How To Use The ISDA Master Agreement
How To Use The ISDA Master Agreement
How To Use The ISDA Master Agreement
Ernest E. Smith
Oil, Gas & Mineral Law Institute
Paul E. Vrana
Craig R. Enochs
Fundi A. Mwamba
I. INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................... 1
II. DERIVATIVES .............................................................................................................. 1
III. A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE ISDA ........................................................................... 3
IV. DEVELOPMENT OF ISDA ........................................................................................... 5
V. NEED FOR THE MASTER AGREEMENT IN TODAY’S OTC MARKETS ................ 6
VI. MASTER AGREEMENT AND RELATED DOCUMENTS ARCHITECTURE ............ 7
VII. SUMMARY OF WHAT CONTRACT DOES............................................................... 12
VIII. ELECTIONS UNDER AGREEMENT.......................................................................... 15
IX. PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS .............................................................................. 17
X. CONCLUSION............................................................................................................. 18
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I. INTRODUCTION
This article (i) provides a basic background on derivatives; (ii) provides an overview of
the Master Agreement; (iii) recounts a brief history of the ISDA and Master Agreement; (iv)
explains the advantages gained by using the Master Agreement and the ISDA Credit Support
Annex to the Master Agreement (“Annex”) for OTC derivative transactions; (v) describes the
contract architecture of the Master Agreement; and (vi) addresses practical considerations
associated with successfully negotiating a Master Agreement.
II. DERIVATIVES
Despite the ancient roots of derivatives, what constitutes a derivative is still unclear to
most people today. Derivatives are financial instruments that derive their value from underlying
product but do not invlolve the purchase, sale or exchange of that product.3 Risk factors may
include: (i) the price of a bond, commodity, currency, or share; (ii) a yield or rate of interest; (iii)
an index of prices or yields; (iv) weather data such as inches of rainfall or heating-degree-days;
or (v) insurance data such as claims paid for a natural disaster.4 Participants in the energy
industry can use derivatives to address a wide range of their financial and risk management
needs. For example, a natural gas producer may wish to reduce downward price risk by locking
in a minimum price he will receive for his natural gas. One way to accomplish this goal is by the
purchase of a financial put option, giving the producer the right to be paid if the price of natural
gas falls below the put option strike price. The cost of the derivative would depend in part upon
the difference between the minimum price sought and the price for natural gas at the time the
derivative was purchased.
Derivatives differ from standard commodity transactions in that they usually settle on a
financial rather than physical basis. Although derivatives reference commodity quantities in
valuing the derivatives, derivatives are usually settled by the payment by one party to the other
and not by the physical delivery of the underlying commodity. In the example of the natural gas
producer in the previous paragraph, the financial put option would not give him the right to sell
natural gas to his counterparty, but rather would entitle him to be paid by the counterparty the
amount by which the put option strike price exceeds the market price of natural gas. Therefore,
while the producer still must sell and deliver the physical natural gas to purchasers at a market
price, he will also receive from the seller of the put option payment in the amount by which the
market price for natural gas at the time the natural gas is sold is less than the put option strike
price.
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Rather than being traded on an exchange, OTC derivatives are privately negotiated
transactions between parties. Eligibility to participate in an OTC derivative transaction is
governed by the Commodity Exchange Act5 and is generally restricted to a class of persons and
entities with sufficiently sizable assets and/or presumed sophistication to understand and manage
the risks associated with derivatives. 6
Many types of derivatives exist, and while it is beyond the scope of this paper to discuss
the vast array of derivatives in detail, a brief discussion of the two most common energy-related
derivatives follows:
1. Options
Options contracts give the option holder the right, but not the obligation, to exercise the
contract at a predetermined price during a specific period of time.7 Options may be the option to
sell, called a “put option,” or the option to buy, called a “call option.”8 Options can be used for
hedging as well as for speculative purposes. The producer discussed earlier who purchased the
put option to create a minimum price for the natural gas he sold was using the option as a hedge,
reducing his risk to market declines in natural gas, while an investor purchasing a call option in
the hopes the natural gas market will rise is using his option to speculate on the market. Options
can be sold through organized exchanges, or they can be negotiated and sold on the OTC market.
American-style options may be exercised at any time before the option expires, while European
options may only be exercised on the date they expire.9
The issuer of the option makes money by charging the purchaser a fee (usually a
percentage of the face value of the underlying asset) to secure the option. If prices remain stable,
option writers make only the original fee they collected, known as the “premium,” on the
transaction. If prices are volatile, however, option writers may suffer losses far greater than the
value of the premium received. For example, assume that an option writer sells a financially-
settled call option to a counterparty giving the counterparty the right to payment if natural gas
prices exceed a specified strike price. Once the option writer has collected the premium, it will
not be entitled to any further payments under the transaction. However, the option writer’s
liability is virtually unlimited as its obligations under the transaction are determined by the
difference between the strike price and the current market price of natural gas at the time the
transaction is settled.
2. Swaps
Swaps are privately negotiated OTC derivatives that are not traded on organized
exchanges. In a swap transaction, two parties agree to exchange a series of payments based on
different instruments.10 Upon settlement, the payment obligations are netted, and the party
owing the net amount pays the other. Swaps are generally used for hedging to alter a party’s
exposure to market volatility. An example of a swap would involve Party A, the holder of a
fixed-price natural gas position, entering into a swap with Party B, the holder of an index-price
natural gas position. Party A, seeking to participate in the natural gas market price volatility,
would agree to pay Party B the fixed price of natural gas and in exchange would be paid a
market-sensitive index price by Party B, who would enter into the transaction with the goal of
reducing its risk exposure to price volatility. If the index price rises above the fixed price, Party
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B will be obligated to pay Party A the difference between the two prices. On the other hand, if
the index price falls below the fixed price, Party A would be obligated to pay Party B the
difference between the two prices.
