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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> London Executive Aviation Ltd v The Royal Bank of Scotland Plc [2018] EWHC 74 (Ch) (22 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/74.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 74 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS & PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (CH)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
London Executive Aviation Ltd |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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The Royal Bank of Scotland PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
MR PAUL SINCLAIR and MR DANIEL KHOO (instructed by Dentons UKMEA LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1 – 3, 6 – 10, 15 – 17 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
I. INTRODUCTION |
1 |
II. THE PARTIES AND WITNESSES |
10 |
III. THE FACTS |
23 |
(a) The Lombard Loans |
23 |
(b) Early contacts between the parties and the 2006 Terms of Business |
27 |
(c) The July 2007 meeting and the September 2007 Meeting |
38 |
(d) The new Terms of Business |
59 |
(e) After the September 2007 meeting until 12 November 2007 |
65 |
(f) From mid November 2007 until the conclusion of the contracts |
120 |
(g) Events after the contracts were concluded |
151 |
(h) The regulatory background |
156 |
IV. THE ADVICE CLAIM |
159 |
(a) The court's approach to negligent mis-selling claims |
159 |
(b) Did Mr Brindley give advice to LEA for which the Bank must take responsibility? |
173 |
(i) Statements alleged in the Particulars of Claim to amount to advice |
173 |
(ii) Advice about interest rates |
186 |
(c) Was there a duty to advise? |
204 |
(i) The sophistication of LEA |
207 |
(ii) Absence of a written advisory agreement |
212 |
(iii) Availability of advice from other sources |
213 |
(iv) Indicia of an advisory relationship | 216 |
(d) LEA's complaints about various features of the hedging products |
218 |
(i) The inconsistency between the hedging products and the Lombard Loans |
219 |
(ii) The divergence between the notional amount of the hedging products and the principal of the Lombard Loans |
221 |
(iii) The callability of the hedging products |
226 |
(iv) The inflexibility of the hedging products |
231 |
(v) The breakage costs |
232 |
(e) Conclusion on the Advice Claim |
233 |
V. THE MEZZANINE CLAIM |
235 |
(i) Failure to explain what would happen if interest rates fall |
239 |
(ii) Failure to explain the full terms of the ISDA agreement |
242 |
(iii) Failure to disclose the CLU or otherwise explain potential breakage costs and other risks |
244 |
VI. THE DECEIT AND MISREPRESENTATION CLAIMS |
255 |
VII. HAS LEA SUED THE WRONG PARTY? |
275 |
(a) The test to be applied in identifying the counterparty to the contract |
279 |
(b) The factual indicators |
280 |
VIII. CONCLUSION | 296 |
Mrs Justice Rose:
I. INTRODUCTION
a. A dual rate swap: under the dual rate swap, the Bank commits to paying LEA each quarter the sum arrived at by applying the variable base rate during that quarter to the notional amount of capital which was £4 million for the first five years and £6 million for the second five years. In return LEA agrees to pay the Bank one of two interest rates applied to the same notional amount. If the variable interest rate stayed between the range of a floor of 4% and a ceiling of 6.25%, LEA would pay the Bank interest at a rate of 4.69% on the notional amount. If the variable interest rate was either lower than the floor or higher than the ceiling, then LEA would pay the Bank an interest rate of 5.35% on the notional. The sums due from the Bank and from LEA would be netted off so that each quarter there would be a payment in one direction or the other, unless base rate happened to be 4.69%. The dual rate swap was cancellable by the Bank on 12 February 2013 and every quarter date thereafter.
b. A value collar. Again, this product was to last for ten years and was based on a notional amount of £4 million for the first five years and £6 million for the second five years. This product was different in that there was only a payment due if interest rates fell outside a range, set as between a floor of 3.75% and a ceiling of 5.75%. If the variable base rate stayed within that range, then neither the Bank nor LEA had to make a payment. If base rate was 3.75% or lower during any quarter, LEA had to pay the Bank the difference between that base rate and 5.49% applied to the notional amount. If base rate went above 5.75% in any quarter, the Bank had to pay LEA the difference between the base rate and 5.75%. The Value Collar was cancellable by the Bank on one date only, on 12 February 2013.
II. THE PARTIES AND WITNESSES
III. THE FACTS
(a) The Lombard Loans
a. Both were subject to a variable interest rate being the NatWest base rate plus a lender's margin, but subject to a minimum base rate of 2.5%.
b. Both were repaid by a number of fixed monthly payments with a single balloon payment at the end of the term.
c. The fixed monthly payments would cover the interest incurred plus an amount of the capital, but how much of the capital was paid off each month would depend on the NatWest base rate. If base rate rose to a very high level, the monthly fixed payment might not be enough to cover all the interest due that month in which case the unpaid interest would be added to the loan amount and deemed to be a further advance by Lombard to LEA: see clause 4.2.3 of both loan agreements.
d. Both could be paid off in whole or in part by LEA on the last day of any interest period on giving 10 days' notice without penalty.
e. Both were subject to an "Asset Coverage Percentage" defined as the value of the aircraft divided by the balance of the Loan expressed as a percentage from time to time. If in Lombard's opinion the Asset Cover Percentage fell below 120%, Lombard could call upon LEA to increase the amount of the instalments to restore the ratio to 120%, or prepay such part of the outstanding balance of the loan as would restore the percentage to 120% or place an amount on deposit with a bank equal to the amount required to restore the Asset Cover Percentage to a percentage not greater than 120: see clause 6.5 of both Loan agreements.
f. Neither of the Lombard Loans required LEA to enter into any hedging product in respect of the interest rate.
(b) Early contacts between the parties and the 2006 Terms of Business
"We bring your attention to the Risk Warning, attached as Schedule 1 to this letter. By signing and returning this letter, you acknowledge receipt of the risk warning and confirm acceptance of its contents."
"Action to be taken
Please read our Terms of Business carefully. They contain important information about our respective rights and obligations, including about certain limitations on our liability to you. When you have reviewed the enclosed documents, you should keep them and this letter for guidance and reference. By signing and returning this letter, you will be deemed to have agreed and accepted our Terms of Business which will therefore become legally binding on you and, in the absence of any other agreement between us and you, will apply to all dealings which we may conduct with you or on your behalf. If you are in any doubt about the meaning or the legal or financial effect of these Terms of Business or any other documents we provide to you, you should obtain professional advice as necessary."
"1. Our Status
1.1 These Terms of Business apply to all designated investment business carried on by The Royal Bank of Scotland plc and National Westminster Bank plc together or, as the context may require, each being referred to as The Royal Bank of Scotland Financial Markets ("RBSFM"), with or on behalf of you. The principal address of RBSFM in the UK is 135 Bishopsgate, London EC2M 3UR. Details of our EEA branches are given in Appendix 1.
1.2 Our affiliates may act as agents for RBSFM. This will be disclosed at or before the time of executing a transaction. It will also be recorded on the confirmation. These Terms shall apply unless our affiliate expressly agrees otherwise.
