frequency of disclosure of this information. Issuers shall comply with the requirements set out in the preceding paragraph through their domiciling agents. Article 5 – repealed (Order of 15 February 2011) 103 Article 6 The Banque de France shall take the measures required for the application of the present Order in order to ensure the smooth functioning of the market. In accordance with Article D. 213-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, the Banque de France may suspend or prohibit issuance by issuers that fail to comply with the laws and regulations governing negotiable debt securities. Article 7 The present Order shall be published in the Journal officiel of the French Republic. ORDER OF 16 FEBRUARY 2005 IMPLEMENTING ARTICLE 1, SECTION III OF DECREE 92-137 OF 13 FEBRUARY 1992 AS AMENDED ON THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR THE ISSUANCE OF NEGOTIABLE DEBT SECURITIES BY INVESTMENT FIRMS, CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND THE CAISSE DES DÉPÔTS ET Article 5 Negotiable medium-term notes issued by entities referred to in Article 1 of this Order shall have an original maturity of over one year and a unit value at least equal to the equivalent of 150,000 euro. Article 6 Issuers of negotiable medium-term notes referred to in Article 1 of this Order shall inform the Banque de France of the name of the credit institution(s) established in France that they have designated to report to the Bank, under terms and conditions defined by the Bank, on developments on the market for their securities. Article 7 Issuers of negotiable debt securities referred to in Article 1 of this Order shall domicile their securities, under the terms and conditions defined in the General Regulations of the Autorité des Marchés Financiers, with: CONSIGNATIONS a) b) as amended by the Order of 15 February 2011 c) Article 1 In addition to the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations, credit institutions and investment firms that fulfil the following conditions shall be authorised to issue negotiable debt securities under the conditions set forth in this Order: d) a) b) c) d) they are not prevented from doing so by the laws and regulations that apply to them; their capital is at least equal to the equivalent of 2.2 million euro or, for home loan companies governed by the Act of 10 April 1908 codified by Article L. 312-2 of the Construction and Housing Code, their own funds within the meaning of Regulation 90-02 aforesaid are at least equal to 4.5 million euro; they are authorised and supervised by a competent authority; their accounts are certified by professionals deemed competent and independent. Article 2 Certificates of deposit issued by credit institutions and by the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations and commercial paper issued by investment firms shall have an original maturity of at least one day and a unit value equal to the equivalent of 150,000 euro. Their original maturity shall not exceed one year. Article 4 Negotiable debt securities issued by entities referred to in Article 1 of this Order may be guaranteed by a credit institution authorised by its status to deliver such guarantees. They may also be guaranteed by an investment firm which is itself authorised to issue commercial paper when such firm directly or indirectly holds at least 20% of the issuer’s capital or when the issuer directly or indirectly holds at least 20% of its capital. 104 e) f) a credit institution authorised in France, a branch referred to in Article L. 511-22 of the Monetary and Financial Code, an investment firm authorised in France and licensed to hold cash accounts, a branch referred to in Article L. 532-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code and licensed to hold cash accounts, the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations, a legal entity established in France whose main or sole activity is the custody or management of the financial instruments referred to in point 5 of Article L. 542-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Domiciling institutions may agree to domicile securities only after having verified that the issuer has fulfilled the conditions of issuance set forth in Articles L. 213-1 to L. 213-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code and their implementing regulations. Article 8 Issuers of negotiable debt securities referred to in Article 1 of this Order shall inform the Banque de France of the features of each issue and provide it with information on the daily outstanding amounts of securities issued as well as on the outstanding amount, for each issuing programme, of the securities purchased and held after their issue and on the early redemption of their securities, the Banque de France shall determine the frequency with which such information should be provided. Issuers shall comply with the requirement set forth in the preceding paragraph through their domiciling agents. Article 9 The Banque de France shall take the necessary measures to implement this Order with a view to ensuring the smooth operation of the market. In accordance with Article 4 of the Decree of 13 February 1992 aforesaid, the Banque de France may suspend or prohibit issues by any issuer that fails to comply with the laws and regulations governing negotiable debt securities. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 10 Regulation 98-08 as amended is hereby repealed. Consequently, all references to Regulation 98-08 in the laws and regulations shall be replaced by references to this Order: - in the third indent of Article 4 of Regulation 86-13 of 14 May 1986 as amended on the remuneration of funds received by credit institutions, - in Article 5.1 c) of Regulation 88-01 of 22 February 1988 as amended on liquidity, - in the twenty-second indent of Article 5, paragraph 2 of Regulation 92-13 of 23 December 1992 on the provision of banking services in France by institutions that have their registered offices in other Member States of the European Union. Article 11 This Order shall be published in the Official Journal of the French Republic. 1.2.5.CLEARING OF CHEQUES REGULATION 2001-04 OF 29 OCTOBER 2001, RELATING TO CHEQUE CLEARING as amended by Order of 29 October 2009 Article 4 4.1 Cheques in electronic form are presented for payment by a supervised institution. This presupposes that the supervised institution is previously in possession of the cheque and that the beneficiary’s or bearer’s supervised institution has carried out verifications to ensure that the cheque complies with formal requirements. The supervised institution that presents a cheque guarantees that the information transmitted in electronic form is strictly identical to the corresponding information appearing on the cheque. In the event of failure to comply with these provisions, the obligation set forth at Article 2, paragraph 3 does not apply. 4.2 Presentation of a cheque for payment in electronic form presupposes that the drawee institution has been provided, in whatever form, with information enabling the drawer, the cheque and the amount to be identified with certainty. 4.3 Presentation of a cheque for payment in electronic form does not preclude remittance of the original cheque to the drawee institution, concomitantly or not. The time it takes to transmit the cheque must not under any circumstances influence the decision whether to pay or not, or preclude compliance with statutory and regulatory obligations. 4.4 The administrative expense of transmitting the cheque or a copy thereof to the drawee may be reimbursed. The conditions for calculating and reimbursing the expense, on the basis of real costs, are set out in an industry-wide agreement. Article 1 This regulation applies to credit institutions as defined in Article L. 511-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code and to the investment service providers as defined in Article L. 531-1 of the above-mentioned Code enjoying acquired rights granted when Act 96-597 of 2 July 1996 (Financial Activity Modernization Act) came into effect, as well as to payment institutions as defined in Article L 522-1 of said Code where they provide for the cashing of cheques. They are referred to hereinafter as supervised institutions. Article 5 Exchanged cheques are kept under the responsibility of a supervised institution. Article 2 Any supervised institution on which cheques are drawn is required to participate, directly or through an agent, in cheque clearing operations in the framework of an interbank settlement system within the meaning of Article L. 330-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Article 6 The provisions of Articles 4 and 5 apply even when a cheque in electronic form is presented outside an interbank settlement system as referred to at Article 2, in particular when the drawee institution is also the institution presenting the cheque. The terms and conditions for clearing cheques through the system are set out in a master agreement, in accordance with the above-mentioned article. Article 7 The above-mentioned industry-wide agreement shall set out the procedures for presenting cheques for payment in electronic form, together with specifications and recommendations for keeping cheques on behalf of drawee institutions. Supervised institutions are required to accept that any cheque drawn on them may be presented to them for payment within the above-mentioned system. Article 3 Cheques presented within the system referred to in the preceding Article may be exchanged in electronic form, provided that the supervised institutions are capable of making all the verifications necessary for their payment or refusal. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 They should be kept for 10 years. During this period, the supervised institution responsible for them is required to produce the original of the cheque or a recto-verso copy under the conditions set forth in the above-mentioned industry-wide agreement. Article 8 The general decision of the Conseil National du Crédit 79-05 of 24 April 1979 relating to cheque clearing is abrogated from 30 June 2002. A new indent is added to the penultimate paragraph of Article 5 of Regulation 92-13 of 23 December 1992 as 105 amended relating to the provision of banking services in France by institutions having their registered office in other Member States of the European Union, reading as follows: "- Regulation 2001-04 relating to cheque clearing". Article 3 The annual total of revenues derived from operations authorised pursuant to the foregoing Article shall not exceed 10 per cent of net banking income. The reference to the above-mentioned Decision 79-05 in the same Article is deleted at the date on which the decision is abrogated. These revenues shall be recorded in the accounts under specially denominated headings, in accordance with the conditions laid down above by an Instruction of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 9 This Regulation, which does not apply in the overseas territories, shall take effect immediately. 1.2.6.NON BANKING ACTIVITIES OF CREDIT INSTITUTIONS REGULATION 86–21 OF 24 NOVEMBER 1986, RELATING TO THE EXERCISE OF NON BANKING ACTIVITIES as amended by Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 Article 1 Credit institutions may, under the conditions laid down herein, conduct as part of their regular business other than banking operations as defined in Articles L. 311-1, L. 311-3, L. 312-2 and L. 313-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code operations related to their normal operations as referred to in Article L. 311-2 of the same Code, or the acquisition of equity holdings in undertakings, under the conditions laid down in Article L. 511-2 of said Code and as provided for in the aforementioned Regulation 85-16. Article 2 A credit institution may act as representative, broker or agent, notably on behalf of a subsidiary. It may also: – manage a real estate portfolio unrelated to its normal operations but owned by it; – provide services constituting accessory uses of resources primarily utilised in its banking operations; – provide services to its customers which, while unrelated to its business, represent an extension of its banking operations. These operations must not, however, be incompatible with the standards of the banking profession, in particular the upholding of the reputation of the institution, and the protection of the interests of depositors. Institutions that engage in such operations shall, moreover, comply with the laws, regulations and articles of associations relating to them specifically and with the conditions on which their authorisation was granted. They shall also, where applicable, comply with the particular regulations governing the goods or services supplied by them. 106 Compliance with the ratio provided for supra may by assessed on the basis of consolidated accounting statements drawn up according to the rules laid down in Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 4 The terms of the present Regulation are not applicable to housing loan companies engaged in real estate development activities pursuant to Section L. 422-4 of the Construction and Housing Code. Article 5 Deleted by Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 6 Institutions subject to the present Regulation which, on the date of publication thereof, are engaged in an activity other than those laid down in Articles L. 311-1, L 311-2, 311-3, L 312-2, L 313-1 and L. 511-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, shall have until 31 December 1988 to comply with the present Regulation. 1.2.7.CREDIT OPERATIONS AND ACTIVITIES OTHER THAN INVESTMENT SERVICES OF INVESTMENT FIRMS REGULATION 98–05 OF 7 DECEMBER 1998, RELATING TO THE CREDIT OPERATIONS OF INVESTMENT FIRMS as amended by Regulation 2000-10 of 8 December 2000 Article 1 Without prejudice to the provisions of Article 1 of amended Regulation 85-17 of 17 December 1985 aforesaid, investment firm referred to in Article L. 532-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, hereinafter referred to as “firms subject to this Regulation”, may carry out credit operations only under the conditions set forth in this Regulation, in accordance with Article L. 321-2 of said Code. Article 2 Firms subject to this Regulation that hold neither funds nor securities belonging to their customers are not authorised to carry out credit operations. Article 3 Firms subject to this Regulation must have paid-up capital as defined in Article 4 of Regulation 96-15 aforesaid at least equal to FRF 12.5 million (€ 1.9 million, as from 1 January 2002, Regulation 2000-10 of 8 December 2000). Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 4 A firm subject to this Regulation may grant credit only to an investor with whom it has direct business relations and for the sole purpose of enabling the investor to carry out a transaction concerning financial instruments in which the firm is involved. The credit referred to in the preceding paragraph includes all credit operations defined in Article L. 313-1, first indent of the Monetary and Financial Code. Article 5 Firms subject to this Regulation may grant or renew credits only with the express agreement of the parties and for a fixed period. However, the parties’ agreement may be established in a line of credit agreement concluded for a fixed amount and for a period not exceeding one year. Such agreements may not be renewed tacitly. Each drawdown of such line of credit must be allocated to the settlement of an identified transaction and reimbursed within 15 days unless the parties expressly agree otherwise. The amount of any credit granted by a firm subject to this Regulation to the same beneficiary shall, where relevant, be applied to the line of credit referred to in the preceding paragraph. Payment extensions granted to investors to allow them to defer settlement of a debt arising from a transaction involving financial instruments may not under any circumstances exceed 30 days from the due date for payment of such transaction. Article 6 Firms subject to this Regulation shall be free to determine the conditions under which credits granted under the terms of this Regulation bear interest. Article 7 An Article 5b shall be inserted after Article 5 of Regulation 86-09 of 27 February 1986 aforesaid, worded as follows: “Article 5b: For the purposes of this Regulation, investment service providers authorised to grant credits pursuant to Regulation 98-05 of 7 December 1998 shall be treated in the same way as credit institutions.” ORDER OF 5 SEPTEMBER 2007 RELATIVE TO ACTIVITIES OTHER THAN INVESTMENT SERVICES AND RELATED SERVICES THAT MAY BE CARRIED OUT BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES Article 1 Investment companies other than portfolio management companies may, under the conditions laid down in the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 present Order, exercise business activities other than the investment services mentioned in article L. 321-1 and the related services mentioned in article L. 321-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code. Article 2 An investment company may act as a representative, broker or agent, notably on the behalf of a subsidiary. Article 3 Investment companies may provide services that constitute the supplementary use of means mainly allocated to the investment services activity, including the provision of IT services or the sale of software developed by the company. They may also provide services that, without being related services as defined by article L. 321-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code, constitute the extension of investment services, notably asset management consultancy or safetydeposit box rental. Article 4 The annual amount of total profits from activities other than investment services and related services shall not exceed 20% of net banking income. These profits shall be included in the specific items under the conditions detailed in a Autorité de contrôle prudentiel Instruction. Compliance with this ratio may be evaluated on the basis of consolidated documents drawn up according to the rules established by the above-mentioned regulation of 6 September 2000. Article 5 Activities other than investment services and related services shall not be incompatible with the profession’s requirements, notably upholding the investment company’s reputation, the primacy of the clients’ interests and competition in the market under consideration. Moreover, the investment company that exercises such activities shall comply with specific regulations, applicable, where relevant, to the goods or services offered. Article 6 The control system for operations and internal procedures defined in Article 5 of aforesaid Regulation 97-02 shall include verification of the requirements set forth in this Order. The internal control procedures of undertakings subject to this Order must enable them to ensure that the provisions of this Order are complied with at all times. Article 7 The present Order comes into force on 1 November 2007. Article 8 Investment companies that, on the date the present Order comes into force, exercise activities other than those mentioned in Articles 2 and 3 shall comply with the provisions of the present Order by 31 December 2008 at the latest. 107 Article 9 The present Order shall be published in the Official Journal of the French Republic. 1.2.8. SEGREGATION OF FUNDS OF INVESTMENT FIRMS’ CUSTOMERS ORDER OF 2 JULY 2007 ON THE SEGREGATION OF FUNDS OF INVESTMENT FIRMS’ CUSTOMERS TITLE I SCOPE OF APPLICATION AND DEFINITIONS Article 1 This Order applies to the investment firms mentioned in Article L. 531-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code other than the portfolio management companies mentioned in Article L. 532-9 of the said Code, that are authorised to hold funds for their customers incidentally to their principal activity. The bank branches mentioned in Article L.532-18-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code are subject to the provisions of Title IV. The present Order does not apply to deposits held by credit institutions. iii) it must provide liquidity through same say or next day settlement. A money market instrument shall be considered to be of high quality if it has been awarded the highest credit rating by all competent rating agencies that have rated the instrument. An instrument that has not been rated by a competent agency shall not be considered to be of high quality. A rating agency shall be considered to be competent if it regularly publishes on a professional basis credit ratings in respect of money market funds and is an external credit assessment institution as defined in Article L.511-44 of the Monetary and Financial Code; (d) “durable medium”: an instrument which enables a client to store information addressed personally to that client in such a way that it is easily accessible for future reference for a period of time suited to the purpose of the information and that enables the information stored to be identically reproduced. The durable medium may be in a form other than paper provided that: i) the provision of information in this medium is suited to the context in which the undertaking subject to this Order and its client conduct or will conduct their business; ii) the person to whom the information is to be provided, when offered the choice between information on paper or this other durable medium, formally opts for the provision of information in this other medium. TITLE II Article 2 For the purpose of this Order, the following terms have been defined: – “professional customer”: a professional customer as defined by Articles L. 533-16 and D.533-11 of the Monetary and Financial Code; – “non-professional customer”: a customer other than a professional customer; SEGREGATION RULE Article 3 Undertakings subject to this Order shall deposit all of the funds of their clients on one or more accounts opened specially for this purpose, separately identified from any other account used to hold funds belonging to the undertaking subject to this Order, with one or more of the following institutions: – “qualifying money market fund”: a collective investment undertaking as defined in Article L.214-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, or subject to supervision, and, if applicable, authorised by an authority under the national law of a Member State of the European Community or another Member State of the European Economic Area, and that meets the following conditions: a central bank; i) its primary investment objective must be to maintain the net asset value of the undertaking either constant at par (net of earnings) or at the value of the investors’ initial capital plus earnings; a qualifying money market fund. ii) to achieve its primary investment objective, it must invest exclusively in high-quality money market instruments with a maturity or residual maturity of no more than 397 days, or for which regular yield adjustments in accordance with the annual maturity are made, and for which the average weighted maturity is 60 days. It may also achieve this objective by additionally investing in deposits with credit institutions; 108 a credit institution authorised in a Member State of the European Community or another Member State of the European Economic Area; a bank authorised in a third country; Undertakings subject to this Order should at any moment be able to produce a justification of their compliance with this obligation. Article 4 I – The amount of funds to be segregated within the meaning of this Title shall be calculated by adding together the following items: - the credit balance of customers’ cash accounts; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 - sums deposited with the undertaking subject to this Order by customers, in any form whatsoever, in order to cover and guarantee transactions related to the provision of investment services and all other sums used to carry out these transactions or resulting from these transactions; - among all accounts tracking current transactions linked to the accounts or sums referred to in the preceding paragraphs, sums due to customers but not yet credited to their accounts and, for transactions where delivery versus payment is pending, sums awaiting disbursement by the undertaking subject to this Order that have been debited from customer accounts. II – The following sums shall be deducted from that amount: sums credited to customer accounts or to accounts tracking their current transactions and transactions awaiting collection by the undertaking subject to this Order. Article 5 Sums thus deposited into one or more of these accounts are recorded in the books of the entities referred to in Article 3 in the name of the undertaking subject to this Order. When these sums are deposited with a credit institution authorised by a Member State of the European Community or another Member State of the European Economic Area or a bank authorised in a third country, they may be paid into sight or time accounts. The account name shall mention the appropriation of the sums deposited in compliance with the provisions of this Order. Undertakings subject to this Order must regularly reconcile their accounts and internal registers with those of third parties with whom these assets are held. Article 6 In the event that the funds of its clients are not deposited with a central bank, the undertaking subject to this Order must exercise extreme care, diligence and competence when selecting, appointing and conducting a periodical assessment of the credit institution, authorised bank in a third country or money market fund where these funds are deposited and of the provisions governing the holding of these funds. The undertakings subject to this Order must take into account the expertise and the reputation of these institutions and money market funds on the market, as well as any legal or regulatory requirement or market practice linked to the holding of clients’ funds, which might have an adverse impact on clients’ rights. Clients have the right to be opposed to their funds being invested in a qualifying money market fund. TITLE III INTERNAL CONTROL AND ENFORCEMENT Article 7 The undertakings subject to this Order shall make sure that their auditors report at least once a year to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel on the compliance of the measures taken with the present Order. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 8 If, pursuant to a foreign regulation similar to the one set forth in this Order, certain funds held for customers must be segregated specifically, verification of the requirements of this Order shall be extended to include verification of such specific provisions. Article 9 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may object to the inclusion of certain assets or the exclusion of certain liabilities when implementing the provisions of this Order if it considers that such assets or liabilities do not satisfactorily meet the conditions contained in the regulations or that their inclusion or exclusion is liable to distort assessment of the effective capacity to repay customers’ funds. Article 10 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may, under exceptional circumstances, allow an undertaking subject to this Order time to bring its situation into compliance with the provisions of this Order. TITLE IV INFORMATION OF EXISTING OR POTENTIAL CLIENTS Article 11 I. – Undertakings subject to this Order are required to communicate to their non-professional clients or potential clients the following information on the maintenance of funds: a) – when funds are invested in a qualifying money market fund, the possibility of them being held by a third party in the name of the undertaking subject to this Order as well as the responsibility carried by the latter, according to the national law of the country under consideration, for any action or omission of the third party, or its possible insolvency and its consequences for the client; – in the other cases, the holding of these funds by a third party in the name of the undertaking subject to this Order as well as the responsibility carried by the latter, according to the national law of the country under consideration, for any action or omission of the third party, or its possible insolvency and its consequences for the client; b) The cases in which the accounts mentioned in Article 3 are or will be governed by a law other than the national law of a Member State of the European Community or another Member State of the European Economic Area, by specifying to what extent the rights of the client are affected; c) The existence or conditions of any security interest or lien that the undertaking subject to this Order has or could have over the funds of the client, or of any right of set-off it holds in relation to these funds. If necessary, the undertakings subject to this Order shall inform the client that a depository may have a security interest or lien, or a right of set-off in relation to these funds. 109 II. – The undertakings subject to this Order are also required to communicate to their professional clients or potential clients the information under b) and c) of I. Article 12 The undertakings subject to this Order as defined in Article 1 shall provide the clients for whom they hold funds with a statement of these funds at least once a year on a durable medium, unless the same information is available in another periodical information notice, notably the statement of financial instruments set out in the general regulations of the Autorité des marchés financiers. The statement of the client’s funds referred to in the first indent should contain the following information: Details on all the funds held by the undertaking subject to this Order for the client at the end of the period covered by the statement ; The extent to which any temporary sales of securities have been carried out; The quantification of any advantage falling to the client that results from his participation in any temporary sales of securities, and the grounds on which this advantage falls to him. TITLE V FINAL PROVISIONS Article 13 The present Order enters into force on 1 November 2007. The Order of 17 June 2005 on the segregation of the funds of customers of investment firms is abrogated on the same date. Article 14 The present Order will be published in the Official Journal of the French Republic. 1.2.9. INTERBANK MARKET REGULATION N° 85-17 OF 17 DECEMBER 1985, RELATING TO THE INTERBANK MARKET as amended by regulations 93-06 of 21 December 1993 and 97-05 of 29 July 1997 Article 1 An interbank transaction is an operation in which each concerned party is a credit institution, or an institution described in Article L. 518-1 of the French Monetary and Financial Code, or an investment company other than a portfolio management company. Article 2 Persons authorised to participate in the interbank market may initiate or be a party to operations, in compliance with the specifically applicable rules, with any other person involving the financial instruments defined in Article L.211-1 of the French Monetary and Financial Code, on a French or a foreign market. Only the credit institutions and establishments described in Article L.518-1 of the French Monetary and Financial Code are authorised to acquire or accept as collateral in a repurchase agreement all other forms of debt instruments. Without prejudice to transactions referred to in article 1 of Regulation n°93-06, such institutions and establishments cannot dispose of or give the aforementioned debt securities as collateral in a reverse repo to unauthorised persons. Article 3 As an exception to Articles 1 and 2 above, the following persons or entities may also participate in the interbank market: - Provident institutions and pension funds until a certain date that will be determined by a future regulation; [at the latest 31 August 1987. cf. Regulation no.86-18, Article 1] - Entities subject to the French Insurance Code until 31 December 1986 ; - The other persons referred to in Article 2 of the abovementioned General Decision n° 67-10 until 31 May 1986. Article 4 Banque de France may take any action necessary in order to ensure the control of monetary aggregates and guarantee the normal functioning of markets. Article 5 The general decisions of the National Credit and Securities Council (Conseil national du crédit et du titre) n° 67-10 of 28 June 1967, n° 67-14 of 7 December 1967 and n° 68-04 of 5 July 1968 are rescinded. 110 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 1.3.MANAGEMENT STANDARDS FOR CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS 1.3.1.OWN FUNDS REGULATION 90-02 OF 23 FEBRUARY 1990, RELATING TO OWN FUNDS as amended by Regulations 91-05 of 15 February 1991, 92-02 of 27 January 1992, 93-07 of 21 December 1993, 94-03 of 8 December 1994 , 98-03 of 7 December 1998, 2000-03 of 6 September 2000, 2000-09 of 8 December 2000 and the Orders of 24 May 2005, 19 September 2005, 3 March 2006, 20 February 2007, 11 September 2008, 29 October 2009, 25 August 2010, 29 December 2010 and 23 November 2011 The IFRS referred to in the present Regulation correspond to International Accounting Standards and International Financial Reporting Standards (IAS/IFRS) and SIC/IFRIC Interpretations, in their most recent version adopted by the European Commission pursuant to Regulation (EC) No. 1606/2002. Credit institutions and investment firms other than portfolio management companies shall at all times have own funds at least equal to the minimum capital resulting from the Regulations applicable to them. Article 2 Core own funds shall comprise the sum of the items listed in a), less the items listed in b). a) The following items shall be included: Article 1 Own funds shall comprise the sum of: − − − − − − − − for institutions subject to this Regulation other than those subject to IFRS, provisions for general banking risks as defined in Article 3; − for supervised institutions originating securitisation transactions, net gains which arise from the capitalisation of future income resulting from the securitised assets and which constitute the credit enhancement to securitisation positions shall not be included. Core own funds as defined in Articles 2 and 2a; Supplementary own funds as defined in Article 4, within the limits laid down in Article 5, from which shall be deducted in the conditions defined in this Regulation the equity holdings, subordinated claims and all other own funds items referred to in Article 6, the securitisation positions referred to in Article 6b and the items referred to in Article 6c. Where the calculation of own funds has to be made on a consolidated basis, the rules laid down in Article 7 shall apply. This Regulation shall apply to credit institutions, financial holding companies, payment institutions and investment firms, excluding portfolio management companies and investment firms which have neither funds nor securities belonging to their customers and which only provide the investment service referred to in Article L. 321-1-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code, hereinafter called supervised institutions. Supervised institutions subject to IFRS are those that are subject to prudential supervision on a consolidated or subconsolidated basis pursuant to Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 and publish consolidated financial statements according to international accounting standards within the meaning of Regulation (EC) No. 1606/2002 as a result of the mandatory or optional application of this Regulation. Supervised institutions subject to IFRS also include institutions subject to prudential supervision on a subconsolidated basis in the absence of any mandatory accounting rule on the matter if the consolidated financial statements of their parent company are published under IFRS under the conditions set forth in the preceding paragraph. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 capital; reserves, including revaluation reserves; share premiums; retained earnings; the profit for the last financial year, pending its allocation, less the dividend distribution to be provided for; Core own funds also include the profit for the last financial year, pending its allocation, and may include the profit as recorded on dates other than the end of the annual accounting period, provided that: − it is determined after booking to account all the charges relating to the period and allocations to the depreciation, provision and value adjustment accounts; − it is calculated net of foreseeable taxes and of interim dividends or forecast dividends; − and it is verified by the auditors. Share capital, in addition to the capital of those institutions subject to the present Regulation which are constituted in the form of commercial companies, shall be deemed to include the sums which take the place thereof or which are equivalent thereto, under the legislation in force, in the accounts of institutions governed by special Articles of association, in particular permanent endowments of funds or fixed or variable capital represented by actually paid up "parts sociales" or by "certificats coopératifs d’investissement". b) Also included in the limits fixed at Article 5 are the funds originating from the issue of instruments which the ACP has decided meet the following conditions for inclusion in base capital: 111 1° Indefinite maturity, or, with initial maturity of at least thirty years. They can only be bought back or redeemed upon the initiative of the issuer and only if the financial situation and solvency of the credit institution subject to this Regulation is not adversely affected. Moreover, any such buy-back or redemption must receive prior authorisation from the ACP. They may include one or several buy-back or redemption options the exercise of which can exclusively be initiated by the issuer, but these options can only be exercised after a minimum of five years after their issue with the ACP’s approval and providing that the instruments be replaced by shareholder capital of at least the same quality, unless the ACP determines that the credit institution subject to this Regulation already possesses a level of shareholder capital more than adequate to cover its risks. If the issue contract of an indefinite maturity instrument provides for a moderate incentive to redeem, this incentive may not be exercised during the first ten years after the issue date. The ACP assesses the “moderate” character of the incentive. provided that this mechanism allows the credit institution subject to this Regulation to preserve its financial resources. Substitutions of this kind must respect the conditions defined by the ACP. 3° The issue contract provides for the absorption of losses by the principal of the instrument, the interest or the undistributed dividends via an appropriate mechanism and that any such loss absorption should not obstruct reconstitution of the shareholder capital of the credit institution subject to this Regulation. 4° In the event of judicial liquidation of the credit institution subject to this Regulation, these instruments carry a lower ranking than the elements mentioned in c) of Article 4 of this Regulation. c) The following items shall be deducted: – the unpaid portion of the capital; – holdings of own shares valued at their book value; – accumulated losses; – intangible assets, including formation expenses; – The ACP may request a credit institution subject to this Regulation to replace the instrument by assets of identical or superior quality, such as those described in the first indent of a) to b) of this Article. if applicable, the loss determined on dates other than the end of the annual accounting period; – The ACP requires the suspension of the redemption of fixed-term instruments if the credit institution subject to this Regulation no longer meets the capital adequacy requirements stipulated in Article 2-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007 and may indeed enforce this suspension whenever the objectives of prudential supervision, and particularly the financial situation and solvency of the credit institution subject to this Regulation, warrant such action. the amounts of pension commitments and similar benefits valued in accordance with Conseil National de la Comptabilité Recommendation No; 2003-R.01 of 1 April 2003 not otherwise booked as provisions for liabilities and charges. Article 2 a For supervised institutions subject to IFRS, core capital as per Article 2 shall be restated as follows. The issue contract of a fixed-term instrument must not carry any incentive to redeem at any date other than the maturity date. The ACP may authorise at any moment the early redemption of fixed- or indefinite term instruments in the event of any modification of the tax treatment or the regulatory classification of these instruments after their issue date. 2° Should it be necessary, the issue contract provides for cancellation by the credit institution subject to this Regulation of interest and/or dividend payments for an indefinite period, in a non-cumulative way, and its stipulates that credit institutions subject to this Regulation must cancel their payments if they no longer meet the shareholder capital adequacy requirements provided for in Article 2-1 of the Order of 20 February 2007. The ACP may require the cancellation of these payments whenever the objectives of prudential supervision, and particularly the financial situation and solvency of the credit institution subject to this Regulation, warrant such action. Such cancellations do not prejudice the rights of the credit institution subject to this Regulation to substitute the payment of the interest or the dividends by a payment in the form of a capital security in the meaning described at the first indent of a) of Article 2 of this Regulation, 112 All shares issued by mutual institutions shall be included in core capital. The as yet non-amortised share of hybrid debt included in book capital under IFRS shall be deducted from core capital. The instrument may be included in capital if it complies with the provisions of Articles 2 or 4. The positive impact on capital of components of derivatives on own stock booked as own funds shall be neutralised. However, it may be included in capital if it complies with the provisions of Articles 2 or 4. If the impact is negative, causing a decrease in capital, it shall not be restated. Net actuarial gains booked to earnings or reserves (in the latter case reflecting variations in previous years) in the framework of defined benefit pension schemes must be restated so that they are neutralised in core capital. For supervised institutions subject to IFRS, the reserves referred to in Article 2 shall include unrealised or deferred gains or losses, especially if they are attributable to IFRS. However, unrealised capital gains or losses on financial assets available for sale, booked directly as own funds, shall be restated as follows: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 − for own equity instruments, net unrealised capital gains shall be deducted from core capital, currency by currency, net of tax deducted, and included for 45%, currency by currency and before tax, in supplementary capital. Net unrealised capital losses are not restated; − unrealised capital gains or losses on other financial instruments, comprising debt instruments or loans and receivables, shall be neutralised; − losses of value on any asset available for sale booked to the income statement are not restated; − restatements of financial assets available for sale do not apply to elements deducted from capital pursuant to Article 6. present Regulation may include in supplementary capital, after tax and application of a discount where relevant, 100% of revaluation differences on such fixed assets under French accounting standards until 31 December 2004. In that case, the restatements set forth at Articles 2a and 2b shall apply to unrealised capital gains and revaluation differences that exceed the fraction included for 100% in supplementary capital. Article 3 For institutions subject to the present Regulation other than those subject to IFRS, provisions for general banking risks shall be the sums that the management within the meaning of Article L. 511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code decides to allocate to cover such risks, where prudential reasons require it in the light of the risks inherent in banking operations. Unrealised capital gains or losses booked directly to own funds as the result of a cashflow hedging transaction shall be neutralised. Article 4 Supplementary own funds shall include: Revaluation differences on tangible fixed assets shall be deducted from core capital, item by item, net of tax deducted, and included for 45%, item by item and before tax, in supplementary capital. a) items included in supplementary capital pursuant to Articles 2a, 2b and 2c; Unrealised capital gains on investment properties booked in application of the fair value model shall be deducted from core capital, item by item, net of tax deducted, and included for 45%, item by item and before tax, in supplementary capital. Unrealised capital losses are not restated. The positive impacts of revaluations made on first application of IFRS to tangible fixed assets or investment properties, whether or not they are subsequently valued at amortised cost under IFRS, shall be deducted from core capital, item by item, net of tax deducted, and included for 45%, item by item and before tax, in supplementary capital. Negative impacts are not restated. To calculate their capital adequacy, supervised institutions shall apply the requirements detailed in Articles 305 to 307-3 of the amended Decree of 20 February 2007 to all their assets valued at fair value, regardless of whether or not they belong to the trading portfolio, and shall deduct from core capital any additional value impairments compared with the recorded book value. The Commission Bancaire may decide other prudential restatements in order to maintain the definition and required qualities of regulated capital, especially if the fair value option is used. Article 2 b For institutions subject to the present Regulation other than those subject to IFRS, revaluation differences on tangible and financial fixed assets shall be deducted from core capital net of tax deducted. 45% of such differences before tax shall be included in supplementary capital. Article 2 c Notwithstanding the provisions relating to fixed assets set forth in Articles 2a and 2b, institutions subject to the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) Items which fulfil the following conditions: − they can be freely used by an institution subject to the present Regulation in order to cover risks normally associated with the carrying on of banking activities, where the losses or capital losses have not yet been identified; − − they appear in the books of the institution; their amount is fixed by the management within the meaning of Article L. 511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code and verified by the auditors or, in other countries, by those persons whose profession is of a similar nature. The following in particular may appear among these items: − − − − fully mutualised guarantee funds; other mutual guarantee funds and public funds allocated for the guaranteeing of types of credit operation, to the extent of 8 per cent of the risks which they cover; non-repayable public or private subsidies; the latent reserve which appears in the financial accounts relating to leases, in respect of those institutions which are not required to calculate own funds on a consolidated basis. c) Funds deriving from the issue of securities, in particular perpetual debt, and funds deriving from loans, which meet the following conditions: − they can only be repaid on the initiative of the borrower and with the prior agreement of the General Secretariat of the Commission bancaire; − the issue or loan contract gives an institution subject to the present Regulation the option to defer the payment of interest; 113 − the lender’s claims on an institution subject to the present Regulation are subordinated to those of all the other creditors; − the issue or loan contract provides that the debt and the non-paid interest shall allow losses to be absorbed, the institution subject to the present Regulation then being in a position to continue its activities. Only amounts actually received shall be taken into account. d) Funds deriving from the issue of subordinated borrowings or subordinated debt securities which, although not satisfying the conditions set out in c), meet the ones below: − − − if the contract stipulates a specific maturity date for repayment, the initial life must be not less than five years; if no maturity is fixed, the debt may only be repaid subject to five years’ notice, unless it is no longer considered as own funds or unless the prior consent of the General Secretariat of the Commission bancaire is formally required for early repayment. The General Secretariat of the Commission bancaire may authorise the early repayment of these funds provided that the request for repayment is made on the initiative of the issuer and that the solvency of an institution subject to the present Regulation is not affected; the loan contract does not contain a clause stipulating that, in specific circumstances, other than the winding-up of an institution subject to the present Regulation, the debt must be repaid before the agreed maturity; in the event of the winding-up of an institution subject to the present Regulation, these securities or loans may only be repaid after settlement of all the other debts existing on the date of winding-up or contracted for the requirements thereof. Only funds actually received shall be taken into account. In addition, the amount up to which they may be included in own funds shall be gradually reduced during at least the last five years remaining before maturity, in accordance with a pre-established schedule. e) For the application of the Order of 20 February 2007 the positive amounts resulting from the difference between the sum of valuation adjustments and collective write-downs relating to the exposures concerned and the expected losses calculated in accordance with Article 68 of said Order, up to 0.6% of the amounts of their weighted exposures. Valuation adjustments and collective write-downs entering into the aforementioned calculation shall only be included in supplementary own funds in accordance with the preceding indent. To this end, the amounts of the weighted exposures do not include those calculated for the securitisation positions with a weighting of 1250% in accordance with Title V of the Order of 20 February 2007. subordinated debt securities, as referred to in Article 4 d), may only be included to the extent of 50 per cent of the amount of original own funds. Article 5 a The deductions referred to in Articles 6, 6a and 6c hereafter are made up to 50% from core own funds and 50% from supplementary own funds, after taking into account the limits mentioned in Article 5. Where 50% of the sum of the items referred to in Articles 6, 6a and 6c exceed the sum of the supplementary own funds, the excess shall be deducted from the core own funds. Notwithstanding the preceding paragraph and until 31 December 2012, supervised institutions may apply the deductions referred to in Article 6, II, to the sum of the own funds when equity holdings, subordinated claims or any other item that are included in the own funds have been acquired before 1 January 2007. Article 5 b I. For the application of Title VII of the Order of 20 February 2007, own funds shall include the core and supplementary own funds remaining after meeting all the requirements for credit and operational risks in accordance with the Order of 20 February 2007, plus the ancillary own funds defined in paragraph III hereafter. In order to calculate core and supplementary own funds, the deductions prescribed in Article 6b shall be made first from the supplementary own funds. II. If they are used to meet the requirements set forth in Articles 292-1 to 292-3 of the Order of 20 February 2007, the supplementary own funds remaining after meeting all the credit and operational risk requirements prescribed in the Order of 20 February 2007 and the ancillary own funds defined in paragraph III hereafter must not exceed 250% of the remaining core own funds. The limit of 250% of the remaining own funds referred to in the preceding paragraph shall be lowered to 200% if the undertaking subject to this Regulation is an investment firm III. Ancillary own funds shall comprise: a) the interim profits derived from the trading book calculated according to the valuation rules set forth in Title VII of the Order of 20 February 2007, net of any foreseeable expenses or dividends and less any net losses on other business, provided that none of those amounts has already been taken into account in the calculation of the own funds for purposes of the above-mentioned amended Regulation 90-02; b) the subordinated loan stock with an initial maturity of at least two years that meets the following conditions; Article 5 Supplementary own funds may only be included in the calculation of own funds up to the amount of original own funds. − the amounts borrowed must be fully paid up and the loan agreement shall not include any clause providing that the debt will become repayable before the agreed repayment date, unless the General Secretariat of the Commission Bancaire approves; In addition, those elements of these additional own funds which have the character of subordinated borrowings or − neither the principal of nor the interest on such subordinated loan stock may be repaid if such 114 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 repayment would mean that the own funds of the institution would then fail to meet the overall requirements defined in Article 2 of the Order of 20 February 2007. Each institution shall notify the General Secretariat of the Commission Bancaire of all repayments on such subordinated loan stock as soon as its own funds fall below 120% of its overall requirements. The part of subordinated loan stock or debt no longer included in the additional capital because of the progressive reduction prescribed in Article 4 (d) of the above-mentioned amended Regulation 90-02 may be included in the items listed in this paragraph, if the above-mentioned requirements are met IV. The sum of the own funds defined in Article 1 of the above-mentioned Regulation 90-02 that are used to cover the credit and operational risks in accordance with the Order 20 February 2007 and the own funds requirements set forth in 5b I, 5b II and 5b III above shall constitute the institution’s overall own funds. Article 6 I - Equity holdings, subordinated claims that take one of the forms referred to in c) and d) of Article 4 of this Regulation and in III b) of Article 5b of the abovementioned Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990 as amended and any item constituting the own funds of institutions referred to in points i) to iii) of f) of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 shall be deducted in the following manner: − where the equity holding exceeds 10 per cent of the capital of the institution in which it is held or enables a significant influence to be exercised over this institution, its total amount shall be deducted together with the subordinated claims and any item constituting its own funds held in respect of this institution; − the total amount of the other equity holdings and subordinated claims and any item constituting its own funds shall be deducted to the extent of the portion which exceeds 10 per cent of the own funds of the institution which holds them, calculated before the deductions stipulated in this Article. II – Equity interests within the meaning of Article L. 51120-II of the Monetary and Financial Code held in entities belonging to the insurance sector within the meaning of Article L. 517-2-I of the Monetary and Financial Code and subordinated claims on such entities shall be deducted. However, for the application of management standards other than those set forth in Regulation 88-01 of 22 February 1988 as amended relating to liquidity, Regulation 90-06 of 20 June 1990 as amended relating to equity holdings in the capital of enterprises and Regulation 98-04 of 7 December 1998 relating to equity interests taken by investment firms other than portfolio management companies in existing or new undertakings, institutions subject to this Regulation may choose not to deduct the items referred to in the first paragraph from their own funds and, in that case, are subject to a supplementary capital adequacy requirement according to the conditions of the "accounting consolidation" method set forth at Section II of the Appendix to Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 However, the Commission Bancaire may decide to require the deduction of these items from the own funds of institutions subject to this Regulation if it deems it necessary for the purposes of prudential supervision, in particular when the equity interests are held in entities whose activity may be regarded as equivalent to activities belonging to the banking and investment services sector, such as those authorised by branches 14 (credit) and 15 (guarantee) of Article R. 321-1 of the Insurance Code. III – For the application of management standards other than those set forth in Regulation 88-01 of 22 February 1988 as amended relating to liquidity, the last indent of Article 1 of Regulation 90-02, Regulation 90-06 of 20 June 1990 as amended relating to equity holdings in the capital of enterprises and Regulation 98-04 of 7 December 1998 relating to equity interests taken by investment firms other than portfolio management companies in existing or new undertakings, parent undertakings within the meaning of Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 and the institutions under their exclusive or joint control may choose not to deduct the items referred to in paragraphs I and II of this article in order to calculate their own funds on a non-consolidated basis. However, the Commission Bancaire may decide to require the deduction of such items from the nonconsolidated own funds of these institutions if it deems it necessary for the purposes of prudential supervision. IV – When an equity interest is held temporarily in another institution referred to at Article 1f, i) to iii) of the aforementioned Regulation 2000-03 or in an entity belonging to the insurance sector within the meaning of Article L. 517-2-I of the Monetary and Financial Code for the purposes of a financial assistance operation designed to reorganise and rescue the entity, the Commission Bancaire may allow the credit institution subject to this Regulation to derogate from the deduction rules set forth in this article. V – For the application of the management standard described in Article 1 of this Regulation, a credit institution subject to this Regulation need not deduct, in the calculation of its core capital, the elements mentioned in paragraphs I and II of this Article when these elements are held by other credit institutions, financial establishments, insurance or reinsurance companies belonging to the same application scope for supervision on a consolidated basis or ‘supplementary’ supervision in the meaning of Regulation no. 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 6 a For the application of the Order of 20 February 2007, supervised institutions shall deduct their securitisation exposures weighted at 1250% in accordance with said Order, where such exposures are not included in the calculation of the amounts of the weighted exposures. Article 6 b Asset items and off-balance sheet commitments granted by an institution subject to the present Regulation to its senior managers or principal shareholders, including commitments that guarantee performance of an obligation contracted by the senior managers or principal 115 shareholders, shall be deducted from the items referred to in Articles 2 to 4 above. calculated by applying the provisions of Articles 7-2 and 16 of the Decree of 20 February 2007 on capital adequacy. By way of an exception from Article 10 below, financial accounting methods shall be used to calculate the deduction of leasing or similar transactions within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article L. 313-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code. IV. – The present article shall not apply to the following: I. – For the purposes of the present article, the following are deemed to be senior managers: a) the persons referred to in Articles L. 511-13 and L. 532-2 of the Monetary and Financial Code; b) any person entrusted with managerial or administrative powers or any member of the supervisory board of a company governed by Book II of the Commercial Code or any other person performing equivalent functions under the terms of the laws or by-laws governing the institution subject to this Regulation, and their standing representatives, their spouse and their ascendants and descendants in the first degree; a) transactions entered into with the senior managers or principal shareholders that have a rating better than 4 on the rating scale of the Banque de France or whose securities and bank debt have a rating at least equal to the rating set forth in Appendix I to the present Regulation; b) transactions entered into with the senior managers or principal shareholders and guaranteed explicitly in favour of the institution subject to this Regulation by a company that has a rating mentioned in paragraph a) above; c) transactions entered into between institutions affiliated to the same central body as mentioned in Article L. 51130 of the Monetary and Financial Code; d) commitments relating to legal entities over which the institution subject to this Regulation exercises exclusive control in accordance with Regulation 200003 of 6 September 2000 aforesaid; c) any person entrusted with managerial or administrative powers in a legal entity that directly or indirectly exercises exclusive or joint control over the institution subject to this Regulation within the meaning of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 relating to prudential supervision on a consolidated basis; e) commitments relating to legal entities over which the institution subject to this Regulation exercises joint control, if such control is shared with persons other than those deemed to be principal shareholders under the terms of section II of the present article; d) any person entrusted with managerial or administrative powers in a legal entity over which the institution subject to this Regulation directly or indirectly exercises exclusive or joint control within the meaning of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 aforesaid; f) the share of exposure to a single beneficiary within the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05 of 21 December 1993 aforesaid not exceeding 3% of the own funds of the institution subject to this Regulation, minus the items referred to at Articles 6 and 6a where relevant; e) any legal entity over which a senior manager as defined in the preceding paragraphs exercises exclusive or joint control; g) for any calculation of own funds carried out before 1 January 2007, the asset items and commitments arising from transactions entered into before 1 April 2001 and transactions entered into subsequently if they arise from commitments assumed before that date. f) any person acting as an intermediary between the institution subject to this Regulation and a senior manager as defined in the preceding paragraphs. II. – For the purposes of the present article, the following are deemed to be principal shareholders: a) any person or group of persons holding jointly or separately, directly or indirectly, over one tenth of the voting rights calculated as set forth at Article 4 of Regulation 96-16 relating to changes in the situation of credit institutions and investment firms other than portfolio management companies; b) any legal entity over which the persons or groups of persons referred to in paragraph a) above directly or indirectly exercise exclusive or joint control within the meaning of Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000 aforesaid. III. – The deductions set forth in the present article shall be calculated by applying the provisions of Articles 4, 5, 6 and 7 of Regulation 93-05 of 21 December 1993 as amended on supervising large exposures. However, deductions relating to documentary credits, granted or confirmed, are 116 V. – For branches of credit institutions having their headquarters in a country that is not a signatory to the agreement on the European Economic Area, the provisions of Article 6b shall apply to the branch’s transactions with the senior managers appointed in France mentioned in Article L. 511-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code. The Commission Bancaire may extend the same provisions to transactions entered into with the headquarters, with persons who are responsible for the management or hold over one tenth of the voting rights of the legal entity and with persons over which the entity exercises exclusive or joint control in at least one of the following cases: a) the institution is not subject in its home country to solvency and large exposure requirements deemed by the Commission Bancaire to be at least as strict as the rules in force in France; b) the competent authorities of the country in which the institution has its headquarters consider that it does not comply satisfactorily with the standards laid down in the fields referred to in a) above. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 6 c For the purpose of applying the Order of 20 February 2007, supervised institutions that use the Internal Ratings Based approach for the exposure risk shall deduct the following items: − − the negative amounts resulting from the difference between the sum of the valuation adjustments and collective write-downs relating to the exposures concerned and the expected losses calculated in accordance with Article 68 of said Order. the amounts of the expected losses calculated in accordance with Article 67-1 of said Order for the equity exposures whose weighted amounts shall be calculated pursuant to the simplified weighted method. Article 7 Where an institution subject to the present Regulation calculates the amount of its own funds on a consolidated basis, the items referred to in Articles 1 to 6b shall be included to the extent of their totals as these result from the consolidation carried out in accordance with the rules laid down in the above-mentioned Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Core own funds shall then include the consolidation differences specified in the above-mentioned Regulation: − the counterpart, in consolidated reserves, of goodwill; − differences arising from consolidation by the equity method; − translation difference; − minority interests. When goodwill is recorded on the assets side of the consolidated balance sheet, it shall be deducted from core capital, including when it is included in the value of securities accounted for by the equity method. For the purposes of Article 6, securities consolidated by the equity method shall be deducted from own funds at their consolidated book value excluding goodwill already deducted. Where an institution subject to this Regulation is subject to a supplementary capital adequacy requirement in accordance with Article 6-II, paragraph 2, it shall deduct from its core capital the contribution of entities belonging to the insurance sector to consolidated earnings and reserves, booked as an equity method difference The prudential restatements under IFRS set forth at Articles 2a and 2c do not concern the items included in the equity method difference. However, the Commission Bancaire reserves the option of applying these prudential restatements to the equity method difference if inclusion of all or some of such items seems inappropriate or liable to mislead from the standpoint of the objectives of prudential supervision. Notwithstanding points 2 and sqs. of the present article and until 31 December 2012, institutions subject to a supplemental requirement concerning capital adequacy may carry out the deductions referred to in Article 6, II, on the global amount of their own funds when the equity holdings, subordinated claims or any other item Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 constitutive of own funds has been acquired before 31 December 2006. This provision shall enter into force on 31 December 2006. Article 8 Articles 4e), 6a and 6c only apply in the framework of Order 20 February 2007. Article 9 If, when the calculation of own funds is made, the institution anticipates that it will incur a fiscal charge on all or some of the items specified in Articles 2 and 3 and Article 4 a) and b), in particular on the day when it decides to earmark these items for the offsetting of losses, the amount of this possible fiscal charge shall be deducted from the amount of each of these items. Article 10 The items included in the calculation of own funds are drawn from the individual accounts of the supervised institutions according to the rules laid down in Regulation 91-01 of 16 January 1991 or in Regulation 97-03 of 21 February 1997. Where institutions are subject to supervision on a consolidated basis, these documents are drawn from the consolidated accounts prepared according to the rules laid down in Regulation 2000-03 of 6 September 2000. Article 11 − Deleted − Deleted − See Article 5 of Regulation 88-01 − Deleted Article 12 The provisions for general banking risks shall be recorded separately on the liabilities side of the balance sheets of institutions subject to the present Regulation other than those subject to IFRS in a special item headed accordingly. The amount by which transfers to exceed transfers from the provisions for general banking risks or the amount by which transfers from exceed transfers to the provisions for general banking risks shall be recorded separately, to the debit or credit respectively of the profit and loss account, in special items headed accordingly. Institutions must be able to furnish the Commission bancaire with all evidence concerning the provisions for general banking risks. Article 13 Institutions subject to the present Regulation shall report the composition of their own funds to the Commission bancaire in accordance with formats specified by it. The conditions which the items taken into account for the purposes of Articles 2 to 8 must fulfil shall, where appropriate, be detailed in a Commission bancaire instruction. 117 The Commission Bancaire may object to the inclusion of certain items if it considers that the conditions specified in Articles 2 to 9 have not been satisfactorily fulfilled or that the inclusion of some or all of these items would be inappropriate or likely to mislead from the standpoint of the objectives of prudential supervision. Article 14 The Commission bancaire may temporarily authorise an institution subject to the present Regulation to exceed, in exceptional circumstances, the limits laid down in Article 5, while allowing it a period of time in which to regularise its situation. Under the same conditions as those set out in the foregoing paragraph, the Commission bancaire may authorise an institution not to deduct from its own funds all or part of the items referred to in Article 6b. If necessary, the Commission bancaire may also allow the supervised institution whose own funds fall under the amount mentioned in Article 1 a further period for it to bring its situation into compliance. Appendix I List of recognised rating organisations and minimum acceptable rating categories referred to in point IV of Article 6b (Order of 20 February 2007 (long term) 1.3.2.CAPITAL ADEQUACY REGULATION 97-04 OF 21 FEBRUARY 1997, RELATING TO THE MANAGEMENT STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO INVESTMENT FIRMS OTHER THAN PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT COMPANIES As amended by Regulation 2001-01 of 26 June 2001 and the Orders of 15 May 2006, 20 February 2007 and 11 September 2008 Prudential Supervision of Market Risks Article 1 Investment firms mentioned in Article L. 531-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code, other than portfolio management companies mentioned in Article L. 532-9 and investment firms which have neither funds nor securities belonging to their customers and which only provide, whether cumulatively or not, the investment service(s) referred to in points 1 and 5 of Article L. 321-1 of said Code must at all times have capital as defined in Article 5b of Regulation 90-02 equal at least to the total of client positions divided by 150. The total of client positions includes positions on regulated markets in financial instruments and over-the-counter positions, as well as, for the other positions: − the debit balances on cash accounts and uncovered short positions on the spot market in the name of clients that are effectively held with the undertaking, − in the case of other clients, the sum of the long and short positions, plus the debit balance on settlement accounts or minus the credit balance on settlement accounts. (short term) Canadian Bond Rating Service B++low A-3 Dominion Bond Rating Service BBBlow R-2 Duff and Phelps, Inc. BBB- F-3 Article 2 BBB- F-3 See Regulation 95-02 of 21 July 1995. Fitch Investors Service, Inc. Article 3 IBCA Notation BBB- A3 Japan Credit Rating Agency, Ltd BBB- J-2 Moody’s France Baa3 P-3 Moody’s Investor Services Baa3 P-3 Nippon Investor Services, Inc. BBB- A-3 Standard and Poor’s-Adef BBB3 T1 Standard and Poor’s International BBB- A-3 The Japan Bond Research Institute BBB- A-2 Thomson Bankwatch BBB- A3 118 See Regulation 91-05 of 15 February 1991. Supervising Large Exposures Article 4 See Regulation 93-05 of 21 December 1993. Article 5 The investment firms referred to in Article L. 531-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code other than the portfolio management companies referred to in Article L. 532-9 of said Code and other than investment firms that do not hold funds or securities belonging to customers and that provide exclusively or cumulatively the investment service(s) referred to in points 1 and 5 of Article L. 321-1 of said Code to the persons referred to in Article L. 442-2, point 4 of the Monetary and Financial Code and the persons referred to in Article L. 542-1 of said Code shall at all times ensure that the total value of the positions of any one client is less than 15 times the amount of their overall own funds as defined in the amended Regulation 90-02 aforesaid. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 However, this rule shall not apply when the client: – – – exercises exclusive control over the investment firm or the person referred to in the first indent of this Article; is exclusively controlled by the investment firm or the person referred to in the first indent of this Article; is exclusively controlled by a parent company which also exclusively controls the investment firm or the person referred to in the first indent of this Article. ORDER OF 20 FEBRUARY 2007 RELATING TO CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS FOR CREDIT INSTITUTIONS AND INVESTMENT FIRMS As amended by Orders of 19 October 2007, 11 September 2008, 29 October 2009, 25 August 2010, 13 December 2010 and 23 November 2011 TITLE I Internal Control GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 6 Deleted. Implementation Article 1 The entities subject to this regulation, referred to hereinafter as supervised institutions, are: Article 7 The investment firms referred to in Article 1 of this Regulation authorised as of the date of entry into force of the Act of 2 July 1996 aforesaid [inserted in the Monetary and Financial Code] shall be immediately subject to the provisions of this Regulation. Other investment firms shall be subject to the provisions of this Regulation on 1 July 1997. L. 522-2, II of the Monetary and Financial Code; Article 8 The general decisions of the Conseil des Bourses de Valeurs 90-15 of 18 December 1990 relating to rules for hedging the exposure of sociétés de bourse and 90-16 of 18 December 1990 relating to the rules for dividing the exposure of sociétés de bourse shall be repealed as of 1 July 1997. - investment firms listed in Article L. 531-4 of the Monetary and Financial Code, with the exception of portfolio management companies referred to in Article L. 532-9 of the Monetary and Financial Code, and of investment firms that do not hold funds or securities belonging to their customers and that only provide, whether cumulatively or not, the investment service(s) referred to in points 1 and 5 of Article L. 321-1 of said Code. Article 9 This Regulation shall not apply to: - financial holding companies as well as mixed financial holding companies supervised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel on a consolidated basis in accordance with Regulation 2000-03; – branches in France of the undertakings mentioned in Article L. 532-18 of the Monetary and Financial Code; – to investment firms whose programme of operations is limited to providing investment services concerning financial instruments involving commodities. These undertakings shall file monthly statements showing the positions taken on the commodities markets with the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel according to a model layout set by the General Secretariat. Article 10 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise an investment firm to temporarily depart from the provisions of this Regulation and give it a deadline for bringing its situation into compliance. It shall stipulate the adaptations to the references to the various Regulations of the Comité de la Réglementation Bancaire et Financière necessary for the application of this Regulation. - credit institutions; - payment institutions granting loans mentioned in Article - payment institutions granting the loans mentioned in Article L. 522-2, II of the Monetary and Financial Code, - the persons mentioned in Point 4 of Article L. 442-2 and Point 5 of Article L. 542-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code. This Order applies on a consolidated basis to supervised institutions supervised on a consolidated basis by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with Regulation 2000-03. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall specify the necessary adjustments, where appropriate, for including a given financial holding company in consolidated supervision. Article 2-1 Supervised institutions shall be required to maintain a solvency ratio of at least 8% at all times. This solvency ratio shall be equal to the ratio of total own funds to the sum of: - risk-weighted exposures, for credit risk and dilution risk; and Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 119 - capital requirements imposed under the prudential supervision of market risk and operational risk, multiplied by 12.5. For the purposes of this Order, own funds shall be determined in accordance with Regulation 90-02 of 23 February 1990 of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel on own funds. Article 2-2 Risk-weighted exposures amounts for credit risk and dilution risk exposures in the banking book shall be calculated using the Standardised Approach for credit risk set out in Title II, or the Internal Ratings Based Approach subject to the conditions set out in Title III. Subject to Article 6a of Regulation 90-02, risk-weighted exposures for securitisation positions, calculated as provided in Title V, shall be included in the total riskweighted exposures of supervised institutions for the calculation of capital requirements for credit risk and dilution risk. Article 2-3 The capital requirement for market risk shall be calculated in accordance with Title VII. Article 2-4 The capital requirement for operational risk shall be calculated using the Basic Indicator Approach or the Standardised Approach set out in Title VIII, or the Advanced Measurement Approach subject to the conditions specified in Title VIII. Article 3-1 By derogation to Article 2-1, subject investment firms that are not authorised to provide the investment services listed in points 3, 5, and 6 of Article L. 321-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be required to maintain own funds at a level that is always equal to or greater than the higher of the following two amounts: a) the sum of the capital requirements set out in Articles 22 and 2-3; b) one quarter of their preceding year’s fixed overheads, or, when a firm has not completed a full year’s business, one quarter of the fixed overheads projected in its business plan. Within the meaning of this Order, ‘fixed overheads’ includes staff costs, taxes linked to the compensation of employees, other taxes, and external services as defined by the accounting rules applicable to investment firms. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may adjust this requirement in the event of a material change in the firm’s activity relative to the preceding year. Article 3-2 By derogation to Article 2-1, subject investment firms that are authorised to provide the investment service shall be required to maintain own funds at a level that is always equal to or greater than the sum of the amounts referred to in points (a) and (b) of Article 3-1to in point 3 of Article L. 321-1 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be required to maintain own funds at a level that is always 120 equal to or greater than the sum of the amounts referred to in points (a) and (b) of Article 3-1, provided that: - they deal exclusively for their own account as a counterparty to a customer’s order or for the purpose of gaining entrance to a clearing and settlement system in the capacity of settlement agent, or to a regulated market, with the view to executing customers’ orders; or - they do not hold funds or securities belonging to their customers, they deal exclusively for their own account, they do not deal for the account of customers, and the execution and settlement of their transactions take place under the responsibility of a clearing institution and are guaranteed by that clearing institution. Article 3-3 When all of the investment firms in a group fall within the class of investment firms referred to in Article 3-1 and the group does not include any credit institutions: a) the parent investment firm shall be required at all times to hold consolidated own funds equal to or greater than the greater of the following two amounts: i) the sum of the requirements in Articles 2-2 and 2-3; ii) one quarter of its fixed overheads, under the conditions set out in point (b) of Article 3-1. The provisions of Article 295 apply to the calculation of these requirements. b) the financial holding company referred to in Article 3 of Regulation 2000-03 shall be required at all times to hold consolidated own funds equal to or greater than the larger of the following two amounts: i) the sum of the requirements in Articles 2-2 and 2-3; ii) one quarter of its fixed overheads, under the conditions set out in point (b) of Article 3-1. The provisions of Article 295 apply to the calculation of these requirements. Article 3-4 When all of the investment firms in a group fall within the class of investment firms referred to in Articles 3-1 and 3-2 and the group does not include any credit institutions: a) the parent investment firm shall be required at all times to hold consolidated own funds equal to or greater than the sum of the requirements in paragraphs (a) and (b) of Article 3-1. The provisions of Article 295 apply to the calculation of these requirements; b) the financial holding company referred to in Article 3 of Regulation 2000-03 shall be required at all times to hold consolidated own funds equal to or greater than the sum of the requirements in paragraphs (a) and (b) of Article 3-1. The provisions of Article 295 apply to the calculation of these requirements. Article 3-5 By derogation to Article 2-1, payment institutions granting credits mentioned in Article L. 522-2 , II of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be required to maintain own funds at a level that is always equal to or greater than the sum of Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 the amounts referred to in Article 28 of the Order of 29 October 2009 relating to the prudential regulation of payment institutions and the requirements for the standardised approach for credit risks. Article 4-1 In applying this Order: a) ’exposure’ means an asset or off-balance sheet item; b) ’institutions’, for the purposes of Titles II and III, means credit institutions and investment firms, including recognised credit institutions and investment firms of third countries. For the purposes of this paragraph, ‘recognised credit institutions and investment firms of third countries’ are those that satisfy the following conditions: - they are authorised by the competent authorities of the third country; - they would be considered credit institutions or investment firms if they were established in a Member State; - they are subject to prudential regulation and supervision equivalent to the regime in force in France; c) ’operational risk’ means the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people, and internal systems, or from external events, including events with a low probability of occurrence but a high loss. This definition includes legal risk but excludes strategic and reputation risk; d) ’dilution risk’ means the risk that an amount receivable is reduced as the result of any form of discount or cancellation granted to the obligor; e) ’Probability of Default’ (PD) means the probability of default of a counterparty over a one-year period; f) ’loss’, for the purposes of the provisions relating to credit risk, means economic loss, including material discounting effects, as well as material direct and indirect costs associated with collecting on the instrument; g) ’Loss Given Default’ (LGD) means the ratio of the loss on an exposure due to the default of a counterparty, to the exposure amount at the time at default; h) ’Credit Conversion Factor’ (CCF) means the ratio of the currently undrawn amount of a commitment that will be drawn and outstanding at the time of default, to the currently undrawn amount of the commitment. The extent of the commitment shall be determined by the advised limit, unless the unadvised limit is higher; i) ’Expected Loss’ (EL), for the purpose of the provisions relating to credit risk, means the ratio of the amount expected to be lost for credit or dilution risk over the year to come as a result of counterparty default, to the exposure value of the exposure; j) ’funded credit protection’ means collateral or an equivalent security interest in which the reduction in the credit risk of an exposure derives from the supervised institution’s right, in the event of the default of the counterparty or the occurrence of other specified credit events relating to the counterparty, to liquidate, retain, or obtain transfer or ownership of amounts or assets; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 k) ’unfunded credit protection’ means a technique of credit risk mitigation in which the reduction of the credit risk of an exposure derives from the commitment of a third party to pay an amount in the event of the default of the borrower or the occurrence of other specified events; l) ’cash-assimilated instrument’ means a certificate of deposit or other similar instrument issued by the lending supervised institution; m) ’securitisation’ means a transaction or structure whereby the credit risk associated with an exposure or pool of exposures is subdivided into tranches that have the following characteristics: i) payments in the transaction or structure depend on the cash flows generated by the exposure or pool of exposures; ii) the subordination of tranches determines the distribution of losses throughout the life of the transaction or scheme; ma) Re-securitisation: a securitisation in which the credit risk associated with a portfolio of underlying exposures is subdivided into tranches and where at least one of the underlying exposures is itself a securitisation position; n) ’securitisation position’ means an exposure to a securitisation transaction or structure. Securitisation positions include exposures arising from interest-rate or foreign-exchange derivatives contracts; na) Re-securitisation position: an exposure to a resecuritisation operation; o) ’recognised exchange’ means an exchange, whatever the country in which it is established, that satisfies the definition of regulated market in Article L. 421-3 of the Monetary and Financial Code and that has a clearing mechanism that permits daily margin calls for the contracts listed in Appendix II; p) ’Member State’ means any State that is a member of the European Union or a signatory to the agreement on the European Economic Area; q) ’external credit assessments’, for the purpose of the provisions relating to credit risk, means an assessment of credit provided by an external credit assessment institution recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and used as provided in Chapter IV of Title II and, as applicable, in Chapter V of Title V; r) ’public sector entities’ means non-commercial administrative bodies responsible to central governments, regional governments, or local authorities; authorities that exercise responsibilities similar to those of regional and local authorities; or any other body with similar characteristics; s) ’valuation adjustment’ means a specific provision corresponding to the decline in the value of an asset associated with credit risk and recorded in accounting statements either directly in the form of a partial write-off or through an allowance account; t) ’residual value at risk’ in a finance lease agreement or a lease agreement of a financial nature means an estimate of the value of the leased asset at the end of the lease period; 121 i) provided that the contractual terms do not rule out that this value could be added to the amortisation of the lessor’s initial investment under the agreement, in particular when it appeared reasonably certain at the origination of the agreement that the leased asset would be sold to the lessee and this certainty has disappeared during the course of the lease; ii) and in the absence of a guarantee by the lessee or by a third party unrelated to the lessor, satisfying all of the conditions listed in Title IV relating to the eligibility of credit protection providers, to bear any possible shortfall in this value relative to the unamortised portion of the financial outstanding at the end of the agreement; u) ’banking book’ means all of the assets or off-balance sheet items that do not belong in the trading book, as that term is defined in Title VII; v) ’exposure value’: for assets, in the context of the Standardised Approach for credit risk, exposure value means the accounting value after deduction of any general provisions under the terms established by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and, in the context of the Internal Ratings Based Approach for credit risk, means the accounting value excluding any value adjustment of unrealised gains or losses not included in the profit and in the own funds, and gains or losses on the covered assets. For off-balance sheet items, exposure value shall mean the nominal value; w) ’finance lease agreements’ means lease agreements whose effect, at the beginning of the agreement, is to transfer to the lessee the quasi-totality of risks and benefits inherent in the ownership of the leased asset, where the agreements are entered into by supervised institutions that are subject to IFRS standards – i.e., institutions that publish their consolidated accounts according to international accounting standards within the meaning of Regulation (CE) 1606-2002; x) ’lease agreements of a financial nature’ means lease agreements, lease agreements with an option to purchase, and lease-purchase agreements. It also includes lease agreements without a purchase option where the aim is to provide a renter with movable property or real estate acquired by the lessor at the renter’s request, and where the lessor is not, in principle, in the business of retaining the property at the conclusion of the agreement. This includes, in particular, lease agreements in which the discounted value of expected minimum payments corresponds to the value of the leased asset, where the agreements are entered into by supervised institutions that are not subject to IFRS standards; Article 4-2 For the application of this Order, the definitions in Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03 shall apply. Article 4-3 Except where the provisions of this Order provide otherwise, assets and off-balance-sheet items shall be valued in accordance with the accounting framework to which the supervised institution is subject. Article 5 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel can at any time waive the application of the provisions of this Order to a supervised institution temporarily, by granting it an extension of time to regularise its situation. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel can prohibit a supervised institution from applying a provision of this Order, the application of which is subject to specific conditions, if the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel judges that those conditions have not been satisfactorily fulfilled. Article 5-1 The branches of credit institutions that have their head office in another State that is party to the Agreement on the European Economic Area are deemed to be in compliance with requirements if the following conditions are met: - Home country regulation and supervision in this regard take into account the risks borne abroad in an equivalent manner to the provisions in force in France. - The head office undertakes to supervise itself the transactions of the branch in France, in accordance with the regulations in force in its home country and under the supervision of the competent authority in its home country. - The head office confirms that it will ensure that its branch in France has sufficient funds to cover its liabilities. - The competent authority in its home country gives its agreement to the request, confirms that the institution is compliant and undertakes to inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any significant change in the aforementioned conditions. - The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel verifies that the above conditions are met and, provided that French credit institutions are able to benefit from equivalent treatment from the competent authority in the home country, grants branches that request it the benefit of this Article. y) ’minimum payments in finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature’ means payments that the lessee is or can be required to make over the course of the agreement, as well as, where applicable: The institutions concerned inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any relevant change to ensure that the abovementioned conditions continue to be satisfied on a lasting basis. i) the guaranteed value of the leased asset at the end of the agreement, when that guarantee is provided by the lessee or by a third party unrelated to the lessor who satisfies all of the conditions listed in Title IV relating to the eligibility of credit protection providers; or ii) the sale price of the asset to the lessee, where there is a reasonable certainty that the asset will be sold to the lessee. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may withdraw the benefit of this Article from an institution if it considers that one of these conditions is no longer being met. It may also refuse to allow a supervised institution the benefit of the present article when it considers that the prudential supervision regime, in areas other than solvency requirements, is not equivalent to that applicable in France. 122 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 6 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall establish the method and frequency for reporting the elements of the solvency ratio to it, along with any other information relevant to its assessment of a supervised institution’s capital adequacy and internal capital. borrowing transactions, or long settlement transactions, or margin lending transactions, may be calculated, as applicable: La Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require any institution to calculate its solvency ratio at additional dates specified by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in order to satisfy supervisory needs: in particular, to enable the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to monitor the impact on the solvency ratio of the distribution of own funds within the group to which the institution belongs. - as provided in Section 3, Chapter 4 of Title IV on the use of internal models to capture the effect of netting mechanisms on such transactions. TITLE II Article 7-7 The exposure value for finance lease agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature, corresponding to their accounting value, can be decomposed into two elements: the discounted value of minimum lease payments on the one hand and, if relevant, a fraction of the residual value at risk equal to 1/t where t equals the higher of 1 and the number of residual full years in the contract, on the other. Distinct weights are applied to these two elements, the fraction of the residual value at risk taken into account being considered as a tangible asset. STANDARDISED APPROACH FOR CREDIT RISK CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 7-1 The exposure value of an asset shall be determined taking into account the effects of any credit risk mitigation techniques. Article 7-2 The exposure value of an off-balance-sheet item listed in Appendix I is a percentage of its value, reflecting the effects of any credit risk mitigation techniques. The percentage shall be determined as a function of the risk category to which the item belongs: - 100% of its value if it is in the full-risk category; - 50% of its value if it is in the medium category; - 20% of its value if it is in the moderate-risk category; - 0% of its value if it is in the low-risk category. These percentages are referred to as supervisory credit conversion factors (CCFs). Article 7-3 For exposures in the form of securities or commodities sold, posted, or lent under repurchase transactions; or securities or commodities lending or borrowing; or margin lending, if the supervised institution uses the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method to reflect the effect of financial collateral as provided in Title IV, the exposure value shall take into account volatility adjustments in accordance with Articles 178-2 to 178-6. Article 7-4 The exposure value of derivative instruments listed in Appendix II shall be determined in accordance with the methods set out in Title VI, taking into account the effects of novation agreements or netting agreements as provided in that Title. Article 7-5 The exposure value for asset sale and repurchase transactions, or securities or commodities lending or Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 - as provided in Chapter V of Title VI on valuation methods using internal models; or Article 7-6 The exposure value for exposures to a central clearing house may be set equal to zero, subject to the conditions set out in Section 2, Chapter I of Title VI. When the sale of the leased asset to the lessee appears reasonably certain at the beginning of the agreement, the supervised institution shall confirm at least annually that the sale remains reasonably certain. Article 8-1 The risk-weighted exposure amount shall be calculated by assigning a risk weight to each exposure as provided in this Title. Elements deducted from own funds as provided in Regulation 90-02 shall be excluded from the calculation of risk-weighted exposure amount. Article 8-2 Except where the provisions of this Title provide otherwise, exposures of supervised institutions shall be risk-weighted at 100%. Article 8-3 The application of risk weights shall be based on the exposure class referred to in Chapter II to which the exposure is assigned and, where applicable, on its credit quality as provided in Chapter IV. For real estate loans granted for the acquisition or improvement of residential property and secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral, and for finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning real estate, if the transaction is with a counterparty whose risk weight is lower than the risk weight that would result from the application of the preceding paragraph, supervised institutions shall assign the risk-weight that applies to an exposure to that counterparty. 123 Article 8-4 The effects of credit risk mitigation techniques shall be taken into account as provided in Title IV. Article 8-5 In the case of asset sale and repurchase transactions, other sales with a commitment to repurchase, and forward purchase commitments, the risk weights shall be those for the assets themselves and not to the counterparties to the transactions. Article 9 Institutions subject to IFRS standards, before applying risk weights, apply adjustments to the denominator of the solvency ratio that match the adjustments made to the numerator of the solvency ratio. These adjustments are detailed in an Instruction issued by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and are applied to all of the instruments involved in the adjustment to the numerator. Article 10 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit the assignment of a risk weight to an asset or an off-balance sheet item if it judges that this item does not fulfil the applicable conditions in a satisfactory manner. CHAPTER II PRUDENTIAL TREATMENT FOR EACH EXPOSURE CATEGORY Article 11 The following treatment applies to exposures to central governments and central banks: a) without prejudice to the provisions of this Article, supervised institutions shall apply a risk weight of 100%; b) supervised institutions that use external assessments shall apply the following risk weights: Credit quality step 1 2 3 4 5 6 credit Risk-weight category 0% 20% 50% 100% 100% 150% c) exposures to the European Central Bank shall be assigned a risk-weight of 0%; d) exposures to central governments and central banks of Member States that are denominated and funded in the domestic currency shall be assigned a risk-weight of 0%; e) when the competent authorities of a third country authorise the use of risk weights lower than 100%, or lower than the risk weight referred to in paragraph (a) for exposures to its central government or central bank that are denominated and funded in the domestic currency, supervised institutions may apply the same risk weight to their exposures to those central governments and central banks, provided that the regulatory and prudential supervisory regimes in the third country are judged by the 124 Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to be equivalent to those in force in France; f) supervised institutions that use external credit assessments issued by an Export Credit Agency shall apply the following risk weights: Minimum export insurance premiums 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Risk-weight category 0% 0% 20% 50% 100% 100% 100% 150% g) credit assessments issued by a Credit Export Agency may be used if either of the following two conditions is satisfied: - the assessments are issued by a Credit Export Agency that participates in the OECD ‘Arrangement on Guidelines for Officially Supported Export Credits’; - the Export Credit Agency publishes its credit assessments and subscribes to the OECD agreed methodology, and the credit assessment is associated with one of the eight minimum export insurance premiums (MEIP) that the OECD agreed methodology establishes. Article 12 The following treatment shall apply to exposures to regional governments and local authorities: a) without prejudice to the following paragraphs, supervised institutions shall apply to exposures to regional governments and local authorities the risk weights that apply to exposures to institutions, unless point d is applicable; b) supervised institutions shall apply to their exposures to regional governments and local authorities in other Member States the treatment accorded by the competent authorities of those States; c) when the competent authorities of a third country riskweight exposures to their regional governments and local authorities like exposures to their central government and central bank, supervised institutions may assign the same risk weight to their own exposures to the third country’s regional governments and local authorities, provided that the regulatory and prudential supervisory regimes in the third country are judged by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to be equivalent to those in force in France; d) Without prejudice to the preceding paragraphs, the exposures to the regional governments and local authorities of Member States denominated and financed in the borrower’s currency are weighted at 20%. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 13 The following treatment shall apply to exposures to public sector entities: a) exposures to public sector entities shall be risk-weighted like exposures to institutions, unless they are treated as exposures to central governments based on their level of risk; b) supervised institutions shall treat their exposures to public sector entities established in other Member States in the same way as the competent authorities of those States; c) when the competent authorities of a third country riskweight exposures to public sector entities established in their territory in the same way as exposures to institutions, supervised institutions may assign the same risk weight to their exposures to those entities, provided that the regulatory and prudential supervisory regimes in the third country are judged by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to be equivalent to those in force in France. Article 14 The following treatment shall apply to exposures to multilateral development banks: a) exposures to multilateral development banks shall be treated as exposures to institutions. For the purposes of this paragraph, the Inter-American Investment Corporation, the Black Sea Trade and Development Bank and the Central American Bank for Economic Integration shall be considered to be multilateral development banks; b) supervised institutions shall assign a 0% risk weight to exposures to the following multilateral development banks: - the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development; - the International Finance Corporation; - the Inter-American Development Bank; - the Asian Development Bank; - the African Development Bank; - the Council of Europe Development Bank - the Nordic Investment Bank; - the Caribbean Development Bank; - the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; - the European Investment Bank; - the European Investment Fund; - the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency; - the International Facility for Vaccination; - the Islamic Bank for Development; c) a risk weight of 20% shall be assigned to the portion of unpaid capital subscribed to the European Investment Fund. Article 15 Exposures to the following international organisations shall be assigned a 0% risk weight: - the European Community; - the International Monetary Fund; - the Bank for International Settlements. Article 16 The following treatment shall apply to institutions: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a) exposures to institutions shall be risk-weighted according to the credit quality step of the State in which the institution is incorporated, subject to the following conditions: Credit quality step of the State 1 2 3 4 5 6 Risk-weight category 20% 50% 100% 100% 100% 150% b) exposures to institutions incorporated in a State that does not have an external credit assessment shall be riskweighted at 100%; c) exposures to institutions with an original effective maturity of three months or less shall be risk-weighted at 20%; d) a risk weight that is one category less favourable that the risk weight applied to central governments shall be assigned to exposures to institutions that have a remaining maturity of three months or less and that are denominated and funded in the borrower’s currency. This risk weight may not be less than 20%; e) investments in the components of the own funds of other institutions shall be risk-weighted at 150%, unless they have been deducted from own funds as provided in Regulation 90-02; f) exposures of an supervised institution to its parent undertaking, its subsidiaries, one of more subsidiaries of its parent undertaking, or another entity affiliated with the group for networks of credit institutions endowed with a central body, including their subsidiaries, shall be riskweighted at 0% providing the following conditions are satisfied: (i) the counterparty is a supervised institution, a financial institution, an asset management company, or an ‘other undertaking’ as defined in Article 1(f)(v) of Regulation 2000-03; (ii) the counterparty is within the perimeter of consolidation of the group to which the supervised institution belongs; (iii) the counterparty is subject to the same risk evaluation, measurement, and control procedures as the supervised institution; (iv) the counterparty is established in the same Member State as the supervised institution; (v) there is no obstacle to the transfer of own funds or of the repayment of liabilities from the counterparty to the supervised institution. The provisions of this article do not apply to a supervised institution’s exposures in the form of investments in the components of the own funds of other institutions in the same group. g) Exposures to institutions in the form of minimum reserves required by the European Central Bank or by national central banks shall be risk-weighted like exposures to the central government or the central bank of the State where the institution is incorporated, provided that: 125 - the reserves are held in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 1745/2003 of 12 September 2003 of the European Central Bank relating to minimum reserves, or equivalent national rules; - in the event of the bankruptcy or insolvency of the institution where the reserves are held, the reserves are promptly and fully repaid and are not made available to meet other liabilities of the institution; h) exposures to financial institutions authorised and supervised by the competent authorities responsible for the authorisation and supervision of credit institutions, and subject to prudential requirements equivalent to those applied to credit institutions, shall be risk weighted as exposures to institutions. Article 17 The following treatment shall applies to corporate exposures: a) when supervised institutions use external credit assessments, subject to the conditions in Chapter 4, the following risk weights shall apply: Credit quality step 1 2 3 4 5 6 Risk-weight category 20% 50% 100% 100% 100% 150% knowledge of the supervised institutions, exceed EUR 1 million. This amount includes past-due exposures but does not include real estate loans secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral. Supervised institutions shall take reasonable steps to obtain this knowledge. The discounted value of minimum payments for finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature with retail customers shall be eligible for treatment as retail exposures. Transferable securities shall not qualify for this treatment. b) retail exposures shall be risk-weighted at 75%. Article 19 The following treatment shall apply to real estate loans granted for the acquisition or improvement of residential property and secured by a first mortgage or equivalent collateral: a) exposures or portions of exposures that are fully and completely secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral on residential property that is or will be occupied or let by the owner shall be risk-weighted at 35%, without prejudice to the provisions of Title IV of this Order. For the purposes of this paragraph, when the owner of the residential property is a société civile immobilière that consists exclusively of natural persons who are not acting in a professional capacity, the shareholders of the société civile immobilière shall be considered to be the owners; b) corporate exposures for which external credit assessments are not available shall be risk-weighted by supervised institutions at 100%, or at 150% when exposures to the State in which the corporate is incorporated are risk-weighted at 150%; b) the discounted value of minimum payments for finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning residential property shall be risk-weighted at 35%; any fraction of the residual value at risk taken into account in exposures shall be risk-weighted at 100% c) corporate exposures for which there is a short-term credit assessment shall be risk-weighted as follows, subject to the conditions in Article 37-4: c) the application of the provisions in the preceding two paragraphs shall be subject to the following conditions: Credit quality step 1 2 3 4 5 6 Risk weight category 20% 50% 100% 150% 150% 150% Article 18 The following treatment shall apply to retail exposures: a) exposures that satisfy the following conditions are eligible for treatment in the retail exposure class: i) the exposure is to one or more natural persons, or to a small or medium-sized entity; ii) the exposure must be one of a significant number of exposures managed in a similar fashion; iii) the total amount owed by the obligor, or by the same beneficiary within the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05, to the supervised institution or to one of the entities of the group to which it belongs, must not, to the 126 i) the value of the property does not depend materially on the credit quality of the obligor; ii) the risk on the borrower does not depend materially on the performance of the underlying property, but rather on the capacity of the borrower to repay the debt from other revenue sources. For purposes of this paragraph, the shareholders of sociétés civiles immobilières can be considered as the borrower; iii) the minimum requirements relating to the eligibility of real estate assets as collateral, set out in Section 2, Chapter II of Title IV, and the valuation rules set out in Section 5, Chapter II of Title IV, are satisfied. The 35% risk weight shall apply only to exposures or portions of exposures whose value, assessed on a regular basis, is less than 80% of the value of the asset pledged as collateral; d) the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may waive subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (c) if the real estate market is sufficiently developed and its loss rates are sufficiently low to justify such treatment. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 When the competent authorities of another Member State apply the above provision, supervised institutions may assign a risk weight of 35% to transactions with counterparties incorporated in that State, provided that the conditions in paragraph (c) are satisfied. The treatment described in this Article shall also apply to exposures that represent commitments associated with mortgage equity withdrawal (hypothèque rechargeable) or reverse mortgage (prêt viager hypothécaire) products. In this case, the institution shall provide in advance on the measures put in place to comply with the provisions of Title IV of this Order. Article 20 Without prejudice to the provisions of Title IV, real estate loans that are granted for the acquisition or improvement of real estate for business use and that are secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral shall be risk-weighted according to the risk-weight category of the counterparty. Article 21 The following treatment shall apply to exposures arising from finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate: a) supervised institutions shall assign a 50% risk weight to the discounted value of minimum payments for the contract when the property is located in French territory. Any fraction of the residual value at risk taken into account in exposures is risk-weighted at 100%. Without prejudice to the provisions of Title X, the 50% risk weight shall apply to the part of the exposure that does not exceed the smaller of the following two amounts: i) 50% of the market value of the underlying real estate asset; or ii) 60% of the mortgage lending value of the underlying real estate asset, whichever is lower. A risk weight of 100% shall be assigned to the portion of the exposure that exceeds these limits. total outstanding amount of all finance lease agreements and lease agreements of financial nature; ii) the total losses generated each year by all finance lease agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature does not exceed 0.5% of the total outstanding amount of all finance lease agreements and lease agreements of financial nature. If either of these two conditions ceases to be satisfied for a given year, the waiver shall be withdrawn until such time as both conditions are again satisfied. When the competent authorities of another Member State apply the preceding waiver, supervised institutions may apply the waiver to their transactions with counterparties incorporated in that State. Article 22 The following treatment shall apply to exposures that are past due by more than 90 days, or by more than the number of days defined in Title X: a) the risk weight of the unsecured part of a past-due exposure shall be: i) 150% if value adjustments represent less than 20% of the unsecured part of the exposure gross of value adjustments; ii) 100% if value adjustments do not represent less than 20% of the unsecured part of the exposure gross of value adjustments, Unless special circumstances indicate that the delinquency is due to factors that are unrelated to the situation of the obligor. For the purpose of this Article, the secured portion of an exposure shall be that portion which is covered by collateral and guarantees listed in Title IV; b) real estate loans that are granted for the acquisition or improvement of residential property, and that are secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral, shall be riskweighted at 100% if they are 180 days past due, subject to the provisions of Title X. b) When the competent authorities in another Member State apply the preceding treatment, supervised institutions shall apply it to their transactions with counterparties incorporated in that State; If value adjustments represent at least 20% of exposures gross of value adjustments, the risk weight shall be reduced to 50%; c) this treatment shall be subject to the conditions in subparagraphs (i), (ii), and (iii) of paragraph (c) of Article 19. c) exposures arising from finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate shall be risk-weighted at 100% if they are more than 180 days past due, subject to the provisions of Title X. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may waive the provisions of subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (c) of Article 19 if the market for finance leases and leases of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate is sufficiently developed, provided that loss rates satisfy the following limits: i) the losses generated each year by those finance lease agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature whose financial outstanding is less than or equal to 50% of the market value or 60% of the mortgage lending value of the underlying real estate asset does not exceed 0.3% of the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 23 The treatment of exposures associated with particularly high risk shall be as follows: a) equity exposures and investments in the components of the own funds of other institutions shall be risk-weighted at 150%; b) supervised institutions shall assign the following risk weights to high-risk exposures that are not more than 90 days past due: 127 - 100% if value adjustments are no less than 20% of the unsecured part of the exposure gross of value adjustments; - 50% if value adjustments are no less than 50% of the unsecured part of the exposure gross of value adjustments. Article 24 The risk weights assigned to covered bonds and other assets benefiting from the preference mentioned in subparagraph 2 of paragraph I of Article L. 515-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code, along with similar bonds issued by an institution whose head office is in a Member State, shall be based on the risk weights assigned to senior unsecured exposures to the institution that issues them, as follows: - if a risk weight of 20% is assigned to exposures to the institution, a risk weight of 10% shall be assigned to these assets; - if a risk weight of 50% is assigned to exposures to the institution, a risk weight of 20% shall be assigned to these assets; - if a risk weight of 100% is assigned to exposures to the institution, a risk weight of 50% shall be assigned to these assets; - if a risk weight of 150% is assigned to exposures to the institution, a risk weight of 100% shall be assigned to these assets; the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall also apply to: - covered bonds and other assets that benefit from the preference mentioned in subparagraph 2 of paragraph I of Article L. 515-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code and that are issued before 31 December 2007; - similar bonds issued before that date by an institution whose head office is in a Member State. Article 25 Exposures to securitisation positions shall be risk-weighted according to the provisions of Title V. Article 26 The following treatment shall apply to exposures in the form of investments in units in Collective Investment Undertakings (CIU): a) supervised institutions that use external credit assessments to risk-weight their units in CIUs shall apply the following risk weights: Credit quality step Risk-weight category 1 2 3 4 5 6 20% 50% 100% 100% 150% 150% b) where the supervised institution is aware of the underlying exposures of the CIU, it may risk-weight them using a ‘look-through’ approach. An average risk weight for the CIU shall be calculated as provided in this Title; 128 c) where the supervised institution is not aware of the underlying exposures of the CIU, it may calculate an average risk weight for the CIU as provided in this Title, as follows: it will be assumed that the CIU invests, to the maximum extent allowed under its mandate, in the exposure classes attracting the highest capital requirement, and then continues making investments in descending order until the maximum total investment limit is reached; d) for the purposes of the two preceding paragraphs, supervised institutions may rely on a third party to calculate and report the risk weight assigned to units in the CIU. Supervised institutions should verify the correctness of the calculation and report; e) supervised institutions may assign the risk weights specified in paragraphs (b) to (d) if the following eligibility criteria are met: i) the CIU is managed by a company that is supervised by an authority in a Member State, or by an authority in a third country whose supervision is judged by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to be equivalent to the provisions in force in France; ii) the CIU’s prospectus, or an equivalent document such as a statement of management authority, includes: - the categories of assets in which the CIU is authorised to invest; - if investment limits apply, the relative limits applied to investments and the methodologies used to calculate them; iii) the business of the CIU is communicated in an annual report that permits an assessment to be made of its balance sheet, income, and operations; f) if a competent authority of a Member States recognises a CIU in a third country as eligible, as set out in paragraph (e) above, that CIU may be treated in accordance with paragraphs (b) to (d); g) supervised institutions shall assign a risk weight of 150% to exposures in CIUs considered high-risk that invest exclusively in the instruments mentioned in paragraph (a) of Article 23, and also to exposures in leveraged funds (transferable securities CIUs with simplified investment rules allowing high leverage), funds-of-alternative funds (transferable securities CIUs with simplified investment rules for investments in alternative funds), contractual mutual funds, futures funds (fonds communs de placement d’intervention sur les marchés à terme), and venture capital funds (fonds communs de placement à risque). Article 27 The following treatment shall apply to items other than those in the exposure categories described in the preceding articles: a) intangible assets shall be risk-weighted at 100%; b) accrued interest and adjustment accounts for which an institution is unable to determine the counterparty shall be risk-weighted at 100%; c) cash items in the course of collection shall be riskweighted at 20%. Cash in hand and equivalent cash items shall be risk-weighted at 0%; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 d) gold reserves held physically or on an allocated basis to the extent backed by bullion liabilities shall receive a 0% risk weight; e) where a supervised institution sells credit protection for a basket of exposures in the form of a credit derivative triggered by the nth default, the risk weights specified in Title V shall apply if the instrument has an external credit assessment. If the instrument does not have an external credit assessment, the risk weights of the exposures in the basket shall be aggregated, excluding n-1 exposures, up to a maximum of 1250% and then multiplied by the nominal amount of the protection provided by the credit derivative in order to obtain the required amount. The n-1 exposures to be excluded from the aggregation shall be determined on the basis that they shall include those exposures each of which produces a lower riskweighted exposure amount than the risk-weighted exposure amount of any of the exposures included in the aggregation. CHAPTER III RECOGNITION OF EXTERNAL CREDIT ASSESSMENT INSTITUTIONS Article 28 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel recognises External Credit Assessment Institutions (ECAIs) based on criteria set out in this chapter. Any fraction of the residual value at risk taken into account in exposures shall be risk-weighted at 100%. Article 29-1 The ECAI shall demonstrate that its methodology for assigning credit assessments is rigorous, continuous, and subject to a procedure for validation based on historical data and applicable to all credit assessments. Article 29-2 Backing-testing should have been conducted for at least one year, for each segment of the market. The ECAI shall make available to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel the extent of contacts it has with members of the executive body of the entities that it assesses. Article 30-1 The ECAI shall demonstrate that its methodology is free from political influence or economic pressures that could influence its credit assessments. Article 30-2 The ECAI shall demonstrate the independence of its methodology, particularly with respect to the following factors: a) ownership and organisation structure; b) financial resources; c) staffing and expertise; d) corporate governance. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 31-1 The ECAI shall demonstrate that its credit assessments are subject to ongoing review, and reflect changes in financial conditions. It shall conduct such a review after any significant event, and at least annually. Article 31-2 In the course of recognition process, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall verify that ECAIs conduct ongoing reviews of their credit assessments for each market sector. Article 31-3 ECAIs shall inform the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of any material change in their methods for assessing credit risk. Article 32 ECAIs shall demonstrate that the principles of the methodology used to formulate their credit assessments are publicly available, so as to allow supervised institutions to assess their validity. Article 33-1 ECAIs shall demonstrate that their credit assessments are recognised as reliable and credible by potential users. Article 33-2 Credibility shall be assessed in terms of the following factors: a) the ECAI’s market share; b) the revenues generated by the ECAI, and more generally, its financial resources; c) the use of its assessments in setting prices; d) the use of its assessments by at least two credit institutions for bond issuance or in the management of credit risk. Article 34 ECAIs shall demonstrate that they provide access to their assessments on equivalent terms to resident institutions, and to all credit institutions that are authorised to conduct business in the European Economic Area and that have a legitimate interest in these assessments. Article 35 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall decide which credit quality steps the credit assessments of an ECAI shall be associated with, taking the following factors into account: - quantitative factors, such as the long-term default rates associated with each assessment category. Recently established ECAIs, and those that do not have a long record of default data, shall communicate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel their estimates of the long-term default rate associated with each assessment category; - qualitative factors, such as the population of issuers covered, the granularity of credit assessments, the meaning of each assessment category, and the definition of default adopted. 129 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall compare the default rates for each of an ECAI’s assessment categories with reference default rates. These reference default rates shall be calculated based on the default data of other ECAIs, for a population of issuers of equivalent credit risk. When the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel believes that the default rates experienced for the credit assessment category of an ECAI is materially and systematically higher than the reference rates, it shall assign that category to a higher credit quality step. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may decide to restore the credit assessment category to its initial credit quality step if the ECAI demonstrates that the default rate calculated is no longer materially and systematically higher than the reference rates. CHAPTER IV THE USE OF EXTERNAL CREDIT ASSESSMENTS Article 36-1 Each subject establishment shall designate one or more ECAIs recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to be used for the determination of risk weights for its exposures. Supervised institutions may use unsolicited credit assessments issued by ECAIs, subject to the conditions specified when they are recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. A supervised institution that designates an ECAI recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel must use that ECAI’s credit assessments consistently for all exposures in the same exposure class. The use of external credit assessments must be consistent and continuous over time. A supervised institution may use only the external credit assessments of an ECAI that covers both principal and interest. If only one external credit assessment is available for a given exposure, supervised institutions shall use it to determine the risk weight for that item. Article 362 If two external credit assessments are available and they give rise to different risk weights, the higher risk weight shall be assigned. Article 37-2 Where there is no credit assessment that applies directly to an exposure, but there is a general credit assessment for the issuer, or a credit assessment for a specific issuing program to which the item constituting the exposure does not belong, that credit assessment shall be used if the following conditions are satisfied: i) it produces a higher risk weight; ii) it produces a lower risk weight, but the exposure ranks: - at least equal in all respects to specific issuing program; - at least equal to senior unsecured exposures to that issuer. The preceding provisions do not preclude the application of the provisions of Article 24 relating to covered bonds. Article 37-3 External credit assessments applied to a firm that is part of a consolidated group within the meaning of Article L. 233-16 of the Commercial Code shall not be used for other firms within the group. Article 37-4 Short-term credit assessments shall be used only to riskweight short-term exposures to corporates. Short-term credit assessments shall be used only for the short-term exposure to which they refer. If a short-term exposure that has an external credit assessment is risk-weighted at 150%, all unrated unsecured exposures to the same obligor shall also be risk-weighted at 150%, whether they are short-term or long-term. If a short-term exposure that has an external credit assessment is risk-weighted at 50%, all unrated short-term exposures shall be risk-weighted no lower than 100%. Article 37-5 An external credit assessment that refers to an exposure denominated in one currency may not be used to derive the risk weight for an exposure denominated in another currency, even if both exposures are to the same obligor. When an exposure results from the participation of a credit institution in a loan granted by a Multilateral Development Bank whose preferred creditor status is recognised in the market, the supervised institution may use an external credit assessment for that exposure even if the exposure is denominated in the obligor’s domestic currency. Article 37-1 If more than two external credit assessments are available, the supervised institution shall refer to the two assessments that give rise to the lowest risk weights and apply the higher of the two risk weights. Where there is an external credit assessment for a specific issuing program, supervised institutions shall that credit assessment to risk-weight that exposure. 