Overview
2360.This Part contains provisions about stock lending and other transactions in the financial markets giving rise to manufactured payments. It is based on sections 231AA, 231AB, 254 and 736B of, and Schedule 23A to, ICTA, sections 263B and 263C of TCGA, section 139 of FA 2006 and paragraph 30 of Schedule 17 to that Act.
2361.Manufactured payments normally arise under stock loan and repo agreements, but they may also occur if there has been a short sale of securities. A short sale is a sale of securities by someone who does not own the securities at the time of selling them, so is required to acquire them at a time between the date of the bargain and the date when the seller has to deliver them to the purchaser. Dealers may sell short for a variety of reasons. For example, dealers may expect the market price of the securities to fall between the time of the sale bargain and the time at which they expect to buy and so may choose to delay acquiring securities.
2362.A consequence of short selling can be that the dealer sells the securities cum-div (with dividend) but buys them ex-div (without dividend – leaving the right to the next dividend with the seller). The dealer pays the buyer a sum as compensation for the dividend that the buyer expected to receive, but did not. This sum is a manufactured payment.
2363.Many of the detailed rules, especially as regards manufactured overseas dividends (MODs), are laid down in regulations. This Act does not rewrite any of these regulations.