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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Australia And New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Societe Generale [2000] EWCA Civ 44 (17 February 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/44.html Cite as: [2000] Lloyd's Rep Bank 153, [2000] CP Rep 71, [2000] EWCA Civ 44, [2000] CLC 833, [2000] 1 All ER (Comm) 682 |
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Case Nos 1999/7942/A3
QBCM1 1999/1110/A3
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
The Honourable Mr Justice Aikens
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Thursday, 17 February 2000
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND BANKING GROUP LTD |
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and |
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SOCIÉTÉ GÉNÉRALE |
Defendant/ |
Mr Mark Barnes Q.C. and Mr Andrew Lenon (instructed by Messrs. Weil, Gotshal & Manges) appeared for the Respondents | |
Mr Iain Milligan Q.C. and Mr Christopher Hancock (instructed by Messrs. Slaughter and May) appeared for the Appellants |
The defendant, Société Genérale ("SG"), appeals against an order of Aikens J dated 21st September 1999, giving summary judgment against SG in a dispute about the proper method of calculation of loss in the event (which occurred) of early termination of three non-deliverable foreign exchange contracts entered into with Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Limited ("ANZ"). Subsequent to the hearing before Aikens J, SG instructed different solicitors (Slaughter and May) as well as fresh Counsel (Mr Milligan Q.C. and Mr Hancock) who appeared before us, and have identified various points not raised before the judge. The relevant facts and the general issue appear with clarity from the notice of appeal submitted on SG's behalf by Slaughter and May:
"1. The Claimant ("ANZ") and the Defendant ("SG") were parties to three
non-deliverable forward foreign exchange contracts ("the Transactions")
contained in amended Confirmations dated 14th April, 1998, 14th April 1998 and
28th May, 1998 respectively.
2. The Transactions provided for the payment on their respective Settlement
Dates, viz. 1st October, 1998, 12th November, 1998 and 25th November, 1998, of
a sum in US dollars calculated by reference to their notional amounts, viz.
US$10m, US$5m and US$10m respectively, and by reference to the change in the
rate of exchange between the US dollar and the Russian rouble between the Trade
Date, viz. 6th November, 1997, 12th November, 1997 and 26th November, 1997
respectively, and the Settlement Date. The payment fell to be made by SG to
ANZ if the rouble depreciated against the dollar and vice versa.
3. The Transactions were subject to the terms of an ISDA Master Agreement
between the parties dated as of 17th February, 1995. The ISDA Master Agreement
allowed of Early Termination upon the occurrence, among other things, of an
Additional Termination Event (Section 5(b) (v)). A Russian Market Event
constituted an Additional Termination Event (Clause 7 of the Confirmations) and
a Russian Market Event included a banking moratorium.
4. It is common ground that the Transactions were terminated early, viz. on
24th September, 1998, by SG by virtue of the Russian banking moratorium
announced on 17th August, 1998.
5. As a result of the Early Termination of the Transactions the parties were
obliged to split the difference between their respective Losses in connection
with the Transactions (Sections 6 (d) (ii) and 6 (e)(ii) (2) (B) of the ISDA
Master Agreement).
6. Before Aikens J. it was common ground that ANZ's loss was US$16,719,459 and
that SG's gain (i.e. a negative Loss) on the Transactions themselves was the
same amount, thus splitting the difference on that basis would have given the
same amount. The dispute between the parties was as to whether SG was entitled
to take account of a loss on three hedging contracts, by virtue of the
definition of Loss in Section 14 of the ISDA Master Agreement.
7. The hedging contracts had been concluded between SG and Banque
Société Générale Vostok ("Vostok") on 6th, 12th and
26th November, 1997 respectively. Their terms were in all material respects
the same as the Transactions, except that the initial rate of exchange differed
slightly and the third contract had a notional amount which was US$0.5m greater
than the Transaction which it hedged, i.e. US$10.5m not US$10m, and an
Effective Date which was one day earlier, i.e. 25th, not 26th, November,
1997.
8. SG calculated that its loss on the hedge contracts had been US$16,245,734,
so that its Loss in connection with the Transactions, taking account of the
hedge contracts, was US$473,725. Splitting the difference between the Losses,
there was a sum of US$8,596,592 due from SG to ANZ. SG paid that sum on 17th
May, 1999.
9. Aikens J held that ANZ, was not entitled to bring the loss on its hedge
contracts into account and therefore that the balance of US$8,122,867, ie, the
difference between US$16,719,459 and US$8,596,592, was still due. He gave
summary judgment for that amount.
10. Aikens J. also gave summary judgment for interest at the rates, namely the
Applicable Rates, stipulated in the ISDA Master Agreement (Sections 6(d) (ii)
and 14) on the basis that the Payment Date occurred two local Business Days
after ANZ had notified SG of its Loss and had notified SG that it disagreed
with SG's calculation, i.e. on 5th October, 1998. He awarded interest at the
Default Rate from that date.
Calculation of Loss
11. Section 14 of the ISDA Master Agreement defines the Loss suffered by one
party (so far as material) as:
"an amount that party reasonably determines in good faith to be its total
losses and costs (or gain, in which case expressed as a negative number) in
connection with ..that..group of Terminated Transactions..., including any loss
of bargain, cost of funding or, at the election of such party but without
duplication, loss or cost incurred as a result of its terminating, liquidating,
obtaining or re-establishing any hedge or related trading position (or any gain
resulting from any of them)."
12. Aikens J. held that the losses suffered by SG on the hedging contracts were
not suffered "as a result of" the termination or liquidation of those
contracts (Judgment, page 16 at paragraph (5)), but rather as a result of
Vostok's inability to pay because of the banking moratorium......"
2. ISDA standard terms.
For convenience I set out in the schedule to this judgment the full terms of
certain of the standard ISDA provisions relating to (a) payment on maturity
(Section 2) and (b) the calculation of the payments to be made upon early
termination under both the Loss and the alternative Market Quotation basis.
Before us, it was common ground that the Loss and Market Quotation clauses aim
at broadly the same result and may to that extent assist construe each other,
although the confirmations relating to the transactions between ANZ and SG
specified that any payments on early terminations should be settled on the
basis of the Loss section.
3. The issues in outline
In paragraph 13, the notice of appeal identifies the only issue argued before the judge and raised by the notice of appeal before us, as follows:
"13. Aikens J. was undoubtedly right to conclude that the losses could not be
brought into account unless they had been suffered "as a result of"
terminating or liquidating the hedge contracts. That is what the definition of
Loss says. In that sense, therefore, there clearly has to be a close link
between the loss and the termination or liquidation. But he was wrong to
conclude that such a link did not exist and so were the reasons which he gave
for reaching that conclusion."
4. By its Notice of Appeal dated 29th October 1999 SG also seeks to
raise a new point (which I will call the first new point). This involves
resiling from the "common ground" stated in the first sentence of paragraph 6
of the notice of appeal, and asserting that ANZ's loss (and SG's corresponding
gain) through termination of the transactions with SG amounted not to some
$16.72 million, but in each case to about $100,000. The argument is (i) that
the Russian banking moratorium itself constituted a Trade Event, (ii) that,
under the terms of the confirmations, SG had the right to determine on the
relevant Settlement Dates that a Trade Event existed (iii) that the consequence
of such a determination would have been to limit SG's obligation to make any
payment to ANZ to one of four methods. They would have been (a) payment in
dollars to an account in Russia designated by ANZ, or, in descending order if
and as ANZ determined such payment to be impossible or impracticable, (b)
payment in Russian roubles to an account designated by ANZ, (c) payment between
Russian affiliates to which ANZ and SG should assign their rights and
obligations under the relevant transaction or (d) the retention by SG of the
settlement amount until cessation of the Trade Event and its payment then with
accrued interest at a rate to be agreed.
5. SG suggests, and one can see the force of the suggestion in the light of the
depth of the Russian financial crisis which the banking moratorium reflected,
that any of these methods would have been unattractive. SG wishes to submit
that the market value of its transactions with ANZ as at the date of their
early termination would have been diminished accordingly; they should have been
valued not "clean" (i.e. assuming that payment would have been made by SG to
ANZ in dollars in London as provided by the confirmations) but "dirty" (i.e.
assuming that SG would or would probably have determined an Event of Change if
the transactions had reached their settlement dates, so that the possible
payments for the foreseeable future would have been in accordance with one of
the four specified methods); that the parties were accordingly mistaken in
proceeding before the judge on the basis that ANZ's loss and SG's gain through
their early termination each totalled $16.72 million; and that each's actual
loss and gain could be measured by reference to the amount that SG agreed that
Vostok should pay SG in respect of the three hedge contracts, that is 0.5% of
their value or in absolute terms $83,597.30. The net economic effect, if this
figure was ANZ's loss and SG's gain, would be that SG should have paid ANZ that
sum, not the $8,596,592 actually paid on 17th May 1999 or the full $16.72m
claimed by ANZ.