3.2 We will provide you with general dealing services on an execution-only basis in relation to shares, debentures, government and public securities, certificates representing certain securities, units, options, futures, contract the difference and rights or interests in investments (together "Investments" and individually "Investment") together with related research and valuation facilities. …
3.3 We will not provide you with advice on the merits of a particular transaction or the composition of any account nor will we bring investment opportunities to your attention. You should obtain your own independent financial, legal and tax advice. Opinions, research or analysis expressed or published by us or our affiliates are for your information and do not amount to advice, an assurance or guarantee. The content is based on information that we believe to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete. …
4.2 Provision of services by us pursuant to these Terms will not give rise to any fiduciary or equitable duties on our part or that of our affiliates.
4.6 Any information we have provided to you relating to trades is believed to be reliable, but no representation is made or warranty given or liability accepted, as to its completeness or accuracy. In particular, market conditions and pricing may have changed by the time you approach us with a view to entering into a trade. Any opinions constitute our judgement as of the date indicated and do not constitute investment advice or an assurance or guarantee as to the expected outcome of any transaction."
"This notice cannot disclose all the risks and other significant aspects of warrants and/or derivative products such as futures, options, and contracts for differences. You should not deal in these products unless you understand the nature and the extent of your exposure to risk. You should also be satisfied that the product is suitable for you in the light of your circumstances and financial position."
a. By paragraph 9, that after a transaction has been executed, the Bank will confirm details to LEA and the content of the confirmations will, in the absence of manifest error, be deemed conclusive and binding on LEA unless LEA objects in writing within five business days.
b. By paragraph 12 that if LEA approached the Bank to close out a trade, the Bank is under no obligation to do this but will calculate the close out value of the trade based on prevailing market conditions. The close out value may be due from LEA to the Bank or from the Bank to LEA depending on the trade.
c. In paragraph 19.14 an exclusion of liability for loss except in so far as (i) the liability was owed under FSA Rules or (ii) the loss resulted from the gross negligence, wilful default, or fraud of the Bank.
"This CLU figure represents with 95% confidence, based on historic rate movements, the most that the Bank would expect to lose in the event of your default on this trade. Clearly this impact would only be felt to this extent in the event of aggressive $ strengthening. Put another way, according to our calculations, and with a 95% confidence level, this is the maximum negative value that we foresee this trade accruing from a close out/valuation standpoint.
Our calculation of CLU is our internal expectation of the maximum close out cost and is by no means a guarantee that this will be the case, in extreme market conditions, this figure could be higher. Please use this calculation as a guide only."
"I would probably do ½ and ½ subject to cost. I find it hard to believe that the $ will move much beyond 2 but also given Iraq and the start of the election race uncertainties are unlikely to provide any dollar strength. There is no evidence that the long-term interest rates are moving back into a normal curve so I think both look quite interesting. … I suspect the dollar will move between 1.90 and 2 you should have some protection over [the period January to July 2007]."
(c) The July 2007 meeting and the September 2007 Meeting
"So what does that mean for interest rates?
- We do not believe that UK interest rates are set to fall back below 5% for the foreseeable future. In fact over the next 18 months – 2 years, we think that rates will most likely have to rise to 6.25 or even 6.5%. Certainly there are few signs that the current monetary stance is doing anything to undermine growth in the UK economy.
- It is also likely that we will see UK interest rates range mainly between 5 and 6.5% over the course of the next 10 years, with visits below 5% and above 6.5% likely to be roughly equal in probability"
"Should you decide to terminate any structure ahead of maturity, you may have to pay market related breakage costs (these could be benefits however). These costs are not predeterminable, depending on prevailing market conditions at the time of breakage."
a. "Any hedging contract that you enter into with RBS is a separate legal contract from any borrowing it may relate to. In particular, they may be terminated independently of each other and early termination of one does not automatically terminate the other".
b. "The cost to you of the overall hedging structure and any borrowing is the sum of the cost of the borrowing and the net cost to you of the hedging contract, whether this is a swap, cap, collar or any other hedging structure."
c. "You are acting for your own account and will make an independent evaluation of the transactions entered into and their associated risks, and you have the opportunity to seek independent financial advice if unclear about any aspect of the transaction or risks associated with it and you place, or will place, no reliance on us for advice or recommendations of any sort."
(d) The new Terms of Business
"This client has been re-categorised as 'Retail' in accordance with the new regulations. A letter and revised Terms of Business was sent to the client on 10 September.
Click here to view the Categorisation Letter and Terms of Business."
"Accordingly, given my knowledge of the Bank's computer systems, I am confident that the fact that the computer entry on the 'Connect' system was raised, this means that the cover letter… and the revised Terms of Business … would have been sent by the Bank to LEA".
(e) After the September 2007 meeting until 12 November 2007
"I also asked if she was still inclined to fully hedge (SWAP) for 10 years and she said more thinking this was too restrictive and will chat with Patrick - Dom maybe also remind them in email that covers current and new debt given plans to expand fleet and debt".
a. The first sheet showed what would happen if the trade terms were that LEA paid interest at 5.78% between a range of 4.75% and 6.0% and paid at 6.10% when base rate was at or outside that range. But the base rate scenarios she modelled were what would happen under such a trade if base rate was 4% (in which scenario LEA would be paying 2.10% more than prevailing base rate), or 5.75% (in which scenario the spreadsheet showed that the Bank would be paying LEA 0.35% - apparently a glitch in the model) or at 6.5% (in which scenario the Bank would be paying LEA 0.4% being the difference between the prevailing rate and the knock in rate of 6.10% which would be triggered). The results showed that if base rate was 4% throughout the life of the trade, the cost to LEA would be £1.7 million, whereas the benefit if base rate remained constant at 5.75% would be £284,000 and would be £325,000 if base rate remained constant at 6.5%.
b. In the second sheet Mrs Margetson-Rushmore sent, she had amended the swap rate used by Mr Brindley to a rate of 5.78% but used the same interest rate scenarios (5%, 5.75% and 6.5%). This meant that negative figures (that is an overall cost to LEA) were generated for two out of the three scenarios.
c. For the third sheet, Mrs Margetson-Rushmore made adjustments to the interest rates payable and the range that Mr Brindley's spreadsheets had shown. She also changed the base rate scenarios to 4%, 5.75% and 6.5% so that again a negative figure of over £1.7 million was generated in the 4% base rate scenario.
d. Mrs Margetson-Rushmore made an additional spreadsheet adding a fourth possibility positing base rates of 4.5%, 5% and 6% and which generated a negative figure of £1.25 million due from LEA in the 4.5% base rate scenario and a cost of over £850,000 in the 5% base rate scenario.
