Financial Sector (Collection of Data) (reporting standard) determination No. 35 of 2008 ARS 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing (Cth)
Financial Sector (Collection of Data) (reporting standard) determination No. 35 of 2008
Reporting standard ARS 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing
Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001
I, Wayne Stephen Byres, a delegate of APRA, under paragraph 13(1)(a) of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 (the Act) and subsection 33(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901:
REVOKE Reporting Standard ARS 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing made by Financial Sector (Collection of Data) (reporting standard) determination No. 23 of 2006; and
DETERMINE Reporting Standard ARS 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing in the form set out in the Schedule, which applies to financial sector entities to the extent provided in paragraph 2 of the reporting standard.
Under section 15 of the Act, I DECLARE that the reporting standard shall begin to apply to those financial sector entities, and the revoked reporting standard shall cease to apply, on the later of 1 April 2008 and the date of registration of this instrument on the Federal Register of Legislative Instruments.
Dated 4th February 2008
[Signed]
Wayne Byres
Executive General Manager
Diversified Institutions Division
Interpretation
In this Determination
APRA means the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority.
Federal Register of Legislative Instruments means the register established under section 20 of the Legislative Instruments Act 2003.
Schedule
Reporting Standard Reporting Standard ARS 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing comprises the 11 pages commencing on the following page.
Reporting Standard ARS 320.5
Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing
Objective of this reporting standard
This reporting standard is made under section 13 of the Financial Sector (Collection of Data) Act 2001 and outlines the overall requirements for the provision of information to APRA relating to securities subject to repurchase and resale and stock lending and borrowing. It should be read in conjunction with Form ARF 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing and the associated instructions (both of which are attached and form part of this reporting standard).
Purpose
Data collected in Form ARF 320.5 Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing (Form ARF 320.5) is used by APRA for the purpose of prudential supervision. It may also be used by the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Application
This reporting standard applies to an authorised deposit-taking institution (ADI) as set out in the table below.
Class of ADI Applicable Australian-owned Bank Yes Foreign Subsidiary Bank Yes Branch of a Foreign Bank Yes Building Society No Credit Union No Specialist Credit Card Institution (SCCI) No Other ADI Yes
Information required
An ADI to which this reporting standard applies must provide APRA with the information required by Form ARF 320.5 for each reporting period.
Form and method of submission
The information required by this reporting standard must be given to APRA in electronic form, using one of the electronic submission mechanisms provided by the ‘Direct to APRA’ (also known as ‘D2A’) application.
Note: the Direct to APRA application software may be obtained from APRA.
Reporting periods and due dates
Subject to paragraph 6, an ADI to which this reporting standard applies must provide the information required by this reporting standard for each quarter based on the financial year (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) of the ADI.
APRA may, by notice in writing, change the reporting periods, or specified reporting periods, for a particular ADI, to require it to provide the information required by this reporting standard more frequently, or less frequently, having regard to:
(a)the particular circumstances of the ADI;
(b)the extent to which the information is required for the purposes of the prudential supervision of the ADI; and
(c)the requirements of the Reserve Bank of Australia or the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
The information required by this reporting standard must be provided to APRA by 20 business days after the end of the reporting period to which it relates.
APRA may grant an ADI an extension of a due date in writing, in which case the new due date for the provision of the information will be the date on the notice of extension.
Authorisation
All information provided by an ADI under this reporting standard must be subject to processes and controls developed by the ADI for the internal review and authorisation of that information. It is the responsibility of the board and senior management of the ADI to ensure that an appropriate set of policies and procedures for the authorisation of data submitted to APRA is in place.
If an ADI submits information under this reporting standard using the ‘Direct to APRA’ software, it will be necessary for an officer of the ADI to digitally sign, authorise and encrypt the relevant data. For this purpose, APRA’s certificate authority will issue ‘digital certificates’, for use with the software, to officers of the ADI who have authority from the ADI to transmit the data to APRA.
