An Overview of Capital Markets Transactions
in the Cayman Islands
Introduction
The Cayman Islands has been the dominant offshore
jurisdiction for capital markets transactions since the 1980’s
due to its political and economic stability, an effective judicial
system, a nil direct tax system, the absence of exchange control
or currency restrictions, the availability of highly skilled professional
and support services and the presence of light but effective regulation
which did not negatively impact on capital markets transactions.
Development of Capital Markets in the Cayman Islands
and the Market Today
From the first bond issues by a Cayman Islands issuer
in the late 1970’s, the volume of capital markets transactions
grew significantly throughout the 1980’s as international
corporations and financial institutions increasingly funded their
activities through Cayman bond issuing vehicles. Acceptance of Cayman
issuing vehicles in the euro bond, MTN and CP markets lead, in the
mid 1980’s, to the emergence of the repackaging market in
which the Cayman Islands dominated, and continues to dominate. This
market saw a huge increase in business from 1987 with hundreds of
billions of dollars of repackaged debt being issued by Cayman issuers,
much originally backed by ex-warrant bonds issued by Japanese corporates
but subsequently the underlying assets came from a wide variety
of credit risks ranging from sovereign issuers to emerging market
debt. This lead to the Cayman Islands being the first choice jurisdiction
for a vast array of structured finance transactions which dominate
the capital markets practices in the Cayman Islands today.
From the late 1980’s there was a move away
from the stand-alone repackaging issue to issuing under repackaging
programmes where one issuer is used to repackage numerous tranches
of debt, structured on adequate security and limited recourse provisions
to compartmentalise the risk. In the event of a default by the finance
vehicle, the noteholders or counterparty will only be entitled to
look to the security for that issue and after this has been realised
and the proceeds distributed, any balance remaining in respect of
that transaction will be extinguished, all other transactions by
that vehicle unaffected by the default. Cayman Islands law will
uphold such contractual “ring-fencing” provisions provided
that they are effective as a matter of the governing law of the
contract. The repackaging programme has become a valuable tool in
the market as its lower cost margins has permitted arrangers to
service clients with smaller issues of repackaged securities. In
addition it has lent itself to, and has contributed significantly
to the growth of, the synthetic repackaging market with credit-linked
note issues being the most frequent type of issue in the market
today. By further amendment to the Companies Law at the end of 2002,
the Cayman Islands introduced a significant change in the legal
structure of companies to permit the segregation of assets and liabilities
amongst various “portfolios” within a single company
such that a liability in respect of a particular segregated portfolio
entitles a creditor of that segregated portfolio to have recourse
only to the segregated portfolio assets attributable to such segregated
portfolio, and not to the assets of other segregated portfolios.
The Segregated Portfolio Company, while not dispensing with the
need for properly structured security and limited recourse arrangements,
is expected to be a useful vehicle, particularly for multi issue
transaction as, amongst other benefits, it will bind non-consensual
as well as consensual parties as a matter of Cayman Islands law.
The mid-1990's saw the emergence of the CBO market
in which the Cayman Islands has been consistently the preferred
issuer jurisdiction. Here, instead of the underlying credit risk
being a single credit risk, multiple or variable credit risks are
collateralised through a Cayman Islands vehicle. There has been
a huge growth in recent years in the volume of synthetic CBOs where
the collateralised assets are credit derivative instruments. The
Cayman Islands is particularly attractive for CBO issues which are
typically made in several tranches with different payment priorities
as contractual subordination is recognised by express statutory
provision (assuming it to be effective as a matter of the governing
law of the contract). There has also been a trend with CBO transactions
to include an offering of preferred shares as the first loss tier,
largely to meet US requirements that such first loss tier constitutes
true equity. Cayman Islands law is particularly suitable in this
regard to such transactions as it provides significant flexibility
in allowing shares to be redeemed or repurchased, or dividends paid,
not only out of profit but also out of any credit balance in the
share premium account provided the company is able to meet its debts
as they fall due. This may be important as it allows the stripping
from the company of any residual net equity after the redemption
of principal and interest in the debt.
Similar to the CBO market is the structured instrument
vehicle market where the Cayman Islands has been the forward jurisdiction
for the incorporation of AAA-rated specialist finance companies
which aim to achieve a credit spread on assets over their costs
of funds fully hedging any exposure to interest rate and currency
exchange risks and being funded by issuing commercial paper and
medium term notes both in the Euro and US Markets with equity either
in the form of a mix of shares and deeply subordinated debt (which
is given statutory recognition in the Cayman Islands) or, more commonly,
deeply subordinated debt only.