"I would say rates, there is a strong possibility that we see rates at 5.25, 5% I would agree with that, that won't in my eyes happen, I see 5.50 the back end of well 5, 5.50 the start of this year coming I'm not 100% convinced that rates get cut on November although a lot of people are commenting on that. I then see the next year we will, given various slow downs, still need another rate cut to take us to 5.25. Whether or not long term rates can be sustained below 5% I'm slightly dubious about. I do see that we may get to 5% but it won't be for a long period of time and I do think that post sort of 2, 3 years the trend for rates will have to be upwards. The reasons for that are that the rest of the global economy will have been through or will be stabilising and moving further forward. And you know I'd cite continued pressure from China and India on raw materials and also prices of goods that are coming out of what are now fairly strong economies. There is the concern that you know the Chinese equity market might blow up and they might have slight concerns if the rest of the world isn't firing on all cylinders to take that they have geared up for. But I still think that you know there will be, there's an unbelievable amount of wealth within those countries now and they have started both on a government basis and also on companies in China are actually looking to divest into assets outside of China. That [is] inherent in you know the stakes that have been taken in Blackstones, the stakes that have been taken in Barclays and I just think that, that pricing tension will have a fairly large effect on, on our inflation environment and less about the national picture and more about the global picture I think. But definitely post sort of 2 years we see rates trending upwards again. But I take your concerns Isabel and if that's you know if that's what you want to do I'll certainly…"
a. The first was a simple 10 year fixed rate of 5.78%.
b. The second was a dual fixed-rate protection with a range of 4.75% to 6% within which range the fixed interest rate payable by LEA would be 5.4%, outside that range the interest rate would be 6.10%.
c. The first version of the third offer was an enhanced dual rate protection which was cancellable by the Bank at year five and every year thereafter, in which case the range would be 4.75% to 6% with the fixed interest rate payable by LEA within that range being 5.3% and the fixed rate payable by LEA outside that range being 6.05% - a slight improvement on the second proposal.
d. The second version of the third offer, also an enhanced dual rate protection, was priced with a range of 4.5% to 6% with the fixed rate payable by LEA within that range being 5.15% and the interest rate payable by LEA outside that rate being 6%.
"Given the amortisation schedule of the loan the life of the loan is actually c. 4 years (see forward curve attached) as such if we looked at hedging interest only levels of this loan and future loans then we could achieve greater levels in the trade. For example if we looked at hedging £8.5m bullet for the first 5 years and then stepped this up to £12m (this assumes as per previous conversations that you will take on more debt) then the levels achievable are as follows. NB this allows us to move the lower level to 4.50%."
a. that the notional amount on which interest would be calculated under the hedging products would be a "bullet" that is a constant figure not a figure which reduced over time;
b. further, that the notional amount of the trade be decoupled from the amortisation of the Lombard Loans and hence from the life of the Lombard Loans. He pointed out, and Mrs Margetson-Rushmore understood, that the life of the Loans might actually be only four years but that better prices were available for the hedging products (in terms of lowering the floor of the range and reducing the interest rates payable by LEA both inside and outside the range) if the notional amount was fixed for 10 years and was for a much higher amount than the remaining principal of the Lombard Loans;
c. further, that there be a substantial step up in the notional amount of the trade after five years in the context of a trade which was callable by the Bank after five years.
"And I think in terms of, a market view on where we think base rates are going, I think there's a fairly strong consensus that, maybe February next year that we could get a rate cut, all things being considered, but there are very slowly, we've seen the FTSE climb, certainly over the last 3 to 4 days, quite considerably. Data that was out of the US today showed very robust PPI, so raw material pricing and output, factory output prices actually being very robust and stronger than we'd expected, same with their retail sales. Now, given in a time when that economy is supposedly falling to pieces around peoples' homes, that information buoys the economy significantly. I think a lot of the firming up of financial markets, certainly … you know, Northern Rock haven't fallen over and, it's continuing. So I think the more that we get confidence back into the equity side of things, the more that we will see confidence actually return to the high street and consumers in terms of thinking. That all of that kind of flies back in the face of a rate cut, because the rate cutting, I guess, if you were to sort of say, people who are opining for a rate cut say that, you know, the housing market slow down has started because prices have already started to fall, the consumer will stop spending because, you know, housing market ostensibly in the UK is a barometer for people's confidence of how the economy is actually working. I think you'll find that we've actually seen a significant amount of price flexibility from retailers in terms of not being shy of providing discounts and to continue to push revenues. If that continues and they have the ability to keep costs down, then, you might well see that, you know, the expected fall in, in consumer spending won't actually take place. We still have the issue that we've got very lax consumer credit in this country. People can quite easily rack up credit card bills left, right and centre. So to stem consumer spending, you need a lot of scare stories to happen. I think the stabilisation period that we've seen, certainly over the last three weeks, sort of flies in the face of the need for an immediate rate cut. I think the wait and see tactic will prevail and I think that, although previously the MPC {sc. Monetary Policy Committee} have been very much "Let's act on impulse and do something now rather than … rather than let it happen and then we react", you've only got to take their rate hike that they came across in January, but I think there is a mind set now that any further shocks to financial markets or to the economy in itself by some unexpected moves isn't a good thing. So I think a case for stability over the next few months is certainly one that you could argue, and the official house forecasts is that we see two rate cuts effectively between now and the end of 2008. The timing of those differs between which economists you speak to, but they think that that's what's required to get the, the UK economy back on track."
".. with the view that longer term rates over the next 2 to 3 years would need to go higher and certainly higher from where we are now, almost back to the position we were in 4 months ago where we sort of saw, you know, rates getting up to 6.25%, that is certainly the view and that view is predicated by a much more global picture than anything here in the UK."
"what that trade is trying to do is give you absolute protection, but what's trying to do is reward you now for taking a view that you think that UK interest rates over the next 5 years, because that's because it is … you know, with all honesty, you have a view or an understanding or an inclination of where interest rates could be over that period … now in a 10 year period, you know, anything can happen and that's the reason why, you know, that worst case rate protection at 6% … if you were going to take … you know, if you were going to say, what are the likelihood of rates being over and above 6% in, in a 5 year, 7 year time horizon and I think it's actually quite high."
"But I mean, it's still likely that Patrick is going to be called at a point when he doesn't want to be called, potentially".
"Years … year 1-5 you are absolutely guaranteed, so in my eyes the crucial part of what you're trying to do with the business so over the next 5 years, there is no way that we can actually touch this trade, it stays exactly as it is with the levels that are in, in the trade that I've shown you, so you pay 5.30 as an enhanced rate or 6.05 as a protected rate and the range is 6% to 4.75. At year 5, we have the right to call the trade. So effectively the trader will say whether or not we want to call the trade. If we call the trade, you revert to paying floating base rate, now that right effectively we have every quarter thereafter …"
"Yes, after 5 years. So the first 5 years … let's just take it in chunks. The first 5 years of the trade, the trader has nothing to do because there's no call option for us, so you get a guaranteed … you get the guarantee of paying of paying … you get a guarantee of paying 5.30 as a swap rate so long as UK rates stay between 6 and 4.75. If they go at or outside either of that range in that time period over the 5 years, then you will pay 6.05. So from a budgeting perspective or from your knowledge, you have a worst case cost of the funds at 6.05 guaranteed for the next 5 years. Hopefully that won't happen, hopefully UK interest rates will remain between that range and you will pay the enhanced rate of 5.30. Now, at year 5, we have the right to call the trade and every quarter thereafter. The trade will still perform exactly as I've just explained it there for 10 years until … until the trader says, actually we're going to call this, we've called the trade. Now if the trader calls the trade, we still have the right, between yourselves and I and the … and here in terms of what we can offer to you … of having a further conversation because the trader turns round to me and says, we're actually going to call this trade. I will then say to you, you are now going to revert to paying base rate. If that is something that … you don't want, we can have a further conversation at that point in time about looking at what solutions are available with regard to interest rate management. Just exactly as we're having this conversation now, there are ways of getting an enhancement to where base rate is at that point in time if your trade gets called, there will be a way of doing that. So it's not to say if we call the trade, the trade is called and that might simply be that future rates, you know, might not be that base rate at that point in time and might be that if we call the trade, you're quite comfortable remaining in floating base rate and paying floating base rate, that might well be the situation. But if that situation is different, then we can engage in conversation just as we are now, just as we have over the last few months, to actually look at putting in some sensible management, interest rate management, that you are comfortable with. So it's not a case of we pull the trade away and you're naked in, in, in the middle of a field almost … it's … the trader's taken a decision based on where his book is and the market is, and that trade is no longer there, let's have a conversation around what we can actually do with trades that we can get away at that point in time."
"…Now if you were to say you want absolute clarity over your debts for the next 10 years or levels of your debt over the next 10 years, you don't really want us to have a call on, on your ability to pay. Let's say, you know, if that's your mindset, then solution 2 would be a better option. But if you wanted to have clarity for a 5 year window, solution 3 gives you the pick up that you want and also, you know, gives you some certainty, absolute certainly for years … so to year 5. You then have a degree of uncertainty, albeit you know this is in place should we not call it."
" … the risks to you would be minimal because interest rates would need to go in the opposite direction that everybody thinks they are actually going to go in."
"… that process will continue so in my mind and certainly I had this conversation with Neil Parker, our economist, because another client of mine is in the throes of completing a deal of a similar size and quite rightly so he was worried about, you know, timing risk in terms of what happens if his transaction takes another few weeks, what would happen to swap rates. Neil's point of view on it was, the more assured and the more stabilised things become, the more chance we have of actually rates going higher. I think the paragraph that, that Neil actually wrote for the client was, in his view, over the next month, we may see rates on a 10 year/15 year basis rise by as much as 10 or 15 basis points. Now that is certainly something … I wouldn't want to be sitting here in two weeks' time, having … having not done anything, and you guys turning around and saying, "Well actually, Dominic, you know, this wasn't something that was pointed out". Because the only way that I can guarantee the rates we're talking about is get ourselves in a position and do it. Because ostensibly what we're trying to do it put some very, you know, put some parameters around something that has a lot of moving objects and those moving objects change on a daily basis …"
"Dominic thank you for the pricing update. We would need the swap rate and the forward curve to look at to compare the various options so please could you arrange for that"
"I understand from my colleagues Dominic Brindley and Adrian Wood that there is an intention for you to enter into derivative transactions with National Westminster Bank plc. As such I am happy now to attach the following documentation."
"I should be obliged if you could please review the draft Schedule and either let me know that it is in an acceptable form for execution, or provide your comments. Should you have any queries relating to the documentation please do not hesitate to contact me."
a. The price for a straightforward 10 year fixed interest payment would be 5.6%.
b. For solution 2 (guaranteed to be in place for 10 years) for a range 4.25% to 6% the interest rate within the range had softened to 5.25% although outside the range it remained 6%.
c. For solution 3 with RBS having the right to cancel at year five and every quarter thereafter until the 10 year maturity the rate within the range of 4.25% to 6% would be 5.1% with the interest rate outside that range still 6%.
"Yes, so I just think that its possibly going to be one of the most contested rate decisions for a very long period of time because it will pretty much govern how quickly we get to, I mean we see the trough in UK interest rates at the bank now at 5.25, we see that whatever happens if it doesn't happen now we'll see a rate cut February, and we see by the back end of sort of 2008 that rates will be at five and half and in 2009 may be going to 5.25 and then subsequently coming back up once the economy has, you know, had the chance to sort of recover from what's been happening. And a period of stabilisation at that point is probably what the market actually needs. Now for all that being said you know it is a case of timing and my sort of gut instinct is that with everything that is going on I think the MPC may well hold off from cutting rates in November unless they because they have foresight as well of the quarterly inflation report and they will be looking at analysing that probably they probably even had a draft copy of it prior to them going into the meeting given how important it is. And if there is something in there that we don't know about we say they've made a market projection for then we may well see rates get cut but as it stands I'm of the mind-set that it remains on hold. I keep convincing myself one way or the other but I think the arguments are sort of very much 50/50…"
"DB Yes its inverting. What I would say is as well is the market doesn't view that we see rates go higher over the next two to three years it sees rates going lower…."
IR Yes. That was always Patrick's concern.
DB But I think in terms of if you look at the ranges on the solutions in terms of you know if you take both of them they've I think as per our conversations before…
IR Yes.
DB What they're both trying to do is give you absolute protection on the top-side which is again you know your primary concern but I think talking to Patrick Patrick's worried if you like in terms of whether rates go lower. You know both ranges on there go all the way down to 4.25% now if you were to ask I mean if I was to give you some facts and figures around 4.25 we've only seen rates at and below 4.25% for a period of three years in the last 50…
IR Uh huh.
DB So that's taken as a percentage that's 5% of the last 50 years so if you wanted to so look at that and think 95% confidence given historic...
IR Yeah.
DB That that range would actually on the bottom side you wouldn't see that…
IR Yeah.
DB Now will we see 6% - you know that is a point in question.
IR Probably not.
DB Yes – you know where is the - if you ask people where the norm for [UNCLEAR] is given where growth expectations are.
IR Yeah.
DB I think most people would come out with somewhere at and around 5.5% now if that's the case – if that's the case because you are always going to have periods where you need to encourage the economy and periods where you need stem the economy from growing too quickly and that will give you the fluctuation in interest rates but if you find that as a medium then both of those trade ideas over the next you know 5 to 10 years would give you a beneficial rate because number 1 the triggers wouldn't happen and number 2 the rates that you are actually locking into are, are below the where the actual market the underlying market would actually be….
IR Yeah okay fine, alright and I think - I know what all the rates are…
DB Yeah.
IR But I've got to put them into my model."
"Please don't worry about not reverting sooner. I had imagined from our conversations that it wasn't going to be a straightforward conversation. If you require updated pricing at any point then please just shout and I will get it across to you. I was just going to point out that we have the MPC decision on Thursday. We may see some movement around rates at this time".
"Great news - I will keep everything crossed - will need a drink to get over this when done."
"Whilst I am more than happy to renew this credit limit with my committee I wondered if you could let me know your plans / timeframes so that I can obtain renewal of the credit limit for an appropriate time."
"A
Thanks for this – yes George and I have looked at this last Friday – I think that in the light of the current press/city new that we feel that there will be 1 to 2 rate cuts in near future – so given this view we will hold off on doing a trade. When we feel it is best to relook we can reprice and ask for credit approval then
Thanks"
(f) From mid November 2007 until the conclusion of the contracts
"I told him that hedge was not unconditional but personally I think it is remiss of the bank not to insist on insurance on any debt over £0.5m and 6 months, and that I did not want to have a chat along the lines of 'I wish we'd locked in' in 6 months, 1 year et cetera et cetera I know he insures against all relevant intangibles but could not understand why he would not insure against something which could have a detrimental effect on business and cash flow if moves against him.
…
His response was that his cash flow is not impacted for 10 years - his payments are fixed and if base rate goes up it will affect his bullet in year 10 - payments in between then and now will stay the same and pay more interest and less capital rather than fluctuate if base rate increases - TANYA CAN YOU CONFIRM IF THIS IS TRUE
Thus his issue was 10 years away with a [worst-case scenario] bigger bullet against planes they expect to appreciate."
"I also promised to back off with the info flow until I am back from hols (26th November) DOM PLEASE NOTE ALBEIT I DID PROMISE IF ANYTHING HAPPENS IN MARKET WE WOULD LET HIM KNOW Dom will leave with you to decide what is important and not in terms of advice.
Dom - seems to me our focus should be on cap and collar perhaps we can work some scenarios and different prices I think he may have an issue with paying a premium …
Dom I know you were pricing £200-£250k on this - I think for all this work we need to work something upward of this
I hope this is all clear - good news is that he is receptive and he is still interested in hedging just now is not a good time
maybe we need to get to see George, Isabel and Patrick on my return with tax expert to kill off any concerns
LETS DO THIS"
"£10.38m Loan maturing January 2018
- Based on current forward rates, the principal balance outstanding in January 2018 is estimated to be £4.74m
- The worst case outstanding balance at a 95% confidence level is £6.22m
- This represents an outstanding principal at-risk amount of £1.49m
£2.5m Loan maturing December 2012
- Based on current forward rates, the principal balance outstanding in December 2012 is estimated to be £1.14m
- The worst case outstanding balance at a 95% confidence level is £1.27m
- This represents an outstanding principal at-risk amount of £134k"
a. The first page set out quotations from Neil Parker, the RBS UK economist, and also a graph showing the results of a Reuters poll carried out on 4 February 2008 about how the City viewed the likely future path of base rate. The graph showed interest rates possibly dropping from 5.5% to 4% in the fourth quarter of 2008 and then either stabilising at that level or starting to rise in the first quarter of 2009.
b. Mr Parker's view was expressed to be that UK longer dated swap rates had been pushing higher recently in spite of the turmoil in equity markets and the speculation about rate cuts: "We think UK swaps have reached a threshold and will eventually push higher by between 20-30 basis points from 7 years out".
c. The next slide showed in diagrammatic form a series of thought bubbles as to why one might move from a straightforward interest rate collar to a value collar (that is where there is a higher knock-in interest rate if the base rate falls below the floor of the range). The final question posited by the hypothetical customer was whether it was possible to move the floor any lower "so I am completely comfortable that there is a minimal chance of the trigger rate being reached?". That thought bubble led to an extendable value collar where the callability of the trade allowed the Bank to set the knock-in rate at 5.75% and enabled LEA to pay floating base rate all the way down to 3.75%. It said "UK Base Rate has only been at and below 3.75% once in the past 50 years and only for a period of 6 months". This was then illustrated by a graph showing historical rates from 1989 to September 2006 showing that rates only dropped below 4% for a brief period in the first quarter of 2004.
d. Similar diagrammatic illustrations of the reasons expressed as thought bubbles why one might move from a straight interest rate swap to a callable dual rate protection product were then set out on the following slide.
e. The final pages of the presentation contained notes on which the Bank rely in their defence against this claim.
"This is a market standard document we ask all entities with more than 1 trade in place to sign into. The document simply lets both parties know exactly how they will be treated in the event that LEA goes bankrupt and the trade still remain in place".
"All that the ISDA document does is allows us to clearly define what happens if you were to go bankrupt and the netting of derivative positions across two derivatives. So, that's really all that ISDA document actually does. It's a market standard document".
"DB The first… the first trade will be it's a ten year trade, the first five years of that trade will be on £4 million on a bullet basis as agreed stepping up to £6 million for years six to ten. That will roll quarterly out of… out of today, which is 12 February 2008 and that will… it's a five year plus five year extendable value collar. So, the first five years of the trade is guaranteed to be in place. At year five RBS have the one time right to actually extend the trade on exactly the same basis for a further five years. The levels within that trade are base rate cap at 5.75%. So, your cost of funds will never be greater than 5.75% plus your lending margin.
You pay floating from 5.75 between … all the way down to the floor, which is at 3.75%. So as we stand at the moment at 5.25% you would pay effectively 5.25% and nothing would happen under the transaction. If interest rates were to rise let's just say 6% you would receive the difference between 5.75 and 6, so 0.25% as a payment on the outstanding balance at that point in time. Should you get interest rates or average base rate trade at or below 3.75% for a period of three months or longer, you will effectively be knocked into paying 5.49% for that period. So, should you get interest rates, get to let's just say 3.50, you would pay 5.5% effectively, or 5.49% underneath that transaction. Now…
.. so should interest rates move back into the range you would just continue to pay floating interest rates. So, that's the first trade that we're going to look at… look to put in place. So, I can get your okay to go ahead and put that trade in place, Patrick?
PMR Yep, you can. Do you want me to repeat it?
DB No, no, no, it's fine. It's just that we just need your okay to go ahead and put that in place.
PMR Yeah… that's fine. On what you've just said, that's fine.
DB Perfect, excellent, thank you. The second trade we're looking to put in place again is in the name of London Executive Aviation Limited and on the same basis as the first trade, it will be on a notional amount out of today the 12 February 2008 on £4 million starting for the first five years and that will be on a bullet basis rolling quarterly.
They will then step up to £6 million from year six to ten and that is a ten year trade again with the first five years of the trade being guaranteed to be in place and RBS having the right to cancel the trade at year five and every quarter thereafter through to maturity. Um, LEA will pay a fixed rate of 4.69% so long as UK base rates remain between the range 6.25% and 4%.
So, effectively what happens is, you pay 4.69% as of today plus your lending margin on £4 million of your debt. UK interest rates would need to trade at or outside of that range before you pay the higher fixed rate or protected fixed rate of 5.35% as per our previous conversations. So, should UK interest rates move to 6.25% you would then revert… you would then pay 5.35% and again just as we talked about before, if the… if UK interest rates move back within that range, so if interest rates fell to 6% you would revert to paying the 4.69% plus the lending margin. Just one final thing before I get your OK to go ahead to put that in place, should you wish to terminate the trades, Patrick, ahead of maturity, there may or may not be a breakage cost attributable to that trade and that can only be determined by the prevailing market at that point in time.
So again, if you're comfortable with all of those details that I've just said for that trade, can I get your okay to go ahead and put that in place?
PMR - Yeah, and the breakage relates just to the second trade or both trades?
DB Both trades. Effectively, because… we're agreeing the trades for a ten year… for a ten year period and if you were to wish… if we exercised that right to cancel the trade you'd just revert to paying floating base rates for nothing. So… but, given the profile of the business and what we discussed in terms of we're only looking to hedge 8 million of your initial £12 million worth of debt, um and then, you know, subsequent to the increases in debt that you envisage by purchasing further aircraft, you know, that will… you know, that's the reasons why you're stepping that into 6 million. Is that okay?
You're happy comfortable with that. Okay… Patrick, all of that's done then so the trader will put that in place and that will start today so what you will receive is a confirmation. So, two emails confirmations… if you can just check the details of them, make sure you're happy with it, sign it and fax that back to the relevant number on the… on the confirmations. What will follow in eight to ten working days is a more long form confirmation again just detailing exactly what the trade is. If you could just satisfy yourself that that's exactly what we agreed sign that and send that back then that's everything done from the formalities and just one final thing, Patrick, as per the start of the conversation, both of the trades will be governed by the ISDA document that I talked about from the bank's perspective.
What I will do is I'll get our legal guys to actually send out a copy of that document for you and we need to put that in place within a month's period of time just from the… from credit perspective. So, that… we can start that process. But, that's all done for you. And uh as I said, you'll receive a confirmation and maybe as and when you're back I can… I can take yourself and Isabel and Adrian out for some dinner maybe or some drinks in town if you're… if you so like."
(g) Events after the hedging products were concluded
"This has been a long time in the making but through persistence, continually having "risk" conversations with the client and some great teamwork to present a united front from RBS (Lombard, Commercial Banking and GBM) this deal has been allowed to happen by those that have been involved-none more so than by RM Adrian Wood who has been instrumental in driving the process throughout. Congratulations on the 2 deals Adrian and I think this puts you into the 600 club so well done on that front as well".
a. 12 February 2008 - 12 May 2008 5.16%
b. 12 May 2008 - 12 August 2008 5.00%
c. 12 August 2008 - 12 November 2008 4.71%
d. 12 November 2008 - 12 February 2009 2.01%
e. 12 February 2009 - 12 May 2009 0.62%
f. The remaining quarters from 0.56% or lower with the last
12 May 2009 to 12 August 2017 four quarters at 0.25%
(h) The regulatory background
IV. THE ADVICE CLAIM
(a) The court's approach to negligent mis-selling claims
"114. In the present case, I find myself unable to resist the conclusion that the banks successfully disclaimed responsibility for any advice that Mr Gillard might give and (as I have found) did give. The Risk Management Paper and the two sets of terms of business were unequivocal; they defined the relationship as one in which advice was not being given. They were clearly drawn to Mr Parker's attention before the swap contract was concluded. He rightly understood (…) that they were not empty words but were intended to have legal effect as part of any contract.
115. Although Crestsign was a retail client and not a large and sophisticated commercial party, it was not in a position akin to the buyer of a second hand car. I do not accept Mr Edwards' submission that it would be rewriting history or parting company with reality (in Clarke J's phrases in Raffeisen) to define the relationship as one in which advice is not given, even though I have found that, in substance, it was. The line that separates provision of information from giving advice may be a fine one, as where advice is conveyed by presenting information selectively. It is not always easy for a salesman such as Mr Gillard to know where one ends and the other begins. Reasonable people could disagree about whether the line is crossed in a particular case.
116. It is considerations such as these that lead parties in this type of arrangement legitimately to define their relationship and avoid disputes afterwards. No violence is done to history or reality by construing the documents as meaning what they say, even though the first document in time – the Risk Management Paper – postdated the meeting on 28 May 2008, and even though what Mr Gillard said at that meeting (and subsequently) in my judgment crossed the line and would have amounted to advice coupled with an assumption of responsibility, were it not for the disclaiming effect of the documents.
117. The end result is that by the time the swap contract was entered into, what Mr Gillard was saying in effect was: "although I recommend one of these products as suitable, the banks do not take responsibility for my recommendation; you cannot rely on it and must make up your own mind." I do not see anything unrealistic about that, nor does it mean the documents must be exemption clauses not basis clauses. As correctly submitted by [counsel for the bank], the disclaimers in the Risk Management Paper, the two sets of terms of business, the written acknowledgment of the transaction, and the formal written swap contract, are all basis clauses."
"94 Against this background, it is inappropriate to go through the hundreds of conversations that took place between Mr Wilson and Mr Gainsley, or even the relatively few that are available, with a view to classifying everything that fell from Mr Gainsley's lips according to a rigorous analysis into separate categories of "information", "opinion", "advice" and "recommendations". That is simply not the way the conversations were conducted. Obligations of that sort could not be imported without express written amendment to the terms of business governing relations between the parties.
…
96 It is clear from the conversations that there was a good deal of banter and light-hearted badinage and, from having seen the transcripts and listened to a few samples from the audio tapes, it is clear to me that what was happening can best be characterised as exchanging information and "bouncing ideas" off each other or swapping hunches about the market. Much of it was spontaneous and off the cuff. It would be unfair and unrealistic to pick upon certain passages in Mr Gainsley's observations, with six or seven years of hindsight, and to conclude that he had suddenly changed into "advice mode" and was undertaking an obligation, on his own initiative, to give advice on behalf of his employers to an "intermediate customer". If such conversations were to be subjected regularly to analysis of that kind with a view to changing the express terms of the parties' relationship, brokers would not be able to operate and communications would soon be drastically curtailed."
"70. Mr Burgess is a salesman. His job is to sell derivatives and he makes his money by selling derivatives. He does not make money by providing advice in return for a fee. It is an integral part of the sales process in my view that he should have a dialogue with the customer and in the course of that dialogue may express opinions to the customer but those expressions of opinion have to be viewed in the context of the entire dealing. This expression of opinion is in my view the expression of a salesman selling his product not an adviser providing advice.
71. In my view this is not a conversation in which Mr Harrison is being advised as to what to do. It is clear from the exchange on rates in which Mr Harrison rejects the lower rates that a longer term would provide, that Mr Harrison understands the options that he is being offered and decides on the one which he feels is appropriate for him."
"Although [the bank's witnesses] were reluctant to accept that such recommendations could be characterised as "investment advice", the real point, in my judgment, is not the semantic one as to whether such recommendations are "advice", or "investment advice", in a loose or a strict sense, but rather whether the giving of such advice, on a regular basis, by a salesperson in such capacity, attracts the obligations and duties of care of an investment advisor in respect of the views actually expressed, or indeed, a positive duty to give advice on a wider basis as to the structure, or concentration, of the portfolio within the asset class of emerging markets securities, or as to wider diversification into other asset classes."
"17. The judge also assumed, uncontroversially, that the Bank owed to Messrs Green and Rowley a duty to take care when making statements in relation to which it knew or ought to have known that Messrs Green and Rowley would rely upon its skill and judgment – the duty discussed in Hedley Byrne and Co Ltd v Heller and Partners Ltd [1964] AC 465. This was in relation to what was called at trial the "Information Claim". So far as concerned the suggestion by the Appellants that the COB Rules informed the content of this duty the judge observed, rightly in my view, although I paraphrase his language, that the Hedley Byrne duty does not comprise a duty to give information unless without it a relevant statement made within the context of the assumption of responsibility is misleading. Thus insofar as COB Rule 2.1.3 refers to a duty to take reasonable steps not to mislead, this is comprised within the common law duty, but insofar as it refers to a duty to take reasonable steps to communicate clearly or fairly, this introduces notions going beyond the accuracy of what is said which is the touchstone of the Hedley Byrne duty. The duty imposed by COB Rule 5.4.3 to take reasonable steps to ensure that the counterparty to a transaction understands its nature the judge regarded, again rightly in my view, as well outside any notion of a duty not to mis-state, as he characterised the Hedley Byrne duty to be. Accordingly, the judge did not regard the content of the Bank's common law duty in relation to the accuracy of its statements as in any relevant manner informed by the content of the COB Rules.
18. By contrast, the judge was prepared to recognise that had the Bank undertaken an advisory duty, the content of that duty would have been in part informed by the content of COB Rules 2.1.3 and 5.4.3. …"
"30. I therefore reject the suggestion that the Bank here owed to Messrs Green and Rowley a common law duty of care which involved taking reasonable care to ensure that they understood the nature of the risks involved in entering into the swap transaction. The existence of the action for breach of statutory duty consequent upon contravention of a rule does not compel the finding of such a duty – indeed for the reasons I have already given it rather tells against it. Mr Berkley's further argument that such a cause of action would afford protection to those who, not being a "private person" cannot avail themselves of a cause of action for breach of statutory duty, is an invitation to the court to drive a coach and horses through the intention of Parliament to confer a private law cause of action upon a limited class."
a. Advice is there defined as including advice given to an investor on the merits of his buying a particular contractually based investment; advice may take the form of a 'personal recommendation' and a 'personal recommendation' is defined in the FSA Handbook as advice on investments that is presented as suitable for the person to whom it is made or is based on a consideration of the circumstances of that person.
b. LEA point to the flow charts used in the February Presentation which were, they say, designed to lead LEA by logical steps to the two specific products that were in fact chosen. Guiding a client through such a flow chart to a particular investment amounts to 'advice' according to the Perimeter Guidance paragraph 8.26.3G.
c. Mr Edwards drew my attention to the extract from the Securities and Futures Authorities Rules on execution only business quoted in paragraph 367 of Gloster J's judgment in Springwell which indicates that in respect of the OTC derivative it is unlikely that a firm will be able to effect or arrange a transaction on an execution only basis, that is without giving advice to the customer.
(b) Did Mr Brindley give advice to LEA for which the Bank must take responsibility?
(i) Statements alleged in the Particulars of Claim to amount to advice
"Q. So instead you wrote to him saying that the credit limit that was in place for the trade, that had been put in place for the trade, was about to expire?
A. Mm-hm.
Q. That wasn't true, was it?
A. Yes, it was. Yes. When we agree facilities the liability goes on our books and there is a period of three months that they are available … - in the expectation that the deal is concluded within a three-month period, because 99% of transactions were concluded in that time frame. If a transaction had not been concluded -- it is still the same now, we have to effectively go back to our credit committee to either refresh the deal and say this is the reason it is not drawn, there could be a hold up in this, that or the other but we expect it to happen, or do you know what, it is not going to happen, we need to take it off our books.
Q. So why was the credit limit put in place until 1 February 2008?
A. So we have, as well as those -- so effectively you have a review date when the entire connection is due for review and for LEA it was in February, the year - I don't know why it was February, probably an anniversary of when we originally opened the accounts because you usually roll facilities for 12 months. But anything agreed in the interim period or at any point with our credit function remains live for three months until you can actually physically mark the limits if the transaction is done, or if you need to go back to your credit committee to say, "Sorry this isn't going to happen we need to cancel this." Or "Can we please refresh it and extend it for another three months?"
Q. If that was the point, if that was all this was about, you would have done it already wouldn't you, because the credit limit was agreed by -- was put in place on 8 August?
A. Let me do the maths. Yes, 8 November 8 November? Yes. So I was probably late, wasn't I? Yes.
Q. Yes, so you would have done it already if that was all you were talking about?
A. If I was on top of my game, I should have done, but obviously I had overlooked it and had been sent a reminder that, this is three months out of date, is it going stale? That is the expression we would use, or are we looking to refresh it. So I needed to clarify with the client actually what their mindset was, if I could obtain that, so I could go back to my credit and ask them to please either refresh it or just say it is not going to happen can we lapse it.
...
Q. The reality is you were simply using this as a pretext for pressing Mr Margetson-Rushmore for a decision, weren't you?
A. That is not correct. If you want to check with the Bank's policy you will see that our facilities when agreed stay viable for a period of three months and if they are not finalised within that time frame we have to go back to our credit committee to tell them what has occurred, what is going on, and what we need to do with that limit. It is bank policy, it has been since I started working in the bank and still is".
a. Interest rates were volatile and might move in a direction adverse to LEA so that they should trade then rather than delay;
b. The rates offered were more advantageous than a straight interest rate swap;
c. Even if the Bank called the swaps after 5 years, LEA could buy protection such as an interest rate cap at that stage.
(ii) Advice about interest rates
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
Introducing the right for RBS to call the trade at year 5 and every quarter thereafter allows us to give you the following; So long as UK Base Rate trades between the range 6.25% to 4.0% LEA will pay the enhanced rate of 4.70%. If rates trade at or outside the range then you are fully protected at 5.35%.
If interest rates were to trade on the top side of the range (6.25%) then LEA will be fixed at 5.35% (nearly 1.0% lower than the prevailing market).
Rates would need to fall 1.25% from present levels before LEA pay the protected rate.
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
(c) Was there a duty to advise?
(i) The sophistication of LEA
(ii) Absence of a written advisory agreement
(iii) Availability of advice from other sources
(iv) Indicia of an advisory relationship
(d) LEA's complaints about various features of the hedging products
(i) The inconsistency between the hedging products and the Lombard Loans
(ii) The divergence between the notional amount of the hedging products and the principal of the Lombard Loans
"given the profile of the business and what we discussed in terms of we're only looking to hedge 8 million of your initial £12 million worth of debt, and then, you know, subsequent to the increases in debt that you envisage by purchasing further aircraft, you know, that will… you know, that's the reasons why you're stepping that into 6 million. Is that okay?"
(iii) The callability of the hedging products
"I like the flexibility of the dual rate protection as it allows me to benefit from my view (that base may head to 5.0% or slightly lower) and also retain protection at no worse than 5.75%. However, if the range was wider and the enhanced rate lower I would feel more comfortable."
"Introducing the right for RBS to call the trade at year 5 and every quarter thereafter allows us to give you the following; So long as UK Base Rate trades between the range 6.25% to 4.0% LEA will pay the enhanced rate of 4.70%. If rates trade at or outside the range then you are fully protected at 5.35%."
(iv) The inflexibility of the hedging products
(v) The breakage costs
(e) Conclusion on the Advice Claim
V. THE MEZZANINE CLAIM
(i) Failure to explain what would happen if interest rates fell
(ii) Failure to explain the full terms of the ISDA agreement
(iii) Failure to disclose the CLU or otherwise explain potential breakage costs and other risks
"If the transaction needs to be amended in any way after it has been put in place, e.g. by amending its size, maturity date, reference exchange rates or cancelling, then there may be a cost to you to do so, credit parameters permitting;
The potential cost will depend upon a number of factors including, but not limited to, the prevailing market rate compared to the transaction rate, the length of time to original maturity and the current volatility of the market.
These factors may generate a cost to amend the trade even where the transaction rate compared to the prevailing market rate would indicate a favourable position;
Should you decide to terminate any structure ahead of maturity, you may have to pay market-related breakage costs (these could be benefits however). These costs are not pre-determinable, depending on prevailing market conditions at the time of breakage;"
"If derivative contracts are closed before their maturity, breakage costs or benefits may be payable. The value of any break cost or benefit is the replacement cost of the contract and depends on factors on closeout that include the time left to maturity and current market conditions such as current and expected future interest rates."
The Notes also said:
"Over-the-counter derivatives ("OTC Derivatives") can provide significant benefits but may also involve a variety of significant risks. … In general, all OTC Derivatives involve risks which include (inter-alia) the risk of adverse or unanticipated market, financial or political developments, risks relating to the counterparty, liquidity risk and other risks of a complex character. In the event that such risks arise, substantial costs and/or losses may be incurred and operational risks may arise in the event that appropriate internal systems and controls are not in place to manage such risks. Therefore the Recipient should ensure that, before entering into any OTC derivative transaction, the potential risks and return thereof is fully understood and the Recipient should also determine whether the OTC transaction is appropriate for the Recipient given its objectives, experience, financial and operational resources, and other relevant circumstances."
"DM Just one final thing before I get your OK to go ahead to put that in place, should you wish to terminate the trades, Patrick, ahead of maturity, there may or may not be a breakage cost attributable to that trade and that can only be determined by the prevailing market at that point in time.
So again, if you're comfortable with all of those details that I've just said for that trade, can I get your okay to go ahead and put that in place?
PMR - Yeah, and the breakage relates just to the second trade or both trades?
DM Both trades. …."
VI. THE DECEIT AND MISREPRESENTATION CLAIMS
a. The defendant makes a false representation to the claimant.
b. The defendant knows that the representation is false, alternatively he is reckless as to whether it is true or false.
c. The defendant intends that the claimant should act in reliance on it.
d. The claimant does act in reliance on the representation and suffers loss.
a. A representation is a statement of fact made by the representor to the representee on which the representee is intended and entitled to rely as a positive assertion that the fact is true. When determining whether any and if so what representation was made by a statement, the court must (1) construe the statement in the context in which it was made, and (2) interpret the statement objectively according to the impact it might be expected to have on a reasonable representee in the position and with the known characteristics of the actual representee.
b. Silence by itself cannot found a claim in misrepresentation. But an express statement may impliedly represent something. For example, a statement which is literally true may nevertheless involve a misrepresentation because of matters which the representor omits to mention.
c. In relation to implied representations the court has to consider what a reasonable person would have inferred was being implicitly represented by the representor's words and conduct in their context. That involves considering whether a reasonable representee in the position and with the known characteristics of the actual representee would reasonably have understood that an implied representation was being made and being made substantially in the terms or to the effect alleged.
d. The claimant must show that he in fact understood the statement in the sense (so far as material) which the court ascribes to it; and that, having that understanding, he relied on it. Analytically, this is probably not a separate requirement of a misrepresentation claim but rather is part of what the claimant needs to show in order to prove inducement.
"Q. And if the bank had told you that its internal credit line for these products was £1.65 million, that would not have affected your decision to go ahead, because you already knew the downside was potentially £1.7 million, and you nevertheless went ahead.
A. I didn't know, my Lady, that the downside was £1.7 million. That was the starting point on a sheet which didn't put in all the variables, point 1. If I had thought that £1.7 million was the potential downside, I would have run a mile from those products. If I had been told that the potential downside was £1.65 million, in my personal view, I would be saying: I have got a potential liability the Bank is telling me that might occur on my balloon payment at £1.5 million so it would go up from 5 -- let's say it was 5 million, 5 to £6.5 million, and against that, to protect against that possibility, I would then take on an unknown uncertainty, and if it was 1.65 and that was an ongoing risk on a regular basis, to me, I think it is fairly obvious that one would just say no to the products.
Q. But that is too simplistic, isn't it? You realised didn't you, that in a situation where the balloon payment was very high at £1.65 million, for example then by entering into the swaps, you would receive huge payments from the bank that would counteract that. Conversely, in a scenario where the pain under the swaps was very high, your balloon payment would be that much lower. So the entire point of entering into the swaps was to smooth out those risks, wasn't it?
A. Maybe I am a very simple person, then, because the explanation that I gave my Lady is how I would have approached it."
"Q If the bank had told you at the February meeting that its internal credit line for these products would be £1.6 million, you would still have gone ahead with the transactions, wouldn't you?
A. The first thing I would have asked is what credit line is, because as I said I'm not familiar with terms like this. If it was explained to me that this is the risk the bank assesses at that point of time that our loans have, I would have taken into consideration. If I was given the risk at the same time what the products have, I would clearly assess once against the other. Common sense, I think.
Q. But if -- you were told, I think, at the meeting that there was a risk on the loan agreements that if interest rates went unusually high the balloon payment could be, say, 1.5, £1.6 million higher; do you remember being told that?
A. I do not remember this being raised at the meeting. That is why it is not in my witness statement. However, I do understand that was brought up from disclosure later on, and on the basis of that I did my second witness statement which assumed that if Mr Wood or Mr Brindley, I can't remember, used that, it would have made some difference. Yes, I didn't care about the balloon, but if someone is telling me, "Well, we assess that your loan has £1.5 million risk and you know what, I will take the risk away from you", I said, "Yes, that makes sense"."
a. Ms Ruddy was applying the interest rate forecasts to the outstanding amount of the existing Lombard Loans whereas the CLU is calculated using the much greater notional amount underpinning the hedging products.
b. She was considering a one-off figure owing from LEA when the Lombard Loans expire and so took into account the effect of varying amounts of interest payments and the fixed monthly payments under the loans over the life of the loans whereas the CLU measures the risk of default at any time during the life of the hedging products.
c. Ms Ruddy's calculation was carried out in December 2007 whereas the CLU was calculated in February 2008 and it is not clear whether this made any difference.
VII. HAS LEA SUED THE WRONG PARTY?
(a) The test to be applied in identifying the counterparty to the contract
"175. The identity of the parties to a contract is fundamental. It is not simply a term or condition of the contract. It goes to the very existence of the contract itself. If it is uncertain, there is no contract. Like the nature and amount of the consideration and the intention to create legal relations it is a question of fact and may be established by evidence. Such evidence is admissible even where the contract is in writing, at least so long as it does not contradict its express terms, and possibly even where it does: see Young v Schuler (1883) 11 QBD 651, Chitty on Contracts 28th ed. p 633. ….
176. Where a contract is contained in a signed and written document, the process of ascertaining the identity of the parties and the capacity in which they entered into the contract must begin with the signatures and any accompanying statement which describes the capacity in which the persons who appended their signatures did so. This may require interpretation, and to this extent the process may without inaccuracy be described as a process of construction. But it is not of the same order as the process of construing the detailed terms and conditions of the contract. These describe the incidents of the contract and the nature and extent of the parties' obligations to each other. But the identity of the parties themselves is not an incident of the contract. Where a signature is accompanied by a description of the capacity in which the signatory has appended his signature the description is not a term or condition of the contract. It is part of the signature and so part of the factual evidence of the identity of the party which is undertaking contractual liabilities under the contract."
(b) The factual indicators
was attached to the pre-contractual material as well.
"1.1 These Terms of Business apply to all designated investment business carried on by the Royal Bank of Scotland plc and National Westminster Bank plc together or, as the context may require, each being referred to as The Royal Bank of Scotland Financial Markets ("RBSFM") with or on behalf of you".
"1.1 These Terms of Business (the "Terms") apply to all designated investment business carried on by the Royal Bank of Scotland plc and National Westminster Bank plc together or, as the context may require, ("The Royal Bank of Scotland Corporate Markets", "we" or "us"), with you".
Discussion
"1.2 Our affiliates may act as agents for us and we may act as agent for one or more of our affiliates. This will be disclosed at or before the time of executing a transaction. It will also be recorded on the confirmation. These Terms shall apply unless our affiliate expressly requires otherwise."
VIII. CONCLUSION