Minor alterations to forms and instructions
APRA may make minor variations to:
(a)a form that is part of this reporting standard, and the instructions to such a form, to correct technical, programming or logical errors, inconsistencies or anomalies; or
(b)the instructions to a form, to clarify their application to the form
without changing any substantive requirement in the form or instructions.
If APRA makes such a variation it must notify in writing each ADI that is required to report under this reporting standard.
Transitional
An ADI must report under the old reporting standard in respect of a transitional reporting period. For these purposes:
old reporting standard means the reporting standard revoked in the determination making this reporting standard (being the reporting standard which this reporting standard replaces).
transitional reporting period means a reporting period under the old reporting standard:
(a)which ended before the date of revocation of the old reporting standard; and
(b)in relation to which the ADI was required, under the old reporting standard, to report by a date on or after the date of revocation of the old reporting standard.
Note: for the avoidance of doubt, if an ADI was required to report under an old reporting standard, and the reporting documents were due before the date of revocation of the old reporting standard, the ADI is still required to provide the overdue reporting documents in accordance with the old reporting standard.
Interpretation
In this reporting standard:
ADI means an authorised deposit-taking institution within the meaning of the Banking Act 1959.
APRA means the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority established under the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Act 1998.
Australian-owned bank means a locally incorporated ADI that assumes or uses the word ‘bank’ in relation to its banking business and is not a foreign subsidiary bank.
branch of a foreign bank means a ‘foreign ADI’ as defined in section 5 of the Banking Act 1959, but does not include a SCCI that is a foreign ADI.
building society means a locally incorporated ADI that assumes or uses the expression ‘building society’ in relation to its banking business.
business days means ordinary business days, exclusive of Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays.
class of ADI means each of the following:
(i)Australian-owned bank;
(ii)foreign subsidiary bank;
(iii)branch of a foreign bank;
(iv)building society;
(v)credit union;
(vi)other ADI; and
(vii)specialist credit card institution.
credit union means a locally incorporated ADI that assumes or uses the expression ‘credit union’ in relation to its banking business and includes Cairns Penny Savings & Loans Limited.
due date means the relevant due date under paragraph 7 or, if applicable, paragraph 8.
foreign subsidiary bank means a locally incorporated ADI in which a bank that is not locally incorporated has a stake of more than 15 per cent.
locally incorporated means incorporated in Australia or in a State or Territory of Australia, by or under a Commonwealth, State or territory law.
other ADI means an ADI that is not an Australian-owned bank, a branch of a foreign bank, a building society, a credit union, a foreign subsidiary bank or a specialist credit card institution but does not include Cairns Penny Savings & Loans Limited.
reporting period means a period mentioned in paragraph 5 or, if applicable, paragraph 6.
specialist credit card institution means an ADI that is subject to a condition on its authority under section 9 of the Banking Act 1959 confining the banking business that the ADI is authorised to carry on to the activities of credit card acquiring and credit card issuing in any credit card scheme that was designated as a payment system under section 11 of the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998 on 11 April 2001.
stake means a stake determined under the Financial Sector (Shareholdings) Act 1998, as if the only associates that were taken into account under paragraph (b) of subclause 10(1) of the Schedule to that Act were those set out in paragraphs (h), (j) and (l) of subclause 4(1).
Reporting Form ARF 320.5
Securities Subject to Repurchase and Resale and Stock Lending and Borrowing
Instruction Guide
General directions and notes
Reporting entity
This form is to be completed by all Australian-owned banks and foreign subsidiary banks, branches of foreign banks and other authorised deposit-taking institutions (ADIs) on a Domestic books basis.
The Domestic books of Australian-owned banks and foreign subsidiary banks, branches of foreign banks and other ADIs relates to the Australian books of the Australian ADI and has the following scope:
is an unconsolidated report of the Australian licensed ADI's operations/transactions that are booked inside Australia;
exclude offshore branches of the Australian licensed ADI from this reporting unit;
exclude offshore banking units based overseas from this reporting unit;
do not consolidate Australian and offshore controlled entities or associated entities that are not ADIs;
include Australian based offshore banking units of the licensed ADI; and
include transactions with non-residents recorded on Australian books.
