Special purpose entities

Contents

What are special purpose entities?


Special purpose entities (SPE) (often referred to as special purpose vehicles 'SPV') are usually created for a single, well-defined and narrow purpose. An SPE does not have a single defining characteristic but is generally identified by the single purpose nature and a number of common features. The SPE may have any one of a number of legal forms: corporation, partnership, trust, unincorporated entity or a multi-user structure such as a protected cell company [SIC-12.1] .

 

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The common features that identify an SPE are:

a) Auto-pilot arrangements that restrict the decision-making capacity of the governing board or management;
b) Use of professional directors, trustees or partners;
c) Thin capitalisation, the proportion of 'real' equity is too small to support the SPE's overall activities;
d) Absence of an apparent profit-making motive, such that the SPE is engineered to pay out all profits in the form of interest or fees;
e) Domiciled in 'offshore' capital havens;
f) Have a specified life;
g) Exist for financial engineering purposes; and
h) The creator or sponsor may transfer assets to the SPE, often as part of a derecognition transaction involving financial assets.

The presence of any of the features identified above does not automatically make an entity an SPE, nor does the absence of a feature or features mean that it is not an SPE. The decision about whether an entity is an SPE, and subsequently who controls it, is one of judgment requiring consideration of all relevant facts.

Pension plans and other long-term employee benefit plans within the scope of IAS19R are scoped out of SIC-12 and therefore are not dealt with in this chapter. Share based payments are not within the scope of IAS19R, thus SIC-12 must be considered when assessing SPEs used in employee share plans.




Control and consolidation of SPEs


Control and consolidation questions are not decided solely by legal ownership under IFRS. The substance of an SPE and its relationship to the various parties that participate in it will determine which party has control and thus should consolidate the SPE [SIC-12.8]. SIC-12 is an interpretation of IAS 27 and was written as an anti-abuse measure to prevent entities from manipulating financial statements through use of financial engineering. Application of SIC-12 results in consolidation of many vehicles that would have otherwise resulted in 'off-balance sheet' treatment .

Control may arise through the predetermination of the auto-pilot mechanism even where an entity owns less than half or even none of the SPE's 'voting' power. Application of the control concept requires a judgement of all relevant factors. Control is also presumed to exist where [SIC-12.10]:

a) the SPE's activities are being conducted on behalf of the entity according to its specific business needs, such that the entity obtains benefits from the SPE's operations;
b) the entity has the decision-making power to obtain the majority of the benefits from the SPE's activities or initiated creation of the SPE including setting up the 'autopilot' mechanism;
c) the entity has the right to obtain the majority of benefits from the SPE's activities and is therefore exposed to the risks incident to those activities; or
d) the entity retains a majority of the residual interest or ownership risks of the SPE or its assets.

The presence of any single factor above may mean that the reporting entity should consolidate the SPE . An SPE can be imagined where the majority of benefits might flow to one entity and a majority of risks be retained by another. However, this situation is unlikely to occur in practice, once the economic and commercial aspects of the SPE are well understood. Only one party should consolidate an SPE where more than one party has access to the benefits and is exposed to the risks of the SPE. Judgement must be exercised to determine which party controls the SPE (a greater share of the risks of the SPE may be indicative).



Analysis of benefits


The entity that obtains most of benefits from the SPE, or its activities are conducted such that the entity obtains benefits from it, are two potential indicators of control over an SPE [SIC-12.10(c)]. The requirement to look at both financial benefits and operational benefits is crucial and indicative of the breadth of SIC-12.

Some possible financial benefits are fees, reduced costs of borrowing or an ability to participate in the potential upside of the assets in a structure. Financial benefit encompasses both absolute income and reduction of costs. Another example of a financial benefit is where an entity is restricted by regulators from, say, writing credit derivatives, but wants to participate in the market and does so through an SPE, which gives it the same exposure in a legally acceptable form .

Operational benefits are where an SPE carries out research and development activities as an 'independent' foundation. The foundation may have been endowed by the entity, which has first rights to purchase any commercially viable products or processes . Alternatively, an SPE may be set up to re-purchase used office equipment from customers and resell it, or retire it, to ensure that cheap second-hand products do not depress the price of new equipment .


Analysis of risks


The entity that is exposed to the principal risks of the SPE may also be deemed to have control and thus be required to consolidate. Again, risks are not limited to strictly financial risks but can include operational risks as well. The types of financial risk that need to be considered are currency, interest rates, equity prices, credit risk and residual value risk. Where risks can be easily hedged in the market (such as currency and interest rate risk), this is often an auto-pilot requirement of the SPE and these risks are seldom its principal risks.

Financial risk is not measured in absolute terms but rather by reference to the variability of the outcome. A portfolio of factored receivables might have a 3% expected default risk. The party that takes on that risk has most of the variable return and thus most of the risks .

Operational risks arise where assets that have been derecognised to the SPE are still used in the entity's business. It may be that the entity has an obligation to maintain or renew the assets .

Residual or ownership risks


An entity will be required to consolidate an SPE when it has retained most of the entity's residual or ownership type risks [SIC-12.10(d)]. An entity may have derecognised receivables through a non-recourse sale to an SPE. However, if the entity has provided a guarantee to the SPE's equity holders that credit losses will be no more than a pre-set percentage of assets, the credit guarantee effectively returns the residual risks to the entity.

A total return swap on a portfolio that the SPE owns, or a residual value guarantee of the value of an asset leased by the SPE, are other examples of where the residual risks are left with the entity .



Recognition and measurement


All SPEs controlled by the entity are consolidated from the point that control exists. The usual procedures are followed for consolidation; elimination of inter-company activity and presentation of minority interests up to 100% .



Presentation and disclosure


IAS 27 requires specific disclosures for subsidiaries that are consolidated for reasons other than majority of voting power. This includes a description of the relationship between the parent and subsidiary that gives rise to control and consolidation [IAS27R.40].



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