2. Two versions of the Master Agreement may be used. The Master Agreement has
two versions, the Local Currency-Single Jurisdiction version and the
Multicurrency-Cross Border version. The existence of two versions permit
parties to elect a version that may be used internationally and with multiple
currencies or a form that omits any terms, such as multi-jurisdictional tax
provisions, not applicable to transactions in a single jurisdiction. Participants in
energy-related OTC derivative transactions most commonly use the
Multicurrency-Cross Border version.
3. The Master Agreement contains an optional Credit Support Annex. The Annex is
optional but is widely used in most Master Agreements for energy-related OTC
derivative transactions. The Annex contains extensive provisions concerning the
posting and return of collateral, the types of collateral that may be used, and the
treatment of collateral by the secured party.
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6. The Master Agreement is the basis for other energy-related contracts. Many of
the standard form agreements now in use in the energy industry can trace many of
their provisions and their treatment of certain issues to the Master Agreement.
Terms originally developed for the Master Agreement are commonly found in
other contracts unrelated to OTC derivatives, such as the GISB Base Contract for
Short-Term Sale and Purchase of natural Gas and the EEI Master Power Purchase
& Sale Agreement.
8. The Master Agreement provides significant credit protection to its users. The
Master Agreement provides several mechanisms to help reduce parties’ credit risk
to each other including: (i) the right to terminate and liquidate all of the
transactions under the agreement when a default occurs; (ii) the right to set-off
obligations owing between the parties; (iii) the right to withhold payment after the
occurrence of an event of default; (iv) the right to demand collateral from the
counterparty under certain conditions; and (v) the ability to monitor and adjust the
exchange of collateral as frequently and as specifically as the parties desire.
9. The Master Agreement reduces legal risk. The Master Agreement significantly
diminishes three legal risks parties assume when they enter into OTC derivative
transactions. First, it improves the enforceability of oral transactions so parties
can enter into transactions by phone rather than waiting to exchange executed
written confirmations. Second, it contains numerous representations to ensure
that both parties abide by all regulatory requirements related to the OTC
derivative transactions and that neither party will violate federal law or incur
unanticipated tax obligations by virtue of entering into OTC derivative
transactions with the other party. Third, the Master Agreement’s credit provisions
reduce the risk resulting from an OTC derivative counterparty’s entering
bankruptcy and the expense and effort a party must expend to work through any
such proceeding.
10. The Master Agreement reduces contract risk. The Master Agreement reduces
contract risk by reducing variance of the contract terms across a party’s contracts
with all counterparties and between counterparties and affiliates. The Master
Agreement achieves this both by its own standardized terms and a party’s use of a
consistent Schedule and Annex for all of its Master Agreements. The burden of
tracking the contractual terms of thousands of transactions is eased considerably
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by the ability to ensure consistent terms are used in all of a party’s Master
Agreements.
11. The Master Agreement reduces the parties’ liquidity risk. Liquidity risk is the
risk that a party may not be able to enter into or terminate a needed transaction.
By having a Master Agreement and the early termination and liquidation and set-
off rights it contains, parties significantly reduce their liquidity risk. The Master
Agreement also increases the number of transactions parties can enter into due to
their ability to net credit exposure, thereby increasing the liquidity of the OTC
derivative market as a whole.
The need for a standard swap agreement arose prior to the deregulation of the United
States energy markets.11 Individual interest rate and currency swap dealers developed different
contracts with different terms and conditions.12 Negotiating these contracts often consumed a
great deal of time and money. The result was the formation of the International Swap Dealers
Association in 1984.13
ISDA initially consisted of 11 members whose goal was to develop standard definitions
for terms typically found in swap agreements.15 The Swaps Code, introduced in 1985 and
updated in 1986, consisted of standard definitions, representations and warranties, events of
default, and remedies.16
In 1987, ISDA produced three documents: (i) a standard form master agreement for U.S.
dollar interest-rate swaps; (ii) a standard form master agreement for multi-currency interest-rate
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and currency swaps (collectively known as the “1987 ISDA Master Agreement”); and (iii) the
interest rate and currency definitions.17
The 1990s resulted in major document production by ISDA, including (i) a revised
version of the Swaps Code, known as the 1991 ISDA Definitions, drafted and replaced later by
the 2000 ISDA Definitions; (ii) a revision to the 1987 Master Agreement resulting in the 1992
Master Agreement; (iii) the User’s Guide to the 1992 Master Agreement, drafted in 1993,
explaining in detail each section of the 1992 Master Agreement; (iv) the Commodities
Derivatives Definitions, drafted in 1993 and supplemented in 2000; and (v) the Annex, providing
for collateral documentation, finalized in 1994, followed by its User’s Guide in 1995.18
As energy markets began to deregulate and a market for energy-based derivatives began
to emerge, large energy trading and marketing firms began using the Master Agreement to
document derivative transactions.
