Draft Delegated Act and Provision of information: Difference between pages

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''Sustainability - European Union - European Commission - Taxonomy Regulation.''
A provision of information covenant requires the borrower to provide information to enable the lender to monitor the borrower’s credit risk.  


Draft legislation to implement the EU's Taxonomy Regulation.  
Such information routinely includes copies of published financial information and circulars to shareholders. It is unlikely that treasurers will see any problem with this.




:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''More granularity'''</span>
Ideally from a corporate borrower's perspective, the borrower would only provide published information, but weaker credits are unlikely to be able to negotiate this. Generally the level of information required increases as the credit quality of the borrower falls, and can include budgets, forecasts and management accounts.


:Compared to the TEG’s March 2020 report, this Draft included more granularity for the classification of activities in manufacturing, energy, transport and building sector.  
Problems may arise when the borrower is a quoted company and the information sought is unpublished and therefore possibly price sensitive, especially if the lender is a universal bank conducting both lending and share dealing activities. Even though most banks will have internal 'Chinese walls' (barriers designed to prevent transfer of confidential information between departments), treasurers may wish to obtain additional confidentiality undertakings bearing in mind regulatory requirements imposing a ‘continuing obligation’ of the avoidance of a false market.


:Sub-categories have been created within existing sectors, in addition to newly created sectors such as “Information & communication”, “Professional, scientific & technical activities”, “Financial & insurance activities”, “Education”, “Human health & social work activities” and “Arts, entertainment & recreation”.


:''Association of Corporate Treasurers ESG blog, Naresh Aggarwal, Associate Director, Policy & Technical, 21 January 2021''.
Where non-bank lenders are involved in bank type lending arrangements, this issue of confidentiality becomes more extreme. While banks have established procedures for keeping information separate from different areas, non-banks do not have this sophistication. One solution is to restrict information to certain lenders to only published data and indeed some presentations are managed in two parts to deal with this.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[EU Taxonomy]]
* [[Covenant]]
* [[European Commission]]
* [[Financial covenant]]
* [[European Union]]
* [[Negative pledge]]
* [[Granular]]
* [[Non-financial covenant]]
* [[Taxonomy Regulation]]
* [[TEG]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Investment]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Ethics]]
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 15:40, 1 August 2015

A provision of information covenant requires the borrower to provide information to enable the lender to monitor the borrower’s credit risk.

Such information routinely includes copies of published financial information and circulars to shareholders. It is unlikely that treasurers will see any problem with this.


Ideally from a corporate borrower's perspective, the borrower would only provide published information, but weaker credits are unlikely to be able to negotiate this. Generally the level of information required increases as the credit quality of the borrower falls, and can include budgets, forecasts and management accounts.

Problems may arise when the borrower is a quoted company and the information sought is unpublished and therefore possibly price sensitive, especially if the lender is a universal bank conducting both lending and share dealing activities. Even though most banks will have internal 'Chinese walls' (barriers designed to prevent transfer of confidential information between departments), treasurers may wish to obtain additional confidentiality undertakings bearing in mind regulatory requirements imposing a ‘continuing obligation’ of the avoidance of a false market.


Where non-bank lenders are involved in bank type lending arrangements, this issue of confidentiality becomes more extreme. While banks have established procedures for keeping information separate from different areas, non-banks do not have this sophistication. One solution is to restrict information to certain lenders to only published data and indeed some presentations are managed in two parts to deal with this.


See also