Other structured finance transactions which use
Cayman Islands vehicles include catastrophe bonds, a capital markets
insurance linked product which capitalises on Cayman’s insurance
expertise as the second largest jurisdiction for captive insurance
companies and securitisation transactions where the underlying asset
is an income stream of receivables generated by limitless varieties
of sources. There is no limitation under Cayman Islands law on the
relevant pool of underlying assets or receivables that can be acquired.
Offshore Capital Markets Jurisdiction of Choice
The Cayman Islands jurisdiction offers the key legal
elements that arrangers and investors require and as a result is
the first choice location for the majority of offshore capital markets
transactions, particularly structured finance transactions. Principally
these key legal elements include:
• Neutrality
- No Taxation: There is no form of corporation,
income or capital taxation in the Cayman Islands, whether direct
(on the finance vehicle or holders of securities issued by the finance
vehicle) or indirect (by way of withholding on payments made by
the finance vehicle). If incorporated as an exempted company (the
typical form of vehicle for capital markets transactions), the finance
vehicle can obtain a tax undertaking from the Cayman Islands Government
that no taxation introduced for a period of up to 30 years will
be applicable to the finance vehicle or to the holders of its securities.
- No Exchange Controls: There are no foreign exchange
controls in the Cayman Islands.
- No Restrictions on Business: There are no restrictions
on a finance vehicle in the Cayman Islands lending, borrowing, or
issuing debt securities or entering into derivatives transactions.
• Substantive Consolidation
Under Cayman Islands common law, it is only in certain
specific cases (English case law is persuasive in this context)
that the separate corporate personality of a finance vehicle will
be ignored, so as to allow creditors of a finance vehicle to proceed
against its shareholders or to allow creditors of shareholders to
proceed against the finance vehicle. Most of these cases involve
fraud.
• Bankruptcy Remote Vehicles
The structuring of bankruptcy remote vehicles in
the Cayman Islands is well established and accepted by rating agencies,
regulators and accountants alike. The use of a charitable trust
when properly structured is well recognised in the financial markets
as an appropriate vehicle for non-consolidation issues. Typically
the trust corporation establishing the charitable trust will also
provide an independent board of directors who will ensure the finance
vehicle functions as a wholly independent entity in accordance with
recognised corporate principles.
•
Creditor Friendly Legal System
The legal system in the Cayman Islands is creditor
friendly and therefore ideally suited to structured debt transactions.
In particular:
- The Cayman Islands does not have any formal system
of corporate rehabilitation, such as the English "administration"
procedure or the United States Chapter 11 proceedings under the
Bankruptcy Code whereby a debtor can effectively "freeze"
the rights of creditors, including, in certain cases, a creditor's
right to enforce his security interest.
- Cayman Islands law does not prevent secured creditors
enforcing their security in a liquidation of a finance vehicle.
There is no concept of an insolvency "stay".
- Liquidators of a Cayman Islands company cannot
disclaim owners contract. The contractual rights of creditors continue
to exist following a liquidation.
- The fraudulent preference rules only apply when,
amongst other requirements, a disposition is made with a view to
preferring one creditor over another – it is not sufficient
simply that an asset or payment was made in circumstances which
resulted in one creditor losing out.
- Netting and set-off arrangements are recognised
by express statutory provisions and will be enforced both pre and
post insolvency (assuming they are effective as a contractual matter
under the governing law with a contract on which they are contained).
- Contractual subordination is recognised by express
statutory provisions (assuming it is effective as a contractual
matter under the governing law of the contract).
- There is no general concept of substance over
legal form – this means that heavily subordinated debt, long-term
and perpetual debt, for example, would continue to be treated as
debt and therefore benefit from the favorable treatment given to
creditors, rather than being treated as equity. Similarly, participating
debt will not be regarded as equity for Cayman Islands purposes,
notwithstanding that it has most of the characteristics of equity.
- The list of "preferred creditors" in
the Cayman Islands (which generally rank ahead of all creditors,
other than, with one relevant exception relating to claims for severance
pay under the Labor Law, those with fixed security) is limited and,
in practice, in the case of a finance vehicle, which will have no
employees in the Cayman Islands, relate only to unpaid Government
fees.
- The Cayman Islands allows companies to move to
or move from the Cayman Islands without triggering their disposal
of assets or requiring a novation of liabilities – this is
used in the event that the selected jurisdiction ceases to be viable
for taxation or securities regulation reasons.
