Source: http://www.ecbc.eu/framework/freeCompare/add_filter_framework/82
Timestamp: 2013-05-24 09:44:58
Document Index: 649856786

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art.2', 'Art. 5', 'Art. 27', 'Art. 14', 'Art. 25', 'Art. 19', 'Art. 34', 'Art 34', 'art 1', 'Art.2', 'Art. 27', 'Art. 14', 'Art. 25', 'Art. 19', 'Art. 34', 'Art 34']

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Australian Covered Bonds Austria
FBS - Fundierte Bankschuldverschreibungen Pfandbriefe Belgium
Belgium Covered Bonds Bulgaria
Bulgarian Covered Bonds Canada
Canadian Covered Bonds Cyprus
Cypriot Covered Bonds Denmark
Realkreditobligationer - RO Særligt Dækkede Obligationer - SDO Særligt Dækkede Realkreditobligationer - SDRO Finland
Finnish Covered Bonds France
Caisse de Refinancement de l'Habitat - CRH General Law Based CBs Obligations Foncières - OF Obligations à l'Habitat - OH Germany
Pfandbriefe Greece
Greek Covered Bonds Hungary
Hungarian Covered Bonds Ireland
Asset Covered Securities - ACS Italy
Obbligazioni Bancarie Garantite - OBG Luxembourg
Lettres de Gage hypothécaires Lettres de Gage mobilières Lettres de Gage publiques Netherlands
Dutch registered CBs programmes Norway
Norwegian Covered Bonds Poland
Polish Covered Bonds Portugal
Mortgage CB (Obrigações Hipotecárias) Public Sector CB (Obrigações sobre o Sector Público) Romania
Obligatiuni Ipotecare - Mortgage Covered Bonds Russia
Slovakian Covered Bonds Spain
Cédulas Hipotecarias - CH Sweden
Swedish Covered Bonds Switzerland
Credit Suisse CB Swiss Pfandbriefe UBS CB Turkey
Turkish Covered Bonds United Kingdom
Regulated Covered Bonds - RCB Unregulated Covered Bonds United States
US Covered Bonds Select Chapter(s)
I. STRUCTURE OF THE ISSUER II. FRAMEWORK III. COVER ASSETS IV. VALUATION OF THE MORTGAGE COVER POOL & LTV CRITERIA V. ASSET-LIABILITY GUIDELINES VI. COVER POOL MONITOR & BANKING SUPERVISION VII. SEGREGATION OF ASSETS & BANKRUPTCY REMOTENESS OF COVERED BONDS VIII. RISK WEIGHTING & COMPLIANCE WITH EUROPEAN LEGISLATION IX. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Questions
Comments: Swiss Pfandbrief law (PfG) Art.2: Only two Pfandbrief institutes (Pfandbriefbank schweizerischer Hypothekarinstitute AG, Pfandbriefzentrale der schweizerischen Kantonalbanken AG)
PfG Art. 5: Special banks with limited business scope (1. issuance of Swiss Pfandbriefe, 2. to grant loans to member banks, 3. invest the capital)
Comments: The bondholder has recourse to the Pfandbrief institute (PfG Art. 27 - 31). The bondholder does not have a direct recourse to the member banks. The Pfandbrief institutes, however, have a direct recourse to the member banks. 3. Who owns the cover assets?
Comments: Cover assets are owned by the member banks and pledged to Pfandbrief institutes.
Comments: The Pfandbrief institutes are the originators of the Swiss Pfandbriefe and the member banks are the originators of the mortgage loans. II. FRAMEWORK
Comments: The legal basis of Swiss Pfandbriefe is the Pfandbrief law (PfG) established in 1931. 2. What is the legal framework for bankruptcy of the issuer of covered bonds? General insolvency law Specific legal framework superseding the general insolvency law (6)
Comments: Specific legal framework under PfG and Swiss Federal Banking Law on Banks and Saving Banks (Swiss Banking law) superseding the general insolvency law.
PfG Art. 14 - 26 and Swiss Banking law Art. 25 - 37. III. COVER ASSETS
1. What types of assets may be included in cover pools? Mortgage loans (Mortgage loans for the purpose of this question are taken to include guaranteed real-estate loans.)
Comments: Only first class mortgages on properties in Switzerland are eligible (PfG Art. 19 and 34 - 36).
95 % are residential, private single-family homes or apartment blocks and only 5 % commercial properties. 2. What is the geographical scope for public sector assets?