The Master Agreement documents the overall terms of the relationship between the
parties, providing for payment provisions, representations and warranties, and provisions for
early termination, while the Annex governs the pledging and management of collateral to secure
a party’s payment obligations.
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contractual terms. Finally, the Master Agreement greatly aids in risk and credit management for
the parties. As a result of all of these advantages, most energy marketing and trading companies
require that all OTC derivative transactions be conducted using a Master Agreement.
A. Master Agreement
The Master Agreement is structured to provide the framework around which the rest of
the ISDA documentation is built. The preprinted Master Agreement is never altered except to
insert the names of the parties, but is customized through use of the Schedule to the Master
Agreement (“Schedule”), a document containing elections, additions and amendments to the
Master Agreement. While comprehensive guides exist for detailed discussion of the Master
Agreement and Annex,22 this paper is intended to describe some of the issues with which every
user of the Master Agreement should be familiar.
There are two versions of the Master Agreement, the local version for transactions
between parties located in the same jurisdiction who are transacting in only one currency, and the
multicurrency version for use when parties are located in different jurisdictions transacting in
different currencies. Despite this distinction, the multicurrency version is often used even when
transactions are in the same jurisdiction and payment will be in the same currency in order to
include the more comprehensive provisions contained in the multicurrency version. The
provisions included in the multicurrency version but not in the local currency version concern
issues such as taxes, currency of payment, the use of multiple offices to enter into transactions,
and the designation of an agent for service of process.
As previously discussed,23 the Master Agreement does not contain any terms specific to a
transaction, such as price, quantity or the identity of the buyer and seller, but rather leaves the
negotiation and documentation of those terms to a separately executed confirmation. The
confirmation establishes the parameters of performance. However, these obligations are limited
by the condition that a party is not obligated to make any payment or deliver or return any
collateral if an Event of Default has occurred or is occurring or an Early Termination Date has
occurred.24 This illustrates one advantage of the Master Agreement, namely that its drafters
considered many undesirable scenarios that could occur, such as an obligation to pay a
counterparty who is in default, and drafted the provisions of the Master Agreement to prevent
these undesirable scenarios from arising.
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further facilitate settling transactions and reduce costs, most counterparties agree to net all
amounts due on a single day regardless of whether amounts are due under a single or multiple
transactions. It is important to note that this netting right is different from the legal right of set-
off discussed later.25 Netting is an accounting convenience utilized on an ongoing basis between
parties while set-off is used as a final settlement of accounts that extinguishes the mutual debts
owed between the parties in exchange for a new, net amount due. The parties are incentivized to
pay in a timely manner by the imposition of interest on any amounts paid after the due date.
Due to the limited types of entities that may participate in OTC derivative transactions, it
is important for the parties to verify that each has the proper authorizations to participate in the
transactions. The ISDA contains a series of representations that address the internal and external
authorizations a party must have to participate in OTC derivative transactions. These include but
are not limited to representations that: (i) a party is duly organized and in good standing; (ii) it
has the power to enter into the agreement; (iii) the entering into of a Master Agreement would
not violate any law, provision of its organizational documents or any court order or judgment;
(iv) no events of default, potential events of default or termination events have occurred or are
continuing or would occur upon the execution of a Master Agreement; (v) no lawsuit has been
filed against the party that could affect the validity, legality or enforceability of the Master
Agreement; (vi) and all information provided to the other party in connection with the Master
Agreement will be accurate. It is common for parties to supplement these representations with
additional representations in the Schedule, often addressing in greater detail the eligibility of the
parties to engage in OTC derivative transactions and the arms-length relationship of the parties in
any OTC derivative transaction. In recognition that circumstances may change after the
execution of the Master Agreement, the Master Agreement requires that these representations be
made at the time the Master Agreement is executed and are deemed repeated at the time any
transaction is entered into.
The netting and set-off rights parties are given in the Master Agreement cause parties to
calculate their financial exposure under OTC transactions on a net basis, i.e., a party calculates
the difference between what it owes a counterparty under a Master Agreement and what the
counterparty owes it under the same agreement. These calculations are made on a mark-to-
market basis to reflect the current market position of each transaction. In support of these
practices, the United States Bankruptcy Code exempts participants in OTC derivative
transactions from the automatic stay provisions of the Bankruptcy Code and permits them to set-
off obligations owed between the creditor and the bankrupt party even during the pendency of a
bankruptcy stay order.26 While this provides a creditor some relief from a counterparty’s
bankruptcy by permitting the set-off of obligations due and owing, it does not provide relief from
the exposure to future positions that have not yet become due and owing. In recognition of this
problem, the Master Agreement contains provisions permitting a creditor party to terminate and
liquidate transactions upon a counterparty’s bankruptcy or other default under the Master
Agreement.
The Master Agreement provides the parties two means by which the Master Agreement
and all transactions thereunder may be terminated upon the occurrence of specified events. The
first is the occurrence of an Event of Default, which permits a party to terminate the Master
Agreement and liquidate all transactions if the other party is affected by an Event of Default. In
contrast, Termination Events may affect both parties, are usually the result of the actions of
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third-parties, and may provide the affected party a grace period to cure the Termination Event
before the other party may terminate and liquidate the Master Agreement.27
Some examples of Events of Default include: (i) a party’s failure to make payment or
deliver collateral after receiving notice of such failure; (ii) a failure of or default under credit
support provided to the other party; (iii) any misrepresentation; (iv) a default under a financial
obligation to a third party; and (v) bankruptcy. Termination Events include: (i) a change in a law
making performance under the Master Agreement illegal; (ii) a merger that impairs the credit of
the resulting entity; (iii) a merger that causes a party to pay increased taxes; or (iv) a change in
tax laws or procedures that increases a party’s taxes. The parties may provide for elect
Additional Events of Default or Additional Termination Events in the Schedule.
