LIBOR Phase-Out: Considerations for Oil & Gas Companies

By Shane Randolph and Jeff Nicholson
Opportune LLP

With over $370 trillion of global financial contracts referencing LIBOR (London Inter-bank Offered Rate), many oil and gas companies are curious about how the phase-out of LIBOR by 2021 could impact their organization. Many companies are beginning to ask how this transition will impact their organization and what steps can be taken now. The following is a discussion of:

• why LIBOR is being phased out;
• the transition plan for the phase-out;
• items companies should consider; and
• the steps that can be taken now.

Why is LIBOR Being Phased Out?
LIBOR has been the default local and international benchmark interest rate for a diverse range of financial products for decades. The rate is based on various banks’ proprietary observations rather than robust market transactions. This has left the rate vulnerable to manipulation and major rate-fixing scandals came to light starting in 2007. As a result, the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) decided that it will no longer compel banks to submit LIBOR estimates by the end of 2021.

What is the Transition Plan?
As a response to the issue in the U.S., the U.S. Federal Reserve Board (the “Fed”) convened the Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) in 2014 to establish a viable alternative to the U.S. dollar LIBOR. The ARRC determined in 2017 that the overnight indexed swap (OIS) rate based on the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), a broad treasury repurchase agreement financing rate used when banks borrow or loan treasuries overnight, would be its preferred alternative reference rate. Accordingly, the Fed began publishing the SOFR daily rate on April 3, 2018 to prepare for its use as a benchmark rate.

The current transition timeline proposed by AARC has SOFR being the primary replacement for LIBOR in the U.S. by the end of 2021. The table below shows the ARRC’s anticipated completion dates and milestones to be achieved by those dates.

There are concerns about utilizing SOFR as a benchmark rate, and it will take time for enough liquidity to develop in the SOFR market to alleviate concerns regarding its viability as a benchmark. One issue is that SOFR is a spot rate from the median of overnight transactions, and it is likely to vary materially from day-to-day. Another issue is that SOFR has only a one-day tenor, whereas LIBOR has many different tenors.

What Should Companies Consider?
Companies should inventory all agreements that reference LIBOR. Also, when executing new agreements, management should carefully consider language addressing alternative or fallback rates if LIBOR is unable to be determined. If contracts are not amended to include alternative rates or fallback provisions in the absence of LIBOR before the relevant LIBOR index is discontinued, it could cause settlement issues or render contracts invalid.

From an accounting and financial reporting standpoint, the impact could be substantial. The primary areas affected include hedge accounting and accounting for debt modifications. In addition, discount rates for impairment testing, lease accounting, asset retirement obligations and fair value estimates will need to be assessed. Fortunately, both the U.S. and international accounting regulatory bodies, FASB and IASB, appear to be aligned and will provide significant relief for the transition, particularly in the areas of hedge accounting and debt modifications. As of now, the actions by the FASB and IASB are tentative proposals, but additional guidance should be provided by the end of 2019.

What Steps Can Be Taken Now?
At this stage in the process, companies should increase organizational awareness, carefully monitor the execution of new agreements referencing LIBOR and create an inventory of existing agreements and valuation models.

Increasing organizational awareness will be key for the transition away from LIBOR. While some may be aware of the impending LIBOR replacement, there may be a lack of appreciation of how broadly the event will impact the organization beyond hedging and debt activities. Increasing awareness throughout the organization will also assist in monitoring the execution of new agreements referencing LIBOR.

In summary, the replacement of LIBOR will have a significant impact globally. Oil and gas companies are encouraged to consider the impact to their organization and take steps to assess existing agreements and carefully monitor the execution of new agreements.

As a Managing Director at Opportune, Shane Randolph assists companies and financial institutions throughout North America, South America, Europe and Asia-Pacific in their understanding of what is possible as they deal with the challenges of implementing risk management programs and highly technical accounting pronouncements. He oversees the risk management, derivatives, stock-based compensation and complex securities service offerings of Opportune. He assists clients with the entire risk management life cycle, including strategy, execution, compliance, valuation and hedge accounting. He has undergraduate and graduate degrees in accounting from Oklahoma State University. He also is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and maintains a Series 3 Securities License.

Jeff Nicholson is a Senior Consultant in the complex securities, hedging and stock-based compensation practice of Opportune LLP. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Business Administration and Management from the University of Colorado, Boulder and a Graduate degree in Finance from the University of Colorado, Denver.

 

 




Recent Case Law Focuses on Drafting Considerations in Payments Contracts

Credit cardThe Blockchain & Financial Services Blog of Frost Brown Todd features a discussion in which a court ruled that where a contract between a credit card processor and its sale agent had conflicting clauses, the clause should be read in favor of the sales agent, resulting in the credit card processor being liable for withholding residual payments.

Courtney Rogers Perrin writes about Infinity Capital LLC v. Francis David Corp., from the Northern District of Ohio.

The ruling offers a lesson in contract drafting and the need for clear, non-contradictory provisions, as well as enforceable damages clauses, according to Perrin.

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Sidley Among Firms Settling Claims Over Their Work for Client Involved in ‘Ponzi-Like’ Scheme

Law firm Sidley Austin was one of the professional services firms that reached a proposed $234 million settlement July 10 in a class-action case alleging links to Aequitas Securities LLC’s “Ponzi-like” scheme, reports Bloomberg Law.

A plaintiff’s firm said the settlement is the largest ever for a securities lawsuit in Oregon.

The case was brought by investors in Aequitas Securities, which unraveled in early 2016 when the Securities and Exchange Commission said the once high-flying investment management firm was operating “in a Ponzi-like fashion.” Rather than investing clients’ funds in new assets, new clients were found to pay out older ones, the SEC’s complaint said.

Plaintiffs said Sidley provided legal advice for Aequitas’ securities offerings since as early as 2014.

Read the Bloomberg Law article.

 

 




Former GC Charged With Defrauding Failed New Orleans Bank

First NBC Bank’s former top lawyer was charged in federal court with conspiracy to defraud the New Orleans bank, which failed two years ago in the biggest U.S. bank collapse since the 2008 financial crisis, reports The New Orleans Advocate.

“Gregory St. Angelo served as First NBC’s general counsel for a decade until 2016, and during that time, he took out loans totaling tens of millions of dollars from the bank, many of which went into default,” according to the Advocate‘s Tony McAuley.

Prosecutors alleged that St. Angelo and two other bank officers conspired to defraud the bank through various “false and fraudulent pretenses,” and that by the time of the bank’s collapse St. Angelo had obtained nearly $56 million in loans and other advances.

Read the Advocate article.

 

 




Citigroup Pays $12 Million to Settle Dark Pool Probe

Image by Mike Mozart

Reuters is reporting that Citigroup Inc. on Friday was ordered to pay more than $12 million by U.S. regulators after it was found that the bank’s investment banking and financial advisory unit misled users of a “dark pool” operated by one of its affiliates.

The article explains:

The bank will pay a penalty of $6.5 million and disgorgement and prejudgment interest totaling $5.4 million, while its affiliate, Citi Order Routing and Execution (CORE), will pay a penalty of $1 million, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said in a statement.

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Recovering Data Breach Losses from Non-Contractual Parties

A post on Dykema’s The Firewall blog considers the question: Who bears the loss from a breach perpetrated by a data breach fraudster: the consumer whose data was compromised, the financial institution where the data was used, or the business that failed to protect the data?

The author, David B. West, writes that the answer depends on which law applies.

“While statutes require banks and their vendors to protect customers’ Personally Identifiable Information (“PII”), the obligation of other businesses to do so is not as well defined,” West explains. “Regulatory obligations to protect data vary by industry and geography.”

He also discusses relying on common law for data breach losses, recovering damages, and the need for consistent ability to recover losses.

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Banks Cannot Skirt Contract Remedies in Data Breach Suit Against Retail Merchant

Credit cardAttempting to advance a novel theory of law, several banks filed a class action in Illinois federal court against a grocery store chain arising out of a data breach that resulted in the theft of 2.4 million credit and debit cards, reports Jackson Lewis PC.

After the breach, the banks were required to issue new cards and reimburse its customers as required by federal law for financial losses due to unauthorized purchases, estimated by the plaintiffs to be in the tens of millions of dollars. With the litigation, the financial institutions sought to recover some of their costs from the grocery store chain that was allegedly responsible for the loss of the data.

Jeffrey M. Schlossberg explains the outcome: “Despite seemingly compelling arguments, the Seventh Circuit ultimately upheld the lower court’s dismissal of the banks’ claims finding that they were bound by the contractual provisions of their agreements. Essentially, the court ruled, by joining the credit card system, the banks accepted some risk of not being fully reimbursed for the costs of another party’s mistakes.”

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GC Roles at Large Banks Went Mostly to Women in 2017

The ranks of women general counsel in the Fortune 500 continued to grow in 2017, particularly in the financial services industry, though it remains more male-dominated than other sectors, according to a Bloomberg Law report.

Cynthia Dow, head of the legal officers practice at executive search firm Russell Reynolds Associates, told Bloomberg that, of the 86 financial services companies in the Fortune 500, 11 hired new general counsel in 2017. And six of those were women.

“Despite the significant bump in 2017, women still lag behind in Fortune 500 financial services GC roles, making up only 22 percent, according to Dow,” writes Stephanie Russell-Kraft.

Read the Bloomberg Law article.

 

 




Commentary: Wells Fargo’s Board Members Are Getting Off Too Easy

When the Federal Reserve announced its punishment of Wells Fargo in the company’s sales scandal, the agency also announced that the company would replace four members of its 16-person board.

In a commentary for The Washington Post, former treasury secretary Lawrence Summers discussed the question: Why aren’t the directors who are leaving being named and asked to resign effective immediately with an element of humiliation?

“There are compelling reasons for due process before anyone goes to jail, even if it undermines deterrence,” Summers writes. “There is no similar justification for due process before being fired, publicly, for being a failed fiduciary. The Fed and other regulatory agencies should change their procedures.”

Read the Post article.

 

 




SEC Halts Dallas-Based Bank’s Cryptocurrency Sale – But Not Before It Says It Raised $600 Million

BitcoinDallas-based AriseBank — intended to be the world’s first “decentralized bank” —  saw its initial offering of a cryptocurrency it called AriseCoin shut down before it could get off the ground, reports The Dallas Morning News.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has halted the sale of AriseCoin, saying it was all part of a more straightforward, old-fashioned investment scam, according to economy writer Jill Cowan.

“Attempting to conceal what we allege to be fraudulent securities offerings under the veneer of technological terms like ‘ICO’ or ‘cryptocurrency’ will not escape the commission’s oversight or its efforts to protect investors,” Shamoil T. Shipchandler, director of the SEC’s Fort Worth Regional Office, said in a statement.

The company company had said it raised $600 million ahead of its initial offering of the new currency.

Read the Dallas News article.

 

 

 




Insurance Giant Receives New York Subpoena on Sales Practices

The New York Times is reporting that New York’s attorney general has subpoenaed TIAA, the giant insurance company and investment firm, seeking documents and information relating to its sales practices, according to people briefed on the inquiry.

Last month, the newspaper raised questions about the firm’s sales methods. TIAA oversees almost $1 trillion in client assets, for more than four million workers at thousands of nonprofits, according to reporter Gretchen Morgenson.

A related SEC complaint was filed by former TIAA employees who contend they were pressured to sell products that generated more revenue for the firm but were more costly to clients while adding little value.

Read the NYT article.




Feds Accuse Georgia GC of Helping Orchestrate Client’s Ponzi Scheme

A civil complaint filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission alleges that the general counsel for Credit Nation Capital was an “active participant” in fleecing elderly and unsophisticated investors out of their savings, reports the Atlanta Journal Constitution.

Reporter Johnny Edwards writes that Celello is accused of fraud, aiding and abetting and routing investors’ money into his own pocket.

Last year a federal judge effectively dismantled a Credit Nation network of investment companies, subprime auto loan businesses and limited liability companies, and a court-appointed receiver is currently trying to return some $10 million to dozens of investors who lost an estimated $61 million, according to Edwards.

Read the Journal Constitution‘s article.

 

 

 




New U.S. Rule on Class Actions Survives First Challenge

CFPB - Consumer Financial Protection BureauA new U.S. rule aimed at restoring consumers’ ability to band together to sue financial companies has survived its first challenge, as a top banking regulator said he would not petition for it to be suspended, Reuters reports

Lisa Lambert and Pete Schroeder write that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s rule abolishing “mandatory arbitration clauses” was released on July 10, and was immediately threatened by Republicans in Congress and President Donald Trump’s administration.

Acting U.S. Comptroller of the Currency Keith Noreika publicly argued with CFPB Director Richard Cordray, appointed by former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, over whether the rule could endanger the banking system.

Read the Reuters report.

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HSBC, UBS Settle U.S. Rate-Rigging Litigation; 10 Banks’ Total Payout Tops $408 Million

Bank sign

Image by Mark Moz

Reuters is reporting that HSBC Holdings Plc and UBS Group AG have each agreed to pay $14 million to settle private U.S. litigation accusing them of rigging an interest rate benchmark used in the $483 trillion derivatives market.

If approved by the judge overseeing the case, the settlements would boost the total payout from 10 settling banks to $408.5 million. HSBC and UBS denied wrongdoing.

“Several pension funds and municipalities had accused 14 banks of conspiring to rig the ISDAfix benchmark for their own gain from at least 2009 to 2012,” writes reporter Jonathan Stempel.

Read the Reuters article.




Wells Fargo’s $142-Million Sham Accounts Settlement: What You Need to Know

A federal judge has signed off on a deal under which Wells Fargo & Co. will pay $142 million to settle a bevy of class-action lawsuits over the bank’s creation of unauthorized accounts.

The Los Angeles Times offers some answers to typical questions that consumers may have about the settlement and what it can mean for the customer individually.

Reporter James Rufus Koren writes that Keller Rohrback, the lawyers who negotiated the settlement with the banking company, will ask the court for $21.3 millions, which amounts to 15 percent of the total settlement fund.

The article answers such questions as: Am I eligible? How much will I get? How do I sign up? What if I want to sue the bank? When will I get paid?

Read the Times article.

 

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Madden Remand Muddles Contract Law: SDNY Decision or Sign of National Trend?

A recent ruling by a U.S. district court’s in New York is another example of a court using public policy reasons to override voluntarily entered into contractual choice-of-law provisions, according to an article published by Paul Hastings LLP.

The court ruled in the remand of Madden v. Midland Funding, LLC that New York’s fundamental public policy against usury overrode a credit card agreement’s Delaware choice-of-law provision, write Thomas P. Brown, Lawrence D. Kaplan, Gerald S. Sachs, Amanda M. Kowalski and Laura E. Bain.

Madden is the latest decision to look past the contractual agreement of the parties to apply state usury and other consumer protection requirements to consumer credit and collections activity. Various courts have taken up some version of the issues presented in Madden, but none have held that bank originated loans sold are subject to interest rate determinations based on the location of collection (as opposed to the location of origination),” according to the article.

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JPMorgan Software Does in Seconds What Took Lawyers 360,000 Hours

A new JPMorgan Chase & Co. a learning machine  called COIN, for Contract Intelligence, is parsing financial deals that once kept legal teams busy for thousands of hours, according to a Bloomberg report.

The company uses the technology to interpret commercial-loan agreements that formerly consumed 360,000 hours of work each year by lawyers and loan officers. The software reviews documents in seconds, is less error-prone and never asks for vacation, writes Hugh Son.

“Made possible by investments in machine learning and a new private cloud network, COIN is just the start for the biggest U.S. bank,” Son explains. “The firm recently set up technology hubs for teams specializing in big data, robotics and cloud infrastructure to find new sources of revenue, while reducing expenses and risks.”

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Current Trends in Loan Terms: Large Cap and Middle Market Loans

Banking -financePractical Law will present a complimentary webinar discussing how current market conditions are affecting loan agreement terms and about the factors that are likely to influence loan agreement negotiations in 2017.

The event will be Wednesday, March 8, at 1 p.m. EST.

Practical Law and experts from Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP and Thompson & Knight LLP will participate in the 75-minute webinar. During this session, the presenters will explain the effects of prevailing market forces on the large corporate and middle market segments of the US loan market and discuss arguments commonly raised in loan agreement negotiations.

Discussions will also include:
-A review of market activity from a rollercoaster 2016.
-The impact of the current pricing environment.
-Developments in unitranche lending.
-A look at the continually evolving composition of underwriting groups.
-The current state of oil & gas lending.

A short question-and-answer session will follow.

Presenters:
Cassandra Mott, Partner, Thompson & Knight LLP
Jason Kyrwood, Partner, Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
Tim Fanning, Senior Legal Editor, Practical Law Finance (Moderator)

Register for the webinar.

 

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Judge Nixes $360-An-Hour Fees For ‘Associates’ Who Looked More Like Temps

A federal judge whacked $10 million from the fee request of a class-action firm that negotiated a $335 million settlement of mortgage-backed securities claims against Bank of America, saying it was based on the work of short-term “associates” who appeared to function as contract attorneys, reports Forbes.

In his order, U.S. District Judge William Pauley awarded $41.3 million in fees and $1.4 million in expenses for their work on the case, or about 12% of the sum they negotiated for their clients.

The 26 Barrack associates, 16 of whom were labeled “temporary associates hired exclusively on the BOA case, “represented 40% of the billable hours and $10.8 million in fees at $362.50 an hour — well above the prevailing rate for contract attorneys of less than $50 an hour,” writes Forbes’ Daniel Fisher.

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GOP Banking Chair: Dodd-Frank Dismantling is First-Year Priority for Trump

Jeb Hensarling
Image by Gage Skidmore

Dismantling President Obama’s financial reform law is not a priority for President-elect Trump’s first 100 days, the author of GOP legislation to undo the law said Thursday, but it is a task for Trump’s first year, reports The Washington Examiner.

Jeb Hensarling, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said he’s discussed ditching the law with Trump, writes Joseph Lawler.

“The president-elect committed to dismantle Dodd-Frank. It’s going to happen in the first year.”

Hensarling has said that some of the law could be dismantled through executive action and more could be undone using budget reconciliation.

Read the Examiner article.

 

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