6. Mr Milligan conceded that, on this new approach, SG could no longer pursue
the case it argued before the judge to the effect that its suggested losses on
the Vostok hedges should be brought into account. Further, although originally
SG sought to put before us fresh evidence to support the suggested value of
$83,597.30, Mr Milligan conceded during the hearing that he could not
realistically ask us to determine any such value, which might be affected by
potentially irrelevant considerations such as Vostok's credit status. He also
pointed out that the question whether SG could recover the balance, on this
approach overpaid, of the $8,596,592 paid on 17th May 1999 was a quite separate
question, which was not on any view before us. He submitted, however, that the
first new point was sufficiently meritorious to justify us (a) granting
permission to raise it in principle, (b) allowing the appeal and (c) ordering a
full trial, at which both parties could deploy whatever factual or expert
evidence they wished upon it. In his submission, although it was a point which
could and should have been raised below, it was a point of real importance, not
only to these parties but to the worldwide derivatives market as a whole; it
was an untested point which had arisen in the rare circumstances of a banking
moratorium, where commercial parties might well have a limited or mistaken
understanding of the allocation of risk intended or achieved by the conditions
which they had adopted or agreed; and the failure to appreciate the point was
essentially a failure by lawyers, grappling with complex conditions in
unfamiliar circumstances.
7. Just before the hearing of the appeal, SG sought to raise a second new point. This was based on the language of the Loss clause requiring each party to determine
"its total losses and costs (or gain, in which case expressed as a negative
number) in connection with .... that Terminated Transaction ...., including any
loss of bargain, cost of funding or, at the election of such party but without
duplication, loss or cost incurred as a result of its terminating, liquidating,
obtaining or re-establishing any hedge or related trading position (or any gain
resulting from any of them)".
Under the clause that begins "including", Mr Milligan wishes to submit that SG
had a right to elect on what basis to measure its loss. It had, he went on,
chosen to measure it by reference to its Vostok hedges; and that entitled it to
ignore any gain made on the ANZ-SG transactions, and to credit as its gain only
the very limited amount of $83,597.30 received from Vostok. Again, on this
approach, Mr Milligan did not seek to suggest that SG could pursue the argument
which it had run before the judge, to the effect that it was entitled to bring
into account the loss of $16,245,734 allegedly made on its hedges.
8. The second new point is, in reality, unnecessary as far as SG is concerned,
if it is allowed to raise its first new point. Its attraction for SG is that it
offers a partial mitigation against the event of the Court refusing permission
to SG to go back on the common assumption before the judge, that ANZ made a
loss and SG a gain of $16,719,459 under the ANZ-SG transactions. The Vostok
hedges were on largely back-to-back terms with the transactions between ANZ and
SG. (Vostok was and is in fact owned by SG, although SG did not guarantee
obligations undertaken by Vostok.) The confirmations included similar
provisions regarding a Trade Event to those agreed between ANZ and SG. By
introducing the concept of election, SG seeks to measure its gain, in
connection with the early termination of the ANZ-SG transactions, by reference
to what it submits was the diminished value of the Vostok hedges arising from
the virtual certainty that a Trade Event would have existed at their settlement
dates, and the resulting risk that Vostok's payment obligations to SG would, by
determination of an Event of Change, be restricted to one of the four methods.
The effect, if SG was not allowed to raise its first new point, would be that,
although SG could not, as it would like to, challenge the proposition that ANZ
had suffered a loss of $16,719,459, SG could still challenge the proposition
that SG had made a like gain. SG's gain would, on SG's case, be $83,597.30,
although Mr Milligan's concession that this opened up factual issues means that
the actual figure could only be determined by a trial. The figures, on SG's
case, would thus be, on ANZ's side, a loss of $16,719,459 (unless SG was
permitted to raise its first new point) but, on SG's side, a gain of
$83,597.30, so that SG's liability to ANZ would consist of $8,401,528, only a
little less than SG has actually paid.
9. There is, however, a potentially relevant difference between the ANZ-SG
contracts and the SG-Vostok contracts. Whereas under the former, the option to
determine an Event of Change belonged to SG which would be the paying party if
the rouble fell against the dollar, under the Vostok hedges the like option
belonged to SG which would be the receiving party in that event. Despite their
corporate relationship, it would by no means appear to follow that SG would on
settlement declare an Event of Change as against Vostok, even if it could. I
also note in parenthesis that there appears to be no indication that SG did, in
fact, determine that an Event of Change had occurred in respect of the one
Vostok hedge that actually matured (on 1st October 1998). All this may in turn
cast doubt on the factual proposition that SG would have been bound on the
relevant settlement dates of the ANZ-SG contracts to have determined that an
Event of Change had occurred, if it had not already determined such an Event in
order to achieve early termination.
10. The issue argued before the judge
It is appropriate to start with the issue argued before the judge, which is
formally before us. SG's submission was that it should be able to bring into
account as a loss its losses under the hedges which it effected with Vostok. In
support of this, SG relied upon the inclusion, in each of the three
confirmations specifically agreed between the parties, of the Russian Market
Event clause together with provision that the standard ISDA Loss clause should
apply in the event of any early termination. Thus, it was said, the reference
to hedging in the Loss clause must contemplate hedging contracts, like those
between SG and Vostok, which might be affected by a banking moratorium leading
to early termination under the Additional Termination Event clause, and must
specifically contemplate the loss which might arise on such contracts upon such
a banking moratorium. The judge rejected this argument, on the ground that the
meaning of the standard ISDA Loss clause could not depend on terms agreed by
the parties under a specific confirmation, and that there is nothing in the
ISDA Loss clause to suggest that it is specifically directed to losses flowing
from a banking moratorium. I agree with the judge's view.
11. The Loss clause does however refer in general terms to loss or costs
incurred as a result of a party terminating or liquidating any hedge. The judge
held that, in circumstances such as the present, it was not the fact of
termination or liquidation of the hedging contracts with Vostok that led to
SG's losses on those contracts. Rather, it was the fact that, because of the
banking moratorium, Vostok could not pay - either on their settlement dates or
on their early termination or at any time. By an agreement dated 5th
November 1998 a number of foreign exchange contracts between SG and Vostok,
including the three hedges, were liquidated for an agreed payment of US$177,000
by Vostok, said to correspond "to the amount market participants were willing
to pay to [SG] to be substituted in [SG's] rights against [Vostok] under the
unmatured and matured NDFs [i.e. non-deliverable forward contracts]". One of
the hedge contracts had already matured, on 1st October 1998. The
almost complete lack of value attributed to this contract cannot have been due
to any termination. It must, if it accurately reflected its market value, mean
that this contract had no substantial value before, on and after its maturity.
The fact that its loss of value was reflected by SG and Vostok in an agreement,
which they chose to head "re: Early termination of Non-Deliverable Forward
Transactions (NDFs)", does not mean either that that contract was terminated
early or, more importantly, that any such loss of value was attributable to its
termination or liquidation, early or late. It must have been due either to the
banking moratorium and its effect on the value of contracts with Russian banks
such as Vostok, or to a failure to value the contract correctly. Similarly, in
relation to the other two contracts, although they had not matured, their loss
of value, reflected in their actual early termination on 5th
November 1998, must at best, from SG's viewpoint, have resulted from the
intrinsic loss of value of such contracts, irrespective of their termination or
maturity.
12. The judge said that, on SG's case, the incidence of this type of loss would
be adventitious, since it would depend upon the identity and circumstances of
any particular counterparty with whom SG chose to hedge their commitments to
ANZ, in circumstances where ANZ would not normally and did not here know
whether any hedge had been concluded or with whom. SG's response is that
whether or not there is a hedge is always adventitious, but that the Loss
clause undoubtedly provides for some form of loss or gain resulting in
connection with a hedge to be brought into account - in other words, the
existence of a hedge is contractually foreseen and provided for.
13. The critical question is however for what purpose it is foreseen and how it
is provided for. This brings one back to the actual language of the Loss
clause, and the scope of the words "as a result of" in the phrase "loss or cost
incurred as a result of its terminating, liquidating, obtaining or
re-establishing any hedge or related position (or any gain resulting from any
of them)". Here I find myself in full agreement with the judge that (a) it is
readily understandable that the parties should agree to share loss or gain
arising from the accelerated termination or liquidation or the need to take
accelerated steps to obtain or re-establish a hedge, but that (b) it is
inherently unlikely that a party in ANZ's position entering into a futures
contract with SG would agree to share the risk of the simple collapse in value
of a hedge arranged by its counterparty, SG. It must be borne in mind that SG's
case at this point proceeds on an assumption that ANZ's loss and SG's gain in
connection with the termination of the ANZ-SG contracts was in each case
$16,719,459. A result which also brings into account a supposed additional
loss, by SG, of $16,245,734 under its own hedges would be by itself surprising.
It would become more, not less, surprising, if SG is permitted to raise and
succeeds on its first new point, since the effect would logically be that,
although SG only owed ANZ less than $100,000 in respect of the ANZ-SG
transactions, SG could claim that ANZ should bear half of its suggested loss of
$16,245,734 in respect of the Vostok hedges. Needless to say, Mr Milligan did
not suggest this before us. In reality, he barely advanced the case which SG
put before the judge.
14. Like the judge, I find it unnecessary to go into many of the other
arguments raised in the affidavits. The only additional observations that I
would make concern the Market Quotation clause, which is under standard ISDA
terms an alternative basis for measuring the amount payable by one affected
party to the other on early termination. In its evidence, SG suggested that it
was with problems like the present in mind that it chose to have the method of
assessment set out in the Loss clause inserted in the present contracts, in
preference to the alternative Market Quotation clause. Even if that was the
basis, there is nothing to show that it was communicated to or shared with ANZ,
and it is therefore irrelevant. ANZ's evidence was that it agreed the Loss
clause as an appropriate measure in circumstances where market quotations might
well not be readily obtainable.
15. Before us, in this area, SG's case has undertaken another metamorphosis. It
is now common ground that the Market Quotation and Loss clauses aim at broadly
similar, although by their nature not always precisely the same, results. The
structure of the relevant ISDA terms (set out in the schedule) confirms this.
There is a possibility of considerable overlap between the basis of calculation
of the amount payable on one and the other basis. Quotations from market
dealers may be used to determine loss under the Loss clause, while loss (as
defined in the Loss clause) may be used under the Market Quotation clause to
determine the settlement amount for any terminated transaction for which a
market quotation "cannot be determined or would not .... produce a
commercially reasonable result". There is however nothing in the Market
Quotation clause which could support an argument similar to that which SG
advanced before the judge. Since that argument could, if accepted, have very
fundamental effects in shifting major financial and commercial risks,
comparison of the Market Quotation and the Loss clauses therefore
provides a yet further pointer to the correctness of the judge's conclusion.
16. The result is that I have no hesitation in upholding the correctness of the
judge's decision on the point argued below.
17. SG's applications for permission to rely on two new points
I turn now to the two new points which SG seeks to advance in this Court. In my
judgment, it should not be permitted to raise either of them. They are, as I
have indicated, closely linked in their nature and motivation. The first new
point aims to re-open what was common ground below regarding ANZ's loss and
SG's gain under the ANZ-SG transactions. The second new point, by introducing
the concept of election, seeks to make irrelevant the concession regarding SG's
gain under the ANZ-SG transactions, and to transfer attention to SG's limited
gain of $83,597.30 under the Vostok hedges. But more is on any view needed to
show that the value of the Vostok hedges was only $83,597.30. The mere fact
that SG accepted a limited payment from Vostok, or indeed that a third party
bank (J.P. Morgan) offered only 0.5% to stand in SG's shoes vis-à-vis
Vostok, cannot suffice. The argument which SG uses at this point is precisely
the same argument as SG wishes to deploy by its first new point, namely that
the likelihood that there would be a Trade Event at the settlement date
diminished the market value of the relevant transactions - that is of the
SG-Vostok hedges just as much as the ANZ-SG transactions.
18. This litigation was begun in March 1999, in respect of transactions
terminated in September 1998. ANZ's summons under RSC O.14 and O.14A was issued
on 1st April 1999 and served with a supporting affidavit of the same date. The
new rules came into force later in April 1999. SG paid the sum of $8,596,592 on
17th May 1999. M. Wellers of SG made a witness statement in answer on 11th June
1999, ANZ responded on 5th July 1999 and SG replied on 20th July 1999. The
parties agreed to the resolution by the judge under O.14A of the sole issue
then arising. After an oral hearing the judge's judgment on that issue was
handed down on 21st September 1999. The first new point was not raised until
the notice of appeal dated 29th October 1999, and the second not until 20th
January 2000, the day before the hearing before us.
19. Both new points could and should have been raised in the evidence for and
on the hearing before the judge. Under the old rules, it was clearly
established that a hearing under O.14 (and all the more under O.14A)
constitutes a "trial or hearing on the merits": see Supreme Court Practice
1999, note 59/10/8. The basic principle in this situation was that "When a
litigant has obtained a judgment in a court of justice .... he is by law
entitled not to be deprived of that judgment without very solid grounds": see
note 59/10/9. When fresh evidence was relied upon, the three conditions stated
in Ladd v. Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489 had to be satisfied, that is that
the evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at
the trial, that it must be such that, if given (and accepted), it would be
decisive, and that it must be apparently credible, though it need not be
incontrovertible.
20. Mr Milligan's starting point is that he is only asking us to consider
certain new submissions of construction and so law. It is only if we accept
these that, he submits, there will have to be any investigation of facts or
admission of fresh evidence. He points out that that investigation could never
have taken place under O.14 or O.14A. All that he is asking therefore is that
SG should be put in the same position as if it had raised the new points in its
evidence and before the judge. The judge would then have ruled on those points
also, and, whoever had lost on them, the case would probably still have come to
the Court of Appeal. Assuming SG to be wrong in principle on its new points,
the Court of Appeal would have decided no more than that, just as ANZ asks us
to do now. Assuming SG to be right on either of its new points, the Court would
have had to make an order for a full trial, just as SG accepts it would have to
do now. On that basis, SG's failure to raise such points earlier can have
caused no real prejudice at all. At most it can have caused a matter of months'
delay and some cost, if one assumes SG succeeding on one of its new points
before the judge, and the matter being sent for trial without any appeal by
ANZ.
21. These were attractively put submissions, but they do not give due weight to
ANZ's interest in the judgment which it has obtained after a trial or hearing
on the merits. That consideration is in no way reduced under the new rules.
Indeed, it is to my mind reinforced by the court's duty actively to manage
cases to further the overriding objective of dealing with them expeditiously
and fairly, by, amongst other things, "identifying the issues at an early
stage" and "deciding promptly which issues need full investigation and trial
and accordingly disposing summarily of the others" (CPR 1.1(2)(d) and 1.4(2)(b)
and (c)), and the parties' duty to help the court further that overriding
objective (CPR 1.3). I would not therefore permit SG now to raise its first
new point, even though the financial significance of that point amounts to
$8,122.867 with interest if SG wins, plus potentially a further $8,596,592, if
SG could establish a claim to recover the sum which, on this hypothesis, was
not owed when SG paid it on 17th May 1999. As to the second new point, if that
stands alone, its significance is simply to reduce SG's liability to
$8,401,528, little less than the $8,596,592 paid on 17 May 1999. The amount in
issue on it, therefore, represents the bulk of the additional $8,122,867 which
the udge ordered SG to pay to ANZ.
22. The issues of principle raised by the new points
I shall however also indicate my views on the issues of principle involved in
the two new points, since they were extensively argued before us. The central
issue is whether SG could have claimed to value either the ANZ-SG or the
SG-Vostok transactions "dirty", that is taking into account any diminution in
value due to the possibility or prospect that SG might, if it had not
previously determined that a Russian Market Event had occurred constituting an
Event of Change, have determined that a Trade Event existed on the relevant
settlement dates and so have restricted its payment obligations to whichever
ANZ selected of the four methods specified in the confirmations[1]. This is an issue of some complexity, but I have come to
the conclusion that Mr Barnes' submission on it is to be preferred. Again it is
helpful to look at the position on a Market Quotation basis, since it is common
ground that the Loss and Market Quotation bases aim at broadly similar results.
The replacement transaction on a Market Quotation basis is one that
"would have the effect of preserving....... the economic equivalent of any
payment or delivery (whether the underlying obligation was absolute or
contingent and assuming the satisfaction of each applicable condition
precedent) by the parties under Section 2(a)(i) in respect of such Terminated
Transaction .... that would, but for the occurrence of the relevant Early
Termination Date, have been required after that date".
The provision goes on:
"For this purpose, Unpaid Amounts in respect of the Terminated Transaction ....
are to be excluded but, without limitation, any payment or delivery that would,
but for the relevant Early Termination Date, have been required (assuming
satisfaction of each applicable condition precedent) after that Early
Termination Date is to be included."
Unpaid amounts are however only excluded here, because they are added to the amount calculated by market quotation elsewhere, as a result of ISDA Section 6(e). They too are defined (as set out above) in terms which (by reference to ISDA Section 2(a)(iii)) mean that all conditions precedent must be deemed to have been satisfied. ISDA Section 2(a) is set out earlier in this judgment.
23. Under clauses 5 and 6 of the confirmations payments in dollars by SG to ANZ
are to be made in London, and under Section 2(a)(ii) it was on any view
contemplated that they would be made in freely transferable dollars. Only in
Section 7 of the confirmations are there included special additional terms
defining and regulating the Trade Events, Cost Events, Russian Market Events,
and Events of Change. Event of Change is defined as:
"The determination by SG that (i) a Trade Event exists on the Settlement Date,
or (ii) subsequent to the Trade Date a Russian Market Event or a Cost Event has
occurred which has continued for at least two (2) consecutive New York Business
Days or until the Settlement Date, whichever comes first."
Under the heading "Occurrence of an Event of Change", there then appears in
sub-clause (a) the provision which I have described whereby, if SG determines
that a Trade Event exists on the relevant settlement date, its payment
obligation on settlement is limited to one of the four specified methods.
Sub-clause (d), provides:
"(d) Upon the occurrence of an Event of Change due to a Russian Market Event,
an Additional Termination Event shall be deemed to have occurred in respect to
such event"
Sub-clause (e) provides that, in the event of an Additional Termination Event
within sub-clause (d), both parties shall be Affected Parties and the Loss
clause shall apply.
24. If the Market Quotation basis of calculation had been adopted between ANZ
and SG, it is clear that it would have been necessary to assume the
satisfaction of all conditions precedent both in respect of any amounts unpaid
on early settlement and in respect of any future payments on settlement. The
task of the Reference Market Makers would not have been to put themselves in
the shoes of either of the actual parties under the actual transaction, but to
assess the consideration required to enter into a replacement transaction to
preserve the economic equivalent of any payment provided by such transaction on
a hypothetical basis. One hypothesis is that no Early Termination Event has
occurred or been effectively designated, another that "each other applicable
condition precedent specified in this Agreement" has been and will be
satisfied.
