Escrow: Difference between revisions
From ACT Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson m (Add link.) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Add link.) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
:''The Treasurer's Wiki - Derivatives documentation'' | :''The Treasurer's Wiki - Derivatives documentation'' | ||
3. ''Bank accounts.'' | |||
Escrow accounts are bank accounts that hold funds owned by another party, separately from other assets. | |||
Line 27: | Line 32: | ||
* [[Derivatives documentation]] | * [[Derivatives documentation]] | ||
* [[Escrow account]] | * [[Escrow account]] | ||
* [[Estoppel]] | |||
* [[ISDA Master Agreement]] | * [[ISDA Master Agreement]] | ||
* [[Law]] | * [[Law]] | ||
* [[Offset]] | |||
* [[Provision]] | * [[Provision]] | ||
* [[Trust account]] | * [[Trust account]] |
Latest revision as of 12:42, 8 March 2022
1. Law - deeds.
A deed that has been delivered, but that is not to become operative until a future date, or until a specified condition has been fulfilled.
2. Contract law.
Funds or documents in escrow are held by a trusted independent third party, to be released only on the fulfilment of prespecified conditions.
- ISDA Master Agreements - other provisions
- "... extra provision required by the parties... may include:
- escrow provisions to address potential problems arising from time differences between the places to which each party makes payments (i.e. one party could make a payment at the time it is obliged to do so in the relevant time zone but then fail to receive payment due to it from the other party); in this situation provision can be made for a third party to hold payments “in escrow” and only release a payment when it has received the corresponding payment from the other party."
- The Treasurer's Wiki - Derivatives documentation
3. Bank accounts.
Escrow accounts are bank accounts that hold funds owned by another party, separately from other assets.