Maple bond and Repurchase agreement: Difference between pages

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A Maple bond is a Canadian dollar-denominated bond issued in the Canadian domestic market by a non-Canadian borrower.
(Repo).  


1. ''Effective collateralisation by legal transfer of securities.''


:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Anglian Water's green corporate Maple bond'''''</span>
A form of secured borrowing, using a simultaneous agreement to:


:"The transaction stood out in a quieter year for new debt issuance because of a number of its distinguishing characteristics, including the green designation, the rarity value offered to investors by Anglian Water's first issuance in the Canadian market, and the attractive pricing that was achieved.  
(i) Sell securities at the start of the contract, and <br>
(ii) Buy them back later at a pre-agreed (higher) price at a fixed future date.


:Achievements include... first green Maple bond in Canadian market history."


:''The Treasurer online, 4 April 2023 - ACT Deals of the Year 2022: Bonds below £750m winner.''
The ''party selling securities'' (usually bonds, gilts, treasuries or other government or tradeable instruments) at the start of the contract is the ''borrower'', receiving cash at the start and tied to an agreement to buy the securities back at a specified later date and price.
 
In the event of the borrower's default, the lender (party providing the cash to the borrower) can sell the collateralised security to recoup some or all of its investment.
 
 
A reverse repurchase agreement (reverse repo) is the mirror image of the repo transaction, from the investor/lender’s view – and could logically have been called a “re-sale agreement”.
 
 
2. ''Collateralisation without legal transfer of securities.''
 
By extension, collateralised borrowing using securities as the collateral (without legal transfer of the securities).




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Bond]]
* [[Bilateral repurchase agreement]]
* [[Bulldog bond]]
* [[Cash in the new post-crisis world]]
* [[Dim sum bond]]
* [[Closing leg]]
* [[Foreign bond]]
* [[Global Master Repurchase Agreement]]
* [[Green bond]]
* [[Tri-party repurchase agreement]]
* [[Issuance]]
* [[Collateral]]
* [[Panda bond]]
* [[Haircut]]
* [[Samurai bond]]
* [[Monetisation]]
* [[Yankee bond]]
* [[Opening leg]]
* [[Repo rate]]
* [[Reverse repo rate]]
* [[Reverse repurchase agreement]]
* [[RONIA]]
* [[Securities Financing Transaction]]
* [[Securities Financing Transactions Regulation]]
* [[Security]]
 
 
===Other links===
[http://www.treasurers.org/node/8409 Repos - a sign of the times, ACT 2012]


[[Category:The_business_context]]
[http://www.treasurers.org/repos  ACT briefing note: Practical steps to investing in Repos ]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Investment]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 13:56, 20 November 2023

(Repo).

1. Effective collateralisation by legal transfer of securities.

A form of secured borrowing, using a simultaneous agreement to:

(i) Sell securities at the start of the contract, and
(ii) Buy them back later at a pre-agreed (higher) price at a fixed future date.


The party selling securities (usually bonds, gilts, treasuries or other government or tradeable instruments) at the start of the contract is the borrower, receiving cash at the start and tied to an agreement to buy the securities back at a specified later date and price.

In the event of the borrower's default, the lender (party providing the cash to the borrower) can sell the collateralised security to recoup some or all of its investment.


A reverse repurchase agreement (reverse repo) is the mirror image of the repo transaction, from the investor/lender’s view – and could logically have been called a “re-sale agreement”.


2. Collateralisation without legal transfer of securities.

By extension, collateralised borrowing using securities as the collateral (without legal transfer of the securities).


See also


Other links

Repos - a sign of the times, ACT 2012

ACT briefing note: Practical steps to investing in Repos