25. An Early Termination Event can only be the result of an Event of Default or
of a Termination Event. The non-occurrence of an Event (or Potential Event) of
Default is itself a specified condition precedent. Termination Events as such
are not specified as conditions precedent. Looking at those specified in ISDA
Section 5(b), most of them appear to have no bearing on the value of "the
economic equivalent of any payment or delivery .... by the parties under
Section 2(a)(i)". But we were referred to the first, illegality, to test the
parties' arguments. Mr Milligan submitted that, in the event that either party
treated a supervening event of illegality, preventing payment under the
transaction, as an Early Termination Event, the Market Quotation basis would
then require the transaction to be viewed as in effect valueless. On this, I
would observe that the illegality would by no means necessarily apply to the
payments on Early Termination required by Section 6(e). If it did, they could
not be paid for that reason. If it did not, then there is nothing in the Market
Quotation clause to indicate that any such illegality must be taken into
account in valuing "the economic equivalent of any payment or delivery .... by
the parties under Section 2(a)(i)".
26. Likewise, coming directly to the difficulty which has arisen in this case,
there is nothing in the Market Quotation clause to suggest that "the economic
equivalent of any payment or delivery .... by the parties under Section
2(a)(i)" must be arrived at by assessing the risk that a Trade Event might
exist on the settlement date and that SG might determine that it did. Indeed,
if one looks at the structure of the confirmation clause "Occurrence as an
Event of Change", it seems clear that its intention was not to alter the value
of the contractually required payment or delivery. The provision for the
payment of interest in part (4) underlines this. The effect which market
participants might or might not regard it as having on the transactions in the
present Russian economic crisis is a different matter. Further, to treat the
contracts as requiring an assessment of the likelihood of a Trade Event
existing and being invoked on settlement, and of the effect of this possibility
on the instruments value would appear to introduce a difficult and uncertain
area of speculation into a calculation which was clearly intended to be
undertaken both quickly and objectively. It would not necessarily even be in
SG's own interest to pay dollars to an account in Russia, still less to put
itself to the risk of having to retain the settlement amount indefinitely
subject to interest "to be agreed".
27. It is true that the contract does not expressly make the absence of a
determination of a Trade Event at the settlement date a condition precedent to
payment as agreed in clauses 5 and 6 of the confirmations. But it is also true
that it is difficult to tie the reference in ISDA Section 2(a)(iii) to "each
other applicable condition precedent specified in this Agreement" in to other
particular terms. One place where additional conditions precedent may be found
is among the specially agreed provisions of the confirmations. The concepts of
Trade Event, Cost Event, Russian Market Event, Event of Change and Occurrence
of an Event of Change are none of them ISDA concepts, they are tailor-made for
these transactions and it is accordingly understandable if their language does
not in all respects echo or tie exactly into that of the standard ISDA terms.
The effect of Occurrence of an Event of Change is, in specified circumstances,
to transmute SG's primary obligation under clauses 5 and 6 to make payment on
the settlement date in dollars in London into an obligation to make payment by
one of the four specified methods. It is not difficult, therefore, to treat the
non-occurrence of an Event of Change as a condition precedent to SG's
obligation to make any payment on settlement under Section 2(a)(i). On that
basis the language of the Market Quotation clause is precisely satisfied.
28. A possible and more general argument in an opposite direction is that the
Occurrence of An Event of Change clause was clearly intended to operate as a
restriction of SG's obligations on settlement in the case of a Trade Event at
that date. Compare sub-clause (b) whereby any obligations of ANZ to SG on
settlement in the case of a Trade Event would have fallen to be paid by ANZ in
dollars to a United States account. Why then should SG's obligations on Early
Termination be free of, and ANZ free to ignore, any such restriction? For
whatever reason, the fact is however that payments on early termination under
ISDA Section 6(e) are free of any such restriction. Further, it was up
to SG to weigh the benefits or disadvantages of early termination, it was under
no obligation to invoke early termination, and, if it did so, the situation
fell outside any tailor-made clause in the confirmations and within the
standard ISDA wording. I have already pointed out that, whatever its actual
effect in circumstances such as the present, it cannot have been the purpose of
the "Occurrence of An Event of Change" clause in the confirmations to affect
the value of the payments due under the transactions.
29. Returning to the Loss clause which directly governs the present
transactions, the position regarding any sum unpaid or any delivery unmade at
Early Termination is identical. In that connection, the clause requires
satisfaction of every applicable condition precedent to be assumed. As regards
loss in connection with the future non-performance of the transaction, the loss
requires a party to assess its total losses and costs (or gains) in connection
with any terminated transaction, including loss of bargain, cost of funding or
certain loss or cost (to which I come in more detail below) associated with any
hedge or related trading position. It refers, as I have indicated, to the
possibility that such loss or gain may be measured by market quotation - which
may be of a less formal nature than that required under the Market Quotation
clause (cf the last sentence of Section II.G.4 of the ISDA Users' Guide (1993
edition)). Bearing in mind the intention of the Loss and Market Quotation
clauses to arrive at broadly the same results, the calculation of loss, or loss
of bargain, must proceed on the same basis, that is valuing the transaction
according to the nominal value of the payments which would have been required
under it, assuming satisfaction of all conditions precedent.