130 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 TITLE III INTERNAL RATINGS BASED APPROACH FOR CREDIT RISK CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Section 1 Approval Procedure Article 38-1 To calculate their risk-weighted exposure amounts, supervised institutions shall use: a) own estimates of the probability of default (PD) in the Foundation IRB Approach; b) own estimates of PD, loss given default (LGD), and credit conversion factors (CCF) in the Advanced IRB Approach. The use of the Foundation and Advanced IRB Approaches is subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, as set forth below. Article 38-2 In order to receive approval to use the IRB Approaches, supervised institutions must have systems for managing and rating credit risk exposures that are based on sound principles and implemented with integrity, as reflected in the satisfaction of the following qualitative standards: a) the supervised institution’s rating systems shall provide for a meaningful assessment of obligor and transaction characteristics, a meaningful differentiation of risk, and accurate and consistent quantification of risk; b) internal ratings and estimates of default probabilities and losses used in the calculation of capital requirements, along with associated systems and processes, shall play an essential role in the institution’s risk management and decision-making process, as well as in its credit approval process, internal capital allocation, and corporate governance; c) supervised institutions shall have a credit risk control unit responsible for its rating systems. This unit shall carry out its control functions on an ongoing and independent basis; d) supervised institutions shall collect and store all data that can provide effective support to its credit risk measurement and management process; e) supervised institutions shall document their rating systems and the rationale for their choice of in the design of those systems; f) supervised institutions shall validate their internal rating systems. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 38-3 When a subject EU parent institution and its subsidiaries apply the IRB Approach on a unified basis, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may allow the minimum requirements of Chapter V to be met at the level of the group. Article 38-4 Without prejudice to the provisions of Title X, a supervised institution requesting approval to use the Foundation IRB Approach shall demonstrate that it has been using internal rating systems that are broadly in line with the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V to measure and manage risks in the IRB exposure classes in question for at least three years prior to approval. Without prejudice to the provisions of Title X, a supervised institution requesting approval to use the Advanced IRB Approach shall demonstrate that it has been estimating and using own estimates of LGDs and CCFs in a manner broadly consistent with the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V for at least three years prior to approval. Article 38-5 Supervised institutions that have received approval to use the Foundation or Advanced IRB Approach may not revert to the Standardised Approach for credit risk, except for demonstrated good cause and with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Supervised institutions that have received approval to use the Advanced IRB Approach may not revert to the Foundation IRB Approach, except for demonstrated good cause and with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. If the requirements of this Title cease to be satisfied, the supervised institution shall present to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel a plan for a timely return to compliance, unless it can demonstrate that the effects of its non-compliance are not material. Article 39-1 Without prejudice to the provisions of Section 3, supervised institutions shall implement the IRB Approaches for all exposures, as set forth below. Article 39-2 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may grant approval to supervised institutions to implement IRB Approaches sequentially, over a reasonable period of time, for each of the exposure classes listed in Section 2, within the same business unit, or for different business units within the same group; as well as for the use of own estimates of LGDs or CCFs for the calculation of risk weights for exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks. In the case of retail exposures, sequential implementation may be by sub-portfolio. Article 39-3 In the context of sequential implementation of IRB Approaches, once a supervised institution uses IRB Approaches for any given exposure class, it must apply the provisions of Title III to the equity exposure class. 131 Article 39-4 The timeframe and conditions for sequential implementation of IRB Approaches shall be approved by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 40-5 Any credit obligation that does not fall within the exposure classes listed above shall be assigned to the corporate exposure class. Conditions shall be designed to ensure that sequential implementation is not used selectively for the purpose of reducing minimum capital requirements. Article 40-6 The methodology used by the supervised institution for assigning exposures to the different exposure classes shall be appropriate and consistent over time. Article 39-5 During the period of sequential implementation, supervised institutions shall ensure that credit risk mitigation techniques used in the context of intra-group transactions are not motivated by considerations of regulatory arbitrage. SECTION 2 EXPOSURE GARANTIES Article 40-1 Each exposure shall be assigned to one of the following exposure classes, as set forth below: a) central governments and central banks; b) institutions; c) corporates; d) retail; e) equity; f) securitisation positions; g) other non credit-obligation assets . Article 40-2 The following exposures shall be treated as exposures to central governments and central banks: a) exposures to regional governments and local authorities or to public-sector entities that are treated as exposures to central governments as provided in Title II; b) exposures to multilateral development banks and international organisations that attract a risk weight of 0% as provided in Title II. Article 40-3 The following exposures shall be treated as exposures to institutions: a) exposures to regional governments and local authorities or to public-sector entities that are not treated as exposures to central governments as provided in Title II; b) exposures to public-sector entities that are treated as exposures to institutions as provided in Title II; c) exposures to multilateral development banks that do not attract a risk weight of 0% as provided in Title II. Article 40-4 When an ECAI is recorded as credit rating agency in accordance with regulation (EC) No. 1060/2009 of 16 September 2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council on credit rating agencies, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall consider that the objectivity, independence, constancy and transparency requirements are met with regard to its assessment method.. 132 Article 41 Exposures that satisfy all of the following conditions are eligible for inclusion in the retail exposure class: a) the exposure is to one or more natural persons, or to a small or medium-sized entity. In the latter case, the total amount owed by the obligor, or by the same beneficiary within the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05, to the supervised institution or to one of the entities of the group to it belongs, does not, to the knowledge of the supervised institutions, exceed EUR 1 million. This amount includes past-due exposures but does not include real estate loans secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral. Supervised institutions shall take reasonable steps to obtain this knowledge. b) the supervised institution’s risk management systems treat exposures consistently over time and uniformly from one exposure to the next; c) exposures are not managed individually like exposures falling within the corporate exposure class; d) each exposure represents one of a significant number of similarly managed exposures. That fraction of the exposure value of lease financing agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature with retail customers that corresponds to the discounted value of minimum payments under the terms of the agreements is eligible for treatment as a retail exposure. The retail exposure class includes the following subportfolios: - revolving exposures to retail customers; - real estate loans to retail customers secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral; - other exposures to retail customers. Article 42 Exposures that convey a subordinated, residual claim on the assets or income of the issuer, or that have a similar economic substance, are treated as equity exposures. Article 43 Within the corporate exposure class, supervised institutions shall separately identify Specialised Lending exposures. These have the following characteristics: a) the exposure is to an entity created specifically to finance or operate physical assets; b) the contractual arrangements give the institution a significant degree of control over the assets and the income they generate; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 c) the primary source of repayment of the obligation is the income generated by the assets being financed, rather than the independent capacity of a broader commercial enterprise. Specialised Lending exposures include project finance, object finance and commodities finance, income-producing real estate, and high-volatility commercial real estate. Section 2 Exposure Guaranties Article 44-1 Subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, supervised institutions may use the Standardised Approach for credit risk for the following exposures: a) exposures to central governments and central banks, and institutions, when the number of significant counterparties is limited and it would be unduly burdensome for the supervised institution to implement a rating system for these counterparties; b) exposures in business units or exposure classes that are not material in terms of their size and perceived risk profile; c) exposures to the central government of the Member States and to their regional governments, local authorities, and administrative bodies, provided that: i) there is no difference in risk between the exposures to the central government and exposures to these other bodies, as a result of specific public arrangements; ii) exposures to the central government are risk-weighted at 0%, as provided in Title II; d) equity exposures to the shares of entities whose credit obligations are risk-weighted at 0%, as provided in Title II; e) equity exposures held in the context of legislated programmes that aim at promoting specified sectors of the economy, that provide significant subsidies to the supervised institution for the investment, and that involve some form of government oversight and restrictions on the equity investments. The amount of exposures subject to this treatment is limited to 10% of the own funds of the supervised institution; f) exposures to institutions in the form of minimum reserves required by the European Central Bank or by national central banks, subject to the conditions paragraph (g) of Article 16; g) exposures covered by guarantees provided in the context of mutual guarantee schemes, or provided by or counterguaranteed by entities such as those listed in Article 192-2. Article 44-2 Supervised institutions may assign a 0% risk weight to exposures to their parent undertaking, their subsidiaries, one of more subsidiaries of their parent undertaking, or another entity affiliated with the group for networks of credit institutions endowed with a central body, including Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 their subsidiaries, subject to the conditions in paragraph (f) of Article 16. Article 44-3 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may grant approval to supervised institutions to apply the Standardised Approach to equity exposures for which that treatment has been approved in other Member States. Article 45 For the purposes of paragraph (b) of Article 44-1, the equity exposure class of a supervised institution shall be considered material if the aggregate value of equity exposures, excluding equity exposures held under the legislative programmes referred to in paragraph (e) of Article 44-1, exceeds 10% of the supervised institution’s own funds on average over the preceding year. If the number of these equity exposures is less than 10 individual holdings, that threshold shall be 5% of the supervised institution’s own funds. CHAPTER II RISK-WEIGHTED EXPOSURES Section 1 Risk-weights for exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks Article 46 Supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach shall use own estimates of PD, and the values for LGDs and CCFs set out in Articles 84 and 76. Supervised institutions using the Advanced IRB Approach shall use own estimates of PDs, LGDs, and CCFs as provided in Chapter V. Article 47 Risk weighted exposure amounts shall be calculated according to the following formulas: RW = (LGD * N[(1-R)-0,5 * G(PD) + (R/(1-R))0,5 * G(0,999)] - PD * LGD) * (1-1,5*b)-1 * (1+(M-2,5) *b) * 12,5 * 1,06 R = 0,12x(1-EXP(-50*PD)) / (1-EXP(-50)) + 0,24* [1-(1-EXP(-50*PD)) / (1-EXP(-50))] b = (0,11852 – 0,05478 * In(PD))2 where: - RW is the risk weight; - R is the correlation; - b is the maturity adjustment; - PD is the probability of default; - LGD is the loss given default; - M is the maturity; - N(x) is the cumulative distribution function for a standard normal random variable; - G(z) is the inverse cumulative distribution function for a standard normal random variable. The risk-weighted exposure amount is equal to the risk weight (RW) multiplied by the exposure value. 133 When PD = 0, RW shall be equal to 0. When PD = 100%, i.e., in the event of default, the following treatment shall be applied: a) RW = 0 for supervised institutions that use the Foundation IRB Approach; b) RW = Max{0, 12,5 * (LGD-ELBE)} for supervised institutions that use the Advanced IRB Approach. ELBE is the supervised institution’s best estimate of expected loss for the defaulted exposure, as defined in Article 129. Article 48 The risk weighted exposure amount for exposures that meet the requirements set out in Articles 188 and 192-4 may be adjusted according to the following formula for treatment of default: Risk-weighted exposure amount = RW * exposure value * (0.15 + 160*PDpp)] where: - PDpp = PD of the protection provider; - RW shall be calculated using the risk-weight formula in the preceding paragraph, using the PD of the obligor, the LGD associated with a comparable direct exposure to the protection provider, and a maturity adjustment (b) calculated using the lower of the PD of the protection provider and the PD of the obligor. Article 49 For exposures to firms where the total annual sales for the consolidated group of which the firm is a part is less than EUR 50 million, supervised institutions may use the following correlation formula to calculate risk weights for corporate exposures: R = 0,12*(1-EXP(-50*PD)) / (1-EXP(-50)) + 0,24 * [1-(1EXP(-50*PD)) / (1-EXP(-50))] – 0,04 * (1-(S-5) / 45) where S is the total consolidated annual sales in millions of euros. Reported sales of less than EUR 5 million shall be treated as if they were equivalent to EUR 5 million. For purchased receivables, the total consolidated annual sales shall be the weighted average by individual exposures of the pool. When total consolidated annual sales is not a meaningful indicator of firm size, and total assets is a more meaningful indicator, supervised institutions shall substitute the total assets of the group for total consolidated annual sales. Article 50-1 When supervised institutions cannot demonstrate that their PD estimates for Specialised Lending exposures meet the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V, they shall apply the following risk weights: Remaining maturity Less than 2.5 years Equal to or greater than 2.5 years 134 Strong Good Weak Default 70% Satisfacto ry 115% 50% 250% 0% 70% 90% 115% 250% 0% Supervised institutions shall assign the above risk weights to Specialised Lending exposures in accordance with the Appendix III based on the following factors: financial strength, political and legal environment, transaction and/or asset characteristics, the strength of the sponsor and developer including any public private partnership income stream, and the security package. Article 50-2 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may grant approval to a supervised institution to apply a risk weight of 50% to all exposures in the ‘strong’ category and a risk weight of 70% to all exposures in the ‘good’ category, whatever their remaining maturity, provided that the institution’s methods for assigning Specialised Lending exposures to supervisory categories are more strict than those set out in Appendix III. Article 50-3 When justified by market conditions, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require the application of higher risk weights for high-volatility commercial real estate. Article 51 For purchased corporate receivables, supervised institutions shall comply with the minimum requirements set out in Articles 141 to 144. For purchased corporate receivables that meet the above requirements and also satisfy the conditions set out in Article 54-5, and where it would be unduly burdensome for a supervised institution to apply to those receivables the risk quantification standards for corporate exposures set out in Chapter V, it shall apply the risk quantification standards for retail exposures set out in Chapter V. For purchased corporate receivables, refundable purchase discounts, collateral, or partial guarantees that provide firstloss protection to the institution for default losses or dilution losses may be treated as first-loss positions as provided in Title V applicable to institutions using the approach based on internal ratings. Article 52 Where a supervised institution sells credit protection for a basket of exposures in the form of a credit derivative triggered by the nth default, the risk weights specified in Title V shall apply if the instrument has an external credit assessment. If the instrument does not have an external credit assessment, the risk weights of the exposures in the basket are aggregated, excluding n-1 exposures, for which the sum of the expected loss multiplied by 12.5 and the riskweighted exposure does not exceed the nominal amount of protection provided by the credit derivative, multiplied by 12.5. The n-1 exposures to be excluded from the aggregation are determined on the basis that they shall include those exposures each of which produces a lower risk-weighted exposure amount than the risk-weighted exposure amount of any of the exposures included in the aggregation. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Section 2 Risk-weights for retail exposures Article 53 Supervised institutions shall use own estimates of PDs and own estimates of LGDs and CCFs as provided in Chapter V. Article 54-1 Risk weighted exposure amounts for retail exposures shall be calculated according to the following formulas: R = 0,03*(1-EXP(-35*PD)) /(1-EXP(-35)) + 0,16*[1-(1-EXP(-35*PD)) / (1-EXP(-35))] RW = (LGD*N[(1-R)-0,5*G(PD)+(R/(1-R))0,5 * G(0,999)] - PD*LGD)*12,5*1,06 where: - N(x) is the cumulative distribution function for a standard normal random variable; - G(z) is the inverse cumulative distribution function for a standard normal random variable. The risk-weighted exposure amount is equal to the risk weight (RW) multiplied by the exposure value. When PD = 100%, i.e., in the event of default, RW = Max {0, 12,5 * (LGD - ELBE)}. ELBE is the supervised institution’s best estimate of expected loss for the defaulted exposure, as defined in Article 129. Article 54-2 The risk-weighted exposure amounts for exposures to small and medium-sized entities classified in the retail exposure class that satisfy the requirements listed in Articles 188 and 192-4 may be adjusted using the formula in Article 48. Article 54-3 For the sub-portfolio of retail estate loans secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral, a correlation of 0.15 shall be substituted for the figure produced by the correlation formula in Article 54-1. A correlation of 0.15 shall also be used for exposures that represent commitments associated with home equity loan (hypothèque rechargeable) or reverse mortgage (prêt viager hypothécaire) products, provided that the risk parameters for these products are generally similar to those for real estate loans. Article 54-4 A correlation of 0.04 shall be applied to qualifying revolving retail exposures as defined below that meet the following conditions: a) the exposures are to natural persons; b) the exposures are revolving, are not covered by any credit protection, and are unconditionally cancellable by the supervised institution to the extent they are not drawn immediately. In this context, revolving exposures are defined as credits where’ customers outstanding balances Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 are permitted to fluctuate based on their decisions to borrow and repay, up to a limit established by the supervised institution. Undrawn commitments may be considered as unconditionally cancellable if the contractual terms permit the supervised institution to cancel them to the full extent allowable under consumer protection and related legislation. c) the maximum exposure in the form of credit extended to a given natural person in the sub-portfolio is EUR 100,000 or less; d) the supervised institution can demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the use of the correlation formula in this Article is limited to portfolios that have exhibited low volatility of loss rates, relative to their average level of loss rates, especially within low PD bands. Supervised institutions shall monitor the volatility of loss rates in the retail revolving exposure sub-portfolio to ensure that this treatment is consistent with the underlying risk characteristics of the sub-portfolio. Article 54-5 To be eligible for the retail treatment, purchased receivables shall satisfy the minimum requirements set out in Articles 141 to 144 and the following conditions: a) the supervised institution has purchased the receivables from unrelated third-party sellers, and its exposures do not include any exposures that are directly or indirectly originated by the supervised institution itself. b) the purchased receivables are generated on an arm’slength basis between the seller and the obligor. As such, inter-company accounts receivables and receivables subject to contra-accounts between firms that buy and sell to each other are ineligible. c) the purchasing supervised institution has a claim on all proceeds from the purchased receivables or a pro-rata interest in the proceeds. d) the portfolio of purchased receivables is sufficiently diversified. Article 55 For purchased receivables, refundable purchase discounts, collateral, or partial guarantees that provide first-loss protection to the institution for default losses or dilution losses may be treated as first-loss positions as provided in Title V applicable to institutions using the approach based on internal ratings. Article 56 For pools comprising different sub-portfolios of purchased receivables, the retail risk weight function producing the highest capital requirements for this type of exposure shall apply where the purchasing supervised institution cannot distinguish exposures secured by a mortgage or equivalent collateral and qualifying revolving retail exposures from other retail exposures. 135 Section 3 Risk weights for equity exposures Article 57-1 Risk-weighted exposure amounts for equity exposures are calculated using the simple risk weight approach set out in Articles 58-1 to 58-3 or the internal models approach described in Articles 59-1 to 59-3. Article 57-2 With the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, supervised institutions may apply one of the two above methods to different portfolios, provided that they already use them for the purposes of internal management. They shall demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the choice of method is applied consistently and is not motivated by considerations of regulatory arbitrage. Article 58-1 In the simple risk weight approach, risk-weighted exposure amounts are equal to the exposure value multiplied by the following risk weights: - 190% for private equity exposures in sufficiently diversified portfolios; - 290% for exchange traded equity exposures; - 370% for all other equity exposures. Article 58-2 Short cash positions and derivative instruments held in the non-trading book are permitted to offset long positions in the same individual stocks, line by line, provided that these instruments have been explicitly designated as hedges of specific equity exposures and that they have a residual maturity of at least one year. Other short positions are to be treated as if they are long positions, with the relevant risk weight applied to the absolute value of each position. In the context of maturity mismatched positions, the method that applies is that for corporate exposures as set out in Article 90. Article 58-3 Supervised institutions using the simple risk weight approach may take unfunded credit protection into account, subject to the conditions in Title IV. For the purposes of Article 195-4, they shall apply, by substitution, the PD of the protection provider for the part of the exposure covered by the protection, a maturity of 5 years, and an LGD of 65% for private equity exposures in sufficiently diversified portfolios and 90% for all other equity exposures. Article 59-1 In the internal models approach for equities: a) supervised institutions shall compare the risk-weighted exposure amounts at the individual exposure level, calculated line by line, using the internal models approach referred to in paragraph (c) (ii), with limits corresponding to the risk-weighted exposure amounts that would result from the application of the simple risk weight approach using the following risk weights: 136 - 190% for private equity exposures in sufficiently diversified portfolios; - 200% for exchange traded equity exposures; - 300% for all other equity exposures. b) supervised institutions shall distinguish, within their portfolio, between: i) equities for which the risk-weighted exposure amounts calculated using the internal models approach referred to in paragraph (c)(ii) are less than the above limits; ii) other equities for which the risk-weighted exposure amounts calculated using the internal models approach are greater than the above limits; c) the risk-weighted exposure amounts shall be equal to the sum of: i) the risk-weighted exposure amounts calculated using the simple risk weight approach and the risk weights in paragraph a) for the equities referred to in paragraph (b)(i); and ii) the risk-weighted exposure amounts for the equities referred to in paragraph (b)(ii), calculated as the potential loss on the supervised institution’s equity exposures using internal value-at-risk models subject to the 99th percentile, one-tailed confidence interval of the difference between quarterly returns and an appropriate risk-free rate computed over a long-term sample period, multiplied by 12.5. Article 59-2 For the purpose of paragraph (c) (ii) of the preceding Article, the recognition of underlying gains by supervised institutions applying the internal models approach to equity exposures is subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, which shall determine whether such recognition is consistent with supervisory objectives, and which shall make its approval subject to the satisfaction of conditions to that effect. Article 59-3 Supervised institutions using the internal models approach for equities may take into account unfunded credit protection obtained on an equity position. Section 4 Risk weights for other non credit-obligation assets Article 60 Risk-weighted exposure amounts shall be equal to 100% of exposure values. Section 5 Dilution risk for purchased receivables Article 61 For receivables purchased with full recourse to the seller for default risk and dilution risk, supervised institutions may treat the exposure as a collateralised exposure instead of applying the treatment set out in this section. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 62 Risk weights for dilution risk shall be calculated according to the formula in Article 47, using a PD, LGD, and exposure value determined in accordance with Chapter IV, and a maturity of one year. If supervised institutions can demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that dilution risk is not material, it need not be recognised. Section 6 Risk weights for exposures in the form of investments in units in a Collective Investment Undertaking. Article 63-1 Where exposures in the form of an investment in a unit in a Collective Investment Undertaking (CIU) meet the criteria set out in paragraphs (e) and (f) of Article 26, and supervised institutions are aware of all or a part of the underlying exposures of the CIU, they shall take those underlying exposures directly into account in calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts and expected loss amounts, using a ‘look-through’ approach. Article 63-2 Where supervised institutions do not meet the conditions for using the IRB Approaches of all or a part of the underlying exposures of the CIU, the risk weighted exposure amounts and expected loss amounts shall be calculated using the following method, without prejudice to the provisions of Article 63-1 concerning the exposures that meet the conditions of use of internal notations: a) for equity exposures, the simple risk weight approach applies. b) for all other underlying exposures, the Standardised Approach for credit risk applies, subject to the following modifications: i) the following exposures have a double risk weighting: - exposures having a specified risk weight, for non noticed exposures; exposures corresponding to the credit quality step immediately above the credit quality step that would normally be assigned to them. These risk weights shall not exceed 1 250 %. ii) For all other exposures, the risk weight shall be multiplied by 1, 1 with a minimum of 5%. Where, for purposes of point a, the supervised institution cannot set a distinction between the exposures in the form of private equity investments, quoted shares and other types of shares, it shall treat such exposures as « exposures on other shares”. Without prejudice to Article 394, Article 44-1 can apply where these exposures, linked to direct exposures of the institution in this category of exposures, are not . relevant in the meaning of Article 45 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 64 Where exposures in the form of a investments in units of a CIU do not meet the criteria set out in paragraphs (e) and (f) of Article 26, or supervised institutions are not aware of all of the underlying exposures of the CIU, they shall look through to the underlying exposures and calculate riskweighted exposure amounts and expected loss amounts using the simple risk weight approach set out in Articles 58-1 to 58-3. If, for those purposes, supervised institutions are unable to differentiate between private equity exposures in sufficiently diversified portfolios, exchange-traded equity exposures, and other equity exposures, they shall treat the exposures concerned as other equity exposures. For these purposes, non-equity exposures are assigned to one of the following exposure classes: private equity exposures in sufficiently diversified portfolios, exchange traded equity, or other equity. Unknown exposures are assigned to the other equity exposure class. Article 65 As an alternative to the method set out in Article 64, supervised institutions may calculate themselves, or may rely on a third party to calculate and report the average risk-weighted exposure amounts based on the underlying exposures of the CIUs, provided that the supervised institutions verify the correctness of the calculation and the report. The calculation shall be made using the approaches described at Article 63-2: The alternative method described in the previous paragraph applies to the portion of the CIU’s underlying exposures that the supervised institution is not aware of or that it may not reasonably become aware of. In particular, it applies when directly taking account of underlying exposures to calculate the risk-weighted exposure amounts and the expected loss amounts, in accordance with the methods described in this section, would represent an excessive constraint for the institution. CHAPTER III CALCULATION OF EXPECTED LOSSES Section 1 Methods of calculation Article 66-1 For exposures to corporates, institutions, central governments and central banks, and for retail exposures, the amount of expected loss is equal to EL multiplied by the exposure value, where EL = PD * LGD. When the probability of default is 100%, i.e., in the case of default, EL shall be set equal to ELBE as defined in Article 129, if the supervised institution uses own estimates of LGDs. For exposures receiving the double-default treatment set out in Article 48, EL shall be zero. Article 66-2 For Specialised Lending exposures for which supervised institutions apply the approach set out in Articles 50-1 to 50-3, EL values shall be determined according to the following table: 137 Remaining maturity Less than 2.5 years Equal to or greater than 2.5 years Strong Good Satisfactory Weak Default 0% 0.4% 2.8% 8% 50% 0.4% 0.8% 2.8% 8% 50% Where competent authorities have granted general approval to a supervised institution generally to assign a risk weight of 50% to exposures in the ‘strong’ category and a risk weight of 70% to exposures in the ‘good’ category, the EL values for those categories shall be set at 0% and 0.4% respectively. Article 67-1 The expected loss amounts for equity exposures whose risk weighted exposure amounts are calculated using the simple risk weight approach shall be equal to the exposure value multiplied by the following EL values: CHAPTER IV RISK PARAMETERS Section 1 Exposure value Subsection 1 Exposures to corporates, institutions, central governments and central banks, and retail customers Article 69 The exposure value of an asset is equal to its balance-sheet value. The exposure value is based on the drawn and undrawn amounts in accordance with Articles 76 to 79. - 0.8% for private equity exposures in sufficiently diversified portfolios; - 0.8% for exchange traded equity exposure; - 2.4% for all other equity exposures. Article 70-1 When supervised institutions use master novation agreements or master netting agreements for repurchase transactions or for securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, exposure values shall be calculated in accordance with the provisions Title IV or the provisions of Chapter V of Title VI relating to valuation using the Internal Models approach. Article 67-2 The expected loss amounts for equity exposures whose risk-weighted exposure amounts are calculated using the internal models approach shall be zero. Article 70-2 When loans and deposits of the same counterparty are subject to on-balance sheet netting, the exposure values shall be determined in accordance with Title IV. Article 67-3 The expected loss amounts for dilution risk of purchased receivables shall be set equal to EL multiplied by the exposure value, where EL = PD * LGD. Article 71 The exposure value of lease financing agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature, corresponding to their accounting value, can be broken down into two elements: the discounted value of minimum lease payments and, if relevant, a fraction of the residual value at risk equal at 1/t where t equals the higher value between 1 and the residual number of full years in the contract.. Article 67-4 For other non credit-obligation assets, EL = 0. Section 2 Treatment of expected losses Article 68 The expected loss amounts calculated in accordance with Articles 66-1, 66-2, and 67-3 shall be subtracted from the sum of value adjustments and general provisions related to these exposures. The expected loss amounts for securitised exposures and the value adjustments and provisions related to these exposures shall not be included in this calculation. Positive and negative margins shall be treated according to Articles 4(e) and 6c of Regulation 90-02. Where institutions calculate risk-weighted exposure amounts for counterparty credit risk under Title VI, the value adjustments made to take account of the credit quality of the counterparty may be included in the sum of value adjustments and collective provisions made for positions in the trading book. Subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, if the credit risk of the counterparty is adequately taken into account in the valuation of a position in the trading book, the expected loss amount associated with the counterparty credit risk shall be zero. 138 The fraction of the residual value at risk taken into account is included in the exposure category of other assets that do not correspond to credit obligations. When the sale of the leased asset to the lessee appears reasonably certain at the beginning of the agreement, the supervised institution shall confirm at least annually that the sale remains reasonably certain. Article 72 For the derivative instruments listed in Appendix II, exposure value is determined in accordance with the methods set out in Title VI. Article 73 The exposure value for purchased receivables shall be the outstanding amount of the receivables, as determined by application of Article 69, minus the capital requirements for dilution risk before taking account of the effects of credit risk mitigation. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 74 For exposures in the form of securities or commodities sold, posted, or lent under repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, long settlement transactions, or margin lending transactions, the exposure value shall be the value of the securities or commodities concerned, calculated in accordance with Article 4-3. If the supervised institutions use the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method for taking into account the effect of financial collateral as provided in Title IV, the exposure value shall take volatility adjustments into account in accordance with Articles 178-2 to 178-6. The exposure value for asset sale and repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, long settlement transactions, and margin lending transactions can, as appropriate, be calculated: - as provided in Chapter V of Title VI on valuation using the Internal Model method; or - as provided in Section 3, Chapter 4 of Title IV on the use of internal models to capture the effect of netting mechanisms on such transactions. Article 75 The exposure value for exposures to a central clearing house may be set equal to zero, subject to the conditions in Section 2, Chapter I of Title VI. Article 76 The exposure value of the following items shall be calculated as the committed but undrawn amount multiplied by a CCF. Supervised institutions shall use the following CCFs: a) for credit lines that are unconditionally cancellable at any time by the supervised institution without prior notice, or that effectively permit automatic cancellation in the event of deterioration in the borrower’s credit-worthiness, a CCF of 0% shall apply, provided that the supervised institutions actively monitor the financial condition of the obligor, and that their internal control systems enable them to detect immediately any deterioration in the credit quality of the obligor. Undrawn retail credit lines may be considered as unconditionally cancellable if the contractual terms permit the supervised institution to cancel them to the full extent allowable under consumer protection and related legislation. b) for short-term letters of credit arising from the movement of goods, a CCF of 20% shall apply for both the issuing and confirming institutions. c) for undrawn purchase commitments for revolving purchased receivables that are unconditionally cancellable or that effectively permit automatic cancellation at any time by the institution without prior notice, a CCF of 0% shall apply, provided that the supervised institutions actively monitor the financial condition of the counterparties, and that their internal control systems enable them to detect immediately any deterioration in the credit quality of the counterparties; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 d) for other credit lines, note issuance facilities (NIFs), and revolving underwriting facilities (RUFs), a CCF of 75% shall apply. Article 77 Where a commitment refers to the extension of another commitment, the lower of the two CCFs associated with the individual commitment shall be used. Article 78 For all off-balance sheet items other than those mentioned above, the exposure value shall be a percentage of their value determined as a function of the risk category to which the item belongs, in accordance with Appendix I, specifically: - 100% of its value if it is in the full-risk category; - 50% of its value if it is in the medium category; - 20% of its value if it is in the medium/low-risk category; - 0% of its value if it is in the low-risk category; These percentages are referred to as supervisory CCFs. Article 79 Without prejudice to the provisions of Article 39-2, supervised institutions that apply the Advanced IRB Approach shall use own estimates of CCFs for the various off-balance sheet items, subject to the conditions set out in Chapter V, with the exception of the items listed in Appendix I that fall within the full-risk category, for which a supervisory CCF of 100% applies. Subsection 2 Equity exposures Article 80 For supervised institutions using the simple risk weight approach set out in Articles 58-1 to 58-3, the exposure value is the value recorded on the balance sheet, subject to the following conditions: a) for investments held at fair value with changes in value flowing directly through income and into own funds, the exposure value is the fair value presented on the balance sheet; b) for investments held at fair value with changes in value not flowing through income but into a tax-adjusted separate component of equity, the exposure value is the fair value presented on the balance sheet, after deduction of any latent gains not included in regulatory capital; c) for investments held at historical cost or at the lower of cost or market value, the exposure value is the historical cost or market value presented on the balance sheet Subsection 3 Other non credit-obligation assets Article 81 The exposure value of other non credit-obligation assets is their accounting value. 139 Section 2 Exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks Subsection 1 Probability of default Article 82-1 The PD of an exposure to a corporate or an institution shall be at least 0.03%. Subsection 2 Loss Given Default Article 84 Supervised institutions applying the Foundation IRB Approach shall use the following LGD values: a) 45% for senior exposures without eligible collateral; b) 75% for subordinated exposures without eligible collateral; The PD of obligors in default shall be 100%. Article 82-2 Supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach shall take unfunded credit protection into account as provided in Title IV. Supervised institutions using the Advanced IRB Approach may take unfunded credit protection into account by adjusting PD, subject to the provisions of Article 86. Article 82-3 For purchased corporate receivables for which a supervised institution cannot demonstrate that its PD estimates meet the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V, the PDs for these exposures shall be determined according to the following methods: a) for senior claims, PD shall correspond to the supervised institution’s estimate of EL, divided by LGD; b) for subordinated claims, PD shall be the supervised institution’s estimate of EL. If a supervised institution uses the Advanced IRB Approach and it can decompose its EL estimates for purchased corporate receivables into PDs and LGDs in a reliable manner, it may use its PD estimates for the purchased receivables. Article 83 For dilution risk of purchased corporate receivables, PD shall be set equal to the EL estimate for dilution risk. If a supervised institution uses the Advanced LGD approach and it can decompose its EL estimates for dilution risk of purchased corporate receivables into PDs and LGDs in a reliable manner, it may use PD estimates for purchased receivables. Supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach shall take unfunded credit protection into account as provided in Title IV Supervised institutions using the Advanced IRB Approach for dilution risk on purchased corporate receivables may take unfunded credit protection into account by adjusting PD, subject to the provisions of Article 86. 140 c) 11.25% for covered bonds and other assets benefiting from the preference, mentioned in subparagraph 2 of paragraph I of Article L. 515-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code, along with similar bonds issued by an institution whose head office is in a Member State. Until 31 December 2010, the above rate shall be reduced to 11.25% when the following conditions, relating to sociétés de crédit foncier and other institutions that issue similar bonds and that have their head office in a Member State, are satisfied: - exposures to public legal persons, such as those referred to in Article L. 515-15 of the Monetary and Financial Code, along with secure and liquid securities and instruments referred to in Article L. 515-17 of the Monetary and Financial Code, qualify for the highest credit quality step issued by an ECAI recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel; - the share of Fonds Communs de Créances does not exceed 20% of the nominal amount of covered bonds and other assets benefiting from an equivalent preference; - ships are not recognised as eligible assets; or - covered bonds and other assets benefiting from the preference mentioned in subparagraph 2 of paragraph I of Article L. 515-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code, or similar bonds issued by an institution whose head office is in a Member State, qualify for the highest credit quality level established by an ECAI recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for that category of bonds; d) 45% for senior purchased corporate receivables, if the supervised institution cannot demonstrate that its PD estimates meet the minimum requirements set in Chapter V; e) 100% for subordinated purchased corporate receivables, if the supervised institution cannot demonstrate that its PD estimates meet the minimum requirements set in Chapter V; f) 75% for the dilution risk of purchased corporate receivables. Supervised institutions that apply the Foundation IRB Approach shall take into account the effects of any collateral and guarantees, as provided in Title IV. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 85 For dilution and default risk, if a supervised institution uses the Advanced IRB Approach and it can decompose its EL estimates for purchased corporate receivables into PDs and LGDs in a reliable manner, it may use its LGD estimates for the purchased corporate receivables. Article 86 Supervised institutions using the Advanced IRB Approach shall take unfunded credit protection into account by substituting PD and (if relevant) LGD estimates, or by adjusting LGD estimates, subject to the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V and with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. They may not assign guaranteed exposures an adjusted PD or LGD such that the adjusted risk weight would be lower than that of a comparable direct exposure to the protection provider. Article 87 Notwithstanding the provisions of Articles 84 and 86, for the purposes of double-default treatment, the LGD for a comparable direct exposure to the protection provider shall be the LGD associated with an unhedged facility to: - the obligor if the available evidence and the structure of the guarantee indicate that, in the event of a joint default of the obligor and the protection provider, the amount recovered would depend on the financial condition of the guarantor or obligor; - the guarantor in all other cases. Subsection 3 Maturity Article 88 Supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach shall assign exposures arising from repurchase transactions or securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions a maturity value (M) of 0.5 years, and to all other exposures a maturity of 2.5 years. Article 89-1 Supervised institutions using the Advanced IRB Approach shall calculate the value of M for each of these exposures in accordance with paragraphs (a) to (g), subject to the provisions of Articles 89-2 and 90. In all cases, M shall be no greater than 5 years. a) For an instrument subject to a cash flow schedule, the value of M shall be calculated using the following formula: M = MAX 1; MIN t * CFt / CFt ;5 t t where CFt denotes the cash flows (principal, interest payments and fees) contractually payable by the obligor in year t; b) for derivatives covered by a master novation agreement or a master netting agreement, M shall be equal to the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 weighted average remaining maturity of each exposure weighted by its notional amount, but no less than one year. c) for fully or nearly fully collateralised derivative instruments, for fully or nearly-fully collateralised margin lending transactions, the maturity M shall be equal to the weighted average remaining maturity weighted by the transactions but not less than ten days; and for repurchase transactions and securities or commodities borrowing or lending transactions that are covered by a master netting agreement, M shall be equal to the weighted average remaining maturity weighted by the transactions, but no less than 5 days. d) if a supervised institution uses own PD estimates for purchased corporate receivables, M for drawn amounts shall be equal to the weighted average maturity of the purchased receivables, but no less than 90 days. The same value of M shall also be applied to undrawn amounts under a committed purchase facility, provided the facility contains effective covenants, early amortisation triggers, or other features that protect the purchasing supervised institution against a significant deterioration in the quality of the receivables it is required to purchase under the terms of the purchase agreement. In the absence of such protection, M for undrawn amounts shall be equal to the sum of the maximum possible maturity for a receivable under terms of the purchase agreement and the remaining maturity of the purchase agreement, but no less than 90 days; e) for any instrument other than those mentioned in this paragraph, or when a supervised institution is not in a position to calculate the value of M in accordance with paragraph (a), M shall be equal to the maximum remaining number of years that the obligor is permitted to take to fully discharge its contractual obligations, but no less than one year; f) for supervised institutions using the Internal Model Method for counterparty credit risk set out in Title VI, the value of M for exposures to which this method is applied and that are included in a netting set within which the maturity of the longest-dated contract is greater than one year, shall be determined using the following formula: tk ≤1year EffectiveEEk * Δtk * dfk +maturity EEk * Δtk * dfk k =1 tk >1an M = MIN ;5 tk ≤1year EffectiveEEk * Δtk * dfk k =1 where: dfk = the risk-free discount factor for future time period tk. A supervised institution that uses an internal model to calculate a one-sided credit valuation adjustment (CVA) may, subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, take as the value of M the effective credit duration estimated by the model. Subject to the provisions of Article 89-2, the formula mentioned at point a shall apply to netting sets in which all contracts have an original maturity of less than one year. 141 For the purposes of double-default treatment, the value of M shall be the effective maturity of the credit protection, but not less than one year. Article 89-2 Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d) and (e) of the preceding Article, M shall be at least one day for: d) – – – – fully or nearly fully collateralised derivative instruments; fully or nearly fully collateralised margin lending transactions; and repurchase transactions and securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, that are subject to daily margin calls and daily revaluation and that allow for the prompt liquidation or setoff of collateral in the event of default or failure to satisfy a margin call; as well as any other items which are not part of the obligor’s ongoing financing. Article 90 Maturity mismatches shall be treated according to the provisions of Title IV. Section 3 Retail exposures Subsection 1 Probability of Default Article 91 The PD of a retail exposure shall be at least 0.03%. For obligors in default, or when a transaction-bytransaction approach is used for defaulted claims, PD shall be 100%. Article 92 For dilution risk of purchased receivables, PD shall be set equal to EL estimates for dilution risk. If a supervised institution can reliably decompose its EL estimates for dilution risk of purchased receivables into PDs and LGDs, the PD estimate may be used. Article 93 Supervised institutions may take unfunded credit protection into account by adjusting PDs, subject the provisions of Article 95. For dilution risk, where supervised institutions do not use own estimates of LGDs, the taking into account of unfunded credit protection shall be subject to compliance with the provisions of Title IV. 142 Subsection 2 Loss Given Default Article 94 Supervised institutions shall provide own estimates of LGDs, in accordance with the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V and with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. For dilution risk of purchased receivables, an LGD value of 75% shall be used. If a supervised institution can reliably decompose its EL estimates for dilution risk of purchased receivables into PDs and LGDs, the LGD estimate may be used. Article 95 Supervised institutions shall take unfunded credit protection into account by substituting PD and (if relevant) LGD estimates or by adjusting LGD estimates for a given exposure or pool of exposures, subject to the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V and with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Supervised institutions may not assign exposures covered by guarantees or credit derivatives an adjusted PD or LGD such that the adjusted risk weight would be lower than that of a comparable direct exposure to the protection provider. Article 96 Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding paragraph, for the purposes of double-default treatment, the LGD for a comparable direct exposure to the protection provider shall be the LGD associated with an unhedged facility to: - the obligor, if the available evidence and the structure of the guarantee indicate that, in the event of a joint default of the obligor and the protection provider, the amount recovered would depend on the financial condition of the obligor; - the guarantor in all other cases. Chapter V MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS Section 1 Rating system Subsection 1 General provisions Article 97-1 ‘rating system’ means all of the methods, processes, controls, and data collection and IT systems that support the assessment of credit risk, the rating of exposures or their assignment to a grade or pool, and the quantification of default and loss estimates for a given type of exposure. Article 97-2 Supervised institutions shall periodically review the criteria and processes for rating exposures or for assigning them to a pool, in order to determine whether they remain appropriate for the composition of the portfolio and external conditions. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 97-3 When a supervised institution uses more than one rating system, the rationale for using a particular rating system for a type of obligor or transaction shall be documented and should reflect the level of risk. Article 97-4 When a supervised institution uses direct estimates of risk parameters, these may be considered as the outputs of a classification by rating grade on a continuous rating scale. Subsection 2 Rating system design for exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks Article 98 The rating system shall satisfy the following requirements: a) it shall take into account the risk characteristics of the obligor and the transaction; b) it shall include an obligor rating scale that reflects exclusively the quantification of the risk of obligor default. This scale shall have a minimum of seven grades for nondefaulted obligors and one grade for defaulted obligors. ‘Obligor grade’ means a risk category within a rating system’s obligor rating scale to which obligors are assigned on the basis of a specified and distinct set of rating criteria from which estimates of PD are derived; c) supervised institutions shall document the relationship between obligor grades associated with a level of default risk, and the criteria used to determine that level; d) supervised institutions whose portfolios are concentrated in a particular market segment and a given range of default risk shall have a sufficient number of obligor grades within that range to avoid undue concentrations of obligors in a given grade; e) where there are large concentrations within a single grade, the institution shall demonstrate that the obligor grade covers a reasonably narrow PD band and that the default risk posed by all obligors to whom that grade is assigned falls within that band. Article 99 To be granted approval to use own estimates of LGDs, supervised institutions must have a rating system that satisfies the following requirements: a) the rating system incorporates a distinct facility rating scale which exclusively reflects LGD-related transaction characteristics. ‘Facility grade’ means a risk category within a rating system’s facility scale to which exposures are assigned on the basis of a specified and distinct set of rating criteria from which own estimates of LGD are derived; b) the definition of grades shall include a description of the methods for assigning exposures and the criteria used to distinguish the level of risk across grades. c) where there are large concentrations within a given facility grade, the institution shall demonstrate that the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 facility grade covers a reasonably narrow LGD band and that the risk posed by all exposures in the grade falls within that band. Article 100 Supervised institutions that risk-weight Specialised Lending exposures as provided in Articles 50-1 to 50-3 shall be exempt from the requirement to have an obligor rating scale which reflects exclusively the quantification of PDs for these exposures. For these exposures and for the purposes of the provisions of Articles 50-1 to 50-3, they shall have at least four grades for non-defaulted obligors and at least one grade for defaulted obligors. Subsection 3 Rating system design for retail exposures Article 101 The rating system shall satisfy the following requirements: a) it shall reflect both obligor and transaction risk, and shall capture all relevant obligor and transaction characteristics; b) the level of risk differentiation shall ensure the assignment to each grade or pool of a sufficient number of exposures to allow for meaningful quantification and validation of the loss characteristics of that grade or pool level. The distribution of exposures and obligors across grades or pools shall be such as to avoid excessive concentrations; c) supervised institutions shall demonstrate that the system for assigning exposures to grades or pools provides for: - a meaningful differentiation of risk; - the grouping of sufficiently homogenous exposures; - accurate and consistent estimation of loss characteristics at the level of each grade or pool. For purchased receivables, this grouping shall reflect the seller’s underwriting policies; d) institutions shall consider the following risk factors when assigning exposures to grades or pools: - the risk characteristics of the obligor; - the risk characteristics of the transaction, including product or collateral types. Supervised institutions shall explicitly address cases where several exposures benefit from the same collateral; - delinquencies, unless the supervised institution demonstrates to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that delinquency is not a material risk factor. Subsection 4 Rating or assignment of exposures Article 102 Supervised institutions’ rating systems shall have specific definitions, processes, and criteria for rating exposures or assigning them to different pools. The following requirements shall be satisfied. a) the definitions and criteria shall be sufficiently detailed to allow those charged with assigning ratings to assign obligors or facilities posing similar risk to the same grade 143 or pool, in a consistent fashion across business lines, departments, and geographic location; b) the documentation of the rating process shall allow third parties: - to understand the methods used to assign exposures to grades or pools; - to evaluate the appropriateness of the assignments; and - and to replicate grade and pool assignments, if necessary. c) The criteria used shall also be consistent with internal lending standards and the policies for handling troubled obligors and facilities. Article 103 Supervised institutions shall take all relevant information into account in assigning obligors and facilities to different grades or pools. Information shall be current and shall enable the supervised institution to forecast the future performance of the exposure. The less information a supervised institution has, the more conservative shall be its rating and assignment policies. If a supervised institution uses an external rating as a primary factor determining an internal rating assignment, it shall ensure that it considers other relevant information. Article 104 The rating of exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks shall be conducted using the following methods: a) each obligor shall be assigned to an obligor grade as part of the credit approval process; b) for supervised institutions using the Advanced IRB Approach, each exposure shall also be assigned to a facility grade as part of the credit approval process; c) supervised institutions using the methods set out Articles 50-1 to 50-3 for assigning risk weights to Specialised Lending exposures shall assign each of these exposures to a grade in accordance with Article 100; d) each distinct legal entity to which the supervised institution is exposed shall be separately rated. The supervised institution shall put in place procedures for rating individual clients that take account of their membership in a group of counterparties considered as a single beneficiary within the meaning of Article 3 of Regulation 93-05; e) the same obligor grade shall be assigned to different exposures to the same obligor, whatever the nature of the transaction. The only exceptions are: i) where there is country transfer risk; ii) where guarantees extended to an exposure imply an adjusted obligor grade; iii) where the exchange of client data is prohibited by bank secrecy, consumer protection, or any other regulation. Article 105 Each retail exposure shall be assigned to a grade or a pool as part of the credit approval process. 