Comments: Not applicable. There are no public sector cover assets. 3. What is the geographical scope for mortgage assets?
Comments: Switzerland only.
4. Are regular covered bond specific disclosure requirements to the public mandatory? Yes (10)
Comments: PfG, Swiss Code of Obligations, Securities Exchange law, Swiss Banking law. IV. VALUATION OF THE MORTGAGE COVER POOL & LTV CRITERIA
1. LTV is calculated using which valuation?[4] Market value (11)
Comments: PfG Art. 34 - 36: The maximum LTV is 2/3 of market value. Detailed valuation regulation have to be authorised by the Federal finance department. Mortgage lending value fixed by Pfandbrief institute completely independent of the member bank. The decision to accept a cover assets lies with Pfandbrief institute and not with member bank. 2. Are there any special LTV limits used solely for calculating collateralisation rates for the cover pool (if yes, specify)? Residential 66.67 %	(12)
Comments: PfG Art 34 - 36: Max. 66.67 % or lower. 3. Do bondholders get the benefit of that portion of the loan which exceeds the LTV cap? No 4a. Is there an LTV cap which makes the entire loan ineligible to be put in the cover pool (if yes, specify)? No (13)
Comments: Eligibility criteria and LTVs have to be met continuously. 4b. Is there an LTV cap which would require a loan to be removed from the cover pool? No (14)
Comments: Eligibility criteria and LTVs have to be met continuously. 5. Is there any additional LTV limit on a portfolio basis? Yes (if yes specify)
Comments: E.g. at least 80 % of cover value after haircuts have to be residential mortgage loans. V. ASSET-LIABILITY GUIDELINES
1. Is exposure to market risk (e.g. interest rate, currency risks) required to be mitigated by law or contract? Yes (16)
Comments: By law there is no interest rate risk, no currency rate risk and no maturity mismatch. 2. What is the primary method for the mitigation of market risk? “Natural” matching (matching without the use of off-balance sheet instruments) and stress testing (17)
Comments: By law matching between loans to member banks and Swiss Pfandbriefe, as both are denominated in CHF and have the same terms.
Derivatives are not used, as there are no currency rate risk, no interest rate risk and no maturity mismatch. 3. If the answer to the above question on market risk mitigation is “Use of derivative hedge instruments”, please specify whether those instruments are entered into: Not relevant (18)
Comments: Derivatives are not used, as there are no currency rate risk, no interest rate risk and no maturity mismatch. 4. What type of coverage test is applied?
Nominal cover 5. What is the frequency of coverage calculations? Daily 6. What types of stress scenarios are applied?
Not relevant (19)
Comments: Not relevant, due to low LTV. Outstanding historical track. No loss since establishment of PfG (1931). 7. What is the frequency of stress test calculations? Not relevant (20)
Comments: Not relevant, due to low LTV. Outstanding historical track. No loss since establishment of PfG (1931). . Exposure to liquidity risk
8. Is exposure to liquidity risk required to be mitigated by law or contract? Yes (21)
Comments: By law. 9. What is the primary method for the mitigation of liquidity risk on interest payments?
Liquidity facilities Contractual arrangements, e.g. a requirement to establish a reserve fund (22)
Comments: Risk management and limits include:
1) Law requires cash flow matching between loans to member banks and Swiss Pfandbriefe
2) Substantial free assets in liquid form (repo capable: SNB GC bond basket holdings can be repoed against CHF to EUREX counterparties)
3) Several cash flow concentration limits per member bank, monitored daily
4) Maturity extension for defined contracts (private placements of Swiss Pfandbriefe of "Limmat" program). 10. What is the primary method for the mitigation of liquidity risk on principal payments?
Natural matching (matching without the use of off-balance sheet instruments) and stress testing Liquidity facilities Contractual arrangements, e.g. maturity extension or prematurity test (23)
4) Maturity extension for defined contracts (private placements of Swiss Pfandbriefe of "Limmat" program). 11. Is there any grace period in case of a breach of liquidity risk mitigants? No 12. What is the consequence of not fixing a breach of liquidity risk mitigants? Other regulatory or rule-based action (24)
Comments: A breach of liquidity risk mitigants is not allowed as the liquidity buffer is stipulated by law. . Monitoring of exposures to market and liquidity risk
Comments: The Swiss Pfandbrief system is twofold. The two Swiss Pfandbrief institutes are the outsourced cover pool of their member banks. The Pfandbrief institutes value the coverage (only mortgages) completely independent of the member banks and supervise them daily. 14. Are there any regular public reporting requirements for market and liquidity risk? Yes (26)
Comments: Reports to member banks, rating agency, auditors, shareholders, Federal Finance Department, Swiss exchange authorities, corporate website. . Overcollateralisation
15. Is mandatory minimum overcollateralisation required? By legislation/regulation (27)
Comments: Yes, by Swiss Pfandbrief law and Swiss Financial Market Authority (FINMA) regulations.
16. What is the level of minimum mandatory overcollateralisation? 8 %	(28)
Comments: Overcollateralisation of at least 8 % is measured after valuation of mortgage loan and individual LTV of max. 66.7 %. 17. If mandatory overcollateralisation is required, are the amounts above the minimum OC level protected? Yes 18. Is there any grace period in case of a breach of the coverage test? No 19. What is the consequence of not fixing a breach of the coverage test?
Other regulatory or rule-based actions (29)
Comments: Law based action by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA).
A breach of liquidity risk mitigants is not allowed as the liquidity buffer is stipulated by law. VI. COVER POOL MONITOR & BANKING SUPERVISION
1. Is a special license required for the issuing of covered bonds? Yes with additional requirements compared to general banking supervision regulations (30)
Comments: Yes, as per Pfandbrief law only the two Swiss Pfandbrief institutes are legally permitted to issue Swiss Pfandbriefe. 2. Are there special reporting duties of the covered bond issuer to the supervision authority concerning covered bonds and the cover pool, which go beyond the regular banking supervision? Periodic reporting required (31)
Comments: Yes, according to Swiss Pfandbrief law. 3. What is the role of the banking supervision regarding covered bonds?
Comments: Supervision of the Swiss Pfandbrief institutes, the issuance of Swiss Pfandbriefe and the member banks. 4. Is there a special role of banking supervision in crisis regarding covered bonds? (33)
Comments: Yes, based on Swiss Pfandbrief law and Swiss Banking law. 5. Is there a cover pool monitor independent from the issuer?
Comments: The Pfandbrief institutes select and valuate the cover pool fully independent of the member bank (who grants the mortgage to the house owner) and supervises the cover pool daily.
6. If there is an independent cover pool monitor, what are its duties? (35)
Comments: See answer above (VI.5) VII. SEGREGATION OF ASSETS & BANKRUPTCY REMOTENESS OF COVERED BONDS
Comments: If a member bank goes insolvent (as opposed to a Swiss Pfandbrief institute), the Swiss Pfandbriefe will be satisfied according to the conditions of the issue and they will be repaid at the time of their contractual maturity. Automatic acceleration only occurs in a case of bankruptcy of the Pfandbrief institute. 2. What is the cover pool? All assets on the cover register (37)
Comments: The cover pool consists only of eligible mortgage loans as per cover pool register. 3. How are the covered bondholders protected against claims from other creditors in case of insolvency of the issuer? (38)
Comments: There are no significant other creditors than Pfandbrief bondholders due to special bank principle.
4. Is there recourse to the credit institution’s insolvency estate upon a cover pool default? Yes, pari passu with unsecured creditors 5. Are there provisions that require derivatives to continue in case of insolvency of the credit institution? (39)
Comments: n.a. (no derivative instrument) 6. If derivatives are permitted in the cover pool, what is their ranking? (40)
Comments: n.a. (derivatives are not permitted by law) VIII. RISK WEIGHTING & COMPLIANCE WITH EUROPEAN LEGISLATION
1. Does the covered bond fulfil the criteria of UCITS 52(4)? Yes 2. Does the covered bond legislation completely fall within the criteria of the Annex VI, Part 1, Paragraph 68 (a) to (f) of the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD)? Yes (41)
Comments: Following Swiss regulation. 3. Are listed covered bonds eligible in repo transactions with the national central bank? Yes (42)
Comments: Part of SNB GC Basket (CHF)
4. Are there any special investment regulations regarding covered bonds? Yes (43)
Comments: Defined by law. IX. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
FINMA - Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority	3. Fact Book Country Chapter
3.29.1 Switzerland.pdf
1: Swiss Pfandbrief law (PfG) Art.2: Only two Pfandbrief institutes (Pfandbriefbank schweizerischer Hypothekarinstitute AG, Pfandbriefzentrale der schweizerischen Kantonalbanken AG)
2: The bondholder has recourse to the Pfandbrief institute (PfG Art. 27 - 31). The bondholder does not have a direct recourse to the member banks. The Pfandbrief institutes, however, have a direct recourse to the member banks.
3: Cover assets are owned by the member banks and pledged to Pfandbrief institutes.
4: The Pfandbrief institutes are the originators of the Swiss Pfandbriefe and the member banks are the originators of the mortgage loans.
5: The legal basis of Swiss Pfandbriefe is the Pfandbrief law (PfG) established in 1931.
6: Specific legal framework under PfG and Swiss Federal Banking Law on Banks and Saving Banks (Swiss Banking law) superseding the general insolvency law.
PfG Art. 14 - 26 and Swiss Banking law Art. 25 - 37.
7: Only first class mortgages on properties in Switzerland are eligible (PfG Art. 19 and 34 - 36).
95 % are residential, private single-family homes or apartment blocks and only 5 % commercial properties.
8: Not applicable. There are no public sector cover assets.
9: Switzerland only.
10: PfG, Swiss Code of Obligations, Securities Exchange law, Swiss Banking law.
11: PfG Art. 34 - 36: The maximum LTV is 2/3 of market value. Detailed valuation regulation have to be authorised by the Federal finance department. Mortgage lending value fixed by Pfandbrief institute completely independent of the member bank. The decision to accept a cover assets lies with Pfandbrief institute and not with member bank.
12: PfG Art 34 - 36: Max. 66.67 % or lower.
13: Eligibility criteria and LTVs have to be met continuously.
14: Eligibility criteria and LTVs have to be met continuously.
15: E.g. at least 80 % of cover value after haircuts have to be residential mortgage loans.
16: By law there is no interest rate risk, no currency rate risk and no maturity mismatch.
17: By law matching between loans to member banks and Swiss Pfandbriefe, as both are denominated in CHF and have the same terms.
Derivatives are not used, as there are no currency rate risk, no interest rate risk and no maturity mismatch.
18: Derivatives are not used, as there are no currency rate risk, no interest rate risk and no maturity mismatch.
19: Not relevant, due to low LTV. Outstanding historical track. No loss since establishment of PfG (1931).
20: Not relevant, due to low LTV. Outstanding historical track. No loss since establishment of PfG (1931).
21: By law.
22: Risk management and limits include:
4) Maturity extension for defined contracts (private placements of Swiss Pfandbriefe of "Limmat" program).
23: Risk management and limits include:
24: A breach of liquidity risk mitigants is not allowed as the liquidity buffer is stipulated by law.
25: The Swiss Pfandbrief system is twofold. The two Swiss Pfandbrief institutes are the outsourced cover pool of their member banks. The Pfandbrief institutes value the coverage (only mortgages) completely independent of the member banks and supervise them daily.
26: Reports to member banks, rating agency, auditors, shareholders, Federal Finance Department, Swiss exchange authorities, corporate website.
27: Yes, by Swiss Pfandbrief law and Swiss Financial Market Authority (FINMA) regulations.
28: Overcollateralisation of at least 8 % is measured after valuation of mortgage loan and individual LTV of max. 66.7 %.
29: Law based action by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA).
A breach of liquidity risk mitigants is not allowed as the liquidity buffer is stipulated by law.
30: Yes, as per Pfandbrief law only the two Swiss Pfandbrief institutes are legally permitted to issue Swiss Pfandbriefe.
31: Yes, according to Swiss Pfandbrief law.
32: Supervision of the Swiss Pfandbrief institutes, the issuance of Swiss Pfandbriefe and the member banks.
33: Yes, based on Swiss Pfandbrief law and Swiss Banking law.
34: The Pfandbrief institutes select and valuate the cover pool fully independent of the member bank (who grants the mortgage to the house owner) and supervises the cover pool daily.
35: See answer above (VI.5)
36: If a member bank goes insolvent (as opposed to a Swiss Pfandbrief institute), the Swiss Pfandbriefe will be satisfied according to the conditions of the issue and they will be repaid at the time of their contractual maturity. Automatic acceleration only occurs in a case of bankruptcy of the Pfandbrief institute.
37: The cover pool consists only of eligible mortgage loans as per cover pool register.
38: There are no significant other creditors than Pfandbrief bondholders due to special bank principle.
39: n.a. (no derivative instrument)
40: n.a. (derivatives are not permitted by law)
41: Following Swiss regulation.
42: Part of SNB GC Basket (CHF)
43: Defined by law.