30. I would therefore have held that ANZ's loss and SG's gain on early
termination of the ANZ-SG transactions fell to be valued "clean". That is
without reference to the possibility that, had no early termination date been
determined by SG, SG might still, under clause 7 of the confirmations, have
determined on settlement that a Trade Event existed, and so have restricted
SG's obligation to pay to one of the four specified methods. SG's gain under
and on any early termination of the Vostok hedges should have been valued
accordingly. The suggested value of 0.5% for which SG settled with Vostok was
either reached under a misconception as to the true construction of the ISDA
early termination provisions as incorporated in the Vostok hedges, or it was
arrived at on the basis of extraneous considerations, such as Vostok's
diminished credit-rating or an assumption (as expressed by J. P. Morgan when it
suggested 0.5%) that all Russian banks engaging in foreign exchange business
should be treated as in de facto default.
31. I need say little about SG's second new point. We heard much argument on
the interpretation of the phrase
"including any loss of bargain, cost of funding or, at the election of such
party but without duplication, loss or cost incurred as a result of its
terminating, liquidating, obtaining or re-establishing any hedge or related
trading position (or any gain resulting from any of them)".
This phrase divides into three sections: (i) loss of bargain, (ii) cost of
funding and (iii) what may loosely be called any hedge loss or cost, with any
reverse gain being in each case also to be taken into account. Whether or not
the phrase contemplates or allows a true election between (iii) and any other
measure of recovery appears to me irrelevant. Under (i), it is common ground
that, in so far as ANZ suffered any loss (whether large or small) on the ANZ-SG
transactions, SG made a corresponding gain. If (iii) is treated, as Mr Milligan
contends, as an alternative basis of assessing SG's gain by reference to any
hedge or related trading position which SG may have arranged or may arrange on
a back-to-back basis, no different result arises. If ANZ's loss is to be
measured "clean", its loss will be large, and on that basis SG's gain on any
early termination of the Vostok hedges ought to have measured as a large
amount, although SG (on this hypothesis either erroneously or due to extraneous
factors) settled with Vostok for a small sum. If ANZ's loss is to be measured
"dirty" (and assuming SG were permitted to rely on their first new case), then
ANZ's loss will be small, and SG's gain on any early termination of the Vostok
hedges would be likely also to be small - though the fact that the Vostok
hedges were not precisely back-to-back, since it was SG that had the option
under them whether or not to determine that an Event of Change existed on any
settlement date, might affect their "dirty" value. If the Vostok hedges yielded
less, and SG received less, than would otherwise have been the case, because
(for example) Vostok was insolvent or of doubtful credit-worthiness, Mr
Milligan accepts that this would have to be ignored (and the hedges would in
effect have to be revalued) when calculating loss under the Loss clause.
32 I therefore think it unnecessary to enter into the debate whether the third
section of the phrase is an alternative (analogous as Mr Milligan suggested to
the second limb of the rule in Hadley v. Baxendale) for which SG may at
will elect; or whether, as Mr Barnes suggested, it covers no more than minor
"breakage" costs or arrangement fees involved in arranging the cancellation of
some existing or arrangement of some fresh hedge. The ISDA Guide contains a
very brief indication that the introduction of this section enables recovery of
"breakage costs". But it does not reproduce, explain or in my judgment do full
credit to the scope of the actual words used. I also note that ANZ itself when
calculating its loss after the early termination treated the third section as a
primary measure, and (echoing its words) based its calculations "on the cost
that would be incurred by us of obtaining or re-establishing a hedge or related
trading position as of the earliest date after 24 September 1998 as is
reasonably practicable" (letters of 29th September and 1st October 1998).
Whilst this is no guide to construction, it does correspond with my own
impression as to the scope of the words. They seem to me wide enough to cover
the substantive cost, after an early termination, of obtaining a hedge or
trading position to cover a party in respect of the other's unfulfilled
obligations; or of a party buying itself out of a related transaction which the
terminated transaction was designed to cover, and, likewise, wide enough to
cover any substantive gain made on realising any such hedge or trading
position. However, it is, as I have indicated, unnecessary to arrive at a final
decision on this, since it makes no difference.
33. Conclusion
For the reasons that I have given, I would dismiss the appeal from the judge's decision, and I would further refuse SG's applications for permission to rely on each of the two new points not raised below, which it sought to argue before us.
LORD JUSTICE KENNEDY: I agree.