A “debtor repo” is a repo from the point of view of
the borrower, the company that sells securities as collateral. The
cash that this company receives, although legally sales proceeds,
equates in substance to a loan.
A company (“the borrower”) has a debtor repo if
all of the following conditions are met:
A company also has a debtor repo if it is a member of a
partnership that meets these conditions.
These conditions cover normal repos executed under standard
market documentation. However they also go slightly wider: since
Condition D does not specify from whom the borrower is entitled or
obliged to buy the securities, this can be a person other than the
“lender.”
There is an example of a debtor repo at
CFM17508a.
“Securities” is defined as UK equities, UK
securities or overseas securities (Paragraph 14(1) Schedule 13 FA
2007). These definitions are the same as those in Paragraph 1(1)
Schedule 23A ICTA 1988 (manufactured dividends).
In Condition D, securities are similar if they entitle their
holders to the same rights against the same persons as to capital,
interest and dividends, and to the same remedies for the
enforcement of those rights (Paragraph 14(4) Schedule 13 FA 2007).
(This definition also applies to the other provisions of Schedule
13 in which the phrase “those or similar securities”
appears, such as Condition D of the creditor repo conditions (
CFM17530)).
If accounts have not been drawn up in accordance with GAAP,
Paragraph 14(11) Schedule 13 FA 2007 provides that they will be
treated as if they had been. This rule applies throughout Schedule
13, not only for the purposes of the debtor repo conditions.