The party responsible for or to whom an Event of Default applies is called the Defaulting
Party and the other party is called the Non-defaulting Party. If an Event of Default occurs and is
continuing, the Non-defaulting Party may, at its option, declare an Early Termination Date.
When a Termination Event occurs, the party affected by the Termination Event is
designated the Affected Party. If a Termination Event affects both parties, both parties are
designated Affected Parties. An Affected Party is obligated to promptly notify the other party in
detail of the occurrence of the Termination Event when it discovers that the Termination Event
has occurred. Certain Termination Events require the parties to negotiate to permit the Affected
Party to transfer its obligations to a different office or affiliate if doing so will cure the
Termination Event.28 Other Termination Events that affect both parties require the parties to
employ reasonable efforts to attempt to negotiate to cure the Termination Event.29
Upon the occurrence of the Early Termination Date, all transactions under a particular
Master Agreement, as well as the Master Agreement itself, are terminated and liquidated at
market values as of the Early Termination Date into a Settlement Amount. Two important
elections shape the liquidated value of the transactions.
The first election is which of two methods to use in calculating the Settlement Amount.
The First Method permits payment of a Settlement Amount only to the Non-defaulting or Non-
affected Party; if the Non-defaulting Party or Non-affected Party would otherwise owe a
settlement amount to the Defaulting Party or Affected Party, any such amount is deemed to be
zero. The premise behind this method is that a party who defaults under the contract should not
receive a benefit in the form of a Settlement Amount as a result of the default. The Second
Method permits either party to receive a Settlement Amount, pursuant to the rationale that a
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Defaulting Party should be entitled to the benefit of its contractual bargain so long as the Non-
defaulting Party is kept whole.
The second election the parties make related to the Settlement Amount is whether to use
the Market Quotations or Loss method to value the liquidated transactions. The Market
Quotations method uses the valuations of the liquidated transactions from various participants in
the relevant OTC derivative market to calculate the Settlement Amount. The Loss valuation
method measures the Non-defaulting/Non-affected Party’s economic loss due to the early
termination, including the cost to unwind any related hedges.
Regardless of the method chosen, any amounts payable with respect to the early
termination and liquidation of transactions are subject to any set-off provisions agreed to by the
parties. These set-off provisions vary in their scope,30 but they permit the Non-defaulting party
to elect whether to employ set-off and at a minimum allow the Non-defaulting Party to set-off
any Settlement Amount it would owe to the Defaulting Party against any amounts the Defaulting
Party owes to the Non-defaulting Party under the Master Agreement. This set-off right is
valuable for several reasons: (1) it extinguishes the underlying debts and gains and replaces them
with a single net amount, greatly aiding in the management of the aggregated amount between
the parties and reducing the Non-defaulting Party’s risk exposure;31 and (2) if the Defaulting
Party is embroiled in bankruptcy proceedings, it reduces the amount and number of claims in the
bankruptcy proceeding and can increase the Non-defaulting Party’s cash liquidity related to those
claims.
The Master Agreement restricts assignment rights to ensure the parties can control the
identity of their respective counterparty. The assignment clause in the Master Agreement
prohibits transfers without consent unless: (i) the transfer is made in conjunction with a merger,
consolidation, or other business event where all or substantially all of the assets of the transferor
have been transferred to the other entity; or (ii) the transfer is an assignment of amounts owed by
the other party pursuant to an Early Termination.
Should a party incur any costs or expenses in enforcing its rights under the Master
Agreement against the other party, Section 11 provides for the recovery of those costs from the
other party. While some states, such as Texas, may offer similar rights,38 this provision is
particularly useful in both providing a broader right to recovery than most states offer and in
eliminating any need to research the treatment of this issue by the particular jurisdiction whose
law is chosen to govern the Master Agreement.
While the parties are free to elect the law of any jurisdiction to govern the Master
Agreement, the most commonly chosen jurisdiction by energy trading and marketing
counterparties is New York. New York has a long history of addressing complex business issues
in its statutes and for tackling complex business issues in the financial and commodities
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industries. The foundation for this is the New York General Obligations Statute39 whereby any
person may file suit in a New York State court against a foreign corporation or other non-
resident if: (1) the suit arises out of an agreement specifying the use of New York law (and, if the
obligation is equal to or greater than $250,000, no relationship to the State of New York need be
shown for the election of New York law to be enforceable); and (2) the suit concerns a
transaction with an aggregated value of at least $250,000.40 Parties also usually consent to
jurisdiction and venue in New York City, because New York City courts have a reputation for
proficiency in complex business litigation, fairness to all parties regardless of their jurisdiction of
origin, including foreign parties, and a desire to welcome cases involving participants from
jurisdictions outside of New York. The Master Agreement also requires that the parties waive
all immunities they may have to being sued or the exercise of any remedy against the party with
immunity.41
The Master Agreement concludes with a definitions section. Parties to the Master
Agreement should be aware that not all definitions are included in Section 14 of the Master
Agreement but may be included in the text of the Master Agreement, the Annex, a Schedule, a
Paragraph 13, or the separately published Commodity Definitions. 42 It is also noteworthy that
terms may have defined meanings even though they are not capitalized in the text of the
agreement.
