CFM20490 - Securitisation: taxation: periods beginning on or after 1 January 2007: the regulations: the payments condition: introduction
The ‘payments condition’: introduction
Regulation 11 sets out the payments condition. Its purpose is to
ensure that the company does not hoard the cash received as part of
the CMA, thus acting as a money box, receiving and retaining cash
tax free and paying it out at a later time. It also helps to ensure
that the regulations are targeted at companies which are genuinely
special purpose companies dedicated to securitisations. One of the
distinguishing features of such companies is that they operate on a
‘cash in, cash out’ basis. This stems from their
fundamental reason for existence, which is to provide a
bankruptcy-remote framework for holding the securitised assets,
collecting the cash flows from those assets and distributing those
cash flows amongst the capital market investors and other
interested parties.
The company must meet the payments condition in every
accounting period for so long as it falls within one of the defined
categories of ‘securitisation company’. It cannot move
in and out of the regulations according to whether it meets the
payments condition in different periods. Failure to meet the
payments condition will therefore result in a company being
permanently excluded from the regime. However, the payments
condition only applies to a company with effect from the time when
it becomes a "securitisation company" within the meaning of the
regulations and for so long as it continues to be within that
definition. A company will not be treated as having failed to meet
the payments condition solely because it has not complied with the
formula in regulation 11 at a time when it was not a securitisation
company. In this connection, it should be borne in mind that a
company will be treated as commencing a new accounting period upon
becoming a securitisation company, and treated as ending an
accounting period when it ceases to be a securitisation company (
CFM20580).
The payments condition is expressed as a formula.
In any accounting period R must be equal to or less than
P+RA+RP. The formula is explained in more detail in
CFM20500.
The payments condition can be very broadly paraphrased by
saying that where a securitisation company receives any amounts
(‘R’) during an accounting period, it must basically
make, during the accounting period or within 18 months thereafter,
aggregate payments out (‘P’) at least equal to R. As an
alternative to making payments out, amounts of R may be placed in
reserves (‘RA’) to the extent that this is required to
maintain the company’s creditworthiness or provide against
expenses. Or, where applicable, amounts of R may be retained as
profit (‘RP’).
If, during the accounting period, any amounts of RA (whenever
retained) either (a) cease to be required for those purposes or (b)
are actually required to be applied in meeting the losses or
expenses provided for, such amounts will be added back to R for the
period and will go back to being required to be paid out as part of
P for the period.
The importance of the transaction documentation
In the normal case, the documentation relating to the
securitisation will include a detailed ‘priority (or
priorities) of payments’, and a ‘cash management
schedule’ (or similar). This will set out in detail how all
amounts received by the company are to be collected into collection
accounts, earmarked for various purposes, transferred into and
between holding accounts and finally transferred into payment
accounts from which payments are made to meet the liabilities of
the company in accordance with the applicable priorities of
payments. The terms of the cash management schedule will themselves
often reflect the contents of a computer system which is maintained
by the ‘servicer’ of the securitisation to monitor cash
flows received and generate instructions for all of the requisite
account transfers and payments to third parties. In simpler
securitisations, the transaction cash flows may be administered
manually rather than by using a computer system.
Whether the systems used are computerised or manual, a
company will be able to satisfy the payments condition by
showing
- that the transaction documentation include a priority of payments and cash management schedule (or similar documents) which provide for payments to be made, with reference to amounts received, on a basis which is fully in accordance with the payments condition, and
- that transaction cash flows are administered in accordance with good practice according to market standards, to ensure that amounts received are monitored, allocated, transferred and paid out in accordance with the terms of the applicable documents.