144 Article 106 Supervised institutions shall document the situations in which human judgement may override the input parameters or the results of the rating system. In particular: a) supervised institutions shall indicate which personnel are responsible for approving such overrides; b) supervised institutions shall analyse changes in the credit quality of exposures that have been the object of such overrides. This analysis shall include an assessment of the appropriateness of the adjustments made by the person responsible for the override. Subsection 5 Integrity of the rating or assignment process Article 107 The rating process for exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks shall satisfy the following requirements: a) the assignment of ratings and the periodic review of those assignments shall be conducted or approved by an independent party that does not directly benefit from decisions to extend or renew the credits; b) supervised institutions shall update their ratings of exposures at least annually. High-risk obligors and problem exposures shall be subject to more frequent review; c) supervised institutions shall assign a new rating to any obligor or exposure for which material new information becomes available; d) supervised institutions shall put in place an effective process permitting them to obtain and update relevant information on obligor characteristics that affect default probabilities, and on transaction characteristics that affect LGDs and CCFs. Article 108 For retail exposures, supervised institutions shall, at least annually, update obligor and facility ratings and assignments to pools based on the risk factors set out in Article 101. Supervised institutions shall review at least annually a representative sample of individual exposures within each pool in order to ensure that exposures continue to be assigned to the correct pool. Subsection 6 Use of models Article 109 If a supervised institution uses a statistical model or any other mechanical method to assign exposures to different rating grades or pools, the following conditions must be met: a) the supervised institution shall demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the model has good predictive power and that its use does not result in a distortion of capital requirements. The input variables shall form a consistent and effective basis for making predictions. The model shall not have material biases; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) the supervised institution shall have a process for vetting inputs to the model which includes an assessment of the accuracy, completeness, and appropriateness of the data; estimates are assigned to rating grades, obligors, exposures, or pools; b) the data sources used to estimate the model; c) the supervised institution shall demonstrate that the data used to build the model are representative of all of its obligors or exposures; d) the supervised institution shall put in place a regular programme of model validation that includes monitoring the model’s performance and reliability, reviewing the specification of the model, and assessing model outputs against outcomes. e) in order to confirm the results produced by the model and ensure that the model is used appropriately, the statistical model shall be complemented by expert judgement and analysis. Review procedures shall permit the supervised institution to detect and limit errors resulting from weaknesses in the model. Expert judgement shall take into account all relevant information not considered by the model; f) the supervised institution shall document how model results and expert judgement are combined. Subsection 7 Documentation of rating systems Article 110 Supervised institutions documentation, including: shall have d) any circumstances under which the model does not work correctly. Article 112 The use of a model obtained from a third-party vendor that claims proprietary technology does not exempt supervised institutions from the requirements of this Chapter relating to rating systems, and in particular from the requirement to provide appropriate documentation. Subsection 8 Data maintenance Article 113-1 For exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks, supervised institutions shall collect and store the following information: a) a complete history of the ratings assigned to obligors and to recognised guarantors; appropriate a) the design and operational details of their rating systems. This documentation shall attest to compliance with the minimum requirements set out in this Chapter, and address topics including portfolio differentiation, rating criteria, the responsibilities of the persons charged with rating and assigning obligors and exposures, the frequency with which ratings and assignments are reviewed, and the methods for overseeing the rating process b) the rationale for and analysis supporting the choice of rating criteria; c) all major changes in the risk rating process. This documentation shall take into account changes made to the risk rating process as the result of any observations made by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to the supervised institution; d) the entire system for rating and assigning exposures and the associated internal control structure; e) the specific definitions of default and loss used by the supervised institutions. The documentation should demonstrate that these definitions are consistent with the definitions set out in this Order. Article 111 If the supervised institution employs statistical models in its rating process, it shall document the methodology, specifying: a) the details of the theories, assumptions, mathematical foundations, and empirical analysis on the basis of which Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 c) a rigorous statistical process used to validate the model, including out-of-time and out-of-sample performance tests; b) the dates the ratings were assigned; c) the methodology and the principal data used to derive the ratings; d) the identity of the person who assigned the ratings; e) identification of defaulted obligors and exposures; f) the date and circumstances of these defaults; g) data on the default probabilities and loss rates associated with rating grades and ratings migrations; h) for supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach, data comparing the realised values of LGD with the values set in Article 84 and the realised values of CCFs with the values set in Article 76. Article 113-2 Supervised institutions that use the Advanced IRB Approach shall collect and store the following information: a) a complete history of facility ratings and the LGD and CCF estimates associated with each rating scale; b) the dates the ratings were assigned and the estimates of LGD and CCFs were made; c) the methodology and principal data used to derive facility ratings and LGD and CCF estimates; d) the identity of the person who assigned the facility ratings and the person who provided LGD and CCF estimates; 145 e) data on the estimated and realised LGDs and CCFs associated with each defaulted exposure; f) data on the LGD associated with each exposure before and after evaluation of the effects of a guarantee or credit derivative, if the supervised institutions adjust their estimates of LGD to take account of the effects of these credit risk mitigation techniques; g) data on the components of loss recorded for each defaulted exposure, including the amount recovered, the source of recovery, and the administrative costs of recovery. Article 114 For retail exposures, supervised institutions shall collect and store the following information: a) data used in the process of assigning exposures to grades or pools; b) data on the estimates of PDs, LGDs, and CCFs associated with each grade or pool; c) the identity of defaulted obligors and exposures; d) for all defaulted exposures, data on the grades or pools to which the exposure was assigned for credit risk during the year prior to default and the realised outcomes on LGD and CCF; e) data on loss rates recorded for the sub-portfolio of qualifying revolving retail exposures. Subsection 9 Stress tests used in assessing capital adequacy Article 115 Supervised institutions shall have a programme of relevant stress tests used to assess the adequacy of internal capital. These stress tests shall make it possible to identify events or changes in economic conditions that could have unfavourable effects on the institution’s credit exposures and to assess its liability to withstand such changes. Article 116 Supervised institutions shall regularly perform a credit risk stress test to assess the impact of the model assumptions on its total capital requirements for credit risk. The stress test used by the supervised institution shall have the following characteristics: It is relevant and reasonably conservative, considering at least the effect of a mild recession which could last two or three quarters; Supervised institutions shall assess the migration of exposures from one rating grade to another as a function of the assumptions made in the different scenarios; The stress portfolios shall cover the great majority of the supervised institution’s exposures. Supervised institutions shall provide the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel with a 146 description of the assumptions and principle methodologies used in the stress tests, in the form of an appendix on stress testing to the report on measurement and monitoring of exposures referred to in Article 43 of regulation 97-02. Article 117 Supervised institutions applying the treatment of doubledefault risk shall take into account as part of their stress testing framework of the impact of deterioration in the credit quality of protection providers, and, in particular, shall consider the case of protection providers who cease to satisfy the eligibility criteria. Section 2 Risk quantification Subsection 1 Definition of default Article 118-1 A particular obligor is in default when one of the following two conditions is satisfied: a) the supervised institution considers that the obligor is unlikely to pay its credit obligations to the institution, the parent undertaking, or any of its subsidiaries in full, without recourse by the supervised institution to actions such as realising security; b) the obligor is more than 90 days past due on a credit obligation to the supervised institution, the parent undertaking, or any of its subsidiaries, unless the specific circumstances indicate that the delinquency is due to causes unrelated to the obligor’s financial condition. Article 118-2 For overdrafts, days past due are counted from when: - the obligor has breached an authorised limit that has been brought to its attention by the supervised institution; - or the obligor has been advised that its current outstandings exceed a limit set by the supervised institution in the context of its internal control system; - or the obligor has drawn credit without authorisation. - In place of the above criteria, supervised institutions may count days past due from when the overdraft has been the subject of a request on the part of the supervised institution for full or partial repayment from the obligor, provided that this request for repayment is in the context of a rigorous daily monitoring of overdrafts by the institution and a documented procedure setting criteria for issuing such requests. Days past due for credit cards are counted from the contractual payment due date. Article 118-3 Without prejudice to the provisions of Title X, for exposures to lessees of real property in finance lease agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature, the number of days past due for purposes of paragraph (b) of Article 118-1 shall be 90. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 For exposures to acquirers of residential property, central governments, regional governments and local authorities, and public sector entities, when the counterparty is incorporated in French territory, the number of days past due for purposes of paragraph (b) of Article 118-1 shall be 180. When justified by the needs of the internal rating system, and when such treatment does not lead to regulatory arbitrage, supervised institutions may use a number of days past due greater than 90 for retail exposures, exposures to central governments, regional governments and local authorities, and public sector entities, and also, until 31 December 2011, for corporate exposures, when the counterparties are incorporated in other Member States. The number of days past due shall not be greater by that set by the competent authorities in the other Member State. For retail exposures, the definition of default may be applied at the facility level. Article 119 The following elements shall be taken as indicators that an obligor is unlikely to pay its credit obligations in full: a) the supervised institution puts the credit obligation on non-accrued status; b) the supervised institution makes a value adjustment motivated by the perception of a significant decline in the quality of the credit obligation subsequent to the extension of credit; c) the supervised institution sells the credit obligation at a material economic loss as a result of the deterioration in its credit quality; d) the supervised institution consents to a forced restructuring of the credit obligation which is likely to result in a diminished financial obligation caused by the material forgiveness or postponement of principal, interest or (where relevant) fees; e) the supervised institution has requested the opening of a collective legal proceeding against the obligor or an obligor of its parent undertaking or its affiliates, or has stated a claim on such obligors in such a proceeding; f) the obligor has requested or obtained the benefit of protection from proceedings that could avoid or delay the repayment of its credit obligation to the supervised institution, its parent undertaking, or any of its subsidiaries. Article 120 Supervised institutions that use external data that are not consistent with the definition of default shall demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that they have made appropriate adjustments in order to achieve broad equivalence with the definition of default. Article 121 If supervised institutions consider that a defaulted exposure no longer has the characteristics set out in Articles 118-1 to 118-3, that exposure shall be reclassified and treated as a non-defaulted exposure. In the event that the definition of Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 default is subsequently triggered, the supervised institution shall consider than another default has occurred. Subsection 2 Overall requirements for estimation Article 122-1 Estimates of the risk parameters PD, LGD, and CCF, as well as of expected loss, shall incorporate all appropriate data, information, and methods, in accordance with the following provisions: a) the estimates shall be derived using historical experience and empirical evidence, and not based purely on judgemental considerations; b) the estimates shall be plausible and shall be based on the material factors determining the evolution of the different risk parameters; c) the less data a supervised institution has, the more conservative shall be its estimations; d) supervised institutions shall be able to provide a history of their loss experience broken down in terms of default frequency, LGD, CCFs, or loss if they use EL estimates, by the factors they considers as the drivers of the different risk parameters; e) supervised institutions shall demonstrate that their estimates are based on long-run experience; f) any changes in lending practices or the process for pursuing recoveries during the observation periods referred to in this Chapter shall be taken into account; g) supervised institutions’ estimates shall reflect any technical advances, new data, and any other information, as soon as they become available; h) supervised institutions shall review their estimates when new information comes to light, and at least once annually. Article 122-2 For purchased receivables, estimates shall reflect all relevant information available to the supervised institution regarding the quality of the underlying receivables, including data provided by the seller or by external sources for similar pools. The purchasing supervised institution shall verify any data furnished by the seller upon which it bases its estimates. Article 122-3 Supervised institutions shall add a margin of conservatism to their estimates to take account of the expected range of estimation errors. Where data and methods are less satisfactory and the expected range of errors is larger, the margin of conservatism shall be larger. Article 122-4 Where supervised institutions use different estimates for the calculation of risk weights and for internal purposes, they shall document the rationale for their choice and demonstrate its reasonableness to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. 147 Article 122-5 Supervised institutions may use data collected prior to the effective date of this Order provided they have demonstrated to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that they have made appropriate adjustments to the data to achieve broad equivalence with the definition of default or loss. Article 123-1 The population of exposures shall satisfy the following requirements: a) the population of exposures represented in the data used for estimation, as well as the lending standards used by the supervised institution when the credit was granted and any other relevant characteristics, shall be comparable with those of the exposures and standards currently in force. b) supervised institutions shall demonstrate that the economic or market conditions that underlie the data are relevant to current and foreseeable conditions; c) the number of exposures in the sample and the reference period used for quantification shall be sufficient to provide the supervised institutions with confidence in the accuracy and robustness of their estimates; Article 123-2 If a supervised institution uses a data set that is pooled across more than one institution, it shall demonstrate that: a) the rating systems and criteria of the other supervised institutions in the pool are similar to its own; b) the pool is representative for the portfolio for which the pooled data is used; c) the pooled data are used consistently over time for the calculation of estimates; d) it has a sufficient understanding of its rating systems, including the ability to monitor and audit the rating process effectively in conformance with Article 37-2 of Regulation 97-02. A supervised institution using pooled data shall remain responsible for the integrity of its rating systems and shall maintain full control over them. Subsection 3 Requirements specific to estimating PDs Article 124 PD estimates for exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks shall satisfy the following requirements: a) supervised institutions shall estimate PDs for each obligor grade from long-run averages of one-year default rates; b) for purchased corporate receivables, supervised institutions may estimate expected losses for each obligor grade from long-run averages of one-year realised default rates; 148 c) if a supervised institution derives long-run average estimates of PDs and LGDs for purchased corporate receivables from an estimate of expected loss and an appropriate estimate of PD or LGD, the process for estimating total losses shall meet the standards for estimation of PDs and LGDs set out in this Chapter. The outcome shall be consistent with the concept of LGD set out in Article 126-1; d) PD estimation techniques must be based on a supporting analysis. Supervised institutions shall recognise the importance of expert judgment in combining the results produced by different techniques and in making necessary adjustments; e) if a supervised institution uses data from its own default experience to estimate own PDs, it shall demonstrate in its analysis that those estimates reflect its underwriting standards and any differences between the rating system that generated the data and the current rating system. Where underwriting standards or rating systems have been modified, the supervised institution shall add a greater margin of conservatism in its estimates of PDs; f) if a supervised institution maps the rating grades in its internal rating system to the credit quality levels used by an ECAI or similar organisation, the following requirements must be satisfied: - mappings shall be based on a comparison between the institution’s internal rating criteria and those used by the external organisation, and on a comparison of the internal and external ratings of any common obligors; - the supervised institution shall avoid any bias or inconsistency in its mapping approach and at the level of its underlying data; - the criteria and data used by the external organisation in calculating its estimates shall be oriented exclusively to default risk and not to the characteristics of the transaction; - the supervised institution’s analysis shall include a comparison of the default definitions used, subject to the requirements set out in subsection 1. The supervised institution shall document the approach used to establish the mapping between external assessments and internal ratings; g) a supervised institution that uses statistical default prediction models may estimate PDs as the average of default-probability estimates for individual obligors in a given rating grade. The supervised institution’s use of default probability models for this purpose shall meet the standards set out in Article 109; h) the length of the underlying historical observation period used shall be at least five years for at least one of the data sources used by the supervised institution, whether the institution uses external, internal, or pooled data sources. If the available observation period for one data source spans a longer period than the other sources, the longer period shall be used, provided the corresponding data are relevant. Supervised institutions may use a historical observation period of at least two years when they first receive approval the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use the Foundation IRB Approach. This shall increase by one year each year until the data cover a period of five years. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 125 PD estimates for retail exposures shall satisfy the following requirements: a) supervised institutions shall estimate PDs by obligor grade or pool, from long-run averages of one-year default rates. PD estimates may also be derived from realised losses and appropriate estimates of LGDs. b) supervised institutions shall regard the internal data that they use to rate exposures or to assign them to a pool as the primary source of information for estimating loss characteristics. They may use external data, including pooled data, or statistical models for quantification, provided a strong link is demonstrated between: i) the supervised institution’s process for assigning exposures to grades or pools and the process used by the external data source; ii) the supervised institution’s risk profile and the composition of the external data. For purchased retail receivables, supervised institutions may use external and internal reference data. They shall use all relevant data sources as points of comparison. c) If a supervised institution derives long-run average estimates of PD and LGD from an estimate of total losses and an appropriate estimate of PD or LGD, the process for estimating total losses shall meet the overall standards for estimating PD and LGD set out in this Chapter. The outcome shall be consistent with the concept of LGD set out in Article 126-1; d) the underlying historical observation period shall be at least five years for at least one of the data sources used by the supervised institution, whether the institution uses external, internal, or pooled data sources. If the available observation period for one data source spans a longer period than for the other sources, the longer period shall be used, provided the corresponding data are relevant. Supervised institutions may use a historical observation period of at least two years when they are first granted approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use IRB Approaches. This shall increase by one year each year until the data cover a period of five years. e) Supervised institutions shall identify and analyse expected changes in risk parameters over the life of credit exposures, including seasoning effects. Section 4 Requirements specific to estimating LGD Article 126-1 Supervised institutions shall estimate LGDs by facility grade or pool on the basis of the average realised LGD by facility grade or pool. They shall take into account all observed defaults in the various data sources, using an average weighted by the number of defaults observed. Article 122 Supervised institutions shall use LGD estimates that are appropriate for an economic downturn if they are more conservative than the long-run average. To the extent that Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 LGD values by grade or pool are expected to remain relatively stable over time, supervised institutions shall make adjustments to their estimates of risk parameters by grade or pool to limit the impact of an economic downturn on their own funds. Article 127 If estimates of LGD reflect the presence of collateral, the following conditions shall be satisfied: a) supervised institutions shall take account of the degree of dependence between the risk of the obligor and the risk associated with the collateral or collateral provider. Where there is a significant degree of dependence, supervised institutions shall apply a conservative treatment; b) in estimating LGD, supervised institutions shall treated conservatively cases where the underlying obligation and the collateral are not denominated in the same currency; c) LGD estimates shall not be based solely on the estimated market value of the collateral. These estimates shall take into account the cost of any delays in gaining control over the collateral and liquidating it; d) supervised institutions shall establish rules and procedures for collateral management, legal certainty, and risk management that are generally consistent with the requirements set out in Title IV. Article 128 If a supervised institution using the Internal Model Method or the Standardised Method for counterparty credit risk under Title VI takes account of collateral in the calculation of exposure value, its estimates of LGD shall not reflect the amounts expected to be recovered on the collateral. Article 129 When exposures are in default, supervised institutions shall take into account: a) the best estimate of expected losses (ELBE) for each exposure, given current economic circumstances and the characteristics of the exposure, and b) any additional unexpected losses that could occur during the recovery period. Article 130 To the extent that unpaid late fees have been capitalised in the supervised institution’s income statement, they shall be added to the supervised institution’s measure of exposure and loss. Article 131 For exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks, estimates of LGD shall be based on data collected over a minimum of five years for at least one data source, when supervised institutions are first granted approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use the Advanced IRB Approach. This shall increase by one year each year until the data cover a period of seven years. 149 If the available observation period for one data source spans a longer period than for the other sources, the longer period shall be used, provided the corresponding data are relevant. Article 132 For retail exposures, the following requirements must be satisfied: a) LGD estimates may be derived from realised losses and appropriate estimates of PDs; b) notwithstanding paragraphs (c) and (d) of Article 133, supervised institutions shall reflect future drawings either in their CCFs or in their LGD estimates; c) for purchased retail receivables, supervised institutions may use internal and external reference data to estimate LGDs; d) estimates of LGD shall be based on data collected over a minimum of five years. Notwithstanding Article 126-1, supervised institutions need not assign the same importance to all historical data if they demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the more recent data are a better predictor of loss rates. Supervised institutions may use a historical observation period of at least two years when they are first granted approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use IRB Approaches. This shall increase by one year each year until the data cover a period of five years. Subsection 5 Requirements specific to estimating CCFs Article 133 Supervised institutions that use own estimates of CCFs shall satisfy the following requirements: a) CCFs shall be estimated for each facility grade or pool on the basis of average expected CCFs. This average, calculated for all facility ratings or pools, is weighted by the defaults observed in the various data sources; b) supervised institutions shall use CCF estimates that are appropriate for an economic downturn if those estimates are more conservative than the long-run average. To the extent that LGDs values by grade or pool are expected to remain relatively stable over time, supervised institutions shall make adjustments to their estimates of risk parameters by grade or pool to limit the impact of an economic downturn on their own funds; c) estimates of CCFs shall reflect the possibility of additional drawings by the obligor up to and after the time a default event is triggered; d) where supervised institutions can reasonable foresee a stronger positive correlation between the default frequency and the magnitude of the CCF, the estimate of the CCF shall incorporate a larger margin of conservatism; 150 e) supervised institutions shall adhere to specific policies for monitoring customer accounts and payments, as well as policies for monitoring and managing new drawing in circumstances short of default, particularly when there are violations of specific contractual terms or other events considered as technical defaults; f) supervised institutions shall put in place appropriate systems and procedures for monitoring credit lines, current outstandings against committed lines, and changes in outstandings per obligor and per grade. They shall be able to monitor outstanding balances on a daily basis; g) when supervised institutions use different estimates of CCFs for the calculation of risk weighted exposure amounts and for internal purposes, they shall document the rationale for their choice and demonstrate its reasonableness to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 134-1 CCF estimates for exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments and central banks shall be based on data collected over a minimum of five years for at least one data source when supervised institutions are first granted approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use the Advanced IRB Approach. This shall increase by one year each year until the data cover a period of seven years. If the available observation period for one data source spans a longer period than for the other sources, the longer period shall be used, provided the corresponding data are relevant. Article 134-2 For retail exposures, estimates of CCFs shall be based on data collected over a minimum of five years. Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of Article 133, supervised institutions need not assign the same importance to all historical data if they demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the more recent data are a better predictor of drawings. Supervised institutions may use a historical observation period of at least two years when they are first granted approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use IRB Approaches. This shall increase by one year each year until the data cover a period of five years. Article 135 For retail exposures, notwithstanding paragraphs (c) and (d) of Article 133, supervised institutions shall reflect future drawings either in their CCFs or in their LGD estimates; Subsection 6 Minimum requirements for assessing unfunded credit protection Article 136-1 For retail exposures and exposures to corporates, institutions, and central governments, central banks and the enterprises that meet the requirements mentioned at Article 186 g, where the supervised institution uses own estimates of LGD, the requirements of this subsection shall not apply to guarantees provided by institutions and central governments and central banks if the supervised institution Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 has received approval to apply the Standardised Approach for credit risk to exposures to these entities. In that case, the requirements set out in Title IV shall apply. exposures and eligible purchased receivables, this paragraph shall apply to the process of assigning exposures to grades or pools. Article 136-2 For guarantees provided by retail customers, the requirements of this subsection apply to the assignment of exposures to grades or pools and the estimation of PD. Article 140 The criteria listed in Article 138 shall address the payout structure of the credit derivative and conservatively assess its impact on the level and timing of recoveries. Supervised institutions shall consider other forms of residual risk. Article 136-3 Credit institutions shall have clear and precise criteria defining the types of protection providers recognised for the calculation of risk weighted exposure amounts. These protection providers shall be subject to the provisions set out in Articles 102 to 108. Article 137 Guarantees recognised by supervised institutions using own estimates of LGD shall satisfy the following requirements: a) they shall be evidenced in writing; b) they shall be non-cancellable on the part of the protection provider; c) they shall remain in force until the obligation is satisfied in full; d) they shall be legally enforceable in a jurisdiction where the guarantor has assets to attach and enforce a judgement. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may deny recognition of a conditional guarantee. Supervised institutions shall demonstrate that the assignment criteria adequately address any potential reduction in the risk mitigation effect. Article 138 To reflect the impact of guarantees on the calculation of risk-weighted exposures amounts, supervised institutions shall have clearly specified criteria for adjusting grades, pools, or LGD estimates, and in the case of retail exposures and eligible purchased receivables, for adjusting the process of assigning exposures to grades or pools. These criteria shall comply with the minimum requirements set out in Articles 102 and 108, and shall address: - the ability and willingness of the protection provider to perform under the guarantee; - the likely timing of payments from the protection provider; - the degree of correlation between the protection provider’s ability to perform under the guarantee and the obligor’s ability to repay; and - the degree of residual risk to the obligor. Article 139 The minimum requirements set out in this subsection shall also apply to single-name credit derivatives. In the case of a mismatch between the underlying obligation and the reference asset specified in the credit derivative contract, or between the underlying obligation and the asset used to determine whether a credit event has occurred, the requirements set out in Article 192-3 shall apply. For retail Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Subsection 7 Minimum requirements for purchased receivables Article 141 The structure of the facility shall ensure that the supervised institution has effective ownership and control of all cash remittances from the receivables under all foreseeable circumstances. When the obligor makes payments directly to a seller or servicer, the supervised institution shall verify regularly that these payments are forwarded in full and within the contractually agreed terms. ‘Servicer’ means an entity that manages a pool of purchased receivables or the underlying credit exposures on a day-to-day basis. Supervised institutions shall have procedures to ensure that ownership of the receivables and cash receipts is protected against bankruptcy stays or legal challenges that could materially delay the lender’s ability to liquidate or assign the receivables or retain control over cash receipts. Article 142 Supervised institutions shall monitor both the quality of the purchased receivables and the financial condition of the seller and servicer. In particular, supervised institutions shall: a) assess the correlation between the quality of the purchased receivables and the financial condition of the seller and servicer, and put in place procedures that provide adequate safeguards to protect against such contingencies, including the assignment of an internal risk rating for each seller and servicer; b) have clear and effective procedures for determining seller and servicer eligibility. Supervised institutions or their agent shall conduct periodic reviews of sellers and servicers to verify the accuracy of their reports, detect possible fraud or operational weaknesses, and verify the quality of the seller’s credit policies and the servicer’s collection policies and procedures. Supervised institutions shall document the findings of these reviews; c) assess the characteristics of the purchased receivables pools, including over-advances; the history of the seller’s arrears, bad debts, and bad debt allowances; payment terms; and potential contra accounts; d) have effective procedures for monitoring, on an aggregate basis, concentrations of risk in a single-obligor within a pool of purchased receivables, and across all of the pools; e) ensure that they receive timely and sufficiently detailed reports from the servicer concerning ageing and dilution of receivables, so as to ensure compliance with eligibility criteria and advancing policies for purchased receivables, and monitor and confirm the seller’s terms of sale and dilution. 151 Article 143 Supervised institutions shall have effective systems and procedures: a) for detecting as early as possible any deterioration in the seller’s financial condition and in the quality of purchased receivables, and for addressing emerging problems proactively; and in particular for identifying covenant violations and enabling the institution to initiate legal action and to deal with problem purchased receivable; b) for governing the control of purchased receivables, credit, and cash. These procedures shall specify all material elements of the receivables purchase programme, including advancing rates, eligible collateral, necessary documentation, concentration limits, and the handling of cash receipts. These elements shall take appropriate account of all relevant and material factors, including the financial condition of the seller and the servicer, risk concentrations, and trends in the quality of the purchased receivables and the seller’s customer base. Internal systems shall ensure that funds are advanced only against the presentation of specified supporting collateral and appropriate documentation. Article 144 Supervised institutions shall put in place an effective process for assessing compliance with all internal policies and procedures. This process shall include: a) regular audits of all critical phases of the receivables purchase programme; b) verification of the separation of duties between the assessment of the seller and servicer and the assessment of the obligor, and between the assessment of the seller and servicer and the field audit of the seller and servicer; c) an evaluation of back-office operations, with particular focus on the qualifications and experience of staff, staffing levels, and supporting automated systems. Section 3 Validation of internal estimates Article 145 Supervised institutions shall put in place reliable systems to validate the accuracy and consistency of rating systems, rating processes, and the estimation of all relevant risk parameters. They shall demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that their internal validation process enables them to assess the performance of internal rating and risk estimation systems consistently and meaningfully. Article 146 To that end, supervised institutions shall use: a) back-testing that enables them to make regular comparisons between realised default rates and estimated PDs for each grade. Where realised default rates are outside the expected range for that grade, supervised institutions shall analyse the reasons for the deviation. Supervised institutions that use the Advanced IRB Approach shall perform analogous analysis for their estimates of LGD and CCFs. These comparisons shall use historical data that 152 cover as long a period as possible. Supervised institutions shall document the methods and data used in such comparisons, and shall update their analysis and documentation at least once annually. b) comparisons with relevant external data sources. This analysis shall be based on data that are appropriate to the portfolio, are updated regularly, and cover a relevant observation period. Supervised institutions’ internal assessments of the performance of their rating systems shall be based on as long a period as possible. Article 147 The methods and data used in quantitative validation shall be consistent over time. Supervised institutions shall document any change in methods or data used in estimation or validation, whether it involves data sources or periods covered. Article 148 Supervised institutions shall have robust internal standards for addressing situations where differences between realised and estimated PDs, LGDs, CCFs, and total losses are significant enough to call into question the validity of the estimates. These internal standards shall take account of business cycles and any other similar variability in observed default rates. Where realised values continue to be higher than expected values, supervised institutions shall revise their estimates upward to reflect observed default and loss rates. Section 4 Calculation of risk-weighted exposures for equity exposures in the IRB Approach Subsection 1 Capital charges and risk quantification Article 149 Supervised institutions requirements: shall satisfy the following a) the estimate of potential loss shall be sufficiently robust in response to adverse market movements impacting the long-term risk profile of the supervised institution’s equity exposures; b) the data used to represent distributions of returns shall reflect the longest possible sample period composed of relevant data representing the risk profile of the supervised institution’s equity exposures. These data shall be sufficient to provide conservative, statistically reliable, and robust loss estimates that are not based purely on subjective considerations; c) supervised institutions shall demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the shock employed provides a conservative estimate of potential losses over a relevant long-term market or business cycle. Supervised institutions shall combine empirical analysis of available data with adjustments based on a variety of factors in order to attain model outputs that achieve appropriate realism and conservatism. In constructing Value at Risk (VaR) models for estimating potential quarterly losses, supervised institutions may use quarterly data or convert shorter Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 horizon period data to a quarterly equivalent, using an analytically appropriate method supported by empirical evidence and a well-developed and documented analysis and thought process. This approach shall be applied conservatively and consistently over time. Where only limited relevant data are available, supervised institutions shall add appropriate margins of conservatism; d) the internal models used shall capture all material risks associated with equity returns, including both general market risk and the specific risk of the supervised institution’s equity portfolio. These models shall explain historical price variation, capture both the magnitude of and changes in the composition of potential concentrations, and be sufficiently robust in response to adverse market environments. The population of risk exposures represented in the data used for estimation shall be closely matched to, or at least comparable with, those of the supervised institution’s equity exposures; e) the internal model shall be appropriate for the risk profile and complexity of the supervised institution’s portfolio. Where a supervised institution has material holdings with values that are highly non-linear in nature, the internal model shall be designed to capture the risks associated with such instruments appropriately; f) the mapping of individual positions to proxy risk factors, market indices, or risk factors shall be clear and rigorous; g) supervised institutions shall demonstrate through empirical analyses the relevance of the risk factors used, including their ability to capture both general and specific risk; h) the estimates of the volatility of returns on equity exposures shall incorporate all relevant and available data, information, and methods. Independently reviewed internal data or data from external sources, including pooled data, shall be used; c) A rigorous and comprehensive programme shall be put in place. stress-testing Subsection 2 Risk management and controls Article 150 Supervised institutions shall set policies, procedures, and controls that enable them to ensure the integrity of internal models and the modelling system including at least the following elements: a) internal models shall be fully integrated with information and management systems and the management of equity positions in the banking book. Internal models shall be fully integrated into the supervised institution’s risk management system if they are used particularly in: - measuring and assessing the performance of the equity portfolio; - allocating economic capital to equity exposures; - evaluating overall capital adequacy; - evaluating methods for managing investments; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) management systems, procedures, and control functions shall be put in place to ensure periodic independent review of all elements of the internal modelling process, including the approval of model revisions, the validation of model inputs, and the review of model results. These reviews shall assess the accuracy, exhaustiveness, and appropriateness of model inputs and results, and shall focus on detecting and limiting potential errors associated with known weaknesses of the model and identifying other weaknesses. This review shall be conducted by an independent internal unit; c) appropriate systems and procedures for monitoring investment limits and the amounts of equity exposures; d) the units responsible for the design and application of the model shall be functionally independent from the units responsible for managing individual investments; e) the persons responsible for each aspect of the modelling process shall be sufficiently qualified. Sufficiently competent and qualified staff shall be assigned the office in charge of modelling. Subsection 3 Validation and documentation Article 151 Supervised institutions shall put in place a reliable system for validating the accuracy and consistency of their models and modelling processes under the following conditions: a) all material elements of the internal models, the modelling process, and the validation system shall be documented; b) the validation system shall enable supervised institutions to assess the performance of their internal models and processes consistent and soundly; c) the methods and data used in quantitative validation shall be consistent over time. Supervised institutions shall document any change in methods or data used in estimation or validation, whether the change involves data sources or periods covered; d) supervised institutions shall regularly compare actual returns on their equity investments, on the basis of realised and unrealised gains and losses, with modelled estimates. These comparisons shall use historical data that cover as long a period as possible. Supervised institutions shall document the methods and data used in such comparisons, and shall update their analysis and documentation at least once annually; e) supervised institutions shall make comparisons with external data sources. The analysis shall be based on data that are appropriate to the portfolio, are updated regularly, and cover a relevant observation period. Supervised institutions’ internal assessments of the performance of their models shall be based on as long a period as possible; f) supervised institutions shall have robust internal standards for addressing situations where differences between actual equity returns and the estimates of their models call into question the validity of the estimates or the models. These internal standards shall take account of 153 business cycles and any other similar variability in equity returns. Any adjustments made to an internal model in response to model reviews shall be documented and shall comply with the supervised institution’s internal standards relating to model review; g) the internal models and the modelling process shall covered by documentation that specifies the responsibilities of the persons involved in modelling and the procedures for approving and reviewing models. Section 5 Requirements relating to internal controls Subsection 1 General provisions Article 152 All material aspects of the rating and estimation systems shall be approved by the executive body referred to Article 4 of Regulation 97-02, which should have a general command of the supervised institution’s rating systems and a detailed understanding of the management reports associated with them. The executive body shall be informed of any changes or exceptions from established policies that will have a material impact on the operation of the rating system. - regularly produces and analyses reports on the output of the rating systems. Article 156 The credit risk control unit is responsible for: a) testing and monitoring grades and pools; b) producing and analysing summary reports on the operation of the rating systems; c) implementing procedures to ensure that the definitions of grades and pools are applied consistently across different departments and geographic areas; d) reviewing and documenting any changes to the rating process, including the reasons for the change; e) reviewing the rating criteria to determine if they remain predictive of risk. Any changes to the rating process, criteria, or individual rating parameters shall be documented and retained; f) actively participating in the design or selection, implementation, and validation of models used in the rating process; g) ensuring the oversight and supervision of models used in the rating process; Article 153 The executive body shall have a good command of the design and operation of the rating system and the measures taken to ensure that it is operating properly. The credit risk control units shall report on the performance of the rating process, areas needing improvement, and the status of efforts to improve identified deficiencies. h) reviewing and altering the models used in the rating process on an ongoing basis. Article 154 Analyses of the supervised institution’s credit risk profile based on internal rating systems shall be an essential part of the reports provided to the executive body. Reporting shall cover at least the following information: the risk profile by grade; migration across grades; estimation of relevant parameters per grade; comparisons of realised and estimated default rates, LGDs, and CCFs; and stress-test results. The frequency of reporting shall depend on the significance, the type of information communicated, and the level of the recipient in the hierarchy. a) producing information relevant to testing and monitoring grades and pools; Subsection 2 Ongoing internal control Article 155 Supervised institutions shall have a credit risk control unit that: - is independent from the persons and units responsible for originating or renewing credit lines; - reports to the executive body; - is responsible for the design or selection, implementation, oversight, and performance of the rating systems; 154 Article 157 Subject to Article 37-1 of Regulation 97-02, supervised institutions that resort to pooled data using the methods described in Article 123-2 may outsource the following tasks; b) producing summary reports on the operation of the rating systems; c) producing information relevant to the review of the rating criteria in order to evaluate if they remain predictive of risk; d) documenting changes to the rating process, criteria, or individual rating parameters e) producing relevant information supporting ongoing review and alterations to models used in the rating process. Subsection 3 Periodic internal control Article 158 The internal audit unit or a comparable independent auditing unit shall review, at least once annually, the rating systems and their operation, and shall ensure compliance with the minimum standards set out in this Title. This review shall include the operation of the credit decision process, and in particular the estimation of PD, LGD, expected loss and CCFs. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 TITLE IV CREDIT RISK MITIGATION CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 159 The provisions of this Title apply to supervised institutions using the Standardised Approach or the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk to take into account the effects of credit risk mitigation techniques in the calculation of riskweighted exposure amounts or, if relevant, expected loss amounts as set out in Section 2, Chapter III of Title III. subdivide that exposure into several parts, each covered by one type of credit risk mitigation tool. The risk-weighted exposure amount for each part shall be calculated separately as provided in Title II and in this Title. The same method shall be applied when credit protection provided by a single protection provider has differing maturities. The provisions of Articles 185 and 195-1 to 195-4 specify the applicable treatment when subject establishments using the Foundation IRB Approach apply several techniques of risk mitigation to the same exposure. CHAPTER II COLLATERAL Article 160 For the purposes of this Title: a) ’lending institution’ means the supervised institution that has the exposure, whether or not the exposure derives from a loan; b) ’secured lending transaction’ means any transaction that gives rise to an exposure secured by collateral and that does not confer on the supervised institution the right to receive margin frequently; c) ’capital market-driven transaction’ means any transaction that gives rise to an exposure secured by collateral and that does confer upon the supervised institution the right to receive margin frequently. d) ’main index’ means a broadly diversified index composed of sufficiently liquid securities. Article 161 Supervised institutions shall have adequate risk analysis and measurement systems that permit them to control the risks associated with the use of credit risk mitigation techniques. Supervised institutions recognising the effects of credit mitigation techniques shall continue to assess the credit risks associated with the underlying exposures. In the case of repurchase transactions and securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, the underlying exposure, for the purposes of this paragraph, means the net amount of the exposure. Article 162 The application of this Title may not result in exposure amounts or, if applicable, expected loss amounts higher than those calculated for an identical exposure for which there is no credit risk mitigation. Where risk-weighted exposure amounts calculated in accordance with Titles II and III already take account of the effects of credit protection, these effects shall not be recognised again under this Title. Article 163 Where a supervised institution that uses the Standardised Approach for credit risk has more than one form of credit risk mitigation covering a single exposure, it shall Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Section 1 Eligibility Article 164-1 The following instruments are recognised as collateral, subject to the minimum requirements of Section 2, under all approaches for credit risk and all of the methods for recognising risk mitigation set out in Section 3 of this Chapter: a) cash on deposit with and pledged or assigned to the lending institution; b) debt securities issued by central governments or central banks which have an external credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 4 or higher as defined in Article 11. For the purposes of this paragraph, the following instruments are considered equivalent to debt securities issued by central governments or central banks: d) debt securities issued by regional governments or local authorities treated like central governments, as set out in Article 12; ii) debt securities issued by the multilateral development banks listed in paragraph (b) of Article 14; iii) debt securities issued by the European Community, the International Monetary Fund, and the Bank for International Settlements; iv) debt securities issued by public sector entities, when their exposures receive the same risk weight as those on central governments, in accordance with Article 13; (c) debt securities issued by institutions, when those securities have an external credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 3 or higher as defined in Article 16. Debt securities issued by institutions may also be recognised as collateral when they do not have an external credit assessment, if they fulfil the following criteria: - the debt securities are of senior rank and are listed on a recognised exchange; - all other issues by the issuing institution that have the same seniority and that have an external credit assessment, 155 have a credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 3 or higher as defined in Article 16; - the lending institution does not possess any information to suggest that the issue would justify a credit assessment below that indicated in the preceding paragraph; - the debt securities are sufficiently liquid. For the purposes of this paragraph, the following instruments are considered equivalent to debt securities issued by institutions: i) debt securities issued by regional governments or local authorities other than those treated like central governments; ii) debt securities issued by public sector entities, when the exposures on these entities receive the same risk weight as institutions, in accordance with Article 13; iii) debt securities issued by multilateral development banks other than those listed in paragraph (b) of Article 14; d) debt securities issued by other entities that have an external credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 3 or higher as defined in Article 17; e) debt securities with a short-term credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 3 or higher as defined in Article 17; f) equities or convertible bonds that are included in a main index; g) gold. Units in collective investment undertakings (CIUs) are also eligible as collateral, subject to the minimum requirements of Section 2, if they are covered by a daily public price quote and are composed of instruments listed in this Article. If the CIU uses, or intends to use, derivative products to hedge the instruments constituting the units, the hedged instruments remain eligible as collateral. If the investments of the CIU are not restricted to the instruments deemed eligible as collateral in accordance with the minimum requirements in section 2, the shares issued may be recognised with the value of eligible assets as collateral assuming that the CIU has invested in noneligible assets to the maximum extent allowed under its mandate. In the case where non-eligible assets have a negative value on account of liabilities or potential liabilities resulting from their ownership, the supervised institution calculates the total value of non-eligible assets and deducts it from the value of eligible assets. Article 164-2 For the purposes of paragraph (b) to (e) of the preceding paragraph, if a given security has two credit assessments, the less favourable assessment shall apply. If a security has more than two credit assessments, the two most favourable assessments shall be taken and the less favourable of the two shall apply. Article 164-3 The following instruments are also eligible as collateral, subject to the minimum requirements of Section 2, under all approaches for credit risk and all of the methods for recognising risk mitigation set out in Section 3 of this Title: a) cash on deposit with a third-party institution that is not a depository institution, and pledged or assigned to the lending institution; b) life insurance policies pledged or assigned to the lending institution; c) instruments of all kinds that are issued by third-party institutions and that will be repurchased by that institution upon request. Article 165 For supervised institutions that use the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method set out in Section 3 of this Chapter to reflect the effects of financial collateral, the following financial instruments are also recognised as collateral, subject to the minimum requirements in Section 2: a) equities or convertible bonds not included in a main index, but traded on a recognised exchange; b) units in CIUs, if they are covered by a daily public price quote and are composed of instruments listed in Article 164-1 and in paragraph (a) of this Article. If the CIU uses, or intends to use, derivative products to hedge the instruments constituting the units, the hedged instruments remain eligible as collateral. If the investments of the CIU are not only composed of instruments considered as eligible under the terms of section 2, and of the assets referred to at point a of this article, the units of such CIU may be estimated at the value of the assets eligible as guarantees where the CIU has invested in non eligible assets the highest amount authorised under the terms of its mandate. Where the non eligible assets have a negative value because of the liabilities or potential liabilities detained the credit institution shall calculate the global value of the non eligible assets and reduce the value of the eligible assets for the amount the non eligible assets. Article 166-1 In addition to the instruments referred to in the preceding paragraphs, supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk may recognise the instruments listed below as eligible collateral, subject to the minimum requirements of Section 2. Article 166-2 Residential real estate that is or will be occupied or let by the owner, as well as commercial real estate, may be recognised as collateral subject to the following conditions: a) the value of the property does not depend materially upon the credit quality of the obligor; b) the risk of the borrower does not depend materially on the performance of the underlying property, but rather on 156 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 the capacity of the borrower to repay the debt from other revenue sources. For the purposes of this paragraph, when the owner of the residential property is a société civile immobilière that consists exclusively of natural persons who are not acting in a professional capacity, the shareholders of the société civile immobilière are considered to be the owners. For exposures secured by residential property, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may waive the condition stated in paragraph (b) if the real estate market is sufficiently developed and its loss rates are sufficiently low to justify such treatment. For finance lease agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may waive the condition stated in paragraph (b) if the finance lease market for this type of property is sufficiently developed and loss rates satisfy the following conditions: - the losses generated each year by lease financing agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature for which the financial outstanding is less than or equal to 50% of the market value or 60% of the mortgage lending value of the underlying real estate asset does not exceed 0.3% of the total outstanding amount of all lease financing agreements and lease agreements; - the total losses generated each year by all financing agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature does not exceed 0.5% of the total outstanding amount of all lease financing agreements and lease agreements. If either of these two conditions ceases to be met for a given year, the waiver shall end until such time as the conditions are again satisfied. Article 166-3 - Receivables shall be recognised as collateral if they are linked to a commercial transaction or to a transaction whose original maturity is less than or equal to one year. Receivables associated with securitisations, subparticipations, or credit derivatives, or corresponding to the amounts owed by an entity belonging to the same group are not eligible. Article 166-4 Physical collateral, other than the types of collateral referred to above, is eligible subject to the following conditions: - the existence of liquid markets for disposal of the collateral in an expeditious and economically efficient manner; - the existence of a well-established, publicly available market prices for the collateral. The supervised institution must be able to demonstrate that there is no evidence that the net price it receives when collateral is realised deviate significantly from the market price. treated as loans secured by the financed property, subject to the provisions of Article 184-1. Section 2 Minimum requirements Article 167-1 In order to be eligible as collateral, the instruments listed in Article 164-1 must satisfy the following minimum requirements: a) the credit quality of the obligor and the value of the instrument must not have a material positive correlation. Debt securities issued by the obligor or by any entity belonging to the same group are not eligible. Instruments and other assets benefiting from the preference mentioned in subparagraph 2 of paragraph I of Article L. 515-13 of the Monetary and Financial Code issued by the obligor shall be eligible when they are posted as collateral for repurchase transactions and the credit quality of the obligor and the value of the bonds or other assets are materially positively correlated; b) supervised institutions shall take all steps necessary to ensure the enforceability of collateral arrangements, including satisfying all contractual requirements and applicable regulatory requirements. They shall carry out a legal review to ensure the enforceability of the collateral in all relevant jurisdictions. This review shall be renewed as often as necessary; c) the collateral arrangements shall be well documented, with a clear and robust procedure for the timely liquidation of collateral; d) supervised institutions shall implement procedures and systems to control risks arising from the use of collateral, including residual risk and concentration risk; e) the supervised institution shall have appropriate, welldocumented procedures for the different types and amounts of collateral accepted; f) supervised institutions shall determine the market value of the collateral, and revalue it accordingly, with a minimum frequency of once every six months, and more frequently if the supervised institution foresees a significant decrease in its market value. g) where the collateral is held by a third party, the supervised institution shall take reasonable steps to ensure that the third party segregates the collateral from its own assets. Article 167-2 In addition to the requirements set out in the preceding paragraph, when supervised institutions use the Financial Collateral Simple Method described in Section 3 to reflect the effects of financial collateral, the remaining maturity of the protection must be at least as long as the remaining maturity of the exposure. Article 166-5 Where the minimum requirements set out in Article 171 are met, lease financing agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature for which there is no residual value are Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 157 Article 168 For the recognition of real estate collateral, the following conditions must be met: a) the mortgage or charge is legally enforceable in all jurisdictions that are relevant at the time of the conclusion of the credit agreement, and, as applicable, properly filed on a timely basis such that the lien is perfected. The legal characteristics of the collateral shall enable the supervised institution to realise the value of the protection within a reasonable timeframe. b) the value of the property shall be monitored frequently, at a minimum once every year for real estate and once every three years for residential real estate, or more frequently if the market is subject to significant changes in conditions. Statistical methods may be used to monitor the value of the property and to identify property that needs revaluation. The property valuation shall be reviewed by an independent expert if it appears that the value of the property has declined materially relative to general market prices. For secured loans exceeding EUR 3 million or representing more that 5% of the own funds of the supervised institution’s own funds, the property valuation shall be reviewed by an independent expert at least once every three years. For the purposes of this paragraph, ‘independent expert’ means a person who possesses the necessary qualifications, ability, and experience to conduct a valuation and who is independent from the credit decision process. c) the types of residential and commercial real estate accepted by the supervised institution as collateral, and its lending policies in this regard shall be well documented. d) supervised institutions shall have procedures permitting them to verify that real estate property accepted as collateral is adequately insured against damage. Article 169 In order to be eligible as collateral, the receivables listed in Article 166-3 must satisfy the following minimum requirements: a) the legal mechanism by which the collateral is provided shall be robust and effective and shall define the lender’s rights over the proceeds clearly; b) supervised institutions shall take all steps necessary to fulfil local requirements regarding the enforceability of their security interest. The applicable legal framework should allow the lender to have a first priority claim over all unsecured creditors; c) supervised institutions shall conduct a legal review to ensure the enforceability of the collateral arrangements in all relevant jurisdictions; d) the collateral arrangements shall be well documented, with a robust procedures for the timely collection of collateral. These procedures shall ensure that any legal conditions required for declaring the default of the borrower and timely collection of collateral are observed. In the event of the borrower’s financial distress or default, 158 the supervised institution should have legal authority to sell or assign the receivables to other parties without consent of the receivables obligors; e) supervised institutions shall have adequate procedures for determining the credit risk associated with receivables eligible as collateral. These procedures shall include, among other things, analyses of the borrower’s business and industry and the types of customers with whom the borrower does business. Where the supervised institution relies on the borrower to ascertain the credit risk of the customers, the supervised institution shall review the borrower’s credit practices to ascertain their soundness and credibility. f) the margin between the amount of the exposure and the value of the receivables shall reflect all relevant factors, including the cost of collection and concentration within a pool of receivables pledged or transferred as collateral by the same borrower. Supervised institutions shall take into account the potential concentration risk for all of their exposures, including the receivables referred to in this paragraph. They shall maintain an appropriate system for monitoring the receivables on a continuous basis. Compliance with loan covenants and all other legal requirements shall be reviewed on a regular basis; g) the receivables pledged or transferred as collateral by a borrower shall be sufficiently diversified and shall not be unduly correlated with the borrower. Where there is material positive correlation, the attendant risks shall be taken into account in the setting of margins for the collateral pool as a whole; h) receivables from entities belonging to the same group as the borrower, or from the employees of such entities, shall not be eligible as risk mitigants; i) the supervised institution shall have a documented process for collecting amounts due in the event of default or financial difficulties on the part of the borrower, even when the supervised institution normally looks to the borrower for collections. Article 170 In order to be eligible as collateral, physical collateral other than the types referred to above must satisfy the following minimum requirements: a) the collateral arrangement are legally effective and enforceable in all relevant jurisdictions, and permit the supervised institution to realise the value of the property within a reasonable timeframe; b) with the exception of permissible prior claims such as those referred to in paragraph (b) of the preceding Article, only first liens on, or charges over, collateral are recognised; c) the value of the property shall be monitored on a frequent basis, at least once annually, and more frequently if the market is subject to significant changes in conditions; d) the loan agreement shall include a detailed description of the collateral and of the methods and frequency of revaluation; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 e) the types of physical collateral accepted by the supervised institution shall be specified in its procedures. These procedures shall indicate the appropriate amount of each type of collateral relative to the amount of the exposure to which it applies; f) the supervised institution’s credit policies shall address appropriate collateral requirements in relation to: - the exposure amount; - the ability to liquidate the collateral; - the ability to establish objectively a price or market value for the collateral; - the frequency with which the value can be readily obtained, including by means of a professional appraisal or valuation; - the volatility of the value of the collateral or a proxy of the volatility; g) both the initial valuation and revaluation of the collateral shall take into account any deterioration or obsolescence; h) supervised institutions shall have the right to monitor the collateral on-site and shall have procedures on the subject; i) supervised institutions shall have procedures that allow them to verify that eligible collateral is adequately ensured against damage Article 171 Lease financing agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature for which there is no residual value may be treated as loans collateralised by the financed property when the following conditions are satisfied: a) the provisions of Articles 168 or 170 apply, according to the nature of the property financed; b) the lessor institution has a rigorous risk management system covering the use to which the leased asset is put, its age and planned duration of use, and the procedures for monitoring the value of the financed property; c) there is a robust legal framework establishing the lessor’s legal ownership of the asset and permitting it to exercise its rights as owner in a timely fashion; d) where this has not already been taken into account, as appropriate, in calculating the LGD level, the difference between the value of the unamortised amount and the market value of the property must not be so large as to overstate the credit risk mitigation attributed to the leased assets. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 172-1 Pledges or assignments of cash deposits referred to in paragraph (a) of Article 164-3 must satisfy the following requirements: - the pledges or assignments are legally effective and enforceable in all relevant jurisdictions; - the third-party institution has been notified of the pledge or assignment, enabling it to proceed on its own with payment to the lending institution, or to any other party with the lending credit institution’s consent; - the pledges or assignments are irrevocable and unconditional. Article 172-2 Pledges or assignments of life insurance policies referred to in paragraph (b) of Article 164-3 must satisfy the following requirements: a) the life insurance policy is openly pledged or assigned to the lending credit institution; b) the company providing the life insurance is notified of the pledge or assignment and as a result may not pay amounts payable under the contract without the consent of the lending credit institution; c) the lending institution has the right to cancel the policy and receive the surrender value in a timely manner in the event of the default of the borrower; d) the lending institution is kept informed of any nonpayments of premiums by the policy-holder; e) the pledged or assigned life insurance policy is valid for the entire maturity of the loan. When this condition cannot be satisfied because the insurance contract expires before the loan relationship expires, the lending institution shall take such measures as are necessary to ensure that the amount due to the policyholder at the expiration of the insurance contract serves as security until the expiration of the credit agreement; f) the pledge or assignment may be effectively implemented in all jurisdictions which are relevant at the time of the conclusion of the credit agreement t. g) the surrender value is declared by the company providing the life insurance and is non-reducible; h) the surrender value is to be paid in a timely manner upon request i) the surrender value cannot be requested without the consent of the credit institution; j) the company providing the life insurance is subject to the insurance code, the mutual benefit insurance code, the social security code, or is subject to supervision by a competent authority of a third country which applies supervisory and regulatory arrangements at least equivalent to those applied in the Community. 159 Section 3 Methods for taking account of financial collateral Article 173 Cash, securities, or commodities purchased, borrowed, or received under a repurchase transaction or securities or commodities lending or borrowing transaction shall be treated as eligible collateral. Subsection 1 Financial Collateral Simple Method Article 174 The Financial Collateral Simple Method set out in the following Articles shall be available only for exposures treated in accordance with the Standardised Approach for credit risk. Without prejudice to the provisions of Article 39-2, a supervised institution may not use the Financial Collateral Simple Method and the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method set out in subsection 2 at the same time, except for the purposes of article 39-1 and article 441. The supervised institutions must demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that the exceptional application of both methods simultaneously is not used selectively for the purpose of reducing minimum capital requirements and does not lead to any regulatory arbitrage. risk weight of 10% shall apply to the exposure values of such transactions, for the portion collateralised by debt securities issued by central governments or central banks and having an external credit assessment corresponding to the highest credit quality step defined in Article 11. For the purposes of this Article, the following instruments considered as equivalent to debt securities issued by central governments or central banks: i) debt securities issued by regional governments or local authorities treated like central governments, as set out in Article 12; ii) debt securities issued by the multilateral development banks listed in paragraph (b) of Article 14; iii) debt securities issued by the European Community, the International Monetary Fund, and the Bank for International Settlements. Article 176-4 A 0% risk weight may be applied in the following cases, provided the exposure and the collateral are denominated in the same currency: - the collateral is cash or cash-assimilated instruments; or - the collateral is in the form of debt securities issued by central governments or central banks that have received an external credit assessment corresponding to the highest credit quality step defined in Article 11. In this case, a discount of 20% is applied to the market value of the securities. Article 175 Supervised institutions shall assign eligible financial collateral instruments a value equal their market value as determined as provided in Article 167-1. The debt securities referred to in the second paragraph of the preceding Article shall also be considered equivalent to debt securities issued by central governments or central banks for the purposes of this Article. Article 176-1 The risk weight that would apply under the Standardised Approach for credit risk to a direct exposure to the collateral instrument shall apply, by substitution, to that portion of the exposure value of the exposure that is covered by the collateral. Subsection 2 Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method The risk weight of the collateralised portion shall be a minimum of 20% except as provided in the following paragraphs. The risk weight of the portion that is not covered by the collateral remains unchanged. Article 176-2 A risk weight of 0% shall be applied to the collateralised portion of the exposure when that exposure arises from repurchase transactions or securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions which satisfy the conditions set out in Article 178-6. If the counterparty to the transaction is not a core market participant as defined in that Article, a risk weight of 10% shall be applied. Article 176-3 A risk weight of 0% shall be applied to the exposure values determined in accordance with Title VII, for the derivative instruments listed in Appendix II, provided those instruments are subject to daily marking-to-market for the portion collateralised by cash or cash assimilatedinstruments, and where there is no currency mismatch. A 160 Article 177 In valuing financial collateral, volatility adjustments shall be applied to the market value of collateral as provided in this subsection in order to take account of price volatility. Subject to the provisions of the following paragraph, when there is a mismatch between the exposure and the collateral instrument, an adjustment reflecting currency volatility shall also be applied. For OTC derivatives transactions covered by novation agreements or netting agreements recognised in accordance with Title VI, an adjustment shall be applied when there is a mismatch between the collateral currency and the settlement currency. When the transactions covered by the novation agreement netting agreement are denominated in several different currencies, supervised institutions shall apply a single volatility adjustment. Article 178-1 Supervised institutions shall calculate the adjusted value of the financial collateral for all of their transactions using the following formula, with the exception of those subject to recognised master netting agreements, for which the provisions of Chapter IV of this Title apply: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 CVA = C x (1-HC-HFX) where: - CVA is the volatility-adjusted value of the financial collateral; - HC is the volatility adjustment for the financial collateral, calculated in accordance with Articles 178-2 to 178-6; - HFX is the volatility adjustment for any currency mismatch, calculated in accordance with Articles 178-2 to 178-6. Supervised institutions shall calculate an adjusted value of the exposure that takes into account the volatility of the collateral instruments and the effects of credit risk mitigation, using the following formula: EVA = E x (1+ HE) where: - EVA is the volatility-adjusted exposure amount; - E is the exposure value; - HE is the volatility adjustment applied to the exposure value calculated in accordance with Articles 178-2 to 178-6. For transactions involving OTC derivative instruments, EVA = E. Article 178-2 The above volatility adjustments may be calculated using an approach based on the supervisory volatility adjustments set out in Article 178-3, or using the approach based on own estimates of volatility adjustments set out in Article 178-4. The choice between these two approaches is independent of the approach for credit risk used by the supervised institution. When a supervised institution chooses to use the Own Estimates approach, that approach shall apply to all of its exposures, with the exception of non-material portfolios, for which the Supervisory Volatility Adjustment approach may be used. Where the financial collateral consists of more than one recognised instrument, the volatility adjustment shall be equal to the weighted average of the volatility adjustments for each instrument, weighted by the proportion of total collateral represented by each instrument. Article 178-3 In the Supervisory Volatility Adjustment approach, the adjustments set out in the following tables shall be applied where there is daily valuation. Supervised institutions shall calculate the fully-adjusted exposure value using the following formula: E* = max {0, [EVA - CVAM]} where: - E* is the fully-adjusted exposure value, taking into account volatility and the risk mitigating effects of the financial collateral; - CVAM is CVA further adjusted for any maturity mismatch as provided in Chapter V of this Title. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 161 Credit quality step with which the credit assessment of a debt security is associated 1 2-3 4 Credit quality step with which the short-term credit assessment of a short-term debt security is associated 1 2-3 162 Residual maturity ≤ 1 year >1 ≤ 5 years > 5 years ≤ 1 year >1 ≤ 5 years > 5 years ≤ 1 year >1 ≤ 5 years > 5 years Volatility adjustments for debt securities issued by central governments and central banks referred to in paragraph (b) of Article 164-1 Volatility adjustments for debt securities issued by institutions or other entities referred to in paragraphs (c) and (d) of Article 164-1 20-day liquidation period (%) 0.707 2.828 5.657 1.414 4.243 8.485 21.213 21.213 21.213 20-day liquidation period (%) 1.414 5.657 11.314 2.828 8.485 16.971 N/A N/A N/A 10-day liquidation period (%) 0.5 2 4 1 3 6 15 15 15 5-day liquidation period (%) 0.354 1.414 2.828 0.707 2.121 4.243 10.607 10.607 10.607 Volatility adjustments for debt securities issued by central governments and central banks referred to in paragraph (b) of Article 164-1 and having a short-term credit assessment 20-day liquidation period (%) 0.707 1.414 10-day liquidation period (%) 0.5 1 5-day liquidation period (%) 0.354 0.707 10-day liquidation period (%) 1 4 8 2 6 12 N/A N/A N/A 5-day liquidation period (%) 0.707 2.828 5.657 1.414 4.243 8.485 N/A N/A N/A Volatility adjustments for debt securities issued by institutions or other entities referred to in paragraphs (c) and (d) of Article 164-1 and having a short-term credit assessment 20-day liquidation period (%) 1.414 2.828 10-day liquidation period (%) 1 2 5-day liquidation period (%) 0.707 1.414 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Other collateral or exposure types 20-day liquidation period (%) 10-day liquidation period (%) 21.213 15 5-day liquidation period (%) 10.607 35.355 25 17.678 0 21.213 0 15 0 10.607 Main index equities and main index convertible bonds Other equities or convertible bonds listed on a recognised exchange Cash Gold Volatility adjustments for currency mismatches 20-day liquidation period (%) 11.314 10-day liquidation period (%) 5-day liquidation period (%) 8 5.657 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 163 The liquidation period shall be: - 20 business days for secured lending transactions; - 5 business days for repurchase transactions, with the exception of transactions involving the transfer of commodities or guaranteed rights relating to title to commodities; - 5 business days for securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions; - 10 business days for all other capital market-driven transactions. For the purposes of this Article, the credit quality steps shall be those assigned in the Standardised Approach for credit risk. The provisions of Article 164-2 shall apply to this Article. For repurchase transactions or securities lending or borrowing transactions involving securities not listed in the above tables, and for commodities lending or borrowing transactions, the volatility adjustment shall be the same as for equities not included in a main index but listed on a recognised exchange. For eligible units in CIUs, the volatility adjustment is the weighted-average volatility adjustment that would apply to the unit’s assets, using the liquidation periods defined above. If the supervised institution is not aware of the composition of the unit’s assets, the volatility adjustment shall be the highest volatility adjustment that would apply to any of the assets in which the fund has the right to invest. For debt securities issued by an institution that does not have an external credit assessment satisfying the conditions set out in Article 164-1, the volatility adjustments shall be the same as for securities issued by an institution or corporate whose external credit assessment corresponds to credit quality steps 2 or 3 as defined in Title II. Article 178-4 Subject to the criteria set out in this Article, supervised institutions may use own estimates of volatility for calculating the volatility adjustments to be applied to exposures and to financial collateral. When eligible debt securities have a credit assessment corresponding to investment grade or better, supervised institutions may use own estimates for each category of security. Supervised institutions shall define each category of debt securities taking into account their external credit assessment, the type of issuer, their residual maturity, and their modified duration. Volatility estimates shall be representative of the debt securities included in each category. For debt securities having an external credit assessment below investment grade, and for all other eligible collateral, supervised institutions shall calculate volatility adjustments for each of these instruments. Volatility adjustments shall be calculated without taking into account any correlations between the unsecured exposure, collateral, or exchange rates. 164 In calculating the volatility adjustments, the following quantitative criteria must be met: a) a 99th percentile one-tailed confidence interval shall be used; b) the liquidation period shall be: - 20 business days for secured lending transactions; - 5 business days for repurchase transactions, with the exception of transactions involving the transfer of commodities or guaranteed rights relating to title to commodities; - 5 business days for securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions; - 10 business days for all other capital market driven transactions; c) supervised institutions may use volatility adjustments calculated using shorter or longer liquidation periods than those set out in the preceding paragraph by applying the following formula: H M = H N TM / TN where: - HM is the volatility adjustment used by the supervised institution; - TM is the liquidation period as specified in the preceding paragraph; - TN is the liquidation period used by the supervised institution to derive HN; - HN is the volatility adjustment calculated based on the liquidation period TN; d) supervised institutions shall take into account the illiquidity of lower-quality assets. The liquidation period shall be adjusted upwards in cases where there is doubt concerning the liquidity of the collateral. Supervised institutions shall identify where historical data may understate potential volatility. Such cases shall be dealt with by means of a stress scenario; e) the historical observation period used for calculating volatility adjustments shall at least one year. For supervised institutions that use a weighting scheme or other methods to determine the historical observation period, the effective historical observation period shall be at least one year with a weighted average time lag of the individual observations not less than 6 months. When volatility increases significantly, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require that volatility adjustments be calculated using a shorter observation period; f) the data sets used by supervised institutions shall updated at least quarterly, and more frequently when volatility increases significantly. This implies that supervised institutions shall calculate volatility adjustments at least quarterly. In calculating volatility adjustments, quantitative criteria must be met: the following a) the volatility estimates shall be used in the day-to-day risk management of the supervised institution, including in relation to its internal exposure limits; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) if the liquidation period used by the supervised institution in its day-to-day risk management is longer than that determined as provided in this Section, the supervised institution’s volatility adjustments shall be scaled up using the formula in paragraph (c) of this Article; Article 164-1 and risk-weighted at 0% in accordance with Title II; c) the supervised institution shall have procedures for verifying and ensuring the effective operation of its system for estimating volatility adjustments and for integrating them into its risk management process. These procedures should be well documented; c) the maturity of the transaction does not exceed one day, or both the exposure and the collateral are subject to daily marking-to-market or daily margin calls; d) the supervised institution’s system for estimating volatility adjustments shall be subject to independent periodic review carried out as part of the supervised institution’s internal control process. This review shall cover the entire system for estimating volatility adjustments and integrating them into the supervised institution’s risk management process. It shall be conducted at least once annually and shall address, at a minimum: - the integration of estimated volatility adjustments in daily risk management; - the validation of any significant change in the process for estimating volatility adjustments; - the consistency, timeliness, reliability, and independence of the data sources used; - the accuracy and relevance of the volatility assumptions. Article 178-5 The volatility adjustments set out in Articles 178-3 and 178-4 are calculated on the basis of daily revaluation. If the frequency of revaluation is less than daily, supervised institutions shall scale up the daily revaluation volatility adjustments using the following formula: H = HM N R + (TM − 1) TM where: - H is the scaled-up volatility adjustments; - HM is the volatility adjustment when there is daily revaluation; - NR is the actual number of business days between revaluations; - TM is the liquidation period as specified in Article 178-4. Article 178-6 Subject to the conditions set out in this Article, supervised institutions using the Supervisory Volatility Adjustment approach or the Own Estimates approach to calculate volatility adjustments may apply a volatility adjustment of 0% to repurchase transactions and securities lending or borrowing transactions, in place of the volatility adjustments calculated as provided in the preceding Articles. The provisions of this Article do not apply to supervised institutions using internal models as provided in Chapter IV. b) the exposure and the collateral are denominated in the same currency; d) the time between the last marking-to-market before the failure by the counterparty to honour a margin call and the liquidation of the collateral shall not exceed four business days; e) the transaction is settled across a settlement system proven for that type of transaction; f) the transaction is covered by standard market documentation for repurchase transactions or securities lending or borrowing transactions in the securities concerned; g) that documentation provides for the immediate termination of the transaction if the counterparty fails to satisfy an obligation to deliver cash or securities, or fails to deliver margin, or otherwise defaults; h) the counterparty is a core market participant. For the purposes of this paragraph, ‘core market participants’ is understood to include the following entities i) the entities listed in paragraph (b) of Article 164-1 and risk-weighted at 0% in accordance with Title II; ii) institutions; iii) other financial companies as defined in Article 1 of Regulation 2000-03, as well as entities belonging to the insurance sector within the meaning of Article L.517-2-I of the Monetary and Financial Code, when the exposures on these firms or entities are risk-weighted at 20% in the Standardised Approach for credit risk, or which, in the case of supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk, have an internal rating associated with a PD that corresponds to credit quality step 2 or higher as defined in Article 17 for corporate exposures; iv) regulated CIUs that are subject to capital or leverage requirements; v) regulated pension funds; and vi) recognised clearing organisations. Where the competent authorities of another Member State apply a volatility adjustment of 0% to repurchase transactions and securities lending or borrowing transactions involving securities issued by their central government or central bank, supervised institutions may apply the same treatment to their repurchase transactions and securities lending or borrowing transactions involving the same debt securities. In order to qualify for the above treatment, the following conditions must be satisfied: a) both the exposure and the collateral are cash or debt securities issued by the entities listed in paragraph (b) of Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 165 Article 179 In calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts, supervised institutions using the Standardised Approach for credit risk shall use the fully-adjusted exposure value, E*, as defined in Articles 178-1 à 178-5, as: - the exposure value, for balance sheet assets; - the value to which CCFs are applied to arrive at the exposure value, for off-balance sheet items. Supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk shall use as LGD for the purposes of Title III the effective loss given default, LGD*, calculated as follows: LGD* = LGD x (E*/E) where: - LGD is the loss given default that would apply to the exposure value in the absence of credit risk mitigation; - E* is the fully-adjusted exposure value as defined in Articles 178-1 to 178-5; - E is the exposure value. Section 4 Methods for taking account of other collateral a risk weight of 70%, where the senior unsecured exposure to the company providing the life insurance is assigned a risk weight of 100%; a risk weight of 150%, where the senior unsecured exposure to the company providing the life insurance is assigned a risk weight of 150%. Article 182 Instruments of all kinds that are issued by a third-party institution and that will be repurchased by that institution upon request, as referred to in Article 164-3, may be treated as collateral provided by the issuing institution. The value of the credit protection shall be: - the nominal value of the instrument when it is repurchased at that value; - the value of the instruments determined in the same way as for the debt securities listed in Article (c) of paragraph 164-1, when they are repurchased at their market value. Section 5 Methods for taking account of collateral for institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk Article 180 Where the conditions set out in Article 172-1 are satisfied, cash on deposit with a third-party institution that is pledged or assigned to the lending institution may be treated as collateral furnished by the third-party institution. Article 183-1 The value of the real estate collateral shall be the market value or mortgage lending value reduced as appropriate to reflect the results of the monitoring required Article 168 and to take account of the any prior claims on the property. For the purposes of this Article: Article 181 Where the conditions set out in Article 172-2 are satisfied, the fraction of the exposure guaranteed by the surrender value of the pledged or assigned life insurance policies shall be calculated either: a) ’market value’ means the estimated amount for which the property should exchange hands on the date of valuation in normal market conditions: that is, when each party to the exchange acts knowledgeably, prudently, and without compulsion. The market value shall be documented in writing in a clear and transparent manner; a) on the basis on the risk weights specified below where the exposure is subject to the standard credit risk approach; b) or by assigning an LGD of 40% where the exposure is subject to an IRB approach but not subject to the supervised institution’s own estimates of LGD. In case of a currency mismatch, the current surrender value shall be reduced according to Article 194, the value of the credit protection being the current surrender value of the life insurance policy For the purposes of Article 181, the following risk weights shall be assigned on the basis of the risk weight assigned to a senior unsecured exposure to the company providing the life insurance: a risk weight of 20%, where the senior unsecured exposure to the company providing the life insurance is assigned a risk weight of 20 %; b) ’mortgage lending value’ means the value of the property as determined by a prudent assessment of the future marketability of the property, taking into account the long-term sustainable characteristics of the property, normal local market conditions, the current use of the asset, and appropriate alternative uses of the property. The mortgage lending value shall be documented in a transparent and clear manner. Article 183-2 In the case of receivables, the value of the collateral shall be the amount receivable. Article 183-3 For physical collateral other than those types mentioned above, the property shall be valued at its market value defined as the amount for which the property would exchange on the date of valuation. a risk weight of 35%, where the senior unsecured exposure to the company providing the life insurance is assigned a risk weight or 50%; 166 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 184-1 Risk-weighted exposure amounts and expected losses taking account of the effects of the collateral referred to in this Section shall be calculated in accordance with the following provisions: For the purposes of Title III, supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk shall substitute the effective loss given default LGD* calculated as indicated below for LGD: - when the ratio of the value of the collateral (C) to the exposure value (E) is below a minimum threshold C* specified in the following table, supervised institutions shall assign the collateralised exposure an effective loss given default (LGD*), equal to the LGD defined in Title III for a similar uncollateralised exposure; LGD* for senior claims or contingent claims Receivables Residential real estate and commercial real estate Other collateral 35 % 35 % 40 % Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 - when the ratio of the value of the collateral (C) to the exposure value (E) exceeds a second threshold (C**) specified in the following table, supervised institutions shall assign the collateralised exposure, by substitution, the effective loss given default (LGD*) calculated as indicated below, in place of the LGD defined in Title III; - when this second threshold (C**) is not reached for the exposure as a whole, supervised institutions shall divide the exposure into two parts: one part for which the second threshold (C**) is reached, and the other part corresponding to the residual exposure. LGD* for senior claims or contingent claims LGD* for subordinated claims or contingent claims 65 % 65 % 70 % Required minimum collateralisation level of the exposure (C*) Required minimum collateralisation level of the exposure (C**) 0% 30 % 125 % 140 % 30 % 140 % 167 Until 31 December 2012, supervised institutions shall assign the following LGDs, subject to the above thresholds: - 30% for senior exposures in the form of Commercial Real Estate leasing for finance lease agreements or lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate use, when the exposure represents a first-priority claim; - 35% for senior exposures in the form of equipment leasing, when the exposure represents a first-priority claim; - 30% for senior exposures secured by residential or commercial real estate and secured by a mortgage or equivalent security, when the exposure represents a firstpriority claim. Article 184-2 For exposures, or any part of an exposure, fully collateralised by residential property, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise supervised institutions to apply, in place of the treatment set out in the preceding Articles, a 50% risk weight to the exposure value, or to the guaranteed portion of the exposure value, if the real estate market is sufficiently developed and its loss rates have the following characteristics: - the losses generated each year by exposures collateralised by residential properties for which the outstanding loan amount is less than or equal to 50% of the market value or 60% of the mortgage lending value of the real property do not exceed 0.3% of total outstanding amount of those exposures; - the total losses generated each year by lending collateralised by residential property do not exceed 0.5% of the total outstanding amount of those exposures. For finance lease agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise supervised institutions to apply, in place of the treatment set out in the preceding Articles, a 50% risk weight to the fraction of the exposure value corresponding to the discounted value of minimum payments for the agreement if the market for finance leases and leases of a financial nature for this type of property is sufficiently developed and its loss rates have the following characteristics: - the losses generated each year by lease financing agreements and leases of a financial nature for which the outstanding financial amount is less than or equal to 50% of the market value or 60% of the mortgage lending value of the underlying real property do not exceed 0.3% of total financial outstanding of exposures in this market; - the total losses generated each year by lease financing agreements and lease agreements of a financial nature do not exceed 0.5% of the total financial outstanding of exposures in this market. If either of these two conditions ceases to be met for a given year, the waiver shall end until such time as both conditions are again satisfied. When the competent authorities of another Member State apply the treatments set out in this Article to exposures collateralised by residential property or to finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate, supervised institutions may apply those treatments to exposures collateralised by 168 residential property located in that State or to finance lease agreements or lease agreements of a financial nature concerning commercial real estate in that State. Article 185 When an exposure is collateralised by both financial collateral and other eligible collateral, supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk shall, for the purposes of Title III, substitute the effective loss given default (LGD*) for LGD, in the following fashion: - first, the adjusted exposure value referred to in Article 1781 shall be divided into several parts, each covered by only one type of collateral. Supervised institutions shall, as appropriate, divide the adjusted exposure value into the portion covered by eligible financial collateral, the portion covered by receivables, the portion covered by real estate collateral, the portion covered by other eligible collateral, and the unsecured portion, if relevant. - then, the effective loss given default (LGD*) shall be calculated for each of these parts as provided in this Chapter. Chapter III UNFUNDED CREDIT PROTECTION Section 1 Eligibility Article 186 Independent of the approach for credit risk used, and subject to the minimum requirements set out in Section 2, supervised institutions may recognise the following entities as providers of protection: a) central governments and central banks; b) regional governments and local authorities; c) multilateral development banks; d) the European Community, the International Monetary Fund, and the Bank for International Settlements; e) public sector entities that are treated like central governments or as institutions as provided in Title II; f) institutions; g) other corporate entities, including those belonging to the same group as the supervised institution, when the following conditions are met: - the corporate entities have an external credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 2 or higher as defined in Article 17; - for supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk, if the corporate entity does not have an external credit assessment, it has an internal rating associated with a PD corresponding to credit assessment corresponding to a credit quality step of 2 or higher as defined in Article 17. Financial institutions authorised and supervised by the competent authorities of another Member State responsible Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 for licensing and supervising credit institutions may be recognised as protection providers if they are subject to a prudential supervision regime equivalent to the regime that applies to the supervised institutions. Article 187 - For institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk, the protection provider must have an internal rating that satisfies the minimum requirements set out in Chapter V of Title III. Article 188 For the purposes of the double default treatment set out in Article 48, institutions, entities belonging to the insurance sector within the meaning of Article L. 517-2-I of the Monetary and Financial Code, and Credit Export Agencies may be recognised as protection providers if the following requirements are satisfied: Section 2 Minimum requirements Article 190-1 Unfunded credit protection referred to in Section 1 must satisfy the following requirements: a) the credit protection is direct; b) the extent of the credit protection is clearly defined and incontrovertible; c) the credit protection contract does not contain any clause, the fulfilment of which is outside the direct control of the lender, and that: b) the protection provider is supervised in a manner equivalent to supervision conducted in accordance with this Order, or had, at the time the protection was put in place, an external credit assessment corresponding to credit quality assessment step 3 or higher as defined in Title II; i) would allow the protection provider to cancel the protection unilaterally; ii) would increase the effective cost of protection as a result of deteriorating credit quality of the protected exposure; iii) could prevent the protection provider from satisfying its payment obligation in a timely manner in the event that the original counterparty fails to make payments due; iv) could authorise the protection provider to reduce the maturity of the credit protection; c) the protection provider has an internal rating associated with a PD corresponding to credit quality step 3 or higher as defined in Title II; d) the protection is legally effective and enforceable in all jurisdictions concerned at the time the credit agreement is concluded. However, at the time the credit protection was provided, the protection provider must have had an internal rating associated with a PD corresponding to a credit quality step of 2 or higher as defined in Title II. If at the time that the protection was put in place, the protection provider had an internal rating associated with a PD corresponding to a credit quality step of 3 as defined in Title II, the protection shall not become eligible until the protection provider obtains an internal rating associated with a probability of default corresponding to credit quality step 2 as defined in Title II. Article 190-2 Supervised institutions shall implement systems to manage concentration risk arising from the use of unfunded credit protection. Supervised institutions must be able to demonstrate how its strategy regarding use of unfunded credit protection interacts with their overall risk profiles. a) the protection provider has sufficient expertise in providing unfunded credit protection; For the purposes of this Article, protection provided by export credit agencies must not benefit from any explicit government counter-guarantee. Article 189-1 Independent of the approach for credit risk used, supervised institutions may recognise credit default swaps, total return swaps, credit linked notes, and other equivalent instruments as credit risk mitigation techniques. For supervised institutions that purchase credit protection in the form of a total return swap and record the net payments received on the swap as net income, but do not record deterioration in the value of the asset that is protected, the credit protection shall not be recognised. Article 189-2 - When supervised institutions use credit derivatives held in the trading book to hedge the exposures in the non-trading book, the credit protection shall be recognised and taken into account in accordance with this Title if the credit risk transferred to the trading book is transferred to one or more third parties. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 191 When an exposure is protected by a guarantee which is counter-guaranteed by a central government or central bank, a regional government or local authority, a public sector entity treated like a central government as provided in Title II, a multilateral development bank referred to in paragraph (b) of Article 14 or an international organisation with a riskweight exposure of 0% in accordance with Article 15 of Title II, the exposure may be treated as protected by a guarantee provided by the above entities, provided the following conditions are satisfied: a) the counter-guarantee covers the entire credit risk of the claim; b) both the original guarantee and the counter-guarantee meet the minimum requirements for guarantees set out in Articles 190-1, 190-2, and 192-1, with the exception that the counter-guarantee need not be direct; c) the protection is robust and the historical data indicate that the protection provided by the counter-guarantee is at least equivalent to that of a direct guarantee provided by the same entity. The treatment referred to in the preceding paragraph also applies to exposures counter-guaranteed by entities other 169 than those listed above if the counter-guarantee is in turn directly guaranteed by one of the entities listed. Article 192-1 In addition to the requirements set out in Articles 190-1 and 190-2, guarantees must satisfy the following requirements: a) in the event of default or non-payment on the part of the counterparty, the lending institution shall have the right to pursue the guarantor in a timely manner for any monies due under the terms of the claim. Payment by the protection provider shall not be subject to the lending institution first having to pursue the obligor. In the case of guarantees covering real estate loans granted for the acquisition or improvement of residential property, the requirements in subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (c) of Article 190-1 and the requirements set out in this paragraph need only be satisfied within an appropriate and reasonable timeframe; b) the guarantee is the object of an explicitly documented agreement accepted by the protection provider; c) the protection covers all types of payments that the obligor is expected under the terms of the claim. When certain types of payment are not covered, the recognised value of the guarantee shall be adjusted to reflect the limited nature of the coverage. Article 192-2 In the case of guarantees obtained in the context of mutual guarantee schemes or provided or counter-guaranteed by the entities listed in Article 191, the requirements set out in paragraph (a) of the preceding Article shall be considered satisfied when either of the following conditions is met: a) the lending institution has the right to receive in a timely manner a provisional payment from the protection provider representing a rigorous estimate of the economic loss, including losses resulting from the non-payment of interest or any other amount due from the borrower, and likely to be incurred by the lending institution in proportion to the coverage of the guarantee; b) the lending institution can demonstrate that the effects of the guarantee, including the coverage of losses resulting from any amount due from the borrower, justify this treatment. Article 192-3 In addition to the requirements set out in Articles 190-1 and 190-2, credit derivatives must satisfy the following requirements: a) subject to the provisions of paragraph (b), the credit events shall at a minimum include: i) the non-payment of the amounts due under the terms of the underlying obligation that are in effect at the time. The payments made under the terms of the protection shall occur, at the latest, after the expiration of a grace period close to or shorter than the grace period provided for in the terms of the underlying obligation; ii) the bankruptcy, insolvency or inability of the obligor to pay its debts, or to make payments as they become due, or any other similar event, or the admission in writing of such inability; 170 iii) the restructuring of the underlying obligation involving forgiveness or postponement of principal, interest, or fees, as well as a value adjustment or any other similar debit to the profit and loss account; b) when restructuring of the underlying obligation is not considered a credit event, the value of the protection shall be adjusted as provided in Article 194; c) when the credit derivatives allow for cash settlement, supervised institutions shall have a robust valuation process for estimating losses reliably. There shall be a clearly specified period for obtaining post-credit-event valuations of the underlying obligation; d) when the protection purchaser’s right and ability to transfer the underlying obligation to the protection provider is required for settlement, the terms of the underlying obligation shall provide that any required consent to such transfer may not be unreasonably withheld; e) the parties responsible for determining whether a credit event has occurred shall be clearly identified. This determination may not be the sole responsibility of the protection seller. The protection buyer shall have the right or the ability to inform the protection provider of the occurrence of a credit event. When there is a mismatch between the underlying obligation and the reference asset, or between the underlying obligation and the asset used to determine whether a credit event has occurred, the following conditions must be satisfied: a) the reference asset, or the asset used to determine whether a credit event has occurred ranks pari passu with or is junior to the underlying obligation; b) the reference asset or the asset used to determine whether a credit event has occurred has the same obligor, i.e., the same legal entity, as the underlying obligation. In this case, cross-default or cross-acceleration clauses are legally enforceable. Article 192-4 Unfunded credit protection eligible for the double default treatment set out in Article 48 shall satisfy the following requirements: a) the underlying obligation shall be: – an exposure classified as a corporate exposure in Article 40-1, excluding exposures on entities belonging to the insurance sector within the meaning of Article L. 517-2-I of the Monetary and Financial Code; or – an exposure to a regional government or local authority or to a public sector entity that is not treated as an exposure to a central government or a central bank as defined in Articles 40-1 to 40-6; or – an exposure to a small or medium-sized entity classified as a retail exposure in Articles 41; b) the obligor for the underlying commitment shall not be a member of the same group as the protection provider; c) the exposure shall be covered by one of the following guarantees or credit derivatives: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 – single-name unfunded credit derivatives or single-name guarantees; – first-to-default credit derivatives covering a basket of assets. In this case, the treatment shall be applied to the asset within the basket with the lowest risk-weighted exposure amount; – nth-to-default credit derivatives covering a basket of assets. In this case, the protection obtained is eligible only if eligible protection for the (n-1)th default has already been obtained or if (n-1) of the assets in the basket have already defaulted. When these conditions are satisfied, the treatment shall be applied to the asset in the basket with the lowest risk-weighted exposure amount; d) the protection satisfies the requirements set out in paragraphs 190-1, 190-2, 192-1 and 192-3; e) the effect of the protection is not already taken into account in the risk-weighting of the exposure prior to the application of the double default treatment; f) the supervised institution that benefits from the protection does not have the obligation to take legal action against the counterparty in order to receive payments under the terms of the protection. To the extent possible, supervised institutions shall take the necessary steps to ensure that the protection provider pays promptly in the event of a credit event; g) the purchased protection absorbs all losses arising from one of the credit events provided for in the contract, for the portion of the exposure covered by the protection; h) for contracts providing for physical settlement, supervised institutions shall ensure the legal certainty of settlement. If a supervised institution intends to deliver an asset other than the underlying asset, it shall ensure that the asset to be delivered is sufficiently liquid to be purchased for delivery in accordance with the terms of the contract; i) the terms and conditions of the contract establishing the protection arrangements shall be legally confirmed in writing by both the protection provider and the supervised institution that benefits from it; j) supervised institutions shall put in place provisions permitting them to detect any excessive correlation between the credit quality of the protection provider and the obligor of the exposure covered by the protection, due to their financial condition being dependent on common factors other than the general or sectoral economic outlook; k) in the case of protection against dilution risk, the seller of purchased receivables shall not be a member of the same group as the protection provider. Section 3 Methods for taking account of unfunded credit protection Article 193 Credit linked notes issued by a lending institution are treated as cash collateral. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 194 Unfunded credit protection is evaluated in accordance with the following provisions: a) the value of protection shall be the amount that the protection provider has undertaken to pay in the event of default, non-payment on the part of the borrower, or any other credit event specified in the contract; b) in the case of credit derivatives for which a restructuring of the underlying obligation is not considered as a credit event implying forgiveness or postponement of principal, interest, or fees resulting in a loss event such as a value adjustment or any other similar debit to the profit and loss account, supervised institutions shall apply the following provisions: - when the amount that the protection provider has undertaken to pay is less than or equal to the exposure value, the value of the protection as defined in paragraph (a) shall be reduced by 40%; - when the amount that the protection provider has undertaken to pay is greater than the exposure value, the value of the credit protection shall not exceed 60% of the exposure value; c) when unfunded credit protection is denominated in a currency different from that in which the exposures covered by the protection are denominated, supervised institutions shall apply a volatility adjustment to the value of the protection, calculated as follows: G* = G x (1-HFX) where: - G is the nominal amount of the protection; - G* is G adjusted for the currency mismatch; - HFX is the volatility adjustment for the currency mismatch, and. In the absence of a currency mismatch, G* = G. The above volatility adjustments may be calculated using the Supervisory Volatility Adjustments approach or the Own Estimates approach set out in subsection 2 of Section 3 of Chapter II. Article 195-1 The calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts and, if relevant, expected losses, shall take account of the effects of unfunded credit protection in accordance with the following provisions. Article 195-2 When a supervised institution transfers a portion of the risk of a loan in one or more tranches, the provisions of Article V shall apply. When there are materiality thresholds below which a credit event will not trigger payment under the terms of the protection, supervised institutions shall be considered to have retained a first-loss position. Article 195-3 Supervised institutions using the Standardised Approach for credit risk shall take account of the effects of unfunded credit protection in accordance with the following provisions: 171 a) when an exposure is entirely covered by unfunded credit protection, supervised institutions shall assign the exposure, by substitution, the risk weight that would apply to a direct exposure on the protection provider in the Standardised Approach for credit risk. To determine the extent of protection, supervised institutions shall use the nominal amount of protection adjusted for any maturity mismatch as provided in Article 194 and for any maturity mismatch in accordance with Chapter V of this title; b) when a portion of an exposure is covered by unfunded credit protection and the protected and unprotected portions rank equal in seniority, supervised institutions shall calculate the risk-weighted exposure amount for the purposes of Title II in the following manner: (E-GA) x r + GA x g where: - E is the exposure value; - GA, is the nominal amount of protection adjusted for any maturity mismatch as provided in Article 194 and for any maturity mismatch in accordance with chapter V of this Title; - r is the risk weight of the exposures to the obligor in the Standardised Approach for credit risk; - g is the risk weight of the protection provider in the Standardised Approach for credit risk. The treatment set out in paragraphs (d) and (e) of Article 11 shall apply to exposures or parts of exposures covered by unprotected credit protection provided by central banks or central governments and denominated in the domestic currency of the borrower, when the exposure is funded in that currency. Article 195-4 For the purposes of the provisions of Sections 2 and 3 of Chapter IV of Title III, supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk shall take account of the effects of unfunded credit protection according the following provisions: a) when an exposure is partially or fully covered by unfunded credit protection, supervised institutions shall apply, by substitution, the PD of the protection provider to the covered portion of the exposure. When the supervised institutions consider that full substitution is not warranted, they shall assign a PD between that of the borrower and that of the guarantor; b) in the case of subordinated exposures covered by nonsubordinated unfunded credit protection, supervised institutions using the Foundation IRB Approach for credit risk shall apply the LGD that would apply to senior exposures; maturity mismatch in accordance with Chapter V of this title; e) by derogation to paragraph (a), supervised institutions shall substitute the risk weight of the protection provider when the protection provider is subject to the Standardised Approach for credit risk. Article 196 When supervised institutions obtain credit protection for a basket of exposures in the form of first-to-default credit derivatives, the following treatment applies: the riskweighted exposure and, if relevant, expected losses, for the exposure in the basket that in the absence of the credit protection would be associated with the lowest riskweighted exposure amount under Title II or III (depending on the choice of approach), may be modified as provided in this Chapter if the value of the exposure is less than or equal to the value of the protection. When supervised institutions have credit protection for a basket of exposures in the form of nth-to-default credit derivatives, the effects of the protection may be treated as provided in the preceding paragraph for the calculation of risk-weighted exposures and, if relevant, expected losses if the institution has already obtained protection for defaults 1 to n-1 or if n-1 defaults have already occurred. CHAPTER IV NETTING Section 1 Eligibility Article 197 Subject to the minimum requirements of Section 2, the netting of the on-balance sheet transactions of a supervised institution with the same counterparty shall be recognised as a credit risk mitigation technique. Without prejudice to the provisions of the following article, this recognition is limited to loans and deposits placed with the lending institution by the same counterparty. Article 198 Subject to the minimum requirements of Section 2, when supervised institutions use the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method set out in Section 3 to reflect the effects of financial collateral as defined in Section 3 of Chapter II, the effects of bilateral netting contracts signed with the same counterparty and covering repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, or other capital market-driven transactions may be recognised as credit risk mitigation techniques. Without prejudice to the provisions of Chapter V of Title VII, the debt securities or commodities involved in these transactions shall be limited to those listed in Articles 164-1 and 165. c) when an exposure is partially covered by unfunded credit protection, supervised institutions shall apply the PD of the borrower and the LGD associated with the underlying exposure to the uncovered portion of the exposure; d) to determine the extent of protection, supervised institutions shall use the nominal amount of protection adjusted for any maturity mismatch as provided in Article 194, and for any 172 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Section 2 Minimum requirements Article 199 In order to be recognised as a credit risk mitigation technique, on-balance sheet netting must satisfy the following requirements: - the netting agreement is legally enforceable in all relevant jurisdictions, including in the event of the insolvency or bankruptcy of a counterparty; - the supervised institution is able to determine at any time which assets and liabilities are subject to the netting agreement; - the supervised institution monitors and controls the risks associated with the termination of credit protection; - the supervised institution monitors and controls the exposures concerned on a net basis. Article 200 In order to be recognised as credit risk mitigation techniques, master netting agreements covering repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, or other capital market-driven transactions must satisfy the following requirements: - they are legally effective and enforceable in all relevant jurisdictions, including in the event of the bankruptcy or insolvency of the counterparty; - they give the non-defaulting party the right to terminate and close-out in a timely manner all transactions under the agreement upon the event of default, including in the event of the bankruptcy or insolvency of the counterparty - they provide for the netting of gains and losses on transactions closed out under a master agreement such that a single net amount owed by one party to the other can be determined. Article 202-2 Supervised institutions should first calculate: a) a net position in each type of debt security or commodity subject to the same master netting agreement. This net position shall be calculated by computing the total value of the debt securities or commodities of that type lent, sold, or provided and then subtracting the total value of securities or commodities of that type borrowed, purchased, or received. For the purposes of this paragraph, ‘type of debt security’ means debt securities issued by the same entity, with the same issue date, the same maturity, the same liquidation period referenced in Section 3 of Chapter II, and subject to the same contractual terms and conditions; b) a net position in each currency other than the settlement currency of the master netting agreement. This net position shall be calculated by taking the total value of the securities denominated in that currency that are, sold, or provided; subtracting the total value of securities or commodities denominated in the same currency that are borrowed, purchased, or received; and then subtracting the amount of cash in that currency that is lent or transferred. Article 202-3 Supervised institutions should then: a) apply the appropriate volatility adjustment for each type of security or cash position to the absolute value of the net long or short position in securities of that type. b) apply the appropriate volatility adjustment for currency mismatch to the net long or short position in each currency other than the settlement currency of the master netting agreement. In addition to the above requirements, the requirements for the recognition of financial collateral set out in Article 167-1 must be satisfied Article 202-4 Supervised institutions shall calculate the fully-adjusted exposure value, taking into account the affects of the master netting agreement, using the following formula: Section 3 Methods for taking account of netting E* = max {0, [(∑(E) - ∑(C)) + ∑(|net position in each type of security | x Hsec) + (∑|Efx| x Hfx)]} Article 201 Loans and deposits placed with the lending institution by the same counterparty and that are subject to on-balance sheet netting shall be treated as cash collateral. Article 202-1 To take account of the effect of master netting agreements covering repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, or other capital marketdriven transactions, supervised institutions shall calculate the fully-adjusted exposure value in accordance with the following provisions, using for the calculation of volatility adjustments either the Own Estimates approach or the Supervisory Volatility Adjustments approach set out in Section 2 of Chapter II. When supervised institutions use the Supervisory Volatility Adjustments approach, the conditions and requirements set out in Article 178-4 must be satisfied. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 where: - E* is the fully-adjusted exposure value; - E is the exposure value that would apply in the absence of the credit protection, for each exposure under the agreement; - C is the value of the debt securities or commodities borrowed, purchased, or received or the cash borrowed or received under the agreement; - ∑(E) is the sum of the exposure values, E; - Σ(C) is the sum of the values of debt securities, commodities, and cash, C; - Efx is the net long or short position in a given currency other than the settlement currency of the agreement; - Hsec is the volatility adjustment appropriate to a particular type of debt security; - Hfx is the volatility adjustment for currency mismatch. 173 Article 203-1 Instead of applying Articles 202-1 to 202-4, and whatever their approach to credit risk, supervised institutions may be authorised by Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use internal models for: a) taking account of the effects of netting that covers repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, or other capital market-driven transactions, if the models takes into account correlations between positions in debt securities covered by the netting agreement as well as the liquidity of the instruments concerned. These models shall provide estimates of the potential change in value of unsecured exposure amount (∑E - ∑C). b) margin lending transactions, if these transactions are covered under a bilateral master netting agreement that meets the requirements set out in Title VI. Supervised institutions granted approval to use an internal model to calculate capital requirements for market risk in conformance with Title VII may use an internal model for the application of this Article. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit the use of such a model. Article 203-2 Internal models shall apply to all counterparties and instruments, except in non-material portfolios, for which the approach set out in Articles 201 and 202-1 to 202-4 may be used. Article 203-3 To use of internal models, supervised institutions shall have a system for the managing the risks associated with transactions covered by master netting agreements that is conceptually sound and implemented with integrity. In particular, the following qualitative criteria shall be met: a) the internal model used to calculate the potential price volatility of transactions is closely integrated into the daily risk management process of the supervised institution and serves as the basis for internal reports; b) supervised institutions have a risk control unit responsible for designing and operating the risk management system. This unit must be independent from business trading units and must report directly to senior management. It shall produce daily reports on the output of the model and on the use of trading limits; c) the daily reports produced by the independent risk-control unit shall be reviewed by a level of management with sufficient authority to enforce reductions of positions taken and reductions in overall risk exposure; d) the risk-control unit has a sufficient number of staff skilled in the use of models; e) supervised institutions have a programme for verifying compliance with the internal policies and procedures relating to the overall operation of the risk-measurement system. These policies and procedures shall be well documented; 174 f) the models have a proven track record of reasonable accuracy in measuring risks, demonstrated through by backtesting its output using at least one year of data; g) supervised institutions frequently conduct a rigorous programme of stress testing. The results of these tests are reviewed and reflected in the system of limits; h) an independent review of the risk-measurement system is conducted as part of the supervised institution’s regular internal control process This review covers both the activities of the trading units and those of the independent risk-control unit; i) the risk management system is reviewed at least once annually; j) the internal models satisfy the requirements set out in paragraphs (b) and (c) of Article 290 and Article 291. Article 203-4 For the calculation of potential changes in value, the following quantitative criteria shall be met: - potential changes in value are calculated at least daily; - a one-tailed 99% confidence interval is used; - a liquidation period of 5 business days is applied to securities repurchase transactions or securities lending or borrowing transactions; for the other operations a liquidation period of 10 business days shall be used; - the historical observation period used in calculating potential variation is at least one year, except where a shorter observation period is justified by a large upsurge in price volatility; - institutions update their data series at least quarterly. The risk-measurement system shall capture a sufficient number of risk factors to capture all material price risks. Supervised institutions may take account of empirical correlations within risk categories and across risk categories, provided that the system for measuring these correlations is sound and implemented with integrity. Article 203-5 The fully-adjusted exposure value, taking account of the effects of the master netting agreement, shall be calculated as follows: E* = max {0, [( ∑E - ∑C) + (VaR of the model)]} where: - E* is the fully-adjusted exposure value; - E is the exposure value for each exposure under the agreement; - C is the value of the debt securities or commodities borrowed, purchased, or received or the cash borrowed or received under the agreement; - ∑(E) is the sum of the exposure values, E; - Σ(C) is the sum of the values of debt securities, commodities, and cash, C; In calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts, supervised institutions shall use the previous business day’s model output as estimated by the internal model. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 204 For the purposes of Titles II and III, supervised institutions shall take the fully-adjusted exposure value (E*) as defined in the preceding paragraphs as the exposure value of exposures to the counterparty arising from the transactions subject to a master netting agreement. CHAPTER V MATURITY MISMATCHES Article 205 For the purposes of calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts, a maturity mismatch exists when the residual maturity of the credit protection is less than that of the exposure covered by the protection. When the residual maturity of the protection is less than three months and there is a maturity mismatch, the protection shall not be recognised. In the case of maturity mismatch, the credit protection shall not be recognised if its original maturity is less than 1 year or if the exposure covered by the protection is a short-term exposure for which the maturity (M) must be at least one day, as provided in Article 89-2. Article 206 The effective maturity of the exposure covered by protection shall be the longest possible remaining time before the obligor is required to fulfil its obligations, but no less than 5 years. Subject to the following paragraph, the maturity of the credit protection shall be the time to the earliest date at which the protection may end or be terminated Where the protection provider has the option to terminate the protection unilaterally, the maturity of the protection shall be the time to the earliest date at which that option can be exercised. Where the supervised institution has the option to terminate the protection and the contractual terms contain a positive incentive for the supervised institution to exercise that option before contractual maturity, the maturity of the protection shall be the time to the earliest date at which that option can be exercised; otherwise the option shall not affect the maturity of the protection. Where the protection provided by a credit derivative can terminate prior to the expiration of a grace period required for a default on the underlying obligation to occur as a result of a failure to pay, the maturity of the protection shall be reduced by the amount of the grace period. Article 207 Supervised institutions using the Financial Collateral Simple Method to reflect the effects of financial collateral may not recognise financial collateral when there is a maturity mismatch. Article 208 When supervised institutions use the Financial Collateral Comprehensive Method to reflect the effects of financial collateral, the maturity mismatch is taken into account in the adjusted value of the instruments constituting: CVAM = CVA x (t-t*)/(T-t*) Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 where: - CVA is the volatility-adjusted value of the instrument constituting the financial collateral as defined in Section 3 of Chapter II, or the amount of the exposure, whichever is lower; - t is the number of years remaining to the maturity date of the credit protection as defined in Article 206 of this Chapter, or the value of T as defined below, whichever is lower; - T is the number of years remaining to the maturity date of the exposure as defined in Article 206, or 5 years when T is greater than 5 years; t* = 0.25. Supervised institutions shall use CVAM to calculate the fullyadjusted exposure value (E*), as provided in Subsection 2 of Section 2 of Title II. Article 209 In the case of unfunded credit protection, the maturity mismatch shall be reflected in the adjusted value of the credit protection as follows: GA = G* x (t-t*)/(T-t*) where: - G* is the amount of the protection adjusted for any currency mismatch - GA is G* adjusted for any maturity mismatch - t is the number of years remaining to the maturity date of the credit protection as defined in Article 206 of this Chapter, or the value of T as defined below, whichever is lower; - T is the number of years remaining to the maturity date of the exposure as defined in Article 206, or 5 years when T is greater than 5 years; - t* = 0.25. Supervised institutions shall use GA as the value of the credit protection for the purposes of Articles 194 and 195-1 to 195-4. TITLE V SECURITISATION CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 210 For the purposes of this Title: a) ’traditional securitisation’ means a securitisation involving the economic transfer of the securitised exposures to a special purpose entity which issues securities. The transaction or structure involves the transfer of ownership of the securitised exposures from the originator supervised institution, or a sub-participation. The securities issued must not represent payment obligations of the originator supervised institution; b) ’synthetic securitisation’ means a securitisation in which the transfer of credit risk is achieved by the use of credit derivatives or guarantees, and the pool of exposures is not removed from the balance sheet of the originator supervised institution; 175 c) ’tranche’ means a contractually established segment of the credit risk associated with an exposure or a number of exposures. Each segment entails a credit risk specific to it, reflecting its rank or subordination, independent of any credit protection obtained directly from third parties; d) ’originator’ means either of the following: - an entity that, either itself or through related entities, was involved directly or indirectly in the original agreement which created the obligations or potential exposures of the debtor or potential debtor that give rise to the securitisation transaction or structure; - an entity that securitises exposures which it has purchased from a third party and brought onto its balance sheet; e) ’sponsor’ means a supervised institution other than an originator supervised institution that establishes and manages an asset-backed commercial paper programme or any other securitisation transaction or structure in which it purchases exposures from third parties; f) ’credit enhancement’ means a contractual arrangement whereby the credit quality of a position in a securitisation is improved, including the enhancement provided by more junior tranches in the securitisation and other types of credit protection; n) ’unfunded credit protection’ means guarantees and credit derivatives other than credit linked notes and similar instruments. Article 211 The risk-weighted exposure amount of a securitisation position shall be calculated by applying the risk weight determined as provided in this Title to the exposure value of the position. Article 212 If a supervised institution uses the Standardised Approach for credit risk set out in Title II for the exposure class to which the securitised exposures belong, the risk-weighted exposure amounts for the securitisation positions shall be calculated as provided in Chapter III. If a supervised institution uses the IRB approach for credit risk set out in Title III, the risk-weighted exposure amounts for the securitisation positions shall be calculated as provided in Chapter IV. Article 213 When an originator supervised institution transfers significant credit risk exposures as provided in Chapter II, it shall: g) ’securitisation special purpose entity’ means an entity, other than a supervised institution, whose purpose is to house one or more securitisations, and whose activities are limited to accomplishing that objective. The structure of the entity is designed to isolate its obligations from those of the originator supervised institution. The holders of the beneficial interests in the entity have the right to pledge or exchange their shares without restriction; a) in the case of a traditional securitisation, exclude from its calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts, and, as relevant, expected loss amounts, the exposures that it has securitised; h) ’excess spread’ means interest income and any other fee income received in connection with the securitised exposures, net of costs and expenses; c) calculate the risk-weighted exposure amounts for the positions that it holds in the securitisation. i) ’clean-up call option’ means a contractual option for the originator institution to repurchase or extinguish the securitisation positions before all of the underlying exposures have been repaid, when the amount of outstanding exposures falls below a specified level; j) ’liquidity facility’ means the securitisation position arising from a contractual agreement to provide funding to ensure the timeliness of cash flows to investors; k) ’KIRB’ means 8% of the sum of: - the risk-weighted exposure amounts for the securitised exposures, as they would be calculated under Article III if the exposures had not been securitised, plus; - the amount of expected losses associated with those exposures; l) ’asset-backed commercial paper programme’ means a programme of securitisation issuing securities that predominantly take the form of commercial paper with an original maturity of one year or less; m) ’funded credit protection’ means collateral and creditlinked notes or similar instruments; 176 b) in the case of a synthetic securitisation, calculate riskweighted exposure amounts, and, as relevant, expected loss amounts, for the securitised exposures; When the originator supervised institution does not transfer significant credit risk, it shall not calculate risk-weighted exposure amounts for the positions it holds in the securitisation, but instead shall apply the provisions of Titles II and III to those positions. Article 214 An originator or sponsor supervised institution, that calculates its risk-weighted exposures, in accordance with the provisions of the previous Article or which has sold instruments from its trading book to a special purpose vehicle with the result that it is no longer obliged to hold capital to cover the risk related to these instruments shall not provide financial support, beyond its contractual obligations, aimed at reducing investors’ real or potential losses. If a supervised institution referred to in the preceding paragraph does provide support beyond its contractual obligations for a given securitisation, it shall be subject to the capital requirements that would apply to the securitised exposures as if they had not been securitised. Supervised institutions shall disclose publicly any support provided beyond their contractual obligations and the impact of that support on their capital requirements. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 215 In the case of an exposure that is to different tranches in a securitisation, the exposure to each tranche shall be considered a separate securitisation position. Supervised institutions that provide credit protection to securitisation positions shall be considered as holding those positions. Article 216 If a supervised institution has two or more overlapping positions in a securitisation, the overlapping position or portion of a position shall be included in the calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts, using the highest risk weight that applies to those positions. The supervised institution may also recognise such overlaps between the capital required to cover specific trading book risk positions and the capital required to cover banking book risk provided that it is capable of calculating and comparing the capital required to cover the positions concerned. The overlapping positions must, wholly or partially, represent an exposure to the same risk, such that the portion of the positions that overlaps constitutes a single exposure. Where Article 255 c applies to positions in a programme of asset-backed commercial paper, the supervised institution may, subject to Autorité de contrôle prudentiel approval, use the weighting applied to a liquidity line to calculate the riskweighted exposure amount for the asset-backed commercial paper if the latter and the liquidity line have the same seniority thereby creating overlapping positions, and if the liquidity line covers 100% of the asset-backed commercial paper programme. Article 217 The exposure value of a position in a securitisation shall be determined as follows: a) if the supervised institution uses the Standardised Approach set out in Chapter III, the exposure value of an onbalance sheet securitisation position shall be its balance sheet value; b) if the supervised institution calculates risk-weighted exposure amounts using the internal ratings approach set out in Chapter IV, the exposure value of an on-balance sheet securitisation position shall be its balance sheet value measured gross of value adjustments and gross of latent gains or losses that are not included in the income statement or in regulatory capital. Latent gains or losses shall not be taken into account in calculating the exposure value of the securitised exposures; c) notwithstanding Article 216, the exposure value of an offbalance sheet securitisation position shall be its nominal value multiplied by a conversion figure of 100% except where otherwise provided in this Title; d) the exposure value of a securitisation position arising from a derivative instrument listed in Appendix II, shall be determined in accordance with Title VI; e) if a securitisation position is covered by funded credit protection, its exposure value may be adjusted as provided in Title IV. A credit institution, other than when acting as an originator, a sponsor or original lender, shall be exposed to the credit risk of a securitisation position, irrespective of the portfolio in which it is, only if the originator, sponsor or original lender has explicitly disclosed to the credit institution that it will retain, on an ongoing basis, a material net economic interest which, in any event, shall not be less than 5 %. For the purpose of this Article, a “material net economic interest” means: i) retention of no less than 5 % of the nominal value of each of the tranches sold or transferred to the investors; ii) in the case of securitisations of revolving exposures, retention of the originator’s interest of no less than 5 % of the nominal value of the securitised exposures; iii) retention of randomly selected exposures, equivalent to no less than 5 % of the nominal amount of the securitised exposures, where such exposures would otherwise have been securitised in the securitisation, provided that the number of potentially securitised exposures is no less than 100 at origination; or iv) retention of the first loss tranche and, if necessary, other tranches having the same or a more severe risk profile than those transferred or sold to investors and not maturing any earlier than those transferred or sold to investors, so that the retention equals in total no less than 5 % of the nominal value of the securitised exposures. The net economic interest is measured at the origination and shall be maintained on an ongoing basis. It shall not be subject to any credit risk mitigation or any short positions or any other hedge. For the purpose of determining the net economic interest, the notional value for off-balance sheet items is used. For the purpose of this Article, “ongoing basis” means that retained positions, interest or exposures are not hedged or sold. There shall be no multiple applications of the retention requirements for any given securitisation. b) Where a supervised institution, EU parent credit institution or EU financial holding company, or one of its subsidiaries, as an originator or a sponsor, securitises exposures from several credit institutions, investment firms or other financial institutions which are included in the scope of supervision on a consolidated basis, the requirement referred to in paragraph a may be satisfied on the basis of the consolidated situation of the related EU parent credit institution or EU financial holding company. This paragraph shall apply only where credit institutions, investment firms or financial institutions which created the securitised exposures have committed themselves to satisfying the requirements set out in paragraph f and deliver, in a timely manner, to the originator or sponsor and to the supervised institution, EU parent credit institution or EU financial holding company, the information needed to satisfy the requirements referred to in paragraph g). Article 217-1 Exposure to transferred credit risk Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 177 c) Paragraph a) shall not apply where the securitised exposures are claims or contingent claims on or fully, unconditionally and irrevocably guaranteed by: - central governments or central banks; - regional or local authorities and public sector entities of Member States; - institutions to which a 50% risk weight or less is assigned under Article 16; or - multilateral development banks. Paragraph a) shall not apply to: - transactions based on a clear, transparent and accessible index, where the underlying reference entities are identical to those that make up an index of entities that is widely traded, or are other tradable securities other than securitisation positions; - syndicated loans, purchased receivables or credit default swaps where these instruments are not used to package or hedge a securitisation that is covered by paragraph a). d) Before investing, and as appropriate thereafter, supervised institutions shall be able to demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for each of their individual securitisation positions, that they have a comprehensive and thorough understanding of these positions. To this end, they have implemented formal policies and procedures suited to their trading book and non-trading book. These policies and procedures, which are commensurate with the risk profile of their investments in securitised positions, aim at analysing and recording: i) information disclosed under paragraph a, by originators or sponsors to specify the net economic interest that they maintain, on an ongoing basis, in the securitisation; ii) the risk characteristics of each securitization position; iii) the risk characteristics of the underlying exposures; iv) the reputation of originators or sponsors and the losses that they may have experienced in earlier securitisations in the relevant exposure classes underlying the securitisation position; v) the statements and disclosures made by the originators or sponsors, or their agents or advisors, about their due diligence on the securitised exposures and, where applicable, on the quality of the collateral supporting the securitised exposures; vi) where applicable, the methodologies and concepts on which the valuation of collateral supporting the securitised exposures is based and the policies adopted by the originator or sponsor to ensure the independence of the valuer; this mission may have been entrusted to agents or consultants under the responsibility of the originator or the sponsor; vii) all the structural features of the securitisation that can materially impact the performance of the supervised institution’s securitisation position. 178 Supervised institutions shall regularly perform their own stress tests appropriate to their securitisation positions. To this end, they may rely on financial models developed by an ECAI provided that they can demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, when requested, that they took due care prior to investing to validate the relevant assumptions and structures of the models and to understand the methodology, assumptions and results. e) Supervised institutions, other than when acting as originators, sponsors or original lenders, shall establish formal procedures appropriate to their trading book and nontrading book and commensurate with the risk profile of their investments in securitised positions to monitor, on an ongoing basis, performance information on the underlying exposures. Where relevant, this information shall include: the exposure type, the percentage of loans more than 30, 60 and 90 days past due, default rates, prepayment rates, loans in foreclosure, collateral type and the percentage of the exposure guaranteed by this collateral, the frequency distribution of credit scores, sectoral and geographical diversification, the frequency distribution of loan to value ratios with bandwidths that facilitate adequate sensitivity analysis, or any other measures of credit worthiness across underlying exposures. Where the underlying exposures are themselves securitisation positions, supervised institutions shall have the information set out above not only on the underlying securitization tranches, but also on the characteristics and performance of the pools underlying those securitisation tranches. Credit institutions shall have a thorough understanding of all structural features of a securitisation transaction that would materially impact the performance of their exposures, such as: the contractual waterfall and waterfall related triggers, credit enhancements, liquidity facilities, market value triggers, the deal-specific definition of default. Where the requirements in paragraphs d), e) and g) in this paragraph are not met in any material respect by reason of the negligence or omission of the supervised institution, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel imposes a proportionate additional risk weight of no less than 250 % of the risk weight (capped at 1 250 %) which would apply to the relevant securitisation positions under Chapters III and IV of this Title. The risk weight shall progressively increase with each subsequent infringement of the due diligence provisions. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall take into account the exemptions for certain securitisations provided in paragraph c and, if necessary, reduces the additional risk weight it imposes under this Article. f) Sponsor and originator supervised institutions shall apply to exposures to be securitised the criteria for credit-granting in accordance with the requirements of Chapter 1 of Title IV of regulation 97-02 of 21 February 1997 relating to internal Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 control in credit institutions and investment firms. To this end, the originator and sponsor supervised institutions shall apply the same processes for approving and, where relevant, amending, renewing and re-financing credits as for exposures to be held on their books. Credit institutions shall also apply the same standards of analysis to participations or underwritings in securitisation issues purchased from third parties whether such participations or underwritings are to be held on their trading or non-trading book. Where the requirements referred to in the first subparagraph of this paragraph are not met, the originator supervised institution shall not apply Article 213, paragraphs a) and c), and shall not be authorised to exclude the securitised exposures from the calculation of its capital requirements. g) Subject originators and sponsors communicate the level of net economic investment they take in the securitisation, in application of paragraph a). They ensure that potential investors have easy access to all the relevant information and data concerning: ― credit quality; ― performance of the different underlying; ― cash flows; ― collateral guaranteeing a securitisation exposure; ― the elaboration and implementation of complete and well documented stress tests To this end, the relevant data is determined on the securitisation date and thereafter whenever needed, depending on the type of securitisation. h) Paragraphs a) to g) apply to new securitisations issued after 1 January 2011. After 31 December 2014 paragraphs a) to g) apply to existing securitisations if the underlying exposures are replaced or added to by new exposures after that date. In the event of a generalised liquidity crisis on the market, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may decided to temporarily suspend the requirements stipulated in paragraphs a) and b). CHAPTER II RECOGNITION OF SIGNIFICANT CREDIT RISK TRANSFER Section 1 Minimum requirements for recognition of significant credit risk transfer Article 218 a) A subject originator of a traditional securitisation may exclude the securitised exposures from the calculation of the weighted exposure amounts, and, where applicable, from the expected losses when one of the following conditions is satisfied: i) a significant fraction of the credit risk associated with the securitised exposures has been transferred to third parties; ii) The originator supervised institution applies a risk weighting of 1,250% to all the securitised positions it holds in the securitisation or deducts these securitised positions from shareholder capital in accordance with Article 6 bis of Regulation n°90-02 of 23 February 1990 regarding own funds. b) For the purposes of the application of point i) of paragraph a), a large exposure is considered to have been transferred in the following cases: i) When the risk-weighted exposures in mezzanine securitised positions held by an originator in the same securitisation do not exceed 50% of the amounts of risk-weighted exposures to all the mezzanine securitised positions existing in this securitisation; ii) Where there are no mezzanine securitisation positions, the originator being able to demonstrate that the exposure value of the securitisation positions that would be subject to a 1250% risk weight exceeds a reasoned estimate of the expected loss on the securitised exposures by a substantial margin, and the originator not holding more than 20% of the exposure values of the securitisation positions that would be subject to a 1,250% risk weight. The ACP reserves the right to assess whether any potential reduction of the risk-weighted exposure amounts that the originator supervised institution would obtain from this securitisation is justified by a proportionate transfer of the credit risk to third parties. c) For the purposes of paragraph b), mezzanine securitisation positions mean securitisation positions to which a risk-weight lower than 1250% applies and that are more junior than the most senior position in this securitisation and more junior than any securitisation positions in this securitisation to which: i) in the case of a securitisation position to which the standardised approach applies, a credit quality step 1 is assigned; or i) in the case of a securitisation position described in Chapter IV (to which the IRB approach applies), a credit quality step 1 or 2 is assigned; or d) As an alternative to paragraphs b) and c), significant credit risk may be considered to have been transferred if the Authority is satisfied that the subject originator has policies and methodologies in place ensuring that the possible reduction of capital requirements which the originator achieves by the securitisation is justified by a commensurate transfer of credit risk to third parties. The Authority shall only be satisfied if the originator Licence Holder can demonstrate that such transfer of credit risk to third parties is also recognised for purposes of the Licence Holder’s internal risk management and its internal capital allocation. e) Apart from the elements mentioned in paragraphs b) and c) all of the following conditions must be satisfied before a large exposure may be considered to have been transferred: i) the securitisation documentation reflects the economic substance of the structure or transaction; ii) the institution has obtained a written and reasoned legal opinion to the effect that: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 179 - the securitised exposures have been effectively transferred to the securitisation special purpose entity; - the underlying assets cannot be used by the originator institution or its creditors; - in the event of a bankruptcy proceeding against the institution, the assets of the special purpose entity are excluded from the debtor’s assets; iii) the securities issued do not represent payment obligations of the originator supervised institution; iv) the transferee is a securitisation special purpose entity; v) the originator supervised institution does not maintain effective or indirect control over the transferred exposures. An originator institution shall be considered to have maintained effective control over the transferred exposures if it has the right to repurchase them from the transferee in order to realise their benefits or if it is obligated to re-assume transferred risk. The originator supervised institution’s retention of servicing rights or obligations for transferred assets shall not in itself constitute indirect control of the exposures; vi) if there is a clean-up call option, the following conditions must be satisfied: i) The risk-weighted exposure amounts of the mezzanine securitised positions held by the subject originator do not exceed 50% of the existing riskweighted exposure amounts of the mezzanine securitised positions in this securitisation; ii) where there are no mezzanine securitisation positions and the originator can demonstrate that the exposure value of the securitisation positions that would be subject to a 1,250% risk weight exceeds a reasoned estimate of the expected loss on the securitised exposures by a substantial margin, and the originator does not hold more than 20% of the exposure values of the securitisation positions that would be subject to deduction from own-funds or a 1,250% risk-weight. The ACP reserves the right to assess whether any potential reduction of the amounts of risk-weighted exposures that the subject originator institution would obtain from this securitisation is adequately matched by a proportionate transfer of the credit risk to third parties. - the clean-up call option is exercisable at the discretion of the originator supervised institution; - the clean-up call option may be exercised only when 10% or less of the original value of the securitised exposures remains unamortised; - the clean-up call option is not structured in such a way as to avoid allocating losses to credit enhancement positions or other positions held by investors and is not otherwise structured to provide credit enhancement. c) For the purposes of the provisions of paragraph b), mezzanine securitisation positions mean securitisation positions to which a risk-weight lower than 1,250% applies and that are more junior than the most senior position in this securitisation and more junior than any securitisation positions in this securitisation to which: vii) the documentation of the securitisation transaction or structure does not contain any clause that: ii) in the case of a securitisation position described in Chapter IV a credit quality step 1 or 2 is assigned; or - except in the case of early amortisation provisions, requires that positions in the securitisation be improved by the originator supervised institution, in particular by substituting underlying credit exposures or by increasing the yield payable to investors in response to a deterioration in the credit quality of the securitised exposures, or - increases the yield payable to holders of positions in the securitisation in response to a deterioration in the credit quality of the underlying pool. d) As an alternative to paragraphs b) and c), significant credit risk may be considered to have been transferred if the supervised institution has policies and methodologies in place to ensure that a possible reduction of capital requirements that the originator achieves by the securitisation is justified by a commensurate transfer of credit risk to third parties. The subject originator institution must prove that such a transfer of risk to third parties is also recognised for the purposes of the internal risk management and its internal capital allocation. Article 219 a) if either of the following conditions is met: i) significant part of the credit risk is considered to have been transferred to third parties either through funded or unfunded credit protection; or; ii) The subject originator institution applies a risk weighting of 1,250% to all the securitised positions it holds in this securitisation or deducts these securitised positions from shareholder capital in accordance with Article 6 bis of Regulation n°90-02 of 23 February 1990 regarding own funds. 180 b) For the purposes of the application of point i) of paragraph a), a significant exposure is considered to have been transferred when at least one of the following conditions have been satisfied: i) in the case of a securitisation positions described in Chapter III, a credit quality step 1 is assigned; or e) In addition, the transfer must comply with the following conditions: i) the securitisation documentation reflects the economic substance of the transaction; ii) the credit protection by which the credit risk is transferred complies with the eligibility and requirements of Title IV. For these purposes, special purpose entities shall not be eligible as providers of unfunded protection; iii) the instruments used to transfer credit risk do not contain contractual terms or conditions that: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 - impose significant materiality thresholds below which credit protection is deemed not to be triggered if a credit event occurs; - allow for the termination of the protection in the event of deterioration in the credit quality of the underlying exposures; - except in the case of early amortisation provisions, require positions in the securitisation to be improved by the originator supervised institution; - increase the supervised institution’s cost of credit protection or the yield payable to holders of positions in the securitisation in the event of deterioration in the credit quality of the underlying pool; iv) a written and reasoned legal opinion is obtained confirming the enforceability of the credit protection in all relevant jurisdictions. RW* = [RW(SP) x (t-t*)/(T-t*)] + [RW(Ass) x (T-t)/(T-t*)] where: - RW* is the risk-weighted exposure amount for the purposes of calculating capital requirements for credit risk and dilution risk; - RW(Ass) is the risk-weighted exposure amount that would be calculated if the exposures had not been securitised, calculated on a pro-rata basis; - RW(SP) is the risk-weighted exposure amounts that would be calculated under Article 220 if there were no maturity mismatch; - T is the remaining maturity of the underlying exposures, expressed in years; - t is the remaining maturity of the credit protection, expressed in years; - t* = 0.25. CHAPTER III CALCULATION OF RISK-WEIGHTED EXPOSURE AMOUNTS UNDER THE STANDARDISED APPROACH v) where there is a clean-up call option, the requirements set out in paragraph (vi) of the preceding Article shall apply. Section 2 Calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts for exposures securitised in a synthetic securitisation Article 220 Where the requirements set out in Section 1 are met, the originator supervised institution of a synthetic securitisation shall use the calculation methods set out in Chapter 4 in place of the provisions of Titles II and III for the entire pool of securitised exposures. Section 1 General provisions Article 222 Subject to the provisions of Section 2, the risk-weighted exposure amount of a rated securitisation or re-securitisation position shall be calculated by applying the following risk weights to the exposure value: Weighting category Credit quality step 1 2 3 4 (Only for credit assessments other than short-term) All other credit quality steps Securitisation 20% 50% 100% 350% 1250% Resecuritisation 40% 100% 225% 650% 1 250% For supervised institutions using the IRB approaches for credit risk, the expected loss for securitised exposures shall be equal to zero. Subject to the provisions of Article 221, the originator supervised institution shall calculate the risk-weighted exposure amounts for all tranches in the securitisation as provided in Chapter IV, including those provisions relating to the recognition of credit risk mitigation. Article 221 Maturity mismatches between the credit protection by means of which the tranching is achieved and the securitised exposures shall be taken into account in accordance with the following provisions: a) the maturity of the securitised exposures shall be taken as that of the exposure having the longest maturity, subject to a maximum of five years. The maturity of the credit protection shall be determined as provided in Title IV. b) originator supervised institutions shall ignore any maturity mismatch in calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts for tranches risk-weighted at 1250%; c) for all other tranches, maturity mismatches shall be treated according to the following formula: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Subject to the provisions of Section 3, the risk-weighted exposure amount of an unrated securitisation position shall be calculated by applying a risk weight of 1250% to the exposure value. Article 223 If credit protection is obtained on a securitisation position, the effects of credit risk mitigation shall be taken into account as provided in Title IV. Article 224 As provided in Article 6a of Regulation 90-02, supervised institutions may deduct the exposure value of a position risk-weighted at 1250% from own funds instead of including the position in the calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts. For this purpose, the calculation of the exposure value shall reflect eligible funded credit protection as provided in Title IV. 181 For the purposes of Section 2, an amount equal to 12.5 times the amount deducted shall be subtracted from the maximum risk-weighted exposure amount. Section 2 Originator and sponsor supervised institutions Article 225 The risk-weighted exposure amounts of securitisation positions held by originator supervised institutions or sponsor supervised institutions may be limited to the riskweighted exposure amounts that would be calculated if the exposures had not been securitised, subject to the application of a 150% risk weight to all securitised exposures that are past due or that are associated with high risk within the meaning of Article 23. Section 3 Treatment of unrated positions Article 226 Provided that they know the composition of the pool of securitised assets at all times, supervised institutions may apply the weighted-average risk weight that would be applied to the securitised exposures under Title II, multiplied by a concentration ratio. This concentration ratio shall be equal to the sum of the nominal amounts of all the securitisation tranches divided by the sum of the nominal amounts of the tranches junior to or pari passu with the tranche in which the position is held, including the tranche itself. The resulting risk weight may not be higher than 1250% or lower than any risk weight applicable to a more senior rated tranche. If a supervised institution cannot determine the risk weights that would be applied to the securitised exposures, it shall apply a risk weight of 1250% to the securitisation position. Section 4 Treatment of securitisation positions constituting a second-loss position or a higher tranche in an assetbacked commercial paper programme Article 227 Subject to the provisions of Section 5, supervised institutions shall apply to securitisation positions a risk weight that is the greater of 100% or the highest risk weight that would be applied under Title II to any of the securitised exposures by a supervised institution holding the exposures. For this treatment to be available, the securitisation positions must satisfy the following conditions: a) they are in a tranche that is economically in a second-loss position or better in the securitisation, and the first-loss tranche provides meaningful credit enhancement to the second-loss tranche; b) their credit quality is equivalent to investment grade or better; c) they are held by a supervised institution that does not hold a position in the first-loss tranche. 182 Section 5 Treatment of unrated liquidity facilities Article 228 Subject to the following conditions, the exposure value of a liquidity facility shall be determined by applying a 50% CCF to its nominal amount : - the liquidity facility documentation clearly identifies and limits the circumstances under which the facility may be drawn; - the facility cannot be drawn to cover losses already incurred at the time of draw: for example, to provide liquidity for exposures in default at the time of draw or to acquire assets at a price higher than fair value; - the facility must not be used to provide permanent or regular funding for the securitisation transaction or structure; - repayment of draws on the facility must not be subordinated to the claims of investors other than those claims arising from interest rate or currency derivative contracts, fees, or other such payments, nor be subject to waiver or deferral; - the liquidity facility cannot be drawn after all applicable credit enhancements from which the liquidity facility would benefit are exhausted; - the facility shall include a provision that provides for an automatic reduction in the amount that can be drawn equal to the amount of exposures that are in default as defined in Article 118-1, or that permits the termination of the facility when the pool of securitised exposures consists of rated instruments and the average quality of the pool falls below investment grade. The risk weight applied to liquidity facilities shall be the highest risk weight that would be applied under Title II to any of the securitised exposures by a supervised institution holding the exposures. Article 229 The exposure value of a cash advance liquidity facility that is unconditionally cancellable shall be determined by applying a 0% CCF to its nominal amount, providing that the conditions set out in Article 228 are satisfied and that repayment of draws on the facility is senior to any other claims on the cash flows arising from the securitised exposures. Section 6 Additional capital requirements for securitisations of revolving exposures with early amortisation provisions Article 230 When supervised institutions sell revolving exposures into a securitisation that contains an early amortisation provision, they shall calculate an additional risk-weighted exposure amount for the sum of the originator institution’s interest and the investors’ interest. If the securitised exposures include both revolving and nonrevolving exposures, originator supervised institutions shall apply the treatment set out below only to that portion of the underlying pool that consists of revolving exposures. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 ‘Originator’s interest’ means the exposure value of that notional part of a pool of drawn amounts sold into a securitisation, the proportion of which in relation to the amount of the total pool sold into the structure determines the proportion of the cash flows generated by principal and interest collections and other associated amounts that are not available to make payments to those holding positions in the securitisation. The originator’s interest may not be subordinate to the investors’ interest. ‘Investors’ interest’ means the exposure value of the remaining notional part of the pool of drawn amounts ‘Revolving exposure’ means the exposures for which customers’ outstanding balances are permitted to fluctuate based on their decisions to borrow and repay, up to a contractual limit agreed with the supervised institution. ‘Early amortisation provision’ means a contractual clause that requires the redemption of investors’ positions before the originally stated maturity of the securities issued in the case of defined events. The exposure of the originator supervised institution associated with its rights with respect to the originator’s interest shall not be considered as a securitisation position but as a pro rata exposure to the securitised exposures as if they had not been securitised. Article 231 Supervised institutions are not subject to additional capital requirements when they originate the following securitisations: a) securitisations of revolving exposures in which the investors remain fully exposed to all future draws by borrowers, such that the risk on the underlying facilities never returns to the originator supervised institution, even after an early amortisation clause has been triggered; b) securitisations in which an early amortisation provision is triggered solely by events unrelated to the performance of the securitised assets or the originator supervised institution, such as material changes in tax laws or regulations. Article 232 The additional risk-weighted exposure amount shall be equal to the amount of the investors’ interest multiplied by the product of the appropriate conversion figure indicated below and the weighted-average risk weight that would apply to the securitised exposures if they had not been securitised, weighted by the exposure value of the underlying assets. Article 233 If a securitisation includes a provision for early amortisation of retail exposures that are uncommitted and unconditionally cancellable without prior notice, and early amortisation is triggered by the excess spread falling below a specified level, supervised institutions shall compare the three-month average excess spread level with the excess spread levels at which excess spread is required to be trapped. If the securitisation does not require excess spread to be trapped, the trapping point shall be 4.5 percentage points greater than the excess spread level at which an early amortisation is triggered. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The CCFs to be applied shall be determined by the level of the actual three-month average excess spread, as shown in the following table. Securitisations subject to a controlled early amortisation provision Securitisations subject to a noncontrolled early amortisation provision CCF CCF 0% 1% 2% 10% 20% 40% 0% 5% 15% 50% 100% 100% 3-month average excess spread Above level A Level A Level B Level C Level D Level E An early amortisation provision shall be considered to be ‘controlled’ if the following conditions are met: a) the originator supervised institution has an appropriate plan to ensure that it has sufficient capital and liquidity available in the event of an early amortisation; b) throughout the duration of the transaction, there is prorata sharing between the originator’s interest and the investors’ interest of payments of interest and principal, expenses, losses, and recoveries based on the balance of receivables outstanding at one or more reference points each month; c) the amortisation period is sufficient for 90% of the total debt (originator’s and investors’ interest) outstanding at the beginning of the early amortisation period to be repaid or recognised as in default; d) the speed of repayment is no more rapid than would be achieved by straight-line amortisation over the period referred to in the preceding paragraph. In the preceding table: - ’Level A’ means a level of excess spread less than 133.33% of the trapping level of excess spread but not less than 100% of that trapping level; - ’Level B’ means a level of excess spread less than 100% of the trapping level of excess spread but not less than 75% of that trapping level; - ’Level C’ means a level of excess spread less than 75% of the trapping level of excess spread but not less than 50% of that trapping level; - ’Level D’ means a level of excess spread less than 50% of the trapping level of excess spread but not less than 25% of that trapping level; - ’Level E’ means a level of excess spread less than 25% of the trapping level of excess spread. If a securitisation includes a provision for early amortisation of retail exposures that are uncommitted and unconditionally cancellable without prior notice, and the early amortisation is triggered by a quantitative threshold other than the threemonth average excess spread, the Autorité de contrôle 183 prudentiel may apply a different treatment to determine the CCF. That treatment shall closely approximate the treatment set out in the preceding Article. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall consult with the competent authorities of all other European Union Member States and give consideration to their opinions. The opinions expressed during this consultation and the treatment adopted shall be made public by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 234 The CCF for all other securitisation transactions and structures that include a provision for controlled early amortisation of revolving exposures shall be 90%. The CCF for all other securitisation transactions and structures that include a provision for non-controlled early amortisation of revolving exposures shall be 100%. Article 235 The sum of the risk-weighted exposure amounts for positions in the investors’ interest and the additional riskweighted exposure amounts referred to in Article 230 shall not exceed the greater of the following two amounts: - the risk-weighted exposure amounts for the positions in the investors’ interest, and - the risk-weighted exposure amounts that would be calculated by a supervised institution holding the exposures if they had not been securitised, in an amount equal to the investors’ interest. Article 236 The deduction of any net gains that may arise from the capitalisation of the future income of securitised assets and that constitute a credit enhancement to the securitisation position shall be treated independently of the maximum amount referred to in the preceding Article. CHAPTER IV CALCULATION OF RISK-WEIGHTED EXPOSURE Section 1 Hierarchy of methods Subsection 1 General provisions Article 237-1 Supervised institutions shall use: a) the Ratings Based Method set out in Section 3 for positions with external credit assessments or for which an inferred rating can be used; b) the Supervisory Formula Method set out in Section 4 for unrated positions, except where the Internal Assessment Approach is permitted subject to the conditions set out in subsection 3. Article 237-2 A supervised institution other than an originator supervised institution or a sponsor supervised institution may use the 184 Supervisory Formula Method only with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Article 237-3 Originator supervised institutions or sponsor supervised institutions that are unable to calculate KIRB and that have not obtained approval to use the Internal Assessment Approach for their positions in asset-backed commercial paper programmes, along with other supervised institutions that have not obtained approval to use the Supervisory Formula Method or, for their positions in asset-backed commercial paper programmes, the Internal Assessment Approach, shall apply a risk weight of 1250% to unrated securitisation positions for which an inferred rating cannot be used. Subsection 2 Use of inferred ratings Article 238 When the following minimum requirements are satisfied, supervised institutions shall assign unrated securitisation positions an inferred credit assessment equivalent to the credit assessment of reference positions. ‘Reference positions’ means the most senior rated positions that are in all respects subordinate to the unrated securitisation position: a) the reference positions must be subordinated in all respects to the unrated securitisation tranche. b) the maturity of the reference positions must be equal to or longer than that of the unrated position. c) any inferred rating must be updated on an ongoing basis to reflect any changes in the credit assessment of the reference securitisation positions. Subsection 3 The Internal Assessment Approach for positions in assetback commercial paper programmes Article 239 Subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, a supervised institution may assign a derived rating to an unrated position in an asset-backed commercial paper programme if the following conditions are satisfied: a) the positions in the commercial paper issued from the programme are rated positions; b) the supervised institution demonstrates to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that its internal method for assessing the credit quality of the position is as reliable, from the perspective of prudential supervision, as the assessment methodology used by one or more ECAIs recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel for rating securities backed by exposures of the same type as the securitised exposures. This methodology must be publicly available; c) the ECAIs whose rating methodology is referenced in the preceding paragraph shall include ECAIs that have provided an external rating for the commercial paper issued from the programme. The quantitative elements, such as stress Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 factors, used in assigning a given credit quality to a securitisation position shall be at least as conservative as those used in the ECAIs’ assessment methodology; d) in developing their internal assessment methodology, supervised institutions shall take into consideration appropriate published ratings methodologies of ECAIs recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that rate the commercial paper of the asset-backed commercial paper programme. This consideration shall be documented and updated regularly; e) the supervised institution’s internal assessment methodology shall include rating grades. There shall be a well-documented correspondence between such rating grades and the credit assessments of eligible ECAIs; f) supervised institutions shall use the internal assessment methodology in their internal risk management processes, including the decision-making, management information, and internal capital allocation processes; g) supervised institutions shall periodically audit their internal assessment process and the quality of the internal assessments of their positions in an asset-backed commercial paper programme. This audit may be conducted by external auditors; h) supervised institutions shall track the performance of their internal ratings over time to evaluate the performance of their internal assessment methodology. They shall make adjustments, as necessary, when the performance of the exposures routinely diverges from that indicated by the internal ratings; i) the asset-backed commercial paper programme shall incorporate underwriting standards in the form of credit and investment guidelines. In deciding on an asset purchase, the programme administrator shall consider the type of asset being purchased, the type and monetary value of the exposures arising from the provision of liquidity facilities and credit enhancements, the loss distribution, and the legal and economic isolation of the transferred assets from the entity selling the assets. A credit analysis of the asset seller’s risk profile shall be performed. It shall include an analysis of the seller’s past and expected future financial performance, current competitive position in the market, expected future competitiveness, leverage ratio, cash flows, interest coverage ratio, and debt rating. In addition, a review of the seller’s underwriting standards, servicing capabilities, and collection processes shall be performed; j) the underwriting standards of the asset-backed commercial paper programme shall set minimum criteria for asset eligibility that, in particular: - exclude the purchase of assets that are significantly past due or defaulted; - limit excess concentrations of risk in an individual obligor or geographic area; - delimit the character and tenor of the assets to be purchased; k) the asset-backed commercial paper programme shall establish collection procedures that take into account the operational capability and credit quality of the body responsible for administering and servicing assets. The Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 programme shall mitigate the risks associated with this body and with the seller using various methods, such as setting triggers based on credit quality that would preclude any commingling of funds; l) the aggregate estimate of loss on an asset pool that the asset-backed commercial paper programme is considering purchasing shall take into account all sources of potential risk, including credit and dilution risk. If credit enhancement provided by the seller is sized based only on credit-related losses, a separate reserve shall be established for dilution risk, if dilution risk is material for the particular exposure pool; m) in addition, in sizing the required enhancement level, several years of historical data, covering losses, delinquencies, dilutions, and the turnover rate of the receivables, shall be reviewed; n) the asset-backed commercial paper programme shall incorporate structural features, such as wind-down triggers, into the purchase of exposures in order to reduce the risk of deterioration in the credit quality of the underlying portfolio. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may waive the requirement for public availability stated in paragraph (d) if there is not yet a publicly available assessment methodology due to specific features of the securitisation, such as the unique character of its structure. Article 240 Supervised institutions shall assign unrated positions one of the ratings described in the preceding Article. The position shall be assigned a derived rating equivalent to the credit assessments corresponding to that rating grade. If this derived rating corresponds, at the inception of the securitisation, to the level of investment grade or better, it shall be treated as an external credit assessment for the purposes of calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts. Section 2 Maximum risk-weighted exposure amounts Article 241 The risk-weighted exposure amounts for the securitisation positions of an originator supervised institution, a sponsor supervised institution, or any other supervised institutions that can calculate KIRB, shall be limited to the sum of the amounts that would be calculated for the underlying exposures if they had not been securitised, plus the expected losses for those exposures. Section 3 Ratings Based Method Article 242-1 The risk-weighted exposure amount of an externally rated securitisation or re-securitisation position is calculated by applying to the exposure value the weighting indicated below in accordance with mapping established by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel and then multiplying the result by 1.06. This multiplicative factor shall not be applied to positions risk-weighted at 1,250%. 185 CREDIT STEPS Credit assessments other than short-term E1 QUALITY Short-term credit assessments A 1 7 12 20 % % % 8 15 25 % % % 10 18 35 % % % 12 20 % % 20 35 % % 35 50 % % 60 75 % % 100 % E2 E3 E4 2 E5 E6 E7 APPLICABLE WEIGHTING Securitisation Repositions securitisation positions 3 E8 B C D 20 % E 100 % 150 % 200 % 30 % 40 % 50 % 65 % 100 % 150 % 225 % 350 % 25 % 35 % 40 % 60 % E9 250 % 300 % 500 % E10 425 % 500 % 650 % E11 650 % 750 % 850 % All other steps and not unrated 1 250 % Article 242-4 To calculate the actual number of securitisation exposures, all the exposures to the same issuer are treated as one and the same exposure. The actual number of exposures is calculated as follows : N= ( EAD i ) 2 i EAD 2 i i Where EADi is the sum of values at risk of all exposures to the Nth issuer. When the supervised institution is aware of the share of the portfolio associated with the highest exposure, C1, the supervised institution may calculate the actual number of exposures, N, as being equal to 1/C1. Article 243 The effects of credit risk mitigation on securitisation positions shall be recognised in accordance with Articles 247 and 248. Section 4 Supervisory Formula Method Article 244 Unless covered by the provisions of paragraph b of Article 246, the weighting applicable to a securitisation position is determined in accordance with the following formula when the latter is above 7% for a securitisation position and above 20% for a re-securitisation position: 12.5 x (S[L+T]-S[L])/T where: Article 242-2 Supervised institutions shall apply the weighting in column C of the above table when the securitisation position is not a resecuritisation position and when the actual number of securitisation exposures is below six. For the other securitisation positions that are not re-securitisation positions, the weightings indicated in column B, should be used except where the position is located in the most senior tranche of the securitisation, in which case the weightings in Column A should be applied. For the re-securitisation positions, the weightings of column E should be used, except where the resecuritisation position is located in the most senior tranche of the re-securitisation and none of the underlying positions are themselves re-securitisation positions, in which case the weighting in column D should be used. In determining whether a tranche is the most senior, the supervised institutions may ignore amounts due on interest rate or currency, derivative contracts fees, or other similar payments. x S[ x] = ω ( Kirbr− x ) / Kirbr ) Kirbr+ K[ x] − K[Kirbr] + (d ⋅ Kirbr/ ω)(1 − e when x ≤ Kirbr when Kirbr< x where: h c v f g a b d = (1 − Kirbr / ELGD ) N = Kirbr /(1 − h ) ( ELGD − Kirbr ) Kirbr + 0,25 (1 − ELGD ) Kirbr N v + Kirbr 2 ( 1 − Kirbr ) Kirbr − v = − c 2 + − 1 h (1 − h ) τ = (1 − c )c −1 f = g ⋅c = g ⋅ (1 − c ) = 1 − (1 − h) ⋅ (1 − Beta[ Kirbr ; a , b ]) = K [ x ] = (1 − h ) ⋅ ((1 − Beta[ x; a , b ]) x + Beta[ x; a + 1, b] c ). and: τ = 1000 ω = 20 186 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 - Beta [x; a, b] is the cumulative beta distribution with parameters a and b evaluated at point x; - T is the thickness of the tranche in which the position is held, and is equal to the ratio of the nominal amount of the tranche to the sum of the exposure values of the securitised exposures. The exposure value of a derivative instrument listed in Appendix II shall, if the current replacement cost is not a positive value, be equal to the potential future credit exposure calculated in accordance with Title VI; - KIRBR is the ratio of KIRB to the sum of the exposure values of the securitised exposures. KIRBR is expressed in decimal form. - L is the credit enhancement level. It is measured as the ratio of the nominal amount of all tranches subordinate to the tranche in which the position is held, to the sum of the exposure values of the securitised exposures. Capitalised future income shall not be included in calculating L. Amounts due by counterparties to derivative instruments listed in Appendix II that represent tranches more junior than the tranche in question may be measured at their current replacement cost, excluding potential future exposure. - N is the effective number of securitised exposures, calculated as provided in Article 242-4. Regarding resecuritisations, the supervised institution includes the number of underlying portfolio exposures to resecuritisation positions and not of underlying portfolio exposures to securitisation positions; - ELGD is the exposure-weighted average LGD, calculated as follows: LGD .EAD ELGD = EAD i i i i i where: - LGDi is the average LGD associated with all exposures to the ith obligor; new text - EADi, is the sum of the exposure values of all exposures to the ith obligor. LGD is determined as provided in Title III. In the case of a securitisation of securitisation positions, an LGD of 100% shall be applied to the new securitised positions. When default risk and dilution risk for purchased receivables are treated in an aggregate manner within a securitisation such that a single reserve or over-collateralisation is available to cover both credit losses and dilution losses, the LGD shall be constructed as a weighted average of the LGD for credit risk and the 75% LGD for dilution risk. This average shall be weighted by the stand-alone capital charges for credit risk and dilution risk. If the exposure value of the largest securitised exposure, C1, is no greater than 3% of the sum of the exposure values of all the securitised exposures, supervised institutions shall set LGD at 50% and assign N one of the following two values: where: N = 1/C1 - Cm is the ratio of the sum of the exposure values of the largest ‘m’ exposures to the sum of the exposure values of the securitised exposures. The level of ‘m’ shall be set by the supervised institution; - for securitisations involving retail exposures exclusively, h = 0 and v = 0, unless the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel disagrees. Article 245 The effects of credit risk mitigation on securitisation positions shall be recognised as provided in Articles 247, 249-1, and 249-2. Article 246 The VaR of the liquidity facilities concerned by this section is determined in the following manner when they do not already have an external credit valuation: a) A conversion factor of 0% is applied to the nominal amount of a credit line in the form of a cash advance when the conditions described in Article 229 are respected; b) When a subject credit institution is unable to calculate its KIRB, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise, on an exceptional basis and for a limited period, the institution in question to apply the method described below to its credit lines not subject to external credit valuations and satisfying the conditions stipulated in Article 228: ― the highest weighting that would have been applied to the securitised exposures – in compliance with Title II – had those exposures not been securitised, is applied to the liquidity facility; ― to determine the position’s VaR, a conversion of 50% is applied to the nominal value of credit lines with initial maturities of one year or less; ― otherwise a conversion factor of 100% is applied Section 5 Liquidity facilities Article 247 Supervised institutions may use: - funded credit protection recognised for the Standardised Approach for credit risk, once the minimum requirements set out in Title IV are satisfied; - unfunded credit protection and unfunded protection providers, as provided in and subject to the minimum requirements of Title IV. −1 Cm −C1 max{1− mC1, 0} m −1 N = C1Cm + Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 187 Article 248 Where risk-weighted exposure amounts are calculated using the Ratings Based Method, the exposure value or the riskweighted exposure amount for a securitisation position for which credit protection has been obtained shall be modified as provided in Title IV for supervised institutions using the Standardised Approach for credit risk. Article 249-1 In the case of full protection, supervised institutions that calculate risk-weighted exposure amounts using the Supervisory Formula Method shall determine the ‘effective risk weight’ of the position, which is obtained by dividing the risk-weighted exposure amount of the position by its exposure value and then multiplying the result by 100. The risk-weighted exposure amount of the securitisation position is determined as follows: a) if the securitisation position is covered by funded credit protection, the risk-weighted exposure amount of the securitisation position shall be calculated by multiplying the fully-adjusted exposure amount of the position (E*), reflecting the effects of the funded protection, by the effective risk weight. E* shall be calculated as provided in Title IV, where E is the amount of the securitisation position; b) if the securitisation position is covered by unfunded credit protection, the risk-weighted exposure amount of the securitisation position shall be calculated by multiplying the nominal amount of the protection adjusted for any currency mismatch and maturity mismatch (GA) by the risk weight of the protection provider, and adding this to the amount arrived at by multiplying the amount of the securitisation position minus GA by the effective risk weight. GA shall be calculated as provided in Title IV. Article 249-2 In the case of partial protection, supervised institutions that calculate risk-weighted exposure amounts using the Supervisory Formula Method shall determine the riskweighted exposure amount of the securitisation position as follows: a) if the credit risk mitigation covers the ‘first loss’ on the securitisation position, or covers all losses on a proportional basis, the supervised institution may apply the provisions set out in the preceding Article; b) in all other cases, the securitisation position shall be treated as two or more distinct positions, with the uncovered portion being considered the position with the lower credit quality. Supervised institutions shall apply the treatment set out in Section 4, with the following modifications: - ’T’ shall be set equal to e* in the case of funded protection; and to T-g in the case of unfunded protection; - e* shall be the ratio of E* to the total notional amount of the underlying pool; - E* shall be the fully-adjusted exposure amount of the securitisation position calculated according to the provisions of Title IV as they apply to supervised institutions using the Standardised Approach for credit risk. E shall be the amount of the securitisation position and g shall be the ratio of the nominal amount of credit protection adjusted for any 188 currency or maturity mismatch as provided in Title IV to the sum of the amounts of the securitised exposures. In the case of unfunded credit protection, the risk weight of the protection provider shall be applied to that portion of the position not falling within the adjusted value of T. Section 7 Additional capital requirements for securitisations of revolving exposures with early amortisation provisions Article 250 When supervised institutions sell revolving exposures into a securitisation that contains an early amortisation provision, they shall calculate an additional risk-weighted exposure amount as provided in Section 6 of Chapter III. Article 251 For the purposes of this treatment: a) ’originator’s interest’ shall be the sum of: i) the exposure value of that notional part of the pool of drawn amounts sold into a securitisation, whose proportion in relation to the amount of the total pool sold into the structure determines the proportion of the cash flows generated by principal and interest collections and other associated amounts that are not available to make payments to those holding positions in the securitisation; and ii) the exposure value of the undrawn amounts of the credit lines, the drawn amounts of which have been sold into the securitisation, whose proportion in relation to the total amount of undrawn amounts is equal to the proportion of the exposure value described in point (i) in relation to the exposure value of the pool of drawn amounts sold into the securitisation; b) the originator’s interest may not be subordinate to the investors’ interest. ‘Investors’ interest’ shall be the sum of the exposure value of the notional part of the pool of drawn amounts not falling within point (i) plus the exposure value of that part of the pool of undrawn amounts of credit lines, the drawn amounts of which have been sold into the securitisation, not falling within point (ii); c) the exposure of the originator supervised institution associated with its rights with respect to the originator’s interest referred to in line (i) of paragraph (a) shall not be considered as a securitisation position but as a pro rata exposure to the securitised drawn amounts as if they had not been securitised, in an amount equal to that described in line (i) of paragraph (a). The originator supervised institution shall be considered to hold a pro rata exposure to the undrawn amounts of the credit lines, the drawn amounts of which have been sold into the securitisation, in an amount equal to that described in line (ii) of paragraph (a). Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Section 8 Reduction in risk-weighted exposure amounts Article 252-1 The risk-weighted exposure amount of a securitisation position risk-weighted at 1250% shall be reduced by 12.5 times the amount of any value adjustments made to the securitised exposures. Such value adjustments shall not be taken into account in the calculation set out in Article 68. Article 252-2 The risk-weighted exposure amount of a securitisation position may be reduced by 12.5 times the amount of any value adjustments made to the position. Article 253 In accordance with Article 6a of Regulation 90-02, supervised institutions may deduct the exposure value of a securitisation position risk-weighted at 1250% from their own funds instead of including the position in the calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts, subject to the following conditions: a) the exposure value of the position shall be derived from the risk-weighted exposure amounts, taking into account any reductions made in accordance with the preceding Articles; b) the calculation of the exposure value shall reflect any eligible funded protection in a manner consistent with the methodology set out in Section 6; c) if the Supervisory Formula Method is used to calculate risk-weighted exposure amounts, and L < KIRBR and [L+T] > KIRBR, the position may be treated as two distinct positions with L = KIRBR for the more senior position. For the purposes of Section 2, supervised institutions shall subtract 12.5 times the amount deducted from their own funds from the maximum risk-weighted exposure amount. CHAPTER V EXTERNAL CREDIT ASSESSMENTS Section 1 Recognition of external credit assessment institutions Article 254-1 The competent authorities shall recognise the ECAIs whose assessments may be used by supervised institutions for the purposes of this Title, on the basis of the criteria set out in Chapter III of Title II, subject to the condition that the ECAI has a demonstrated ability in the area of securitisation. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel also takes the necessary measures to oblige these entities, in the framework of the assessments of exposures involving structured financial instruments, to provide explanations to the public detailing to what extent the performances of the underlying basket of assets influences their credit assessments. Article 254-2 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall decide which credit quality steps shall be associated with the external Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 credit assessments made by an ECAI. This mapping shall take into account the following factors: - the degree of risk associated with each assessment; - quantitative factors, such as default or loss rates; and - qualitative factors such as the range of transactions assessed by the ECAI and the meaning of the credit assessment. Securitisation positions to which the same risk weight is applied on the basis of the credit assessments of eligible ECAIs should present an equivalent degree of credit risk. If this is not the case, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may decide to modify the mapping. Article 255 In order to be used in calculating risk-weighted exposure amounts as provided in this Title, external credit assessments must comply with the following conditions: a) there is no mismatch between the types of payments reflected in the external credit assessment and the types of payment to which the supervised institution is entitled under the contract giving rise to the securitisation position; b) the external credit assessment is publicly available. Credit assessments shall be considered publicly available only if they have been published in a publicly accessible forum and are included in the ECAI’s transition matrix. External credit assessments that are made available only to a limited number of entities shall not be considered to be publicly available. c) the credit assessment cannot be based, either fully or partially, on the un-financed support provided by the supervised institution itself. In such cases, the supervised institution treats the position concerned as though it were unrated and applies the valuation process stipulated in Title V of this Decree. Article 256 Supervised institutions may nominate one or more eligible ECAIs recognised by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to be used in the calculation of risk-weighted exposure amounts. External credit assessments must be used consistently for all securitisation positions. The assessments may not be used selectively. A supervised institution may not use the credit assessments of one ECAI for its positions in some tranches and the credit assessments of another ECAI for its positions in other tranches within the same structure. If a position has two credit assessments by nominated ECAIs, the supervised institution shall use the less favourable credit assessment. If a position has more than two credit assessments by nominated ECAIs, the supervised institution shall take the two most favourable assessments and use the less favourable of the two. If eligible credit protection as defined in Title IV is provided directly to a securitisation special purpose entity, and that 189 protection is reflected in the external credit assessment of a securitisation position, the risk weight associated with that external credit assessment shall be used. shall supply collateral to a second counterparty when an exposure of that second counterparty to the first counterparty exceeds a level determined in advance, referred to as the margin call threshold; The external credit assessment may not be used if: a) the credit protection is not eligible; b) the credit protection is not provided to the special purpose entity but applies directly to the securitisation position. TITLE VI THE TREATMENT OF COUNTERPARTY CREDIT RISK CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Section 1 Definitions Article 257 For the purposes of this Title, the following definitions shall apply: a) ’counterparty credit risk’ mean the risk that the counterparty to a transaction could default before the final settlement of all of the transaction’s cash flows; b) ’long settlement transactions’ mean transactions in which a counterparty undertakes to deliver securities, commodities, or a foreign exchange amount against cash, other financial instruments, or commodities, or vice versa, at a settlement or delivery date that is contractually specified as the market standard for this type of transaction, or no later than five business days after the date on which the supervised institution enters into the transaction; c) ’margin lending transactions’ mean transactions in which the supervised institution is involved in the purchase, sale, carrying, or trading of securities. Margin lending transactions do not include other loans that are secured by securities collateral; d) ’netting set’ means a group of transactions with a single counterparty that are subject to a legally enforceable bilateral novation agreement or bilateral netting agreement whose effects are recognised under the provisions of this Title and Title IV. Each transaction that is not subject to a legally enforceable bilateral netting agreement that is recognised under the provisions of this Title should be considered as its own netting set; e) ’risk position’ means an amount that is assigned to a transaction under the Standardised Method set out in Chapter IV and resulting from a predetermined algorithm; f) ’hedging set’ means a group of risk positions arising from the transactions within a single netting set, for which only the net balance is relevant for determining the exposure value under the Standardised Method set out in Chapter IV; g) ’margin agreement’ means a contractual agreement or the provisions of an agreement under which one counterparty 190 h) ’margin period of risk’ means the time period from the last exchange of collateral covering a netting set of transactions with a defaulting counterparty until that counterparty is definitively dissolved and liquidated and the resulting market risk is re-hedged; i) ’cross-product netting’ means the inclusion of transactions in different product categories within the same netting set under the conditions set out in Section 3; j) ’current market value’ means the net market value of all the transactions within a netting set. Both positive and negative market values are used in computing the current market value; k) ’distribution of market values’ means the forecast of the probability distribution of net market values of transactions within a netting set at some future date (the forecasting horizon), given the realised market value of those transactions; l) ’distribution of exposures’ means the forecast of the probability distribution of market values that is calculated by setting forecast instances of negative net market values equal to zero; m) ’risk-neutral distribution’ means a distribution of market values or exposures at a future date, calculated using market implied values such as implied volatilities; n) ’actual distribution’ means a distribution of market values or exposures at a future date, calculated using historic or realised values such as volatilities calculated using past price or rate changes; o) ’current exposure’ means the larger of zero or the market value of a transaction or portfolio of transactions within a netting set that would be lost upon the default of the counterparty, assuming no recovery on the value of those transactions is possible; p) ’peak exposure’ means a high percentile of the distribution of exposures at any particular future date before the maturity date of the longest maturity transaction in the netting set; q) ’expected exposure’ means the average of the distribution of exposures at any future date before the maturity date of the longest maturity transaction in the netting set; r) ’effective expected exposure’ means the value defined at a given date as the maximum expected exposure that occurs at that date or any prior date; s) ’expected positive exposure’ means the weighted average over time of expected exposures, weighted by the fraction of the entire time interval represented by individual expected exposures. When calculating the minimum capital requirement for counterparty credit risk, the average is calculated over the first year or, if all of the contracts within the netting set mature within less than one year, over the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 time period corresponding to the longest maturity contract in the netting set; - the Standardised method; - the Internal Model method. t) ’effective expected positive exposure’ means the weighted average over time of effective expected exposure over the first year, or, if all the contracts within the netting set mature within less than one year, over the time period of the longest maturity contract in the netting set, weighted by the fraction of the entire time interval represented by individual expected exposures; Supervised institutions that use the treatment set out in Article 293-1 may not use the original exposure method. u) ’credit valuation adjustment’ means an adjustment to the mid-market valuation of the portfolio of transactions with a counterparty. This adjustment reflects the market value of the credit risk due to any failure to perform on contractual obligations. This adjustment may reflect the market value of the credit risk of the counterparty or the market value of the credit risk of both the supervised institution and the counterparty; v) ’one-sided credit valuation adjustment’ means a credit valuation adjustment that reflects the market value of the credit risk of the counterparty to the supervised institution, but does not reflect the market value of the credit risk of the supervised institution to the counterparty; w) ’rollover risk’ means the amount by which the expected positive exposure is understated when future transactions with a counterparty are expected to be conducted on an ongoing basis. The additional exposure generated by those future transactions is not included in the calculation of expected positive exposure; x) ’general wrong-way risk’ means the risk arising when the PD of counterparties is positively correlated with general market risk factors; y) ’specific wrong-way risk’ means the risk arising when the exposure to a particular counterparty is positively correlated with the PD of the counterparty due to the intrinsic nature of the transaction. A supervised institution shall be considered to be exposed to specific wrong-way risk if the future exposure to a specific counterparty is likely to be high when the counterparty’s PD is also high. Article 258 Supervised institutions shall treat counterparty credit risk for all of their exposures, whether they are in the non-trading book or the trading book. The counterparty credit risk of elements in the trading book shall be treated in accordance with the provisions of Chapter V of Title VII relating to capital requirements for settlement and counterparty risk, and with the provisions of this Title. Section 2 Choice of method Article 259-1 Subject to the provisions of this Section, supervised institutions shall use one of the following methods to calculate the exposure value for the derivative instruments listed in Appendix II: - the Mark-to-Market method; - the Original Exposure method; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Article 259-2 The combined use of different methods listed above shall be permitted on a permanent basis within a group, but not within a single legal entity, except where one of the methods is used for the cases set out in Article 277. Article 259-3 Subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, supervised institutions may use the Internal Model method set out in Chapter V to calculate the exposure value for: - the derivative instruments listed in Appendix II; - repurchase transactions; - securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions; - margin lending transactions; - long settlement transactions. Article 260 When a supervised institution purchases protection in the form of a credit derivative for a non-trading book exposure, or for an exposure to counterparty credit risk, it may compute its capital requirement for the hedged asset in accordance with Articles 194 to 195-4 relating to the methods for recognising the effects of credit derivatives, or, subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, in accordance with Article 48 relating to the treatment of double default or Articles 136-1 to 140 relating to the effects of credit derivatives for institutions using own estimates of LGD. In all of these cases, the exposure value for counterparty credit risk for the credit derivatives is set equal to zero. The exposure value for counterparty credit risk for a credit default swap sold in the non-trading book is set equal to zero if the credit default swap is treated as credit protection provided by the supervised institution and if it is subject to a capital requirement for credit risk for the full notional amount. Article 261 Whatever the method used to calculate counterparty credit risk, the exposure value for a given counterparty is equal to the sum of the exposure values calculated for each netting set with that counterparty. Article 262 An exposure value of zero for counterparty credit risk and credit risk may be assigned to derivative contracts, repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, long settlement transactions, and margin lending transactions outstanding with a central clearing house. The exposures of the clearing house with all participants in its arrangements shall be fully collateralised on a daily basis. 191 Article 263 The exposure value of long settlement transactions may be determined using any of the methods set out in this Title, independent of the choice of method for treating the counterparty credit risk of OTC derivatives, repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, and margin lending transactions. In calculating capital requirements for long settlement transactions, supervised institutions that use IRB approaches for credit risk may assign the risk weights of the Standardised approach for credit risk on a permanent basis, whatever the magnitude of those transactions. Section 3 Contractual netting Article 264 For the purpose of this Section: - ’counterparty’ means any entity that has the power to conclude a contractual netting agreement; - ’contractual cross-product netting agreement’ means a bilateral agreement between a supervised institution and a counterparty that creates a single legal obligation covering all included bilateral master agreements and transactions belonging to different product categories. For the purposes of cross-product netting, the following transactions and instruments are considered as belonging to different product categories: - repurchase transactions and securities and commodities lending and borrowing transactions; - margin lending transactions; - the derivative instruments listed in Appendix II. Article 265 For the purposes of this Title, the following netting mechanisms may be recognised as risk-reducing: - bilateral novation agreements; - other bilateral netting agreements between the supervised institution and a counterparty; - bilateral cross-product netting agreements, for supervised institutions that have received the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel to use the Internal Model method. Article 266-1 Contractual netting shall be recognised for the calculation of capital requirements when the following conditions are met: a) in the event of default, bankruptcy, of liquidation of the counterparty, or any other similar circumstance, the netting agreement creates a single legal obligation, covering all included transactions, giving the supervised institution the right to receive or the obligation to pay the net balance of the positive and negative mark-to-market values of the transactions concerned; b) in the cases referred to in the preceding paragraph, the supervised institution must have a written and reasoned legal opinion to the effect that, in the event of legal challenge, its claims and obligations would be limited to the net sum referred to in the preceding paragraph under the law that applies: 192 - in the jurisdiction in which the counterparty is incorporated and, if a foreign branch of an undertaking is involved, under the law of the jurisdiction in which the branch is located; - to the transactions concerned; - to any other contract or agreement necessary to effect the contractual netting; c) the supervised institution has procedures in place to ensure the continued legal validity of the netting agreement in the event of changes in the applicable laws; d) the agreement does not contain a lump-sum settlement clause in the event of failure; e) the supervised institution documentation in its files; maintains all required f) the supervised institution takes into account the effects of netting when it calculates its aggregate credit risk exposure to each counterparty and when it manages counterparty credit risk on that basis; g) the credit risk to each counterparty is aggregated to arrive at a single legal exposure for all transactions. That aggregated value shall be factored into credit limits and used in the assessment of internal capital adequacy. The contracts of netting agreement along with legal opinions relating to them, shall be made available to the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit the recognition of these agreements if, after appropriate consultation with the competent authorities of the other Member States concerned, it judges that their legal validity is not assured. Article 266-2 Contractual cross-product netting agreements shall be recognised when they meet the following conditions, in addition to the conditions mentioned above: a) the net sum referred to in paragraph (a) of the preceding Article is the net sum of the positive and negative close out values of all bilateral master agreements and the positive and negative mark-to-market value of the individual transactions; b) the written and reasoned legal opinions referred to in paragraph (b) of the preceding Article address the validity and enforceability of the entire cross-product netting agreement and the impact of that agreement on the material provisions of the individual bilateral master agreement included in the cross-product agreement. c) the procedures referred to in paragraph (c) of the preceding Article permit to verify that any transaction included in a netting set is covered by a legal opinion; d) the supervised institution complies with the requirements for the recognition of netting mechanisms and, if relevant, for the recognition of each individual master netting agreement included in a cross-product agreement, in accordance with the provisions of Title IV. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 coefficients in the preceding table are applicable to a contract, based on its characteristics, the largest coefficient should be used. CHAPTER II MARK-TO-MARKET METHOD Article 267-1 In the Mark-to-Market method, supervised institutions calculate replacement cost and potential future risk in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter. Contracts that do not fall within any of the categories set forth in the preceding table shall be assigned the largest coefficient, after their residual maturity has been taken into account. Article 267-2 Where a contract is not included in a novation agreement or netting agreement that satisfies the conditions set out in Article 266-1, its replacement cost is equal to its market value, if positive. Otherwise, the replacement cost is set equal to zero. With the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, supervised institutions that conduct a large amount of commodities business and have a diversified commodities portfolio may use the following coefficients in place of the coefficients assigned to contracts on precious metals other than gold and to commodities. Where contracts are governed by a single novation agreement or a single netting agreement that satisfies the conditions set out in Article 266-1, the replacement cost is the net balance of the market values of those contracts, if positive. Otherwise, the replacement cost is set equal to zero. Remaining maturity Article 267-3 For the calculation of potential future risk, the notional amount of all contracts is risk-weighted as a function of their remaining maturity, as follows: Remaini ng maturity One year or less More than one and not exceedin g five years More than five years Exchang e-rate and gold contract s Equity contrac ts 0% 1%% 0.5% 5% 6% Contra cts on preciou s metals other than gold 7% 10% 8% 7% 12% Equity contrac ts Commodit ies contracts One year or less More than one and less than or equal to five years More than five years Contracts on precious metals other than gold Contracts on other metals Contracts on agricultural products Contracts on energy products and other commodities 2% 2.5% 3% 4% 5% 4% 5% 6% 8% 9% 10 % 7.5% Article 267-4 For contracts concluded with the same counterparty, the future potential risk on that counterparty is the sum of the nominal amounts, weighted according to the provisions of Article 267-3. However, the future potential risk arising from contracts subject to a single novation agreement or netting agreement that meets the conditions set out in Article 266-1 may be calculated as follows. First, institutions calculate the ratio of net replacement cost to gross replacement cost, RNG: 1.5% 7.5% 10% 8% 15% The future potential risk of options sold is considered to be equal to zero. If forward foreign exchange transactions and similar transactions are subject to a single netting agreement that meets the conditions set out in Article 266-1, the net amount may be used when the flows being netted are denominated in a single currency and are payable at a single value date. For contracts structured in such a way that the replacement cost is periodically cancelled, the residual maturity is reduced to the time between such cancellations. However, the coefficient applicable to interest-rate contracts may not be less than 0.5% when the residual maturity of such contracts is longer than one year. For contracts structured in such a way as to leverage the nominal amount, institutions shall calculate the future potential risk after applying an appropriate leverage coefficient to the nominal amount. If more than one of the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 - the numerator of the ratio is the replacement cost of the contracts, calculated in accordance with Article 267-2, taking into account the effects of netting or novation; - the denominator of the ratio is the replacement cost of the contracts, calculated in accordance with Article 267-2, without taking into account the effects of netting or novation (gross replacement cost). When the denominator is zero, the ratio is considered to be equal to zero. Second, the following formula is used to determine the future potential risk, FPR, for contracts subject to the same novation agreement or netting agreement: RPF = (0,4 + 0,6 × RNB) × (sum of nominal amounts, weighted as set out in the provisions of Article 267-3) Institutions may also calculate a single RNG ratio applicable to all contracts covered by a legally valid novation agreement or netting agreement. In that case: 193 - the numerator of the ratio is the sum of net replacement costs resulting from the application of Article 267-2 to each novation agreement or netting agreement referred to above; - the denominator of the ratio is the sum of gross replacement costs for all contracts mentioned above. Institutions shall inform the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of their choice of option for calculating the RNG ratio. The option must be applied consistently. Article 267-5 The exposure value is the sum of the current replacement cost as determined in Article 267-2 and the potential future credit exposure. CHAPTER III ORIGINAL EXPOSURE METHOD Article 268-1 Institutions may avail themselves of this method only for exchange-rate and interest-rate contracts. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit the use of this method. Article 268-2 Where contracts are not included in a novation agreement or netting agreement that satisfies the conditions set out in Article 266-1, their notional amount shall be weighted according to their initial maturity as follows: Initial maturity Less than one year More than one year and not exceeding two years Additional allowance for each additional year Interest rate contracts 0.5% 1% Exchange rate Contracts 2% 5% 1% 3% For interest-rate contracts, institutions may, however, refer to the residual maturity to the extent that their business justifies it. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit this practice if it judges that this condition is not met. value date, the net amount may be used; the weightings to be applied shall then be those referred to in the preceding Article. For interest-rate contracts, institutions may, however, refer to the residual maturity to the extent their business justifies it. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit this practice if it judges that this condition is not met. Article 268-4 The exposure value is the result obtained from the preceding calculations. CHAPTER IV STANDARDISED METHOD Article 269 The use of the Standardised Method shall be limited to OTC derivatives and long settlement transactions. The exposure value shall be calculated separately for each netting set. It shall be determined net of any collateral using the following formula: exposure value = β * max CMV − CMC ; j i RPT ij − RPC lj * CCRM j l where: CMV = the current market value of the portfolio of transactions in the netting set with a counterparty, gross of collateral; that is, where: CMV = CMVi i where: - CMVi is the current market value of transaction i; - CMC is the current market value of the collateral assigned to the netting set, that is, where: CMC = CMCl l Article 268-3 Where contracts are included in a single novation agreement or a single netting agreement that complies with the conditions of Article 266-1, their notional amount shall be weighted according to their initial maturity as follows: Initial maturity Less than one year More than one and not exceeding two years Additional allowance for each additional year Interest rate contracts 0,35 % Exchange rate contracts 1,50 % 0,75 % 3,75 % 0,75 % 2,25 % If forward foreign-exchange transactions and similar transactions are subject to a single netting agreement that meets the conditions of Article 266-1, and the flows are denominated in the same currency and payable at the same 194 where: - CMCl is the current market value of the collateral; - i is the index designating a transaction; - l is the index designating the collateral; - j is the index designating the hedging set category. These hedging sets correspond to risk factors for which risk positions of opposite sign can be offset to yield a net risk position on which the exposure measure is then based; - RPTij is the risk position from transaction i with respect to hedging set j; - RPClj is the risk position from collateral l with respect to hedging set j; - CCRMj is the multiplier given in the table in Article 276 for hedging set j; - β = 1,4 Collateral received from a counterparty has a positive sign, and collateral posted to a counterparty has a negative sign. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Collateral that is recognised for this method shall be confined to the collateral that is eligible under Articles 165 and 338-3. Article 270 When an OTC derivative transaction with a linear risk profile stipulates the exchange of a financial instrument for a payment, the part of the transaction associated with the payment is referred to as the payment leg. Transactions that stipulate the exchange of payment against payment consist of two payment legs. The payment legs correspond to the contractually agreed gross payments, including the notional amount of the transaction. In applying the Standardised method, supervised institutions may disregard the interest rate risk from payment legs with a remaining maturity of less than one year. Supervised institutions may treat transactions that consist of two payment legs that are denominated in the same currency as a single aggregate transaction. The aggregate transaction is then treated like a payment leg. Transactions with a linear risk profile for which the underlying financial instrument is an equity instrument (including equity indices) or a commodity (including gold or other precious metals) shall be mapped to a risk position in the respective equity (or equity index) or commodity (including gold and other precious metals). The payment legs of these transactions shall be mapped to an interest rate risk position. payments (including the notional amount), and converted to euros, and then multiplied by the modified duration of the debt instrument or the payment leg. - for credit default swaps, the size of a risk position is equal to the notional value of the reference instrument multiplied by the remaining maturity of the credit default swap; - for OTC derivatives with a non-linear risk profile, including options and swaptions, the size of the risk position is equal to the delta equivalent of the effective notional value of the financial instrument that underlies the transaction, unless that instrument is a debt instrument. - for OTC derivatives with a non-linear risk profile, including options and swaptions, where the underlying financial instrument is a debt instrument or a payment leg, the size of a risk position is equal to the delta equivalent of the effective notional value of the financial instrument or payment leg multiplied by its modified duration of the debt instrument. Article 272 In determining risk positions, supervised institutions shall treat collateral received from a counterparty as a long position that comes due the same day. Collateral posted with the counterparty shall be treated as a short position that comes due the same day. Article 273 Supervised institutions shall use the following formulae to determine the value and sign of risk positions: a) for all instruments other than debt securities, the effective notional value or the delta equivalent notional value shall be equal to: If the payment legs are denominated in a foreign currency, they shall also be mapped to a risk position in that currency. Transactions with a linear risk profile for which the underlying instrument is a debt instrument shall be mapped to an interest rate risk position for the debt instrument and another interest rate risk position for the payment leg. Transactions with a linear risk profile that stipulate the exchange of payment against payment, including foreign exchange forward contracts, are mapped to an interest rate risk position for each of the payment legs. If the underlying debt instrument is denominated in a foreign currency, the debt instrument is mapped to a risk position in that currency. If a payment leg is denominated in a foreign currency, the payment leg is also mapped to a risk position in that currency. p ref where: - pref is the price of the underlying instrument, in euros; - V is the value of the financial instrument (in the case of an option, the option price; and in the case of a transaction with a linear risk profile, the value of the underlying instrument); - P is the price of the underlying instrument, expressed in the same currency as V. b) for debt instruments and the payment legs of all transactions, the effective notional value multiplied by the modified duration, or the delta equivalent notional value multiplied by the modified duration, shall be equal to: ∂V ∂r The exposure value assigned to a foreign exchange basis swap transaction is zero. Article 271 The size of risk positions is determined as follows: - for transactions whose underlying financial instruments are not debt securities, the size of the risk position is equal to the effective notional value of the underlying financial instruments, defined as the market price multiplied by the quantity, and converted to euros. - for transactions whose underlying financial instruments are debt securities and for payment legs, the size of the risk position is equal to the effective notional value of the gross Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 ∂V ∂ p where: - V is the value of the financial instrument (in the case of an option, the option price; and in the case of a transaction with a linear risk profile, the value of the underlying instrument or the value of the payment leg); - r is the interest rate. If V is denominated in a currency other than the euro, the derivative instruments shall be converted into euros using the appropriate exchange rate. 195 Article 274 Supervised institutions shall group risk positions into hedging sets. For each hedging set, they shall calculate the absolute value of the sum of the resulting risk positions. This sum is termed the ‘net risk position’ and is represented the following expression in the formulas in Article 269: i RPTij − RPClj l Article 275 For interest rate risk positions associated with money deposits received as collateral, with payment legs, and with underlying debt instruments for which a capital charge of more than 1.60% is prescribed in the table in Article 321, six hedging sets shall be distinguished for each currency, as set out in the following table. Maturity Maturity Maturity Government referenced interest rates Less than 1 year From 1 to 5 years More than 5 years Other referenced interest rates Less than 1 year From 1 to 5 years More than 5 years For interest rate risk positions associated with underlying debt instruments or payment legs for which the interest rate is linked to a reference interest rate that represents a general market interest level, the remaining maturity is the length of the time interval up to the next re-adjustment of the interest rate. In all other cases, it corresponds to the remaining maturity of the underlying debt instrument, or in the case of a payment leg, the remaining life of the transaction. A single hedging set is defined for each issuer of a reference debt instrument that underlies a credit default swap. The nth-to-default credit default swaps are treated as follows: A single hedging set is defined for interest rate risk positions associated with: - money deposits that are posted with a counterparty as collateral when that counterparty does not have debt obligations with low specific risk; - underlying debt instruments for which a capital charge of more than 1.60% is prescribed in the table in Article 321; - payment legs that emulate debt instruments referred to in the preceding line; Supervised institutions shall assign to the same hedging set risk positions corresponding to: - debt instruments of a given issuer, or; - reference debt instruments of the same issuer that are emulated by payment legs, or; - debt instruments that underlie a credit default swap. Supervised institutions shall assign underlying financial instruments other than debt instruments to the same hedging sets only if they are identical or similar instruments. In all other cases, they shall be assigned to separate hedging sets. The similarity of instruments is established as in accordance with the following provisions: a) equities are treated as similar if they have the same issuer. An equity index is treated as a separate issuer; b) for precious metals, instruments are treated as similar if they involve the same metal. A precious metal index is treated as a separate precious metal; c) for commodities, instruments are treated as similar if they involve the same commodity. A commodity index is treated as a separate commodity. Institutions shall apply the multipliers defined in the following table to the different categories of hedging sets: a) The measurement of the net risk position of a reference security underlying a nth-to-default credit default swap corresponds to the effective notional value of the reference security, multiplied by the modified duration of the derivative at the umpteenth default divided by a variation of the credit margin of the reference security; Hedging set categories 1. Interest rates 2. Interest rates for risk positions associated with a reference debt instrument that underlies a credit default swap and to which the table in Article 321 assigns a capital charge of 1.60% or less Multiplier 0.2 % 0.3 % b) A single hedging set is constituted for each reference security underlying a credit default swap at the nth default; the net risk positions associated with the different swap contracts at the nth default are not included in the same hedging set; 3. Interest rates for risk positions associated with a debt instrument or reference debt instrument to which the table in Article 321 assigns a capital charge of more than 1.60% 0.6 % c) The multiplication factor applied to all the hedges constituted for each reference security underlying a derivative at the nth default is: 4. Exchange rates 5. Electricity 6. Gold 7. Equity 8. Precious metals (excluding gold) 9. Other commodities (excluding precious metals) 10. Underlying instruments of OTC derivatives that are not in any of the above categories 2.5 % 4% 5% 7% 8.5 % 10 % 0,3% when the reference security is subject to a credit assessment conducted by a recognised credit assessment agency, equivalent to step 1 to step 3 of the credit quality scale; 0.6% in other cases. 196 10 % Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Underlying instruments of OTC derivatives that do not fall within other categories shall be assigned to separate individual hedging sets for each category of underlying instrument. Article 277 When supervised institutions cannot determine the delta or the modified duration of transactions with a non-linear risk profile, or of payment legs and transactions for which the underlying are debt instruments, using a model approved for the purpose of calculating minimum capital requirements for market risk, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require that the size of the risk positions and multipliers be determined using more conservative measures or that the Mark-to-Market method be used. Netting of such transactions shall not be recognised; each transaction shall be considered as a separate netting set. Supervised institutions shall have internal procedures to verify that transactions included in a hedging set are covered by a legally enforceable netting contract that meets the requirements set out in Section 3 of Chapter I. Supervised institutions that use collateral to mitigate their counterpart credit risk shall have internal procedures to verify that the legal certainty standards set out in Title IV are satisfied before recognising the effect of the collateral. CHAPTER V INTERNAL MODEL METHOD Section 1 Scope of application Article 278-1 When the requirements of this Chapter are satisfied, supervised institutions may use the Internal Model method to calculate the exposure value of: received approval to use the Internal Model method, it shall use the Mark-to-Market method or the Standardised method. The combined use of these two methods within a group is permitted on a permanent basis. The combined use of these two methods within a single legal entity is permitted only where one of the methods is required by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel in accordance with the provisions of Article 277. Article 278-4 Supervised institutions which have been granted approval to use the Internal Model method shall not revert to the Markto-Market method or the Standardised method except for demonstrated good cause and with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. If the requirements of this Title cease to be satisfied, the supervised institution shall present to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel a plan for a timely return to compliance, unless it can demonstrate that the effects of its non-compliance are not material. Section 2 Calculation of exposure value Article 279 The exposure value shall be measured at the level of the netting set, under the following conditions: a) the model shall specify the distribution of changes in the market value of the netting set attributable to changes in market variables such as interest rates and foreign exchange rates; b) the model shall compute the exposure value for the netting set at different future dates, given the changes in the market variables; c) for counterparties subject to margin agreements, the model may also capture future movements in collateral; - the derivative instruments listed in Appendix II; or - repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, and margin lending transactions; or - all of the operations referred to in the preceding two lines. d) supervised institutions may reflect eligible financial collateral as defined in Articles 165 and 338-3 in calculating the distribution of changes in the market value of the netting set, if the quantitative, qualitative, and data requirements for the Internal Model method are satisfied; Long settlement transactions shall be included in each of these categories. Article 280 The exposure value shall be calculated as follows: Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 259-2, supervised institutions may choose not to apply this method to exposures that are immaterial in size and risk. Article 278-2 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may grant approval to supervised institutions to apply the Internal Model method sequentially across different transaction types. During this period, counterparty credit risk of transactions to which the Internal Model method does not apply shall be calculated using the Mark-to-Market method or the Standardised method. Article 278-3 For all OTC derivative transactions and for long settlement transactions for which a supervised institution has not Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 E = α × effective EPE where: - E is the exposure value; - effective EPE is the effective expected positive exposure; - α = 1,4 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require a value of alpha greater than 1.4. The EPE shall be calculated as follows: effective EPE = (EEt) where EEt is the average exposure at future date t. 197 This average shall be calculated across future values of relevant market risk factors. d) Internal estimates of α shall take account of the granularity of portfolios. The model estimates EE at a series of future dates. e) the numerator and denominator of the ratio defined in paragraph (b) shall be calculated consistently in terms of modelling methodology, parameter specifications, and portfolio composition; Effective EE shall be computed recursively as follows: effective EE = max(EE tk ; effective; EE ) tk-1 tk f) the approach used shall be based on the supervised institution’s internal capital approach. That approach shall be well documented and subject to independent validation; where: - EE is the effective expected exposure; - t is the current date; g) supervised institutions shall review their estimates of α at least quarterly, and more frequently if justified by changes in the composition of the portfolio; 0 - EE is the current exposure. to The effective expected positive exposure is the average value of the effective expected exposures calculated on a horizon of one year. If all contracts in the netting set mature within this horizon, the expected positive exposure is the average value of expected exposures until all contracts in the netting set mature. Effective expected positive exposure is computed as a weighted average of effective expected exposures using the following formula: effective EPE = min(1year; ; maturity) effective EE tk * Δ tk k =1 where the weights ∆t = t – t k k k-1 allow for the case in which future exposure is calculated at dates that are not equally spaced over time. The values of expected exposure or maximum exposure shall be calculated based on a distribution of exposures that accounts for the possible non-normality of the distribution of exposures. Supervised institutions may use a more conservative measure for each counterparty than that calculated using the above equation. Article 281-1 Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding Article, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may permit supervised institutions to use their own estimates of α under the following conditions: a) α is not be less than 1.2; b) α is equal to the ratio in which: - the numerator is the amount of internal capital resulting from a full simulation of counterparty credit risk exposure reflecting all market risk and counterparty credit risk factors; - the denominator is the amount of internal capital calculated using, as a measure of counterparty credit risk, a fixed amount corresponding to the expected positive exposure. c) Supervised institutions shall demonstrate that their internal estimates of α capture, in the numerator, material sources of stochastic dependency in the distribution of market values of transactions or of portfolios of transactions across counterparties; 198 h) supervised institutions shall assess model risk. Article 281-2 Where appropriate, volatilities and correlations of market risk factors used in the joint simulation of market and credit risk should be conditioned on the credit risk factor in order to reflect potential increases in volatility or correlation in an economic downturn. Article 282 If a netting set is subject to a margin agreement, supervised institutions shall use one of the following measures of expected positive exposure: a) effective expected positive exposure without taking into account the margin agreement; b) the threshold set in the margin agreement, if positive, plus an add-on that reflects the potential increase in the exposure over the margin period of risk. The add-on is equal to the expected increase in the netting set’s exposure beginning from a current exposure of zero over the margin period of risk. The minimum length of the margin period of risk is five business days for netting sets consisting only of repostyle transactions subject to daily re-margining and daily mark-to-market, and ten business days for all other netting sets; c) if the internal model captures the effects of the margin agreement in the estimation of expected exposure, the model’s measure of expected exposure may be used directly in the formula for effected expected exposure in Article 280, with the prior approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Section 3 Minimum requirements for the use of internal models Subsection 1 Counterparty credit risk control Article 283-1 Supervised institutions shall have a control unit that is responsible for the design and implementation of its counterparty credit risk management system, including initial and on-going validation of the model. This unit shall: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a) control the integrity of input data and produce and analyse reports on the output of the risk measurement model, including an evaluation of the relationship between measures of risk exposure and credit and trading limits; b) be independent from the operating units responsible for originating, renewing, or trading exposures; confidence interval chosen, at both the portfolio and the counterparty level. Supervised institutions take account of large or concentrated positions, including by groups of related counterparties, by industry, and by market; k) supervised institutions have a programme for verifying compliance with internal rules and procedures relating to the operation of the counterparty credit risk management system. This system is covered by documentation describing the empirical techniques used. c) be adequately staffed; d) report directly to the executive body; e) be closely integrated with the process of daily management of credit risk, and be an integral part of the process of monitoring and controlling credit risk and the overall risk profile of the institution. Article 283-2 Supervised institutions shall have procedures and systems for managing counterparty credit risk that are conceptually sound, are implemented with integrity, and satisfy the following criteria: l) Supervised institutions have a routine and rigorous programme of stress testing, as a complement to the day-to-day counterparty credit risk analysis based on the output of the risk measurement model. The results of this stress testing are reviewed periodically by the executive body and are reflected in the counterparty credit risk policies and limits set by the executive body. Where stress tests reveal a particular vulnerability to a given set of circumstances, prompt steps are taken to reduce that risk. b) they take into account market, liquidity, legal, and operational risks that may be associated with counterparty credit risk; Article 284 An independent review of the counterparty credit risk measurement system shall be conducted at regular intervals as part of the institution’s internal control process. This review shall cover the activities of both operating units and the independent counterparty credit risk control unit. It shall cover, at a minimum: c) before any new transaction, the credit risk of any new counterparty is assessed; a) the adequacy of the documentation of the counterparty credit risk management system and process; d) credit risk over the period running from the trade date to the settlement date is properly taken into account; b) the organisation of the counterparty credit risk control unit; e) market, liquidity, and operational risks are managed as comprehensively as possible both at the counterparty level (aggregating counterparty credit risk exposures with other credit exposures) and at the group level; c) the integration of counterparty credit risk measures into daily risk management; a) they include the management, approval, counterparty credit risk; identification, and internal measurement, reporting of d) the approval process for risk pricing models and valuation systems used by front- and back-office personnel; f) the executive body exercises control over the limitations and assumptions of the model used, and understands their impact on the model’s output; e) the validation of any significant change in the counterparty credit risk measurement process; g) the uncertainties of the market environment and any operational issues that may exist are reflected in the model; f) the scope of counterparty credit risk captured by the internal model; h) daily reports on the supervised institution’s exposures to counterparty credit risk are reviewed by persons with sufficient expertise and authority to enforce any needed reductions in positions taken by individual traders or credit managers, or in the supervised institution’s overall exposure to counterparty credit risk; g) the integrity of the management information system; i) the system for measuring counterparty credit risk is used in conjunction with credit and trading limits. Credit and trading limits are consistent with risk modelling over time, and well understood by traders and credit managers; j) the system for measuring counterparty credit risk captures daily and intra-day commitments. Supervised institutions measure current exposures gross and net of collateral. Supervised institutions calculate and monitor their peak exposures or their potential future exposures, at the Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 h) the accuracy and completeness of counterparty credit risk data; i) the procedures for verifying the consistency, timeliness, and reliability of data sources used to run models, including the independence of data sources; j) the accuracy and appropriateness of volatility and correlation assumptions; k) the accuracy of valuation and risk transformation calculations; l) the verification of the model’s accuracy through frequent back-testing. 199 Subsection 2 Use test Subsection 3 Stress testing Article 285 Supervised institutions shall demonstrate that they use their model for internal purposes, as set forth in the following provisions: Article 286 Supervised institutions shall have appropriate stress testing procedures which they use to assess the adequacy of internal capital for counterparty credit risk. The output of these stress tests shall be compared with the measure of expected positive exposure as part of the process of capital adequacy assessment set out in Article 17b of Regulation 97-02. Stress testing shall permit supervised institutions to identify events or changes in economic conditions that could have unfavourable effects on their credit exposures, and to assess their ability to withstand such changes. a) the distribution of exposures generated by the model and used to calculate effective expected positive exposure shall be closely integrated into the day-to-day counterparty credit risk management process. The model’s output shall be an integral part of the credit approval and counterparty credit risk management, and is taken fully into account in internal capital allocation and internal controls; b) supervised institutions shall have a sufficient track record in the use of internal models. They shall demonstrate that, for at least one year prior to approval by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, they have used an internal model, which meets, in broad terms, the minimum requirements set out in this Section, for calculating the distributions of exposures; c) the model used to generate the distributions of exposures shall be an integral part of a counterparty credit risk management framework that includes the identification, measurement, management, approval, and internal reporting of counterparty credit risk. This framework shall cover the usage of credit lines (aggregating counterparty credit risk exposures with other credit exposures) and internal capital allocation. In addition to expected positive exposure, supervised institutions shall measure and manage current exposures. Where appropriate, supervised institutions shall measure current exposure gross and net of collateral. The use test shall be satisfied when the supervised institutions use other measures of counterparty credit risk, such as peak exposure or potential future exposure, based on the distribution of exposures generated by the model used to compute expected positive exposure; d) supervised institutions shall have systems for estimating expected exposure daily, if necessary, unless they demonstrate to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel that their exposures to counterparty credit risk warrant less frequent calculation. Expected exposure amounts at future dates shall be calculated in a manner that adequately reflects the time structure of future cash flows and the maturity of contracts, and that is consistent with the materiality and the nature of the transactions; e) exposures shall be measured, monitored, and controlled over the life of all contracts in the netting set, and not just to the one-year horizon. Supervised institutions shall put in place procedures permitting them to identify and control the counterparty credit risk when the exposure increases beyond the one-year horizon. The forecast increase in exposure beyond one year shall be taken into account in the internal capital model. Supervised institutions shall stress test their counterparty credit risk exposures, including joint stressing of market and credit risk factors. Stress tests shall consider concentration risk to a single counterparty or groups of counterparties, correlation between market risk and credit risk, and the risk that liquidating the counterparty’s positions could move the market. Stress tests shall also consider the impact of such market movements on the supervised institution’s own positions, and integrate the results of that analysis in its assessment of counterparty credit risk Subsection 4 Wrong-way risk Article 287 Supervised institutions shall give due consideration to exposures that give rise to a significant degree of general wrong-way risk. Supervised institutions shall put in place procedures to identify, monitor, and control cases of specific wrong-way risk over the entire life of the transaction. Subsection 5 Integrity of the modelling process Article 288 The modelling requirements: process shall satisfy the following a) internal models shall reflect transaction terms and specifications in a timely, complete, and conservative fashion. These terms and specifications shall include at least minimum contractual notional amounts, maturity, reference assets, margining agreements, and netting agreements. The terms and specifications shall be maintained in a database that is subject to periodic audit; b) supervised institutions shall obtain a legal opinion verifying the legal enforceability of novation agreements and netting agreements. The agreements should be entered into the database by an independent unit; c) the entry of terms and specifications into the model shall be subject to periodic internal audit; d) supervised institutions shall put in place formal procedures for reconciliation between the model and source 200 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 data systems to verify that the terms and specifications are reflected correctly, or at least conservatively, and on an ongoing basis, in the calculation of expected positive exposure; e) the model shall use current market data to compute current exposures. When historical data are used to estimate volatility and correlations, at least three years of historical data shall be used. Historical data shall be updated quarterly, or more frequently if market conditions warrant. The data shall cover a full range of economic conditions over a complete business cycle; f) a unit independent from operating units shall validate the price set by the operating units. Data shall be acquired independently of the operating units, fed into the model in a timely and comprehensive fashion, and maintained in a database that is subject to periodic internal audit; g) supervised institutions shall have a well-established process for verifying the integrity of data, which permits them to correct identified errors and anomalies; h) if the model relies on proxy market data, particularly where three years of historical data are not be available for new products, internal policies shall identify suitable proxies. Supervised institutions shall demonstrate empirically that the proxies provide a conservative representation of the underlying risk under adverse market conditions; i) if the model considers the effect of collateral on the market value of the netting set, supervised institutions shall have appropriate historical data to model the volatility of the collateral. Article 289 The model shall be subject to internal validation. This process shall be clearly articulated in the supervised institutions’ policies and procedures, and shall include: a) a description of the testing needed to ensure the integrity of the model and to identify the conditions under which assumptions are violated and which could result in an understatement of expected positive exposure; b) a review of the comprehensiveness of the model. Article 290 Supervised institutions shall have internal controls and procedures that permit them: a) to adjust their estimates of expected positive exposure when risks become significant. These controls and procedures shall include: h) identifying and managing exposures to specific wrongway risk; i) ii) for exposures with a rising risk profile after one year, making regular comparisons between estimates of expected positive exposure over one year and expected positive exposure over the entire life of the exposure; iii) for exposures with a remaining maturity of less than one year, making regular comparisons between the replacement cost and the realised exposure profile, or with stored data that allow such a comparison; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) to verify, prior to including a transaction in a netting set, that the transaction is covered by a legally enforceable netting contract that is legally enforceable and that meets the requirements set out in Section 3 of Chapter I; c) to verify, prior to recognising the effect of collateral to reduce their exposures to counterparty credit risk, that the collateral meets the legal certainty standards set out in Title IV. Subsection 6 Use of internal models Article 291 In order to be approved by the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, models used by supervised institutions to calculate expected positive exposure shall also satisfy the following requirements: a) they comply with the qualitative criteria set out in Chapter VII of Title VII; b) interest rates, foreign exchange rates, equity prices, commodities, and other market risk factors are forecast over long time horizons for measuring counterparty credit risk exposure; c) the forecasting model for market risk factors performs well over a long time horizon; d) the pricing models used to calculate counterparty credit risk exposure for a given scenario of future shocks to market risk factors is validated by appropriate tests. Pricing models for options take account of the nonlinearity of option value with respect to market risk factors; e) the model captures transaction-specific information in order to aggregate exposures at the level of the netting set. Supervised institutions shall ensure that transactions are assigned to the appropriate netting set within the model; f) the model for calculating expected positive exposure includes transaction-specific information to capture the effects of margining. The model takes into account the current amount of margin as well as the margin that may be passed between counterparties in the future, the nature of margin agreements (unilateral or bilateral), the frequency of margin calls, the margin period of risk, the minimum threshold of unmargined exposure that the supervised institution is willing to accept, and the minimum transfer amount; g) the model may either reflect changes directly in the value of collateral posted, or apply the provisions set out in Title IV; h) supervised institutions shall put in place back-testing based on static, historical data for representative counterparty portfolios. At regular intervals, supervised institutions shall conduct such back-tests on a number of representative counterparty portfolios (actual or hypothetical). These representative portfolios shall be chosen based on their sensitivity to the correlations and material risk factors to which the supervised institutions is exposed. 201 TITLE VII PRUDENTIAL SUPERVISION OF MARKET RISK CHAPTER I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 292-1 Own funds, as defined in Article 5b of Regulation 90-02, must cover all of the requirements for: a) market risks in the trading book as defined in Section 1 of Chapter II. These risks, which correspond to the position risk on debt or equity securities defined in Article 294, include interest-rate risk as defined in Section 2 of Chapter III, equity-position risk as defined in Section 3 of Chapter III, and option risk attached to them as set out in Chapter VIII; b) foreign-exchange risk as defined in Section 1 of Chapter IV, commodity risk as defined in Section 2 of Chapter IV, and the option risks attached to them as set out in Chapter VIII; c) any additional requirement resulting from exceeding large-exposure limits, as set out in Chapter VI. Article 292-2 Both the settlement risk, whether related to the trading portfolio or to the banking book, and the counterparty risk described in Chapter V are covered by core capital and supplementary capital. Article 292-3 The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may authorise supervised institutions to use their own internal models to calculate capital requirements for market risk in the trading book, foreign-exchange risk, and options risk attached to them, if those models comply adequately with the conditions set out in Chapter VII of Title VII of this Decree. Article 293-1 Supervised institutions, with the exception of investment firms and financial holding companies whose principal holdings consist of one or more investment firms, may calculate the capital requirements for their trading books as specified in Titles II and III, provided they meet the following conditions: - in the past two half-years, the average book value of the trading book has not exceeded 5% of total assets plus offbalance-sheet items. It must at no time have exceeded 6% of that sum; - the average total trading book positions has not exceeded 15 million euros in the past two half-years. It must at no time have exceeded 20 million euros. If either of these limits is exceeded, the supervised institution shall be subject to the provisions of this Title. The above treatment shall apply to consolidated calculations. If the group to which a supervised institution belongs does not meet the conditions for this treatment, each supervised institution in the group that meets the conditions individually, and that has an investment department whose management is not integrated into that of the parent company, shall be eligible for the treatment. 202 Article 293-2 Foreign-exchange risk and the gold risk must be covered by own funds if the net overall position in foreign currencies plus the gold position exceeds 2% of total own funds. Article 294 For purposes of this Title, the position risk on a debt or equity security, or a derivative thereof, shall be divided into two components: – the general risk, which is the risk of a price change caused by an interest-rate fluctuation in the case of a debt security or a debt derivative, or by a movement in the equity market as a whole in the case of an equity or an equity derivative; – the specific risk, which is the risk of a price change due to factors related to the issuer of the security or the underlying instrument. Securities issued by the supervised institution itself or by regional or central institutions affiliated with the same central organisation as defined in Article L. 511-31 of the Monetary and Financial Code shall be disregarded. Article 295 he trading-book positions of consolidated institutions authorised in a Member State may be offset insofar as own funds are suitably distributed within the group and the group has a legal structure that guarantees reciprocal financial assistance. Foreign-exchange positions may be offset under the same conditions. The trading-book positions of institutions authorised in a Member State may also be offset against those of consolidated institutions having their registered office in a third country, provided the following three conditions are all met: - the institutions in the third country meet the definition of supervised institutions; - those institutions are subject to rules at least as strict as the provisions in force in France; - there are no obstacles in law or in fact that are liable significantly to affect the transfer of funds within the group to which the supervised institution belongs. Foreign exchange and commodity positions may be offset under the same conditions. Article 297 Supervised institutions must immediately inform the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel of all defaults by their counterparties in repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements or security lending or borrowing transactions. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 CHAPTER II DEFINITION AND VALUATION OF THE TRADING BOOK Subsection 2 Internal hedges Section 1 Definition of the trading book Article 300 Internal hedges may be included in the trading book under the following conditions. An internal hedge is defined as a position that materially or completely offsets the risk associated with a banking book position or set of positions. Positions arising from internal hedges are eligible for trading book treatment, provided that they are held with trading intent and that the general criteria on trading intent and prudent valuation set out in the preceding Article and in Section 3 are met. In particular: a) internal hedges shall not be intended primarily to reduce capital requirements; b) internal hedges shall be properly documented and subject to internal approval and audit procedures; c) the internal transaction shall be dealt with at market conditions; d) the bulk of the market risk that is generated by the internal hedge shall be dynamically managed in the trading book within the authorised limits; e) internal transactions shall be carefully monitored using appropriate procedures. The treatment referred to above applies regardless of the capital requirements applicable to the banking book leg of the internal hedge. When an institution sets up an internal hedge using a credit derivative booked in its trading book to hedge a banking book exposure, the banking book exposure is not deemed to be hedged for the purposes of calculating capital requirements unless the institution purchases from an eligible third-party protection provider a credit derivative meeting the requirements set out in Article 192-3 to hedge the banking book exposure. In that case, and without prejudice to the provisions of Article 338-4, neither the internal nor the external credit derivative hedge shall be included in the trading book for the purposes of calculating capital requirements. Article 298 For purposes of calculating market risk, the trading book consists of all positions in financial instruments and commodities held with trading intent or in order to hedge other elements of the trading book. These instruments must be free of any restrictive clauses on their tradability or hedging. Subsection 1 Trading intent Article 299 Positions held with trading intent are those held intentionally for short-term resale and/or with the intention of benefiting from actual or expected short-term price differences between buying and selling prices, or from other price or interest rate variations. They include proprietary positions and positions arising from client servicing and market making. Positions held in order to hedge other elements of the trading book are those that have been taken in order to offset, in whole or in part, the risk factors associated with those elements. Trading intent shall be evidenced based on the policies and procedures set by the institution to manage its positions or portfolios in accordance under the following conditions: a) the positions, the associated instruments, or the portfolios must be covered by a clearly documented trading policy approved by the executive body, specifying the expected holding period; b) the supervised institutions must have clearly defined procedures for the active management of positions taken on a trading desk, which include the following: i) position limits must be set and monitored for appropriateness; ii) position-taking by dealers must be subject to predetermined limits according to defined policies; iii) positions must be reported to the executive body as an integral part of the supervised institution’s risk management process; iv) positions must be actively monitored with reference to market information sources; v) an assessment must be made of the marketability or hedge-ability of positions, and of the quality and availability of market inputs to the valuation process, the level of market activity, and the size of positions traded in the market; c) supervised institutions must have clearly defined procedures that permit them to monitor positions against their trading policies, including monitoring rolled-over transactions and short positions in the trading book. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Subsection 3 Other specific treatments Article 301-1 Subject to the approval of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, the elements listed in point I of Article 6 of Regulation 90-02 may be included in the trading book and treated as equity or debt securities depending on their nature if the supervised institution demonstrates that it is an active market maker in the positions concerned. In that case, the supervised institution shall have internal systems and controls for trading the constituent elements of own funds mentioned above. Article 301-2 Repurchase transactions and similar trading transactions may be included in the trading book for the purpose of calculating capital requirements regardless of their accounting treatment, provided that all of these transactions are included under the same conditions. For these purposes, ‘repurchase transactions and similar trading transactions’ means transactions that satisfy the requirements of Articles 298 and 299 and both legs of which 203 are in the form of cash or securities eligible for inclusion in the trading book. Regardless of whether they classified are in the non-trading or trading book, all of these transactions and similar transactions are subject to the treatment of counterparty credit risk that applies to elements of the banking book. Subsection 4 Composition of the trading book for supervised institutions not subject to IFRS standards Article 302 The trading book includes: a) the trading securities defined in Article 2 of Regulation 90-0l and all forward transactions on such securities; b) derivative instruments whose purpose is either: i) to maintain isolated open positions in order to benefit from price variations; ii) to enable specialised management of trading books including derivatives and securities, or of equivalent financial transactions, provided all three of the following conditions are met: - the supervised institution is able to sustain a constant presence on the derivatives market; - the trading book containing derivatives has a significant volume of transactions; - the book is managed globally, for example on a sensitivity basis, at all times; iii) to implement a pre-defined strategy of hedging against the market risks affecting items included in the trading book; c) repurchase transactions, securities or commodities lending or borrowing transactions, other capital market-driven transactions, and forward foreign-exchange transactions, when they are carried out in order to benefit from a favourable variation in interest rates or when they hedge another item in the trading book; d) other transactions with credit institutions or investment firms when they finance one or more items in the trading book. Supervised institutions wishing to include other items in their trading book must first inform the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, which may prohibit them from doing so. The Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may require the exclusion from the trading book of items whose marketability is not or is no longer evident, for example in the absence of liquidity or actual trading, particularly if the holding period for these instruments is longer than corresponds to short-term trading intent. In addition, the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel may prohibit the inclusion in the trading book of items for which the supervised institution lacks the resources and the experience required to manage them actively or lacks adequate control systems. 204 Subsection 5 Composition of the trading book for supervised institutions subject to IFRS standards Article 303 The provisions of the preceding Article apply to supervised institutions that are subject to IFRS standards, with the exception of the elements referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b), which are replaced by the following paragraph (a): a) Financial instruments booked at fair value within the meaning of Regulation (EC) 1606/2002, i.e., those held with trading intent excluding those designated at fair value through profit and loss. Section 2 Valuation of trading book items Article 304-1 This section applies to elements of the trading portfolio and to assets on the banking book recognised at fair value. All trading book positions and banking book assets recognised at fair value shall be subject to prudent valuation rules as specified in this Section. Article 304-2 Supervised institutions shall ensure that the value applied to each of its trading book positions correctly reflects its market value. This valuation shall appropriately reflect the dynamic nature of trading book positions and the demands of prudential soundness inherent in the trading book. Trading book positions as determined in Section 1 of Chapter III, shall be re-valued daily. When a market price is not available, or, on an exceptions basis for certain convertible products, when the market price does not reflect the intrinsic value of the position, the supervised institution should use an alternative method of valuation provided that the method is sufficiently prudent and has been communicated in advance to the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, which may prohibit its use. Positions shall be booked from the trading date of the transactions. Article 305 Supervised institutions shall establish systems and controls to provide prudent and reliable valuation estimates. These systems and controls shall include at least the following elements: a) documented procedures for the process of valuation. These procedures shall include clear definitions of the responsibilities of the various units involved in valuing positions, checking market information sources and reviewing their relevance, as well as guidelines for the use of non-observable data corresponding to assumptions made by the supervised institution concerning the elements on which market participants rely to establish the prices of positions, the frequency of independent valuations, the timing of closing prices, procedures for adjusting valuations, and month-end and ad-hoc verification procedures; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) reporting lines for the department in charge of the valuation process that are clear and independent of operating units. The reporting line shall ultimately be to the executive body. Article 306 Supervised institutions must value their positions at market prices at every possible occasion. ‘Marking to market’ means, at least, daily valuation of trading book positions at readily available closing prices that are sourced independently. Examples include exchange prices, screen prices, or quotes from several reputable independent brokers. When marking to market, supervised institutions shall use the more prudent side of bid/offer unless they are significant market makers in the particular type of financial instrument or commodity in question and can close out their positions at mid market. Where marking to market is not possible, supervised institutions shall prudently mark their positions or their portfolios to model before applying capital requirements for the trading book. ‘Marking to model’ means any valuation that has to be benchmarked, extrapolated, or otherwise calculated from a market input. The following requirements must be complied with when marking to model: a) the executive body must be aware of the elements in the trading book or of other elements recognised at market value that are marked to model and shall understand the degree of uncertainty created in the reporting of the risk and performance of this business; b) the market inputs used shall, to the extent possible, be in line with market prices; c) the relevance of the market inputs for the position being valued and the parameters of the model shall be reviewed periodically; d) where available, valuation methodologies that represent currently accepted market practice in the markets for financial instruments or commodities shall be used; e) Where the model is developed by the institution itself, it shall be based on appropriate assumptions, which have been assessed and challenged in advance by suitably qualified parties independent of the development process. The model shall be developed or approved by units independent of operational units. It shall be independently tested, including validation of the mathematics, assumptions and software implementation. f) there shall be formal change-control procedures in place and a secure copy of the model shall be held and periodically used to check valuations; g) the units responsible for risk management shall be aware of the weaknesses of the models used and how best to reflect them in the valuation output; Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 h) the model shall be subject to periodic review to determine the accuracy of its performance, in particular to ensure the continued appropriateness of assumptions, to analyse profit and loss in relation to risk factors, and to compare actual close-out values to model outputs. In addition to daily marking to market or marking to model, independent price verification shall be performed. This shall include a periodic verification of the accuracy and independence of the market prices and data used by the model. When daily marking to market is performed by dealers, the verification of market prices and model inputs shall be performed by a unit independent of the dealing room, at least monthly, or more frequently depending on the nature of the market or the trading activity. Where independent pricing sources are not available or pricing sources are subjective, supervised institutions shall take prudent measures such as valuation adjustments. Article 307-1 Supervised institutions shall establish procedures permitting them, as appropriate, to make valuation adjustments to their positions. Article 307-2 The possibility of making adjustments should be considered for the following elements: non-accrued credit spreads, close-out costs, operational risk, early termination, investing and funding costs, future administrative costs, and, where relevant, model risk. . Article 307-3 Less liquid positions may result from market conditions, or specific conditions to institutions when they hold concentrated or long-term positions. Supervised institutions must establish and maintain procedures for calculating the adjustments to the valuation of less liquid positions. These adjustments, where applicable, may be in addition to any changes to the value of the position required for the financial reporting purposes and are designed to reflect the illiquidity of the positions. As part of these procedures, institutions must examine several factors to determine whether they need to adjust the value of less liquid positions: ― the amount of time would take to hedge out the positions or risks within the positions; ― the average volatility of bid/offer spreads for financial instruments or hedges; ― the availability of market quotes; ― the volatility and average of trading volumes, including volumes traded during periods of market stress for financial instruments and their hedges; ― the level of market concentration; ― the aging of positions; ― the extent to which the valuation of the position relies on marking-to-model and permits an assessment of the model risk; ― the impact of other model risks. If they use third-party valuations or mark-to-model, supervised institutions shall determine whether they need to 205 adjust the valuation of their positions. They must also examine the need to make adjustments to the valuation of less liquid positions and review their appropriateness on an on-going basis. In the case of complex products, including, but not limited to, exposures to securitisation and nth-to-default credit derivatives, supervised institutions must explicitly assess the need for valuation adjustments to reflect the model risk associated with using a possibly incorrect valuation methodology and the risk associated with using unobservable (and possibly incorrect) calibration parameters in the valuation model. Section 3 Management of the trading book Article 308-1 Supervised institutions shall have clearly defined procedures for determining which positions to include in the trading book for the purposes of calculating their capital requirements. These procedures shall be adapted to the institutions’ risk management methods. Compliance with these procedures shall be subject to periodic internal audit. Article 308-2 Supervised institutions shall have clearly defined procedures for management of the trading book. These procedures shall identify: a) the activities the institution considers as trading and as constituting part of the trading book for capital requirement purposes; b) the extent to which a position can be marked-to-market daily by reference to an active liquid market; c) for positions that are marked-to-model, the extent to which the institution can: i) identify all material risks associated with a given position; ii) hedge all material risks of the position with instruments for which there is an active liquid two-way market as defined in Article 347-2; iii) derive reliable estimates for the key parameters and assumptions used in the model; d) the extent to which the supervised institution can generate valuations that can be validated externally; e) the extent to which legal restrictions or other operational requirements could impede the institution’s ability to liquidate or hedge its exposure in the short term; f) the extent to which the supervised institution can actively manage its exposure within its trading operation; g) the extent to which the supervised institution may transfer risk or positions between the banking and trading books and the criteria for such transfers. 206 CHAPTER III CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS FOR MARKET RISK IN THE TRADING BOOK Section 1 Calculating the net position Subsection 1 General provisions Article 309 For the purposes of Sections 2 and 3 of this Chapter and, if relevant, Section 1 of Chapter VIII, the supervised institution shall calculate its net position as set out in this Section. The net position shall be the long balance (or net long position) or short balance (or net short position) of the transactions recorded by the institution in each of the securities or instruments classified in the trading book as defined in this Title. In calculating its net positions, a supervised institution may fully offset its long and short positions in: - equities from the same issuer; - debt securities from the same issuer with the same maturity that are directly fungible under the terms of the bond indenture. Net positions shall be converted daily into the reporting currency used for the returns, at the spot exchange rate. Subsection 2 Positions in the form of investments in units in collective investment undertakings Article 310-1 The capital requirements for positions in the form of investments in units of collective investment undertakings that meet the conditions set out in Chapter II shall be calculated in accordance with the following provisions. Article 310-2 Without prejudice to the provisions of the following Articles, these positions shall be subject to a capital requirement for position risk (specific and general) of 32%. Without prejudice to the provisions of the last indent of subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of Article 331 and paragraph (d) of Article 346, when the specific treatment for gold set out in those provisions is applied, these positions shall be subject to a capital requirement for position risk (specific and general) and foreign-exchange risk of no more than 40%. Unless otherwise noted, no netting is permitted between the underlying investments of a collective investment undertaking and other positions held by the supervised institution. Article 311 In order to apply the specific treatments set out in Articles 312-1 to 312-4 to positions in the form of investments in companies supervised or incorporated in a Member State, the following conditions must be satisfied: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 a) the collective investment undertaking’s prospectus or an equivalent document (such as a management mandate) must include: i) the categories of assets in which the collective investment undertaking is authorised to invest; ii) any relative limits applied to investments and the methodologies to calculate them; iii) if the collective investment undertaking is authorised to borrow, the maximum level of debt authorised; iv) if the collective investment undertaking is authorised to invest in OTC financial derivatives or repurchase (or similar) transactions, the measures put in place to limit counterparty risk from these transactions; b) the business of the collective investment undertaking must be reported in semi-annual and annual reports to enable an assessment to be made of the assets and liabilities, income, and operations over the reporting period; c) the units of the collective investment undertaking must be redeemable in cash, out of the undertaking’s assets, on a daily basis at the request of the unit holder; d) investments in the units of the collective investment undertaking must be segregated from the assets of its manager; d) the investing institution must conduct an adequate risk assessment of the collective investment undertaking. The specific treatments set out in Articles 312-1 to 312-4 shall also apply to positions in the form of investments in companies supervised or incorporated in a third country, if the conditions set out in paragraphs (a) to (e) above are satisfied. When a competent authority in a Member State recognises a collective investment undertaking in a third country as eligible for the application of the above provisions, that investment undertaking shall be treated in accordance with Articles 312-1 to 312-4. Article 312-1 If an institution is aware of the underlying exposures of the collective investment undertaking on a daily basis, it may look through to those underlying exposures in order to calculate the capital requirements for position risk (general and specific) for those positions in accordance with the provisions of this Chapter or, if applicable, in accordance with the provisions of Chapter VII. Under this approach, positions in the form of investments in units in collective investment undertakings shall be treated as positions in the underlying investments. Netting is permitted between positions in the form of investments in units in the collective investment undertaking and other positions held by the institution, as long as the institution holds a sufficient quantity of units to permit an exchange for the underlying investments. Chapter VII, for assumed positions representing the positions they would have to hold to replicate the composition and performance of an index or basket of equities or debt securities referred to in paragraph (a) below, subject to the following conditions: a) the collective investment undertaking’s mandate is to replicate the composition and performance of an externally generated index or basket of equities or debt securities; b) a correlation of at least 0.9 between daily price movements of the units of the collective investment undertaking and the index or basket of equities or debt securities that it tracks can be clearly established over a minimum period of six months. ‘Correlation’ in this context means the correlation coefficient between daily returns on the collective investment undertaking on a traded market and the index or basket of equities or debt securities that it tracks. Article 312-3 If the institution is not aware of the underlying investments of the collective investment undertaking on a daily basis, the institution may calculate the capital requirements for position risk (general and specific) in accordance with the methods set out in this Chapter, subject to the following conditions: a) it shall be assumed that the collective investment undertaking first invests to the maximum extent allowed under its mandate in the asset class attracting the highest capital requirement for position risk (general and specific), and then continues making investments in descending order until the maximum total investment limit is reached. The positions in the form of investments in units of collective investment undertaking shall be treated as if these assumed positions were held directly; b) The institution shall take account of the maximum indirect exposure that it could achieve by taking leveraged positions in the form of investments in units of the collective investment undertaking, by proportionally increasing its position up to the maximum exposure to the underlying investments, as authorised by the investment mandate; c) the capital requirement for position risk (general and specific), calculated in accordance with the preceding paragraphs, shall be capped at the level specified in Article 310-2. Article 312-4 For the purposes of the specific treatments set out in Articles 312-1 to 312-4, supervised institutions may rely on a third party to calculate and report capital requirements for position risk (general and specific) for their positions in the form of investments in units of collective investment undertakings. Supervised institutions shall verify the correctness of that calculation and that report. Article 312-2 Supervised institutions may calculate the capital requirements for position risk (general and specific), in accordance with the methods set out in this Chapter or, if applicable, in accordance with the methods set out in Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 207 Subsection 3 Positions in derivatives Article 313-1 Forward positions and option positions shall be converted into equivalent positions in the underlying instrument or instruments, subject to compliance with the provisions set forth below. Article 313-2 Interest-rate futures, forward rate agreements, and forward commitments to buy or sell debt securities shall be treated as combinations of long and short positions: - a long position in financial futures based on interest rates or interest-rate futures shall be treated as a combination of a borrowing maturing on the delivery date of the financial future and a long position in the instrument underlying the contract concerned. Short positions shall be treated symmetrically; - a forward commitment to buy a debt security shall be treated as a combination of a borrowing maturing on the delivery date and a long position in the security. Forward commitments to sell shall be treated symmetrically. Article 313-3 For calculation of interest-rate risk as defined in Section 2, swaps shall be treated on the same basis as instruments carried on the balance sheet. An interest-rate swap under which an institution receives a floating rate and pays a fixed rate shall be treated as a combination of a long position in a floating-rate instrument of maturity equivalent to the period until the next interest-rate fixing and a short position in a fixed-rate instrument with the same maturity as the swap itself. When the floating rate causes more complex behaviour, the institution shall break down the overall position into as many elementary positions as necessary, or use a sensitivity algorithm. Article 313-4 For certain methods for treating options specified in Chapter VIII, options and warrants on interest rates, debt securities, equities, stock indices, financial futures, swaps, and foreigncurrencies shall be treated as positions of equal value to the amount of the instrument underlying the option, multiplied by the delta. The positions so calculated may be netted against any offsetting positions in identical underlying securities or derivatives as specified in Sections 2 and 3 of this Chapter. The delta used shall be that of the exchange involved or, where that is not available or for options traded over the counter, the delta calculated by the institution itself, provided that the institution uses a standard Cox, Ross, Rubinstein or Black and Scholes type algorithm or another type of comparable and equivalent algorithm based on sufficiently prudent assumptions. In the latter case, the General Secretariat of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel shall receive prior notice of the algorithm chosen and may prohibit its use. Article 313-5 Stock-index futures and the delta equivalents of options in stock-index futures may be broken down into as many individual positions as securities constituting the index. These positions may then be offset against the positions 208 taken in the underlying assets as specified in Sections 2 and 3 of this Chapter. Article 313-6 Institutions may treat as fully offsetting any positions in interest-rate derivatives (forward rate agreements, interestrate swaps, floors and ceilings, swap options) that meet at least the following conditions: a) the positions are offset up to the same nominal amount and are denominated in the same currency and relate to the same underlying; b) the reference rates for floating or adjustable rate positions are identical and the differential between coupons for fixedrate positions is at most equal to 20 basis points; c) the next interest-rate fixing date or, in the case of fixedcoupon positions, the residual maturity meets the following conditions: - less than one month: same day; - between one month and one year: within seven days; - over one year: within thirty days. Article 313-7 The positions for which capital requirements are determined according to the risk assessment calculated by a clearing and guarantee house under the conditions set out in Section 2 of Chapter VIII shall be dissociated from positions determined for purposes of the calculations set out in Section 2 of Chapter III, Chapter V, and Section 1 of Chapter VIII. Subsection 4 Positions in underwriting commitments Article 314 - Positions linked to underwriting commitments shall be taken into account only from the day on which the institution makes an irrevocable commitment to accept a known quantity of securities at an agreed price (working day zero). Two types of reduction shall then be applied to calculate the amount of the positions to be included in the corresponding positions in equities or debt securities: a) positions that are subscribed or sub-underwritten by third parties on the basis of formal agreements shall be deducted from the underwriting positions taken by the institutions, b) for the calculation of specific risk and also, in the case of equities, for the calculation of general risk, the net positions so calculated shall be included only for their amount multiplied by the following coefficient: - working day zero: 0%; - working day 1: 10%; - working days 2 and 3: 25%; - working day 4: 50%; - working day 5: 75%; - after working day 5: 100%. Debt securities, for the calculation of general risk, are included for their full value from working day zero. From the time of the initial commitment, the supervised institution must ensure that it takes risks only to the extent compatible with its level of own funds. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Subsection 5 Positions in credit derivatives Article 315 Unless otherwise specified, supervised institutions that are sellers of protection shall use the notional amount of credit derivatives to calculate the capital requirements for market risk associated with their positions. The supervised institution may, however, choose to replace the notional amount by the notional amount adjusted for the market value of the credit derivative. For credit derivatives other than total return swaps, supervised institutions shall use the maturity of the contract to calculate specific risk. Positions shall be determined as follows, according to the type of instrument: i) A total return swap shall be treated as: - for general risk, a long position in the reference asset and a short position in a government bond with a maturity corresponding to the next interest-rate fixing and that is assigned a 0% risk weight under the Standardised Approach for credit risk; and - for specific risk, a long position in the reference asset; ii) a credit default swap does not create any position for general risk. For the purposes of specific risk, it shall be treated as: - a synthetic long position in an obligation of the reference entity if the derivative instrument is not rated externally and does not meet the eligibility conditions set out in Section 2; - a long position in the derivative instrument if it is rated externally and does meet the eligibility conditions set out in Section 2. If premium or interest payments are due under the contract, these cash flows shall be treated as notional positions in government bonds. iii) A single-name credit-linked note shall be treated as: - for general risk, a long position in the note itself, considered as an interest-rate instrument; - for specific risk, a synthetic long position in an obligation of the reference entity; and - a long position for specific risk in the issuer of the credit-linked note. If the credit-linked note has an external rating and meets the eligibility conditions set out in Section 2, supervised institutions shall record a single long position in the specific risk of the instrument. iv) A multiple-name credit-linked note proportional protection shall be treated as: v) a first-asset-to-default credit derivative shall be treated as creating positions for the notional amount in an obligation of each reference entity. If the amount of the maximum credit event payment is lower than the capital requirement calculated under this paragraph, the maximum payment amount may be taken as the capital requirement for specific risk. A second-asset-to-default credit derivative shall be treated as creating positions for the notional amount in an obligation of each reference entity except the entity that has the lowest capital requirement. If the maximum credit event payment amount is lower than the capital requirement calculated under this paragraph, the maximum payment amount may be taken as the capital requirement for specific risk. If an nth-to-default credit derivative is subject to an external credit assessment, supervised institutions may calculate a single capital charge that reflects the external credit assessment of the instrument and apply the respective securitisation position weights, as applicable. Article 316 Supervised institutions that are buyers of protection shall calculate their positions as the mirror-image of the treatment applied to their positions as sellers of protection, except for credit-linked notes, which do not give rise to any short position in the issuer. If at a given date there is a call option associated with a stepup, that date shall be treated as the maturity of the protection. In the case of credit derivatives first-to-default and nth-todefault credit derivatives, the following treatment is applied instead of the principle of perfectly matched positions: First-to-default credit derivatives: When a credit institution obtains a credit protection for a certain number of reference entities underlying a credit derivative on condition that the first credit event triggers payment and terminates the contract, this institution can offset the specific risk for the reference entity to which the lowest capital requirement applies with specific risk among the underlying reference entities, according to the table set out in Article 321. providing - a long position in the specific risk of the issuer of the note; and - a position in the specific risk of each reference entity. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 The total notional amount of the contract shall be allocated across all of the positions according to the proportion of the total notional amount that each position on a reference entity represents. If there is more than one obligation of the same reference entity, supervised institutions shall use the obligation with the highest risk weighting to determine the specific risk. If a multiple-name credit-linked note has an external rating and meets the eligibility conditions set out in Section 2, supervised institutions shall record a single long position in the specific risk of the instrument; Nth-to-default credit derivatives: When the nth default among the exposures triggers the credit protection payment, the protection buyer only offset the risk specific risk of the protection has also been obtained for defaults 1 to n-1 or when the n-1 credit events have already occurred. In such cases, the methodology indicated above 209 for first-to-default credit derivatives is applied in an appropriate manner to the nth-to-default products. Article 317 Supervised institutions shall apply the following provisions to the calculation of capital requirements for specific risk for trading book positions covered by credit derivatives: a) full allowance shall be given when the value of two legs always move in the opposite direction and broadly to the same extent. This will be the case in the following situations: underlying asset must be subject to physical delivery under the documentation of the credit derivative contract. In each of those situations, supervised institutions shall apply the higher of the two specific risk capital requirements for each leg of the transaction; d) in all situations not falling under the preceding paragraphs, supervised institutions shall calculate a specific risk capital requirement for each of the two legs of their positions. Subsection 6 Positions in other items in the trading book i) the two legs consist of completely identical instruments; ii) a long cash position is hedged by a total rate of return swap (or vice versa) and there is an exact match between the reference asset and the underlying exposure. The maturity of the swap may be different from that of the underlying exposure. In these situations, supervised institutions shall not apply any capital requirement for specific risk to either leg of the position; b) An 80% offset shall be applied when the value of the two legs always move in the opposite direction and where the following conditions are satisfied: i) there is an exact match in terms of the reference asset, the maturity of both the reference asset and the credit derivative, and the currency of the underlying exposure; ii) the key features of the credit derivative contract do not cause the price of the credit derivative to deviate materially from the price of the cash position. To the extent that the transaction transfers risk, an offset of 80% of the specific risk shall be applied to the leg of the transaction with the higher capital charge. The specific risk capital requirement for the other leg shall be zero; c) partial allowance shall be given when the value of two legs usually move in the opposite direction. This would be the case in the following situations: i) the position corresponds to the situations described to in subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a), but there is an asset mismatch between the reference asset and the underlying exposure. However, the positions must meet the following requirements: - the reference asset ranks pari passu with or is junior to the underlying obligation; Article 318-1 A convertible bond should be treated as a bond when the probability of exercise is very low, and as an equity when, because of market conditions, conversion is likely and the institution does not incur any loss thereby. In intermediate cases, it should be split into an interest-rate component and an equity component using a suitable method. Article 318-2 Positions in warrants shall be treated like equity call options. Article 318-3 Positions in certificates of securities on deposit may be offset against positions in the corresponding equities or identical equities on different markets. Article 318-4 Repurchase transactions, securities lending and borrowing, and other capital market-driven transactions shall not affect the institution’s net position in these securities. They may generate an interest-rate risk when they are made for cash. In that case they are regarded as purchases coupled with sales at different value dates and are treated according to the provisions of Article 313-2. Section 2 Capital requirements for interest-rate risk Article 319 Supervised institutions shall classify their net positions, reported at market value, according to the currencies in which they are denominated and shall calculate the capital requirement for general and specific risk in each currency separately. - the underlying obligation and reference asset share the same obligor and have legally enforceable cross-default or cross-acceleration clauses; Subsection 1 Capital requirements for specific risk ii) the two legs consist of completely identical instruments or the position corresponds to the situations described in paragraph (b), but there is a currency or maturity mismatch between the credit protection and the underlying asset. Currency mismatches shall be included in the reporting on foreign exchange risk as set out in Section 1 of Chapter IV; Article 320 The following items have no capital requirement for specific risk: - items deducted from own funds; - positions resulting from the decomposition of derivative products as described in Article 313-1, provided they are not covered by the other Articles of this Subsection; - the items listed in paragraphs and (c) and (d) of Article 302. iii) the position corresponds to the situations described in paragraph (b), but there is an asset mismatch between the cash position and the credit derivative. However, the 210 Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 specific risk capital charges for securitisation positions in accordance with Article 323-1. Article 321 Supervised institutions shall assign their net positions in the trading book in financial instruments that are not securitisation positions, to the appropriate categories in the following table on the basis of the internal rating or external credit assessment of the issuer or obligor, and their residual maturity. These net positions shall then be multiplied by the weightings shown in the table to yield capital requirements. Supervised institutions shall sum their weighted positions (whether long or short) to calculate their capital requirement for specific risk. Supervised institutions must calculate For the purposes of this Article and Articles 321-1 and 3231, supervised institutions may cap the product of the risk weights multiplied by the net positions at the maximum possible loss from a default. In the case of a short position, this cap is the variation in the valuation of the underlying assets in the event of the sudden disappearance of the default risk. ²Risk weight Debt securities issued or guaranteed by central governments, issued or guaranteed by central banks, international organisations, multilateral development banks, or regional governments or local authorities of Member States that would qualify for credit quality step 1 or that would receive a 0% risk weight under the provisions of Title II Debt securities issued or guaranteed by central governments, issued or guaranteed by central banks, international organisations, multilateral development banks, or regional governments or local authorities of Member States that would qualify for credit quality step 2 or 3 under the rules for the risk weighting of exposures under the provisions of Title II Debt securities issued or guaranteed by institutions that would qualify for credit quality step 1 or 2, under the provisions of Title II Debt securities issued or guaranteed by corporates would qualify for credit quality step 1, 2 or 3, under the provisions of Title II. Other qualifying items defined in Article 323 Debt securities issued or guaranteed by central governments, issued or guaranteed by central banks, international organisations, multilateral development banks, regional governments or local authorities of Member States, or institutions that would qualify for credit quality step 4 or 5 under the provisions of Title II. 0% . 0.25 % if the residual maturity is 6 months or less) 8% Debt securities issued or guaranteed by institutions that would qualify for credit quality step 4 under the provisions of Title II. Debt securities issued or guaranteed by corporates that would qualify for credit quality step 3 or 4 under the provisions of Title II Positions for which no external credit rating is available Debt securities issued or guaranteed by central governments, issued or guaranteed by central banks, international organisations, multilateral development regional banks, governments or local authorities of Member States, or institutions that would qualify for credit quality step 6 under the provisions of Title II. Debt securities issued or guaranteed by corporates that would qualify for credit quality step 5 or 6 under the provisions of Title II. 12% For supervised institutions that use the IRB approaches for credit risk, the obligor, in order to qualify for an external credit assessment corresponding to a given credit quality step, must have an internal rating associated with a PD lower than or equal to that associated with the credit quality step in question, as provided in the Standardised Approach for credit risk. a) The total capital charges for specific risk that would apply just to the net long positions in the correlation trading portfolio; Article 321-1 By way of exception to Article 321, supervised institutions may use the largest of the following amounts for the capital charges for the specific risk of the correlation trading portfolio: Article 321-2 The correlation trading portfolio is made up of securitisation positions and nth-to-default credit derivatives that meet the following criteria: Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 b) The total capital charges for specific risk that would apply to just the net short positions in the correlation trading portfolio. 211 a) The securitisation positions are neither re securitisation positions, nor derivatives of securitisation exposures that do not provide a pro-rata share in the proceeds of a securitisation tranche, (or a synthetically leveraged supersenior tranche, LSS); and b) All reference instruments are either single-name products, including credit derivatives, for which a liquid two-way market exists, or commonly traded indices based on singlename financial instruments. A two-way market means a market where there are independent bona fide offers to buy and sell so that a price based on the latest sales prices or current bids can be determined within one day and settled at such a price within a relatively short time, in accordance with market practices. Article 321-3 Positions that make reference to one of the following two categories are not included in the correlation trading portfolio: a) An underlying asset that can be classified in the exposure categories specified in Articles 18 and 19; or b) A claim on a special purpose entity representing a securitisation position backed by an asset that is not eligible for the correlation trading portfolio. Supervised institutions may include positions that are neither securitisation positions nor nth-to-default credit derivatives, but still hedge other positions in the said portfolio, provided that there is a liquid two-way market, as described in Article 321-2, for the instrument or its underlying assets. Article 322 For items that do not qualify under Articles 321 and 323, the risk weight for specific risk shall be 8% or 12% according to the table in the preceding Article. Securitisation positions that would be subject to deduction treatment under Article 6a of Regulation 90-02, or riskweighted at 1250% under Title V, shall be subject to a capital charge that is no less than that which would result from those treatments. Unrated liquidity facilities shall be subject to a capital charge that is no less than that which would result from the application of the provisions of Title V. A risk weight of 0% shall be applied to debt securities issued or guaranteed by the central governments and central banks mentioned in the table in the preceding Article when they are denominated and funded in the currency of the borrower. Article 323 For the purposes of the preceding Articles, qualifying items shall include: a) long and short positions in assets qualifying for a credit quality step corresponding at least to investment grade as defined in Title II; b) long and short positions in assets that, because of the solvency of the issuer, have a PD less than or equal to that of 212 the assets referred to in paragraph (a) under the IRB Approaches for credit risk; c) long and short positions in assets that do not have an external credit assessment, when the following conditions are met: i) they are considered by the supervised institutions concerned to be sufficiently liquid; ii) their quality is judged by the supervised institution to be at least equivalent to that of the assets referred to in paragraph (a) iii) they are listed on at least one recognised market in a Member State or on a recognised stock exchange in a third country; d) long and short positions in assets issued by supervised institutions or by institutions in a Member State, that are considered by the supervised institution concerned to be sufficiently liquid and whose investment quality is judged by that institution to be at least equivalent to that of the assets referred to in paragraph (a); e) securities issued by institutions that are deemed to be of equivalent or higher credit quality than that associated with credit quality step 2 as defined in Title II and that are subject to a prudential supervisory regime comparable to the regime that applies to supervised institutions. Supervised institutions shall apply the maximum weighting shown in the table in Article 321 to instruments that show a particular risk because of the insufficient solvency of the issuer. Article 323-1 In the case of instruments in the trading book that are securitisation positions, the supervised institutions shall assign the following risk weights to the net positions, as calculated in accordance with Article 309: a) For securitisation positions in the banking book under the standard approach to credit risk, 8% of the risk weight calculated in accordance with the provisions of Chapter III of Title V of this Order; b) For securitisation positions in the banking book under the internal ratings-based approach for credit risk, 8% of the risk weight calculated in accordance with the provisions of Chapter IV of Title V of this Order. For the purposes of b, a supervised institution other than the originator or sponsor cannot use the supervisory formula method without the authorisation of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel. Originators and sponsors can apply this method for the same securitisation position in their banking book. Where applicable, the probability-of-default and loss-givendefault estimates used for the purposes of the Supervisory Formula Method shall be computed in accordance with Title III of this Order or, with the explicit and special authorisation of the Autorité de contrôle prudentiel, on the basis of estimates computed using an approach described in Article 347-2 that comply with the quantitative standards of the Internal-Ratings-Based Approach. Selected French Banking and Financial Regulations – 2013 Notwithstanding points a and b, supervised institutions shall apply an 8% risk weight to securitisation positions that are risk weighted in accordance with Article 217-1, if they are in the banking book of the supervised institution. Supervised institutions shall sum all of the weighted positions (both long and short) to calculate the specific risk capital charges. Subsection 2 Capital requirements for general risk Article 324 Positions shall be reported at market value and classified using the Maturity Method set out in Article 325, the Duration Method set out in Article 326, or the Sensitivity Algorithm Method set out in Article 327. Article 325 The Maturity Method involves the three following steps, elaborated in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) below: - weighting of the previously determined net positions, instrument by instrument and by maturity. This weighting is designed to reflect their sensitivity to general interest-rate movements; - matching of the weighted net positions, successively: within the same maturity band, between different bands in each zone, and between different zones; - calculating the capital requirement. a) Supervised institutions shall calculate their weighted net positions as follows: i) net positions are allocated to the appropriate maturity bands in the following table: Net positions corresponding to collective investment undertakings may be assigned in full to the maturity corresponding to the actuarial sensitivity of the portfolio. ZONE MATURITY BAND Coupon of 3 % or more (1) One Two Three (2) 0 ≤ 1 month > 1 ≤ 3 months > 3 ≤ 6 months > 6 ≤ 12 months > 1 ≤ 2 years > 2 ≤ 3 years > 3 ≤ 4 years > 4 ≤ 5 years > 5 ≤ 7 years > 7 ≤ 10 years > 10 ≤ 15 years > 15 ≤ 20 years > 20 years Coupon of less than 3% (3) 0 ≤ 1 month > 1 ≤ 3 months > 3 ≤ 6 months > 6 ≤ 12 months > 1 ≤ 1.9 year > 1.9 ≤ 2.8 years > 2.8 ≤ 3.6 years > 3.6 ≤ 4.3 years > 4.3 ≤ 5.7 years > 5.7 ≤ 7.3 years > 7.3 ≤ 9.3 years > 9.3 ≤ 10.6 years > 10.6 ≤ 12 years > 12 ≤ 20 years > 20 years RISK WEIGHT (in %) ASSUMED CHANGE in interest rate (in %) (4) 0.00 0.20 0.40 0.70 1.25 1.75 2.25 2.75 3.25 3.75 4.50 5.25 6.00 8.00 12.50 (5) 1.00 1.00 1.00 0.90 0.80 0.75 0.75 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.60 0.60 ii) Securities shall be assigned to the maturity bands on the basis of the residual maturity in the case of fixed-rate securities and of the period remaining until the next interest-rate fixing in the case of other instruments. A distinction shall also be drawn between securities with a coupon of 3% or more and those with a coupon of less than 3%; ii) by zones, the supervised institution shall calculate the sum of the unmatched weighted long positions in the bands of each of the zones in the table to derive the unmatched weighted long position of each zone. Similarly, the unmatched weighted short positions of the bands of each zone shall be summed to calculate the unmatched weighted short position of that zone. iii) each position shall then be multiplied by the risk weight shown in column (4) of the table for the maturity band concerned; That part of the unmatched weighted long position for a given zone that is matched by the u