B. Annex
The Annex is not required by the terms of the Master Agreement, but almost all parties
using the Master Agreement also require the use of the Annex. The insistence on using the
Annex stems from the fact that the Annex contains the vast majority of the credit terms related to
a Master Agreement.
The Annex’s mechanism for the requirement to deliver or return collateral is based on
whether a party’s exposure to the other party exceeds its credit threshold.43 If it exceeds the
threshold, it must deliver collateral to the other party, and if its exposure is less than the
threshold, then any collateral it has previously posted must be returned to it. Neither party is
obligated to deliver or return collateral unless the amount to be transferred exceeds a minimum
transfer amount, and any amount to be transferred is rounded to an agreed amount. If cash is
posted as collateral, the Annex provides for the payment of interest on that cash amount each
month by the secured party.
The parties may elect conditions restricting a party’s right to hold collateral,44 and if a
party fails to meet these requirements, it may still request collateral from the other party but any
such collateral must be held by a custodian that meets certain requirements. If a party is not
affected by an ongoing Event of Default or Termination Event, then it may freely use,
commingle or otherwise dispose of collateral as it sees fit, provided that it must exercise the
same standard of care as it would exercise toward its own property. This provision permits a
great deal of flexibility in a party’s use of another party’s collateral, even permitting a secured
party to rehypothecate the other party’s collateral for the secured party’s benefit, and thereby
greatly improves the liquidity of collateral posted under the Annex. However, this flexibility
also causes the inherent danger that a counterparty might utilize collateral given to it and not be
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able to return the collateral when required under the Annex. This danger often causes parties to a
Master Agreement to strike this provision .
The Annex concludes with a set of definitions, but as previously noted,45 this is by no
means a comprehensive list.
In addition to the Master Agreement and Annex, parties are required to negotiate a
Schedule to the Master Agreement (“Schedule”) and a Paragraph 13 to the Annex (“Paragraph
13”). The Schedule and Paragraph 13 are used to make all amendments to and customizations of
the Master Agreement and Annex, including the elections of the various options presented to the
parties in the Master Agreement and Annex and the addition of provisions not contained in the
Master Agreement. The Schedule and Paragraph 13 contrast with the Master Agreement and
Annex in that while the Master Agreement and Annex are always the same, it is rare for the
forms of Schedule and Paragraph 13 of any two parties to be exactly alike. The Schedule and
Paragraph 13 are always separately executed from and in addition to the Master Agreement and
Annex.
The Master Agreement addresses five primary issues inherent to OTC derivative
transactions.
OTC transactions by their nature do not raise many of the concerns associated with
physical transactions in the same commodities. For example, issues involving gas transportation
or the failure of power generation are irrelevant to an OTC transaction. However, while risk
reduction is always beneficial, the elimination of some risks amplifies the importance of the
remaining risks. Chief among these risks is the credit risk of counterparties.
At their core, transactions under a Master Agreement are nothing more than a transfer of
payments from one party to the other. These are usually made on a net basis, with each party
owing money to the other under various multiple transactions, and the amounts owed are
typically quite large, with energy trading and marketing companies often exchanging tens or
hundreds of millions of dollars each month under Master Agreements with various
counterparties. If this mutual cash flow is disrupted by the failure of one party to pay its
obligations, the effect can be damaging, as a net obligation or receivable an entity anticipated
being due in a month will suddenly turn into a larger exposure upon the other party’s failure to
pay. For example, assume that Party A owes Party B $25 million in a month under a Master
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Agreement, and Party B owes Party A $50 million in the same month. Party A would normally
expect a net receivable of $25 million from Party B for this month. If the parties do not net
obligations and Party A makes its payment to Party B not knowing Party B will not make its
corresponding payment, Party A will lose $50 million as a result of paying $25 million to Party
B and never receiving the $50 million from Party B.
The Master Agreement addresses this issue by creating a sophisticated collateral and
security system that functions to protect the parties while creating as flexible a mechanism for
doing so as the parties desire. The Master Agreement permits the parties to select any kind of
collateral they desire, although typically cash, third-party guaranties and letters of credit are
used. The parties set individual thresholds for each other beyond which collateral must be
provided to reflect the individual evaluation each party may have of the creditworthiness of
another.46 The parties also elect how frequently the credit exposure each party has to the other
must be monitored and how frequently and in which amounts collateral must be delivered and
returned. The existence of these variables results in Master Agreements resembling snowflakes,
where they are all identifiable as Master Agreements but no two are exactly alike. However, in
doing so the Master Agreement provides the parties powerful and individualized tools to manage
their credit exposure according to their own individual credit policies and risk tolerances. No
other standardized energy trading and marketing contract addresses this issue as
comprehensively as does the Master Agreement, and in so doing the Master Agreement, when
managed in a diligent manner, is usually considered to provide parties the lowest credit risk of
any standardized agreement.
OTC derivatives carry a substantial risk of forward exposure, i.e., the risk that their value
will change drastically as the market moves up or down over time. This risk is minimized by the
performance obligations of the other party, in particular by the payment of amounts owed and the
posting of additional collateral when necessary. However, when a party cannot rely on the other
party’s performance, the market risk dramatically increases, and most parties will prefer to exit
their market positions rather than accept this risk. Most contracts do not permit a party to
terminate its obligations subsequent to an adverse occurrence with sufficient ease to allow a
party to quickly address its increased market risk. In response to this, the Master Agreement
provides for two different means by which the Master Agreement and the Transactions
thereunder may quickly be terminated and the OTC positions unwound.
