Updated: 12/28/2015
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) adopted revisions to Regulation AB on August 27, 2014, after a four year process of proposals and review. Regulation AB is the rule that governs the offering disclosure and periodic reporting obligations of issuers of asset-backed securities (“ABS”).
Insofar as covered bonds are concerned, several things are clear. First, covered bonds are not included in the definition of “asset-backed security.” Item 1101 of Regulation AB provides that:
Asset-backed security means a security that is primarily serviced by the cash flows of a discrete pool of receivables or other financial assets, either fixed or revolving, that by their terms convert into cash within a finite time period, plus any rights or other assets designed to assure the servicing or timely distributions of proceeds to the security holders; provided that in the case of financial assets that are leases, those assets may convert to cash partially by the cash proceeds from the disposition of the physical property underlying such leases.
It is clear that covered bonds are not “primarily serviced by the cash flows of a discrete pool of receivables or other financial assets.” Instead, covered bonds are senior obligations of the issuing financial institution and are expected to be repaid from the general funds of the institution. Accordingly, covered bonds should not be asset-backed securities and Regulation AB should not apply generally to covered bonds.