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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> LBI EHF v Raiffeisen Bank International AG [2018] EWCA Civ 719 (11 April 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/719.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 719 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
ROBIN KNOWLES J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
LORD JUSTICE FLAUX
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LBI EHF |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RAIFFEISEN BANK INTERNATIONAL AG |
Respondent |
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Guy Philipps QC and Richard Power (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Flaux:
Introduction
Factual background
(1) The bonds can be sold in good faith and the sale price used to determine the Default Market Value (paragraph 10(e)(i)(A)).(2) The Default Market Value can be determined from the mean average of commercially reasonable quotations obtained from market makers for the bonds (paragraph 10(e)(i)(B)).
(3) Where the non-Defaulting Party has endeavoured but been unable to sell the bonds or cannot obtain commercially reasonable quotations, the non-Defaulting Party can determine the Net Value of Equivalent Securities and elect to treat that Net Value as the Default Market Value (paragraph 10(e)(i)(C)).
"(ii) If by the Default Valuation Time the non-Defaulting Party has not given a Default Valuation Notice, the Default Market Value of the relevant Equivalent Securities or Equivalent Margin Securities shall be an amount equal to their Net Value at the Default Valuation Time; provided that, if at the Default Valuation Time the non-Defaulting Party reasonably determines that, owing to circumstances affecting the market in the Equivalent Securities or Equivalent Margin Securities in question, it is not possible for the non-Defaulting Party to determine a Net Value of such Equivalent Securities or Equivalent Margin Securities which is commercially reasonable, the Default Market Value of such Equivalent Securities or Equivalent Margin Securities shall be an amount equal to their Net Value as determined by the non-Defaulting Party as soon as reasonably practicable after the Default Valuation Time."
""Net Value" means at any time, in relation to any Deliverable Securities or Receivable Securities, the amount which, in the reasonable opinion of the non-Defaulting Party, represents their fair market value, having regard to such pricing sources and methods (which may include, without limitation, available prices for Securities with similar maturities, terms and credit characteristics as the relevant Equivalent Securities or Equivalent Margin Securities) as the non-Defaulting Party considers appropriate, less, in the case of Receivable Securities, or plus, in the case of Deliverable Securities, all Transaction Costs which would be incurred in connection with the purchase or sale of such Securities;"
The judgment of Knowles J
"I do not consider it is a reliable approach to take definitions offered by those sources when the words appear without those definitions in the GMRA."
"I do not consider the words are to be limited in this way. In the context of the GMRA, when called into action the words are words that will have to work in a whole range of factual scenarios. LBI submitted, drawing on definitions found elsewhere, that a critical point in the meaning for which it contended was the lack of compulsion. This, it was submitted, excluded from the "fair market value" prices achieved in a distressed market. I find the submission that lack of compulsion is within the meaning of the words difficult to reconcile with the fact that under paragraph 10(e)(i) of GMRA the non-Defaulting Party may actually sell the securities, in what may be a distressed market, and determine the Default Market Value on the basis of the prices obtained, provided always that it acts in good faith."
(1) bids from 10 institutional counterparties which the respondent had requested;(2) algorithm-based prices shown on Bloomberg which the respondent used for internal purposes, and which the respondent did not consider to represent a practical and commercial realisable value; and
(3) the only activity experienced by the respondent on 15 October 2008 itself, namely a bid shown by Citi at 45 for ICICI (USD) bonds and a request by Citi that RZB place an order with it at 80 for RAK Bank bonds.
"I am unable to treat as irrational an assessment of fair market value based on the information RZB did have in the present case and without more. I do not rule out that the position may be different in the circumstances of other cases. There is no doubt that the information available in the present case was imperfect, and it is to be noted that it includes the Bloomberg or BGN prices despite what I have said above. However the circumstances at that time were imperfect. Any assessment of fair market value would have been imperfect but the non-Defaulting party was nonetheless entitled to make one."
Grounds of appeal
(1) failed to give sufficient weight to the contractual context in which the words 'fair market value' appear;(2) failed to have regard to, or to take sufficient account of, the Guidance Notes ("the Guidance") that accompany the GMRA as a permissible aid to the construction of 'fair market value'; and
(3) reached a commercially unsound conclusion contrary to the guidance promulgated by the publishers of the GMRA.
The parties' submissions
"58 Where, as here, the formulation is "fair market value", the valuation test requires a similarly limited focus on the range of circumstances relevant to a process of determining exchange value. A "fair market value" may diverge from a "market value" for numerous reasons, e.g. where property is thinly traded, or the parcel is small, or there exist market distortions.
59 In the present contractual context, the intrusion of the word "market" between "fair" and "value" points away from a process of determining what is just or equitable between the parties, towards an objective standard. That that is so in the present case is strongly suggested by the decision-maker nominated in cl II.2.3. The decision is to be made jointly by the company's auditor and a chartered accountant nominated by the vendor and, failing agreement, by a nominee of the President of the Institute of Chartered Accountants. Persons with such a background are not generally suited to determining what is just or equitable in all circumstances. Their expertise is appropriate for determining exchange value.
60 Nevertheless, the word "fair" has, in my opinion, work to do. In a contractual context, this additional word suggests that the valuation should proceed on the assumption, which may be contrary to the facts of a particular contractual relationship, that there is no impediment to the process of bargaining, whether in terms of availability of information or restraints arising from the characteristics of a particular vendor or purchaser or otherwise. Issues will arise, however, when determining what aspects of the particular relationship are of a character which inhere in the item of the property itself, as distinct from those which should be treated as excluded by the concept of a "fair market value"."
"21 The statute does not define the expression "fair market value", but the expression has been defined in many different ways depending generally on the subject matter which the person seeking to define it had in mind. I do not think it necessary to attempt an exact definition of the expression as used in the statute other than to say that the words must be construed in accordance with the common understanding of them. That common understanding I take to mean the highest price an asset might reasonably be expected to bring if sold by the owner in the normal method applicable to the asset in question in the ordinary course of business in a market not exposed to any undue stresses and composed of willing buyers and sellers dealing at arm's length and under no compulsion to buy or sell. I would add that the foregoing understanding as I have expressed it in a general way includes what I conceive to be the essential element which is an open and unrestricted market in which the price is hammered out between willing and informed buyers and sellers on the anvil of supply and demand. These definitions are equally applicable to "fair market value" and "market value" and it is doubtful if the use of the word "fair" adds anything to the words "market value"."
"It may perhaps be open to question whether the expression "fair" adds anything to the meaning of the words "market value", except possibly to this extent that the market price must have some consistency and not be the effect of a transient boom or a sudden panic on the market."
"27 The recurrent thought in these extracts is that the market price must have the element of consistency which precludes the existence of a transient boom or sudden panic and that the market price should be realistic rather than "ephemeral". If the undue stresses contemplated by Migneault J are present then those influences will result in a volatile rather than a consistent market and accordingly I would conclude that a market price subject to such influences cannot be considered as the "fair" market value, which it would be otherwise, and that this is the significance attributed by Mr. Justice Migneault in the use of the word "fair" before the words "market value"."
Analysis and conclusions
"such pricing sources and methods (which may include, without limitation, available prices for Securities with similar maturities, terms and credit characteristics as the relevant Equivalent Securities or Equivalent Margin Securities) as the non-Defaulting party considers appropriate…"
"Under the contract, the exercise in determining the "fair market value" is a broad one. The non-Defaulting Party is entitled to have regard to such pricing sources and methods, which may include without limitation available prices for securities with similar maturities, terms and credit characteristics, as it considers appropriate."
Lord Justice Henderson:
Lord Justice Longmore: