The International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) published new legal opinions that recognize the enforceability of close-out netting under regulations released by the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) earlier this year.
SAMA’s netting regulations were published in February, meaning all Group-of-20 jurisdictions now recognize the enforceability of close-out netting. The regulations, which are closely based on ISDA’s 2018 Model Netting Act, apply if at least one party is supervised by SAMA, which includes banks and non-banking financial institutions supervised by SAMA.
Riyadh-based law firm STAT was commissioned by ISDA to draft the netting opinions – one under the ISDA Master Agreement and one for Islamic derivatives under the ISDA/International Islamic Financial Market (IIFM) Tahawwut Master Agreement.
“The SAMA regulations mark a significant milestone in the development of a robust and efficient derivatives market in Saudi Arabia. The ISDA netting opinions will give firms enhanced certainty and confidence to trade derivatives with Saudi counterparties regulated by SAMA, encouraging more participation and increasing the depth and liquidity of Saudi capital markets,” said Scott O’Malia, ISDA’s chief executive, in a statement.
By allowing counterparties to reduce their obligations to a single net payment due from one party to another, netting significantly reduces credit risk. As of the end of 2024, the global gross market value of derivatives contracts stood at $17.6 trillion, whereas the gross credit exposure, which adjusts gross market values for legally enforceable bilateral netting agreements, amounted to $3.0 trillion, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements.
In addition to SAMA’s regulations, the Saudi Capital Market Authority (CMA) has published draft netting regulations that are closely aligned with SAMA’s rules, which will cover other financial market participants, including asset managers and infrastructure providers. The ISDA netting opinions will be extended to cover the CMA rules when they are finalized.