• Security, Set-Off, Netting and Subordination
- Cayman Islands law recognises and facilitates
the use of different systems of law governing different aspects
of the transaction and the grant of security interests. The Cayman
courts will recognise or enforce netting, set off and subordination
agreements (which are given express statutory recognition) and security
interests created under laws other than Cayman Islands law if validly
created under the relevant law.
- The Cayman Islands has no general system of registration
of security interests to perfect or obtain priority (there are registration
systems in place for Cayman Islands real estate, ships and aircraft
registered in the Cayman Islands, limited partnership interests
of Cayman Exempted Limited Partnerships and "personal chattels"
under the Bills of Sale Law).
• Credibility and Rating Agency and Institutional
Acceptance
- Cayman Islands legal opinions are regularly accepted
by the major institutions and rating agencies. Many industry organisations
such as ISDA and various bankers association recognise that finance
vehicles established in the Cayman Islands are acceptable counterparties
in derivative transactions. Cayman Islands legal opinions have been
produced for various bankers associations, ISDA, ISMA, BBA and other
industry organisations relating to swaps, credit support annexes,
stock lending agreements, repurchase agreements and others.
- Rating agencies are familiar with Cayman Islands
vehicles and S&P have published specific Cayman Islands legal
criteria for structured finance companies thus endorsing their use.
• Regulation
There is no specific transaction regulation of debt
issues (unless such issues are listed on the Cayman Islands Stock
Exchange) or derivatives transactions. The issue of securities by
a Cayman issuer and surrounding activities will not require licencing
under the recently introduced Securities Investment Business Law
which regulates all other securities investment business. There
are no restrictions on finance vehicle in the Cayman Islands lending,
borrowing or issuing debt securities (none of these activities for
example, constitute banking business requiring the vehicle to be
licenced as a bank) other than no offer of such securities to the
public in the Cayman Islands may be made unless the issuing vehicle
is listed on the Cayman Islands Stock Exchange. The Cayman Islands
does not regard instruments such as credit linked bonds or credit
default swaps as insurance products which would require the vehicle
to obtain an insurance licence.
• Speed and Cost
Since Cayman entities can be formed on the day of
filing and there are no lengthy regulation or filing procedures,
transactions can very quickly be brought to market. The cost of
forming and maintaining Cayman entities is competitive and usually
minimal in the context of most transactions.
Types of Entities
Typically the exempted company is the vehicle used
in most capital markets transactions as it benefits from the flexible
corporate regime, low cost and simple, same day incorporation procedures
in addition to qualifying for the tax concessions referred to above.
There is also no requirement to appoint Cayman Islands directors
or shareholders or to prepare or file accounts with any Cayman Islands
authority nor does the law specify any minimum issued or paid-up
capital or other thin capitalisation rule. However, other entities,
such as unit trusts and, in particular, exempted limited partnerships
may also be used for on-shore tax or regulatory reasons which are
equally straight forward to establish.
An exempted company may not carry on business in
the Cayman Islands except in furtherance of its business abroad
and it may not make any invitation to the public in the Cayman Islands
to subscribe for any of its shares or debentures unless they are
listed on the Cayman Islands Stock Exchange.
Cayman Islands Stock Exchange
The Cayman Islands Stock Exchange (CSX) is the most
recent addition to the full range of financial services that the
jurisdiction offers and has particular synergy with the finance
vehicle. The listing rules are tailor made for specialist products
such as debt securities and derivative warrants issued by finance
vehicles which recognise that products of this nature are usually
purchased and traded by a limited number of knowledgeable and sophisticated
institutional investors. The CSX therefor adopts a pragmatic approach
to the documentation required for a listing and disclosure requirements
have been set at a level which is intended to provide investors
with sufficient information without imposing unnecessarily onerous
demands. As at January, 2003, the CSX had a total of 716 listed
issues including debt issues by institutions such as Merrill Lynch,
Deutsche Bank and Lehman Brothers with a combined market capitalisation
in excess of US$36 billion.
Conclusion
The Cayman Islands legal framework and laws are
flexible in terms of meeting the objective of arrangers, issuers
and investors in capital markets transactions yet at the same time
provide a credible and well-established foundation for creditor
rights. The Cayman Islands has as a result become the first choice
location for vehicles in capital markets transactions by offering
the key legal elements that arrangers, issuers and investors require.
Rebecca Steller
Partner
Maples and Calder
Cayman Islands
rebecca.steller@maplesandcalder.com
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