Corporations Amendment Regulations 2002 (No. 7) 2002 No. 182
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Statutory Rules 2002 No. 182
Issued by the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer
Corporations Act 2001
Corporations Amendment Regulations 2002 (No. 7)
Section 1364 of the Corporations Act 2001 (the Act) provides that the
Governor-General may make regulations prescribing matters required or permitted
by the Act to be prescribed by regulations or necessary or convenient to be
prescribed by such regulations for carrying out or giving effect to the Act.
Section 1368, among other things, provides that the regulations may, subject to
any prescribed terms and conditions, provide that specified provisions of
Chapter 7 (which relates to financial services and markets) do not have effect
in relation to a specified class of transactions entered into by a specified
person.
The purpose of the Regulations is to exempt specified operations of CLS Bank
International (CLS) from the provisions of the Act that regulate clearing and
settlement facilities on the basis that regulation under these provisions is
inappropriate. It is inappropriate because the proposed operations of CLS that
are exempted are in the nature of a payment system, rather than a clearing and
settlement facility. An example of a typical clearing and settlement facility
is a facility that assists in the transfer of cash and securities to settle
securities transactions entered into on a stock exchange.
Regulations have also been made declaring CLS's proposed system for the
settlement of payment instructions arising from foreign exchange transactions
to be a netting market for the purposes of Part 5 of the Payment Systems and
Netting Act 1998.
CLS will provide continuous linked settlement service that simultaneously
settles both payments under a foreign exchange transaction - for example, A and
B may have agreed to exchange A$50 million for US$25 million. The service will
eliminate the risk that can occur when each leg of a foreign exchange
transaction is settled separately - that is, one payment could be made and the
corresponding payment not received.
CLS will be regulated by the United States Federal Reserve System, in
consultation with a number of international central banks, including the
Reserve Bank of Australia. It is proposed that initially CLS will settle
payment instructions in the following currencies: Australian Dollar, Canadian
Dollar, Euro, Japanese Yen, Swiss Franc, UK Pound Sterling and US Dollar.
Subregulation 9.12.02(1) will exempt certain operations of CLS from:
• Part 7.3 of the Act which requires that clearing
and settlement facilities be licensed; and
• section 794E of the Act, which empowers ASIC to
give directions to a clearing and settlement facility which provides services
to a licensed market where there is disorderly trading.
The operations exempted are those currently proposed - the settlement of
non-cash payments in various currencies. The operations proposed are therefore
in the nature of a payments system, and distinct from those of a typical
clearing house connected with a stock or futures exchange.
Any other operations of CLS will not be exempted from these provisions.
The exemption is subject to the conditions specified in subregulations
9.12.02(3) to (6) (subregulation 9.12.02(2)). They relate to:
• the continued regulation of CLS as a bank by the
Federal Reserve System of the United States of America and under section 25A of
the Federal Reserve Act (subregulation 9.12.02(3));
• the class of Australian entities which can be
participants (they must be regulated by the Australian Prudential Regulation
Authority and it must not be used by retail clients - subregulation
9.12.02(4));
• the matters that CLS must advise the Reserve Bank
of Australia (including when an Australian entity requests to become a
participant in the facility) -subregulation 9.12.02(5).
Subregulation 9.12.02(6) provides definitions of three relevant terms -
'Australian entity', material regulatory action' and 'participant'.
The Regulations commenced on gazettal.