Carve-out and Mandate: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
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1. ''Documentation and regulation''. 
1.


A carve-out is a special exception.
An authoritative command or instruction, for example one given to a bank by its customer.


A carve-out can be used in the context of a loan agreement; a negative pledge might apply to all but specific subsidiaries. 


2.


Carve-outs might also be used in the context of regulation where, effectively, a section or sections might be dis-applied.
An account (or bank) mandate completed by a customer to open a new bank account. The mandate specifies which individuals in the customer organisation are authorised to act on the account, in what capacity and up to what limits.




2. ''Corporate finance''. 
3.


A transaction in which a holding company sells an equity interest in one of its subsidiary companies to external investors.
Agreements regulating the dealing relationship between an organisation and its counterparties, authorising people to conduct transactions, possibly applying limits to the size of deals and procedures concerning settlement, and regulating the opening and closing of transactions. 
 
Mandates are a key element of treasury [[controls]] and are an essential mechanism for reducing an organisation's dealing risk.
 
 
4.
 
A bond mandate.  




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Contract]]
* [[Board resolution]]
* [[Corporate finance]]
* [[Bond mandate]]
* [[Equity]]
* [[Exception]]
* [[Holding company]]
* [[Loan agreement]]
* [[Negative pledge]]
* [[Regulation]]
* [[Subsidiary]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Investment]]
[[Category:Cash_management]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Treasury_operations_infrastructure]]

Revision as of 11:38, 10 February 2017

1.

An authoritative command or instruction, for example one given to a bank by its customer.


2.

An account (or bank) mandate completed by a customer to open a new bank account. The mandate specifies which individuals in the customer organisation are authorised to act on the account, in what capacity and up to what limits.


3.

Agreements regulating the dealing relationship between an organisation and its counterparties, authorising people to conduct transactions, possibly applying limits to the size of deals and procedures concerning settlement, and regulating the opening and closing of transactions.

Mandates are a key element of treasury controls and are an essential mechanism for reducing an organisation's dealing risk.


4.

A bond mandate.


See also