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Counterparties were able to invoke the early termination provisions of the Master Agreement to
quickly segregate the Enron obligations, isolate them from the remainder of their trading book,
quantify and affix their value and continue in business. If parties had been required to negotiate
release from their contracts with Enron or terminated the contracts with the risk that Enron might
file suit for such action, the marketplace could very well have ground to a halt upon the demise
of such a major market participant. Instead, the market continued functioning without any
discernible impairment.
The other facet of the early termination provisions that give them so much power is the
means by which parties are able to swiftly and objectively calculate the value of the terminated
transactions, thus permitting them to exit their positions without concern that the method by
which their damages were measured might be challenged by a legal proceeding. The costs
incurred by the terminating party are addressed as well, leaving few issues for dispute other than
the proper market numbers to use to value the terminated transactions. As shown by the Enron
bankruptcy, companies were rewarded in the marketplace when they were able to quickly
quantify their exposure to Enron with certainty. This certainty could be seriously misplaced if
not for the valuation provisions of the early termination provisions.
The right to demand and the obligation to deliver collateral are often hotly contested in
contracts. Many contracts do not specifically discuss collateral, and many rely upon the UCC49
fallback provisions to enforce their collateral rights. The UCC is inapplicable to many
contracts,50 however, and even when it does apply its rights to demand collateral are couched in
vague, ambiguous terms that lend themselves to challenge by the party from which collateral is
demanded.51 Once collateral is transferred under the UCC, it is up to the parties to determine
how the collateral is valued, how frequently it is valued, what the secured party may do with the
collateral and what rights the party providing collateral has to the return of the collateral. The
Master Agreement resolves all of these issues in advance by specifically addressing the rights of
the parties to collateral and requiring the parties to detail what collateral policies will apply and
how they will be applied. By resolving these issues in advance, parties are provided better credit
certainty, reduced credit risk, a reduced likelihood for disputes concerning the posting and
treatment of collateral and lower transaction costs.
E. Rights to Set-off
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by the parties. With these assurances in hand, the parties are able to offer greater credit leverage
than they otherwise would.
Every Master Agreement presents the parties with certain standard elections. While this
paper is not intended to comprehensively address every contractual option available under the
Master Agreement, this section highlights and summarizes the most common elections.
This option permits the parties to elect to have the Master Agreement and all
Transactions automatically terminate upon the occurrence of certain bankruptcy or insolvency
events.57 This is desirable in the event the parties have no other means to avoid the automatic
stay provisions of the United States Bankruptcy Code and would thereby be prevented from
enforcing the early termination and liquidation scheme detailed in Sections 5 and 6 of the Master
Agreement. This election is typically not made, however, due to its overlap with provisions of
the United States Bankruptcy Code that exclude OTC derivatives from the automatic stay
provisions.58 Further, it is presently unclear whether this provision is enforceable in the United
States or Canada. This provision is most useful when the choice of law is a jurisdiction other
than the United States or when there is an issue of whether the transactions entered into under the
Master Agreement will be excluded from the automatic stay provisions of the United States
Bankruptcy Code.
The Loss method is an indemnity provision based on the economic loss realized by the
Non-defaulting Party as a result of the termination of the Transactions. This method is very
subjective as it relies on the self-reporting of the Non-defaulting Party, permits the recovery of
such amorphous damages as loss of bargain, and permits the Non-defaulting Party to estimate the
value of its losses. 60 Further, the recovery of the cost of unwinding any hedge related to the
terminated transactions is specifically provided for when using the Loss method. Master
15
Agreements between energy trading and marketing companies tend to utilize the Market
Quotation method in order to inject as much objectivity as possible into the liquidation process.
The other variable in valuing liquidated transactions is the use of First Method versus
Second Method. First Method permits only the Non-defaulting Party to receive payment for the
terminated transactions while the Second Method allows either party to receive payment. The
argument for using the First Method is that a defaulting party should not be rewarded for its
default. The counter-argument for the Second Method is that contract law envisions both parties
receiving the benefit of the contractual bargain, and so long as the Non-defaulting Party is made
whole, it is unjust to bestow a windfall on that party as well. The First Method also could wreak
havoc on the defaulting party’s risk profile when it anticipates a gain from various transactions
that is wiped out due to the use of the First Method. Parties will occasionally alter the early
termination provisions to permit the Non-defaulting Party to pick and choose which transactions
it wishes to terminate. When coupled with the First Method, this creates a tremendous incentive
for a party to identify the transactions unfavorable to it, identify a Event of Default or
Termination Event as soon as possible, and terminate only the transactions unfavorable to it so
that it owes the counterparty nothing under those transactions. Energy trading and marketing
companies tend to elect the Second Method.
D. Set-off
The Master Agreement permits the parties to enforce any set-off rights they may have
when the payment amount after early termination is calculated. In general, parties may set-off
the obligations owed to one another under a contract without any express right to do so.61
However, this is typically insufficient for parties to a Master Agreement. Parties often elect in
the Schedule to add a set-off provision permitting the set-off of all amounts owed between the
parties to a Master Agreement under all contracts between them. This is particularly desirable
for energy trading and marketing companies who will typically trade in both the physical and
financial sides of one or more commodities and therefore have multiple contracts between
counterparties in order to avoid a circumstance where the Non-defaulting or Non-affected Party
was required to pay the other party under one agreement with no reasonable expectation of
payment by the other party under another agreement.
Some parties add a provision permitting the set-off of obligations owed between affiliates
of the parties. This can be useful when sister companies of the parties to a Master Agreement
also enter into transactions and the Non-defaulting or Non-affected Party wishes to avoid making
payment from one affiliate while the other affiliate fails to receive payment from the other party
or its affiliate. An example of this is Party A and Party B entering into a Master Agreement to
facilitate OTC derivative transactions while each has an affiliate that has entered into an
agreement with the other party’s affiliate for entering into physical natural gas transactions.
Despite the potential advantages this type of provision can provide, many companies are
not permitted to entangle their obligations with the obligations of affiliates. This issue is
particularly acute as deregulation of the energy industry progresses in the United States and more
companies are divided into regulated and unregulated subsidiaries that are prohibited from
16
entering into transactions involving each other. Companies are also more reluctant to agree to
cross-affiliate netting provisions as the companies grow in size and complexity and the issue of
tracking obligations across all affiliates becomes more and more cumbersome. It is not unusual
for an energy marketing and trading company to have more than 150 affiliates, each with their
own credit and risk managers. Parent companies of these affiliates are often unwilling to permit
a single affiliate to enter into an agreement that would affect other affiliates, possibly without the
knowledge of the other affiliates.
On the other hand, as the Enron bankruptcy showed, it is not uncommon for the affiliates
of two companies to have numerous contracts and transactions with each other, and it makes
more sense to net these obligations on an organizational level than to have some affiliates pay the
bankrupt party and have other affiliates file as unsecured creditors of the bankrupt party. Using
cross-affiliate netting, the creditor party will likely realize more money in set-off value for
amounts owed to it by the debtor party than it would receive as an unsecured creditor. Cross-
affiliate netting has the advantage of reducing the amount of time it takes to resolve claims with
a bankrupt party, the expense of addressing these claims and the organizational energy and
attention that must be devoted to these claims. Utilizing cross-affiliate netting can lead to a
much more efficient marketplace and lower transaction costs for the market participants.
A party considering the use of the Master Agreement should take the following steps to
implement the use of the Master Agreement for its transactions.
1. Purchase the materials. The Master Agreement, definitions, user’s guides and
other materials are all available for sale from ISDA.62 These materials are
essential to developing policies and documentation related to the Master
Agreement.
17
entered into OTC derivative transactions and therefore has not required that such
authorizations and documentation be put in place.
5. Start early. All of these steps require an extended time frame for completion.
Ample time must be allotted to lay the groundwork prior to entering into Master
Agreements or a party risks creating uncertain or inconsistent policies which can
increase the risk and workload after transactions commence.
X. CONCLUSION
OTC derivatives are extremely valuable tools to more precisely manage risk, increase the
efficiency of the marketplace and increase the profits of the parties using them. However, OTC
derivatives carry great risks if improperly used, thus creating issues that could cause the expense
and risk of OTC derivatives to outweigh their utility. By using the Master Agreement properly,
parties can reduce this risk and expense to a customized and comfortable level that allows for
very efficient transactions.
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18
ENDNOTES
1
10 Myths About Financial Derivatives, Thomas F. Siems, Cato Policy Analysis No. 283, September 11, 1997
(citing Artistotle, Politics, trans. Benjamin Jowett, vol. 2, The Great Books of the Western World, ed. Robert
Maynard Hutchins (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1952), book 1, chap. 11, p. 453).
2
The name was changed to International Swaps and Derivatives Association in 1993. The association had
previously been known as the International Swap Dealers Association.
3
Alternately, “[d]erivatives are financial instruments that derive their used to hedge risk and speculate on market
movements, the value of which depends, at least in part, upon the value and risk factor of a related asset or liability.”
Applied Derivatives, Glossary, February 2002, found at http://www.appliederivatives.com/glossary/index; and The
Derivatives ‘Zine, Derivatives Dictionary, November 2001, found at http://www.margrabe.com/Dictionary.
4
The Derivatives ‘Zine, supra note 3.
5
7 U.S.C. § 1, et seq., as amended (West 1999).
6
See 7 U.S.C.A. § 1a(12) (West Supp. 2001) (definition of “eligible contract participant”).
7
The Derivatives ‘Zine, supra note 3.
8
Id.
9
Applied Derivative, supra note 3.
10
The Derivatives ‘Zine, supra note 3.
11
Sean M. Flanagan, Student Note, The Rise of a Trade Association: Group Interactions Within the International
Swaps and Derivatives Association, 6 Harv. Negotiation L. Rev. 211, 235-236 (2001).
12
Id.
13
Id.
14
See International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc., Who we are - Mission, at
http://www.isda.org/wwa/index.html (last visited January 26, 2002).
15
Flanagan, supra at 235-236.
16
Id. at 234.
17
Id. at 243-245.
18
Id. at 243-245.
19
See International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc., All About Membership, at
http://www.isda.org/membership/index.html (last visited January 26, 2002).
20
See International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc., Conferences, at http://www.isda.org/conf/index.html
(last visited January 26, 2002).
21
E.g., http://www.isda.org/speeches/pdf/FeinsteinLetter.pdf.
