Legal Ground and Applicability

1.1 Please identify the legal source of the insider trading rules applicable to investors in Ireland.

The following provisions of Irish law apply to shareholders as well as officers of a company:

  1. Part V of the Companies Act, 19901. This applies to companies listed on the Alternative Securities Market and the Irish Enterprise Exchange of the Irish Stock Exchange, so should not be of wide application;
  2. Market Abuse (Directive 2003/6/EC) Regulations 2005 SI No. 342 of 2005, ("the Regulations");
  3. Part 4 of the Investment Funds, Companies and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 2005, ("the Act");
  4. Market Abuse Rules issued by the Financial Regulator ("the Rules");
  5. Caselaw

    Where an entity is considering making an offer for a company which is listed on a relevant market, it will need to comply with the following pieces of legislation in addition to those listed at points I to IV above.
  6. The Irish Takeover Panel Act, 1997 ("Takeover Act"),
  7. The Irish Takeover Panel Act 1997, Takeover Rules, 2007 ("Takeover Rules");
  8. The European Communities (Takeover Bids (Directive 2004/25/EC) Regulations 2006, ("Takeover Regulations"), and

    Point IX applies to listed companies and requires them to comply with the obligations of the Regulations as if it were an issuer for the purposes of the Regulations.
  9. Listings Rules (these apply to Companies listed on the main market of the Irish Stock Exchange).

    Point X applies to persons discharging managerial responsibilities and would include directors of a company
  10. Model Code in the Irish Stock Exchange Listing Rules (Appendix 1 to Chapter 6) (the "Model Code");

    Point XI applies to directors of companies and those who act at the instigation of a director.
  11. Section 30 of the Companies Act 1990;

1.2 What is decisive for insider trading rules in Ireland to apply (e.g. seat of issues?, place of listing of relevant instruments?)?

Regulation 4 of the Regulations applies to any financial instrument2 which is (a) admitted to trading on a regulated market in at least one Member State, or (b) for which a request for admission to trading on a regulated market in at least one Member State has been made whether or not any transaction in or relating to the financial instrument takes place on that market. Regulation 4 is extended by Regulation 5 to a financial instrument which does not come within the definition contained in Regulation 4 but the value of which depends on a financial instrument which does fall within Regulation 4.

The Regulations therefore apply to actions carried out in the State or abroad concerning financial instruments that are admitted to trading on a regulated market situated in or operating in the State, or for which a request for admission to trading on a regulated market situated in or operating in the State has been made and to actions carried out in the State concerning financial instruments that are admitted to trading on a regulated market in a Member State, or for which a request for admission to trading on a regulated market in a Member State has been made.

The Listings Rules and the Model Code apply to companies which are listed on the Official List of the Irish Stock Exchange.

The Companies Act, 1990 applies to quoted Irish companies admitted to one of the Irish Stock Exchange markets, other than companies with securities admitted to trading on the Official List (regulated market).

The Takeover Rules and the Takeover Act apply to companies with their registered office in Ireland whose transferable securities are admitted on a regulated market in Ireland or on a regulated market in another Member State. The place of listing is therefore generally the determining factor in whether the Irish law on insider dealing applies.

2. Which instruments are covered by insider trading regulations?

2.1 Please name examples of financial instruments covered by insider trading regulations, especially with regard to debt securities:

Regulation 2 of the Regulations applies to:

  1. units in collective investment undertakings,
  2. transferable securities as defined by Directive 2004/39 EC,
  3. money market instruments,
  4. financial futures contracts, including cash-settled instruments,
  5. forward rate interest agreements,
  6. interest-rate, currency and equity swaps,
  7. derivatives on commodities,
  8. any other instrument admitted to trading on a regulated market in a Member State or for which a request for admission to trading in such a market has been made, and
  9. options to acquire or dispose of any instrument referred to above in (i) to (vii), including equivalent cash settled instruments in particular options on currency and on interest rates.

Transferable securities are defined for the purpose of the Regulations as those classes of securities which are negotiable on the capital market and include the following:

  1. shares in companies and other securities equivalent to shares in companies, partnerships or other entities, and depository receipts in respect of shares,
  2. bonds or other forms of securitised debt, including depository receipts in respect of such securities, and
  3. any other securities giving the right to acquire or sell any such transferable securities.

Where Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 applies, securities are defined as:

  1. shares, debentures or other debt securities issued or proposed to be issued, whether in Ireland or otherwise, for which dealing facilities are, or are to be, provided by a recognised stock exchange (which for these purposes is the Irish Stock Exchange),
  2. any right, option or obligation in respect of such shares, debentures or other debt securities referred to in paragraph (i),
  3. any right, option or obligation in respect of any index relating to any such shares, debentures or other debt securities referred to in paragraph (i); and
  4. such interests as may be prescribed.