Securitisation deconsolidation principle
Except as otherwise specified in these instructions, the following applies:
Where an ADI (or a member of its Level 2 consolidated group) participates in a securitisation that meets APRA’s operational requirements for regulatory capital relief under Prudential Standard APS 120 Securitisation (APS 120):
(a)special purpose vehicles (SPVs) holding securitised assets may be treated as non-consolidated independent third parties for regulatory reporting purposes, irrespective of whether the SPVs (or their assets) are consolidated for accounting purposes;
(b)the assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses of the relevant SPVs may be excluded from the ADI’s reported amounts in APRA’s regulatory reporting returns; and
(c)the underlying exposures (i.e. the pool) under such a securitisation may be excluded from the calculation of the ADI’s regulatory capital (refer to APS 120). However, the ADI must still hold regulatory capital for the securitisation exposures[1] that it retains or acquires and such exposures are to be reported in Form ARF 120.0 Standardised – Securitisation or Forms ARF 120.1A to ARF 120.1C IRB – Securitisation (as appropriate). The RWA relating to such securitisation exposures must also be reported in Form ARF 110.0 Capital Adequacy (ARF 110.0).
[1] Securitisation exposures are defined in accordance with APS 120.
Where an ADI (or a member of its Level 2 consolidated group) participates in a securitisation that does not meet APRA’s operational requirements for regulatory capital relief under APS 120, or the ADI elects to treat the securitised assets as on-balance sheet assets under Prudential Standard APS 112 Capital Adequacy: Standardised Approach to Credit Risk or Prudential Standard APS 113 Capital Adequacy: Internal Ratings-based Approach to Credit Risk, such exposures are to be reported as on-balance sheet assets in APRA’s regulatory reporting returns. In addition, these exposures must also be reported as a part of the ADI’s total securitised assets within Form ARF 120.2 Securitisation – Supplementary Items.
Reporting period
The form is to be completed as at the last day of the stated reporting quarter. Australian-owned banks, foreign subsidiary banks, branches of foreign banks and other ADIs should submit the completed form to APRA within 20 business days after the end of the relevant reporting quarter.
Unit of measurement
Australian-owned banks, foreign subsidiary banks and branches of foreign banks are asked to complete the form in millions of Australian dollars rounded to one decimal place. Other ADIs are asked to complete the form in whole Australian dollars (no decimal place).
Amounts denominated in foreign currency are to be converted to AUD in accordance with AASB 121 The Effects of Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates (AASB 121).
The general requirements of AASB 121 for translation are:
foreign currency monetary items outstanding at the reporting date must be translated at the spot rate at the reporting date;[2]
[2] Monetary items are defined to mean units of currency held and assets and liabilities to be received or paid in a fixed or determinable number of units of currency. Spot rate means the exchange rate for immediate delivery.
foreign currency non-monetary items that are measured at historical cost in a foreign currency must be translated using the exchange rate at the date of the transaction;[3]
[3] Examples of non-monetary items include amounts prepaid for goods and services (e.g. prepaid rent); goodwill; intangible assets; physical assets; and provisions that are to be settled by the delivery of a non-monetary asset.
foreign currency non-monetary items that are measured at fair value will be translated at the exchange rate at the date when fair value was determined.
Transactions arising under foreign currency derivative contracts at the reporting date must be prepared in accordance with AASB 139 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement (AASB 139). However, those foreign currency derivatives that are not within the scope of AASB 139 (e.g. some foreign currency derivatives that are embedded in other contracts) remain within the scope of AASB 121.
For APRA purposes equity items must be translated using the foreign currency exchange rate at the date of investment or acquisition. Post acquisition changes in equity are required to be translated on the date of the movement.
As foreign currency derivatives are measured at fair value, the currency derivative contracts are translated at the spot rate at the reporting date.
Exchange differences should be recognised in profit and loss in the period which they arise. For foreign currency derivatives, the exchange differences would be recognised immediately in profit and loss if the hedging instrument is a fair value hedge. For derivatives used in a cash flow hedge, the exchange differences should be recognised directly in equity.
The ineffective portion of the exchange differences in all hedges would be recognised in profit and loss; and
translation of financial reports of foreign operations.
A foreign operation is defined in AASB 121 as meaning an entity that is a subsidiary, associate, joint venture or branch of a reporting entity, the activities of which are based or conducted in a country or currency other than those of the reporting entity.
·Exchange differences relating to foreign currency monetary items that form part of the net investment of an entity in a foreign operation, must be recognised as a separate component of equity.
·Translation of financial reports should otherwise follow the requirements in AASB 121.
Timing
Report assets and liability positions as at the date of change of ownership.
Netting
Unless otherwise specifically stated, institutions are to comply with the prerequisite for netting outlined in Australian accounting standards AASB 139 and AASB 132 Financial Instruments: Disclosure and Presentation and AASB 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures and any relevant prudential standards.
Term to maturity
References to term to maturity in this form are references to original term to maturity
Valuation and currency conversion
Closing balances should be reported at market price effective at the reference date. Where denominated in foreign currency, market values in foreign currency should be converted to AUD at the spot rate effective as at the reference date.
Basis of preparation
Unless otherwise specifically stated, institutions are to comply with Australian accounting standards regarding the measurement of asset, liability and equity items.
Specific instructions
Refer to the sector definitions in the ARF 320.0 Statement of Financial Position (Domestic Books) instructions as a general guide for reporting by sector. In particular, care should be taken in reporting debt securities that appear to be issued by State, Territory and local government (and therefore classified on this form as "Other debt securities"), which may actually be issued by central borrowing authorities. State central borrowing authorities have taken over almost all bond issuance for funding required by State, Territory and local governments.
Securities subject to repurchase and resale and stock lending and borrowing
Repurchase/Resale agreements (repos) are undertaken for the purposes of liquidity management, increasing income generated from a security, and/or to minimise the cost of borrowing. Securities lending tends to take place to cover "short" positions in a security, and/or to increase income generated from a security. Repos and securities lending are very similar, with only a very fine division between the two types of transactions. In both cases the arrangement involves the transfer of legal ownership of securities (debt or equity) between the original holder and "borrower", including the right for the "borrower" to on-sell the securities. However, in both transactions, the market risk on the security and right to holding gains (and losses) and income generated by the security remains with the original holder. Repos and securities lending both occur at a specified price with a commitment to repurchase the same or similar securities at a fixed price on a future date, which is specified in the contract or available on demand. Primarily the difference between repos and securities lending transactions is that securities lending involves the payment of a fee to the "lender" as an incentive to agree to the transaction as it generates an additional return on the security. The fee is independent of any income that may be earned on the security. Repo transactions however generate interest income for the "borrower" although in certain circumstances where the cash provider ("borrower") as a specific need for a security, the borrowing rate could fall to zero.[4] Repos involve the provision of collateral and an exchange of cash whereas securities lending doesn't necessarily involve cash exchange or collateral.
[4] "The Macroeconomic Statistical Treatment of Reverse Transactions", Statistics Department, International Monetary Fund, Thirteenth Meeting of the IMF Committee on Balance of Payments Statistics, Washington DC, October 23-27 2000, BOPCOM-00/13.
Securities subject to repurchase and resale
Report all securities (debt and equity) held under resale agreements and due for repurchase at the end of the reference period by counterparty to the agreement. Report all securities at market value.
Separate repurchase/resale agreements, even when with the same counterparty, should not be netted against each other if they involve different security types.
Include:
reverse repos.
Stock lending and borrowing
Report all securities (debt and equity) borrowed and lent at the end of the reference period by counterparty to the agreement. Report all securities at market value.
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