22
See ISDA, User’s Guide to the 1992 ISDA Master Agreements (1993) (hereinafter ISDA User Guide); 1991
ISDA Definitions; 1994 ISDA Equity Definitions; ISDA Commodity Definitions.
23
See supra Section V.
24
International Swap Dealers Association, Inc., Master Agreement §§ 5-6, at 5 (1992) (hereinafter ISDA Master
Agreement).
25
See Section VII(E), infra.
26
11 U.S.C.A. § 362 (West Supp. 2001).
27
See infra Section VII.
28
See ISDA Master Agreement, supra note 6.
29
Id.
30
E.g., many Master Agreements permit the set-off of amounts owed between the affiliates of the parties to the
Master Agreement and/or amounts owed under physical commodity agreements between the parties to the Master
Agreement and/or their affiliates.
31
E.g., If Party A declares an Event of Default due to Party B’s default, and Party A owes Party B $30 million
under the Master Agreement while Party B owes Party A $50 million under the Master Agreement, Party A risks
having to pay Party B while not getting paid in return, an $80 million exposure. However, if set-off is employed,
Party B would owe Party A $20 million, resulting in a $20 million exposure for Party A.
19
3052741v9
32
This provision establishes that no agreements or indications of the intent of the parties exist regarding the subject
of the Master Agreement other than those contained in the Master Agreement.
33
For any modification of the master Agreement to be effective, both parties must sign the written document
detailing the modification.
34
Contracts that contain liquidated damages typically limit recovery to those liquidated damages. However, the
Master Agreement in this provision permits the parties to any other remedy available to it, such as injunctive relief
or specific performance, and permits the parties to seek such remedies without necessarily terminating the Master
Agreement or any Transaction.
35
As is typical in energy trading and marketing contracts, the Master Agreement permits the parties to exchange
duplicate originals of the Agreement and/or signatures via fax with all such duplicates or facsimile copies
constituting an original document for purposes of evidencing the contractual agreement of the parties. Further, the
Master Agreement establishes that Transactions are binding as soon as they are agreed upon rather than at the time
Confirmations are jointly executed, thus permitting a party to rely on an oral agreement and immediately establish
other positions based on that oral agreement rather than requiring for the complete execution of the confirmation. It
is not uncommon for days or weeks to elapse before a confirmation is fully executed, and without this provision
parties would incur significant market risk in that the market could move substantially while the parties were
awaiting the execution of confirmations. This provision greatly improves the efficiency of OTC derivative
transactions, lowers transaction costs and decreases the likelihood that a counterparty will back out of a transaction
on the basis that the transaction was not binding until a Confirmation was fully executed.
36
In some cases a party’s failure to take an action or waiver of a right can be construed by a court as a waiver of all
similar rights. This provision rejects this approach in favor of permitting the parties to decline to exercise a right at
any time without prejudicing any future rights.
37
Headings and titles can sometimes be used to interpret the meaning of contractual provisions, but this section of
the Master Agreement prevents headings from being used in such manner.
38
See TEXAS CIV. PRAC. & REM CODE, § 38.001 (VERNON 1997).
39
N.Y. Gen. Oblig. § 5-1401 (McKinney 1989).
40
N.Y. Jud. L. 27(b) (McKinney 1989).
41
This is occasionally a sticking point for quasi-governmental entities, but this issue can usually be separately
negotiated in a mutually satisfactory manner and this provision serves the valuable role of identifying this issue for
negotiation even if a party refuses to agree to its terms.
42
1991 ISDA Definitions; 1994 ISDA Equity Definitions; ISDA Commodity Definitions.
43
The threshold is calculated using a threshold established by the parties and adding to it any collateral previously
posted.
44
This usually prohibits a party from holding collateral if it is affected by an ongoing Event of Default or
Termination Event or fails to meet certain creditworthiness requirements.
45
See supra Section VI(A).
46
Parties frequently tie these thresholds to a matrix so the thresholds adjust themselves automatically in relation to
changes in a party’s credit ratings.
47
See supra Section VI.
48
See The Power Marketing Association Online, at http://www.pmaconference.com/topmarketers
49
See Tex. Bus. Com. Code Ann. § 2.609 (Vernon 1994) (Right to Adequate Assurance of Performance) (The
Uniform Commercial Code as set forth in the provisions of the Texas Business and Commerce Code will be
hereinafter cited as the “U.C.C.”).
50
U.C.C. § 2-201 (Vernon 1994). The UCC Article 2 only applies to transactions between merchants for the sale of
goods.
51
U.C.C. § 9 et. Seq. (Vernon 1994).
52
See supra Section VI.
53
11 U.S.C.A. § 553 (West Supp. 2001).
54
See Studley v. Boylston National Bank, 229 U.S. 523, 528 (1913).
55
See ISDA Master Agreement.
56
See ISDA User’s Guide, at 54.
57
See ISDA Master Agreement, at 8. Parties often also elect to cause automatic termination to occur if a party’s
credit rating drops below investment grade.
58
11 U.S.C.A. § 362(b) (West Supp. 2001).
59
See infra Section V.
20
60
See ISDA Master Agreemen, at 15.
61
See supra Section VII(E).
62
ISDA offers all of its materials for sale at its website, www.isdsa.org.
63
An example of this is the tension between the trader desiring to enter into OTC derivative transactions, who is
incentivized to assume risk to maximize return, and legal counsel, who is incentivized to minimize the risk in the
Master Agreement.
21