Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L01519:body:0:p3
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L01519
Segment Type: other
Provision Reference: 
Character Range: 7694–10777

following definitions are used in this Prudential Standard:
        1.           credit-event payment - the amount that is payable by the credit protection provider to the credit protection buyer under the terms of the credit derivative contract following the occurrence of a credit event. The payment can be in the form of physical settlement (payment of par in exchange for physical delivery of a deliverable obligation of the reference entity) or cash settlement (either a payment determined on a par-less-recovery basis, i.e. determined using the par value of the reference obligation less that obligation's recovery value, or a fixed amount, or a fixed percentage of the par amount);

        2.           credit events - events affecting the reference entity that trigger a credit‑event payment under the terms of the credit derivative contract;

        3.           deliverable obligation - any obligation of the reference entity that can be delivered, under the terms of the contract, if a credit event occurs. A deliverable obligation is relevant for credit derivatives that are to be physically settled;

        4.           general market risk - the risk of loss owing to changes in the general level of market prices or interest rates. It arises from positions in interest rate, equities, foreign exchange and commodities;

        5.           market risk - comprises general market risk and specific risk;

        6.            marking-to-model - any valuation that has to be benchmarked, extrapolated or otherwise calculated from a market input;

        7.           nth-to-default credit derivative - a contract where the payoff is based on the nth asset to default in a basket of underlying reference instruments. Once the nth default occurs the transaction terminates and is settled;

        8.           reference entity - the entity or entities whose obligations are used to determine whether a credit event has occurred under the terms of the credit derivative contract;

        9.             reference obligation - the obligation used to calculate the amount payable when a credit event occurs under the terms of a credit derivative contract. A reference obligation is relevant for obligations that are to be cash settled (on a par-less-recovery basis);[1]

       10.             specific risk - the risk that the value of a security will change due to issuer-specific factors. It applies to interest rate and equity positions related to a specific issuer;

       11.           traded market risk, foreign exchange and commodities capital requirement (TFC capital requirement) - the regulatory capital that an ADI is required to hold against its exposure to market risk in accordance with this Prudential Standard; and

       12.             underlying exposure - the exposure that is being protected by the credit derivative.

Key principles
     1.          An ADI that wishes to operate a trading book must, in accordance with Attachment A, submit for APRA's approval a trading book policy statement that specifies those activities that