The Listing Rules and the Model Code apply to Securities (being shares, certificates representing shares, units in a collective investment scheme, options to subscribe for or purchase securities, treasury shares, debt securities, warrants, certificates representing debt securities, and other instruments specified in Section C of Annex 1 of MiFID) admitted or seeking admission to one of the Irish Stock Exchange markets. The Irish Stock Exchange has three markets; the Main Market, the Alternative Securities Market and the Irish Enterprise Exchange.

The Takeover Rules apply to transferable securities which are admitted (depending on the registered office of the company) on a regulated market in either Ireland or another Member State.

2.2 Where do insider securities have to be admitted to trading (e.g. organized market, regulated market, regulated unofficial market, etc.)? In which jurisdictions do insider securities have to be admitted to trading? Is the mere (i) application or (ii) announcement of such application sufficient? Are OTC/private deals included?

Under the Regulations, the financial instruments have to (a) be admitted to trading on a regulated market in at least one Member State, or (b) requested admission to trading on a regulated market in at least one Member State whether or not any transaction in or relating to the financial instrument takes place on that market. As the Regulations apply whether or not a transaction takes place on the market, they would appear to cover private/OTC deals.

Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 applies in respect of dealings in companies securities which are listed on unregulated markets operated by the Irish Stock Exchange.

The Listings Rules (as they pertain to prohibiting the use of inside information) and the Model Code apply to dealings in the securities of listed companies (which are defined as Companies that have any class of their securities admitted to the official list of the Irish Stock Exchange). "Dealing in" includes:

  1. any acquisition or disposal of, or agreement to acquire or dispose of any of the securities of the company,
  2. entering into a contract (including a contract for differences) the purpose of which is to secure a profit or avoid a loss where reference to fluctuation in the price of any of the securities of the company,
  3. to grant, acceptance, acquisition, disposal, exercise or discharge of any option to acquire or dispose of any of the securities of the company,
  4. entering into, or terminating, assigning or novating any stock lending agreement in respect of the securities of the company,
  5. using a security, or otherwise granting a charge, lien or other encumbrance over the securities of the company,
  6. any transaction, including a transfer for nil consideration, or the exercise of any power or discretion effecting a change of ownership of a beneficial interest in the securities of the company, or
  7. any other right or obligation, present or future, conditional or unconditional, to acquire or dispose of any securities of the company.

The Takeover Act and the Takeover Rules apply to takeovers (not being takeover bids) and other relevant transactions in respect of Directive Companies (companies with their registered office in Ireland whose transferable securities are admitted to a regulated market in Ireland or a regulated market in one or more Member States (other than Ireland) or companies with their registered office in another Member State whose transferable securities are admitted to a regulated market in Ireland or companies with their registered office in another Member State whose transferable securities are admitted to a regulated market in Ireland or a regulated market in one or more Member States (excluding that Member State) but including Ireland) which are also relevant companies under the Takeover Act (Directive Relevant Companies) and to companies which fall within the definition of "relevant company" in Section 2 of the Takeover Act but which do not fall within the scope of the Takeover Regulations ("non-Directive Relevant Companies").

A relevant company, as defined in Section 2 of the Takeover Act, means (i) any public limited company or other body corporate incorporated in the State, any of whose securities are authorised for trading (or have been so authorised within 5 years prior to the relevant proposal) on a market regulated by a recognised stock exchange (the Irish Stock Exchange has been prescribed as such) and (ii) a public limited company incorporated in the State, any securities of which are authorised to be traded, or have been so authorised within 5 years prior to the relevant proposal on the London Stock Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq.

Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities and investment companies within the meaning of Part xiii of the Companies Act, 1990 are excluded under the Takeover Act from the definition of relevant companies. The Takeover Rules do not apply to takeover bids for securities issued by collective investment undertakings, other than the closed ended type, or for securities issued by a Central Bank of a Member State. The Takeover Rules will apply to a bid in respect of a closed-end investment company formed under Part XIII of the Companies Act, 1990 pursuant to certain amendments introduced by virtue of the Takeover Regulations. The applicability of the Takeover Act and the Takeover Rules are therefore not affected by the location of the companies head office or place of central management.

The Takeover Regulations, the Takeover Act, (subject to the Takeover Regulations), and the Takeover Rules apply to takeover bids for companies in respect of which the Takeover Panel has jurisdictions to supervise by virtue of Regulation 6 of the Takeover Regulations. Regulation 6 of the Takeover Regulations provides that the Takeover Panel shall have jurisdictions to supervise a bid in respect of a company which:

  1. has its registered office in the State and whose transferable voting securities are admitted to trading on a regulated market in this State,
  2. has its registered office in the State and whose transferable voting securities are admitted to trading on regulated market in one or more Member States other than the State,
  3. has its registered office in another Member State and whose transferable voting securities are admitted to trading solely on a regulated market in the State, or
  4. has its registered office in another Member State and whose transferable voting securities are admitted to trading on regulated markets in more than one Member State, excluding that other Member State but including the State if:
    (i) the transferable voting securities were first admitted to trading on a regulated market in the State; or
    (ii) (subject to (iii)) the transferable voting securities have been simultaneously admitted to trading on regulated markets in more than one Member State, including the State, and the company determines in accordance with the Directive that the Irish Takeover Panel shall be the competent authority to supervise the takeover bid; or
    (iii) where the transferable voting securities were simultaneously admitted on regulated markets in more than one Member State, including the State by 20 May 2006 and the supervisory authorities of those Member States or, failing them, the company have determined in accordance with the Directive that the Irish Takeover Panel shall be the competent authority to supervise the bid.

2.3 Is it sufficient that the price of financial instruments depends (directly or indirectly) on insider securities, even without such instruments themselves being admitted to trading?

The insider dealing provisions of the Regulations apply to:

  1. any "financial instrument" admitted to trading on a regulated market in the European Economic Area (EEA)3 (or for which a request for admission to trading has been made) irrespective of whether the transaction takes place on that market; and
  2. any "financial instrument" not admitted to trading on a regulated market in the EEA, but whose value depends on a "financial instrument" admitted to trading on a regulated market in the EEA or for which such admission to trading has been sought.

On that basis, the Regulations could apply to instruments which are themselves not listed.

Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 prohibits the dealing in securities where a person connected with the Company in the preceding 6 months is in possession of information that is not generally available, but, if it were, would be likely to materially affect the price of those securities. The definition of securities is set out in 2.1 above and includes securities which are proposed to be listed.

Please refer to 2.2 for the application of the Model Code.

The Takeover Rules and Takeover Regulations apply to transferable voting securities which are admitted to trading on a regulated market in Europe. See 2.2 above.

3. What is insider information?

3.1 Are debt securities treated more/less strict than equity instruments?

Given the relatively recent introduction of much of the legislation in this area and the dearth of Irish case-law it is not possible to advise whether debt securities would be treated any differently to any other form of financial instruments such as equity instruments.

3.2 Can rumours or circumstances in the future be insider information?

"Inside information" is defined in Regulation 2 of the Regulations as meaning:

  1. information of a precise nature relating directly or indirectly to one or more issuers of financial instruments (see 2.1 above for a definition of financial instrument) or to one or more financial instruments which has not been made public and which, if it were made public, would be likely to have a significant effect on the price of those financial instruments or on the price of related derivative financial instruments",
  2. in relation to derivatives on commodities and subject to paragraph (2), information of a precise nature which has not been made public, and relating, directly or indirectly, to one or more such derivatives and which users of markets on which such derivatives are traded would expect to receive in accordance with accepted market practices on those markets, or
  3. for persons charged with the execution of orders concerning financial instruments, information conveyed by a client and relating to the client's pending orders, which is of a precise nature, which relates directly or indirectly to one or more issuers of financial instruments or to one or more financial instruments, and which, if it were made public, would be likely to have a significant effect on the prices of those financial instruments or on the price of related derivative financial instruments.

The four major components of the definition of inside information are therefore:

  1. the information must be precise;
  2. the information must not be available to the public. It would appear that reasonably extensive disclosure to the securities market is the test;
  3. the information must relate to the issuer of the securities or to the securities themselves;
  4. the information must be price sensitive, in that if disclosed generally, it is likely to have a significant effect on the price of the securities being traded.

"Information of a precise nature" is defined in Regulation 2 of the Regulations as information that indicates a set of circumstances which exists or may reasonably be expected to come into existence, or an event which has occurred or may reasonably be expected to occur and is specific enough to enable a conclusion to be drawn as to the possible effect of that circumstance or event, as the case may be, on the price of financial instruments or related derivative financial instruments.

"Information which, if it were made public, would be likely to have a significant effect on the prices of financial instruments or related derivative financial instruments" means information that a reasonable investor would be likely to use as part of the basis of the investor's investment decisions.

In determining the likely price significance of information, the Rules require that the issuer assess whether the information in question would be likely to be used by a reasonable investor as part of the basis of his investment decision and would therefore be likely to have a significant impact on the price of the issuer's financial instruments or related derivative financial instruments ("the reasonable investor test"). In conducting the reasonable investor test, the Rules require that the issuer:

  1. take into account that the significance of the information in question will vary widely from issuer to issuer depending on a number of factors such as the issuer's size, recent developments and the market sentiment about the issuer and the sector in which it operates; