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Catherine Walsh Formation Continue McGill University 30 November 2010 Hypothecation of investment assets: digression from general principles.

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Presentation on theme: "Catherine Walsh Formation Continue McGill University 30 November 2010 Hypothecation of investment assets: digression from general principles."— Presentation transcript:

1 Catherine Walsh Formation Continue McGill University 30 November 2010 Hypothecation of investment assets: digression from general principles

2 New Regime The Act Respecting the Transfer of Securities and the Establishment of Security Entitlements (Loi sur le transfert de valeurs mobilières et l’obtention de titres intermédiés) entered into force on 1 January 2009. Complementary amendments were concurrently effected to the Civil Code hypothecary regime.

3 Objectives of new regime To modernize the law governing the transfer and hypothecation of investment property to accommodate market realities and practices To harmonize Quebec law with equivalent legislation in the common law provinces (Securities Transfer Acts) Canadian legislation in turn rooted in Articles 8 and 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code in the United States

4 Directly held securities Directly held security = direct legal relationship between holder and issuer Certificated securities: holder holds certificate issued by the issuer representing the security Uncertificated securities: holder is registered in the issuer’s share register but does not possess a certificate representing the security

5 Indirectly held securities no legal relationship between the holder and the issuer; investor holds a securities account with a securities intermediary (e.g. a broker) and the security is credited to this account investor exercises its rights in the security through the intermediary Intermediary in turn holds securities in an account with an upper tier intermediary and so on up to a central securities depository

6 Security versus security entitlement Security = a directly held security, whether certificated or uncertificated Security entitlement = the right of the holder of a securities account against his intermediary in respect of the securities and other intangible property credited to his account (“financial asset”).

7 Creation & third party effectiveness General Principles For creation, a written agreement or physical dispossession is required For third party effectiveness, publication by registration or physical dispossession is required

8 Creation & Third Party Effectiveness: security entitlements A hypothec with delivery may be constituted and made effective against third parties by the creditor obtaining “control”; physical dispossession is not required (and not possible); A hypothec without delivery granted by an intermediary is deemed published upon its creation without the need for registration.

9 Modes of control: security entitlements A person acquires control by: becoming the account holder concluding a control agreement with the intermediary with whom the grantor maintains the securities account (for example, a broker) By virtue of status if the secured creditor is the intermediary with whom the grantor has his securities accounts

10 Priority of Hypothecs: General Principle Priority among the holders of hypothecs granted by the same grantor rank according to the date on which each becomes effective against third parties regardless of the method of publication (registration or dispossession).

11 Priority of hypothecs: security entitlements A “control” hypothecary creditor trumps all other creditors including creditors who registered their hypothecs prior to the obtaining of control Among control creditors, priority is accorded to the creditor who obtained control by becoming the named holder on the securities account Otherwise, control creditors rank according to when they obtained control.

12 Special priority rules for intermediaries If the holder of a securities account grants to the intermediary with whom he has his account a hypothec on the assets credited to the account, the intermediary’s hypothec has a super priority over any other hypothec on those assets, regardless of when that other hypothec was granted; Multiple hypothecs without delivery granted by an intermediary rank concurrently.

13 Priority among hypothecs granted by different grantors: general principle Suppose A grants to B a hypothec on certain assets, and B subsequently grants to C a hypothec on those same assets. General principle: Nemo dat quod non habet: a hypothec on the asset of another is ineffective.

14 Exception to nemo dat: security entitlements Rehypothecation generally permissible; Rehypothecation by intermediary/secured creditor permissible if authorized by client/grantor Even if reyhpothecation not authorized by law or by an agreement, generally C prevails against A if C obtains control and gives value.

15 Priority of intermediary’s secured creditor against account holders If an intermediary is bankrupt and there is a shortfall in the securities accounts held for its customers, a secured creditor of the intermediary who has obtained control has priority over the claims of the intermediary's customers. The secured creditor takes precedence even if the intermediary violated its customers’ rights in granting security. To defeat the secured creditor, the entitlement holders must show that the secured creditor acted in collusion with the securities intermediary in violating the intermediary's obligations (knowledge or imputed knowledge insufficient.

16 Conflict of laws General principle: validity, third party effectiveness and priority are governed by the law of the location of either the encumbered asset (tangibles) or the grantor (intangibles); Exception: If the encumbered asset is a security entitlement, the applicable law is the law designated by the parties to the securities account agreement as the law governing the account.

17 Policy rationales Finality in securities transfer transactions Reduction of transaction costs for purchasers and secured creditors Facilitation of access to low cost financing for brokers and other intermediaries

18 Do costs outweigh benefits?

19 Acknowledgements/References J.M. Deschamps, «Sûretés et ventes portant sur des valeurs mobilières » 2010 Cours de perfectionnement du notariat no 1, p. 179 (Édition Yvon Blais) J.M. Deschamps «Le nouveau régime québécois des sûretés sur les valeurs mobilières» (2009) 68, Revue du Barreau du Québec, p. 541 Mohamed F. Khimji, Annotated Securities Transfer Act (Ontario) (Toronto: Butterworths Steven L. Schwarcz, “Distorting legal principles” (2010) 35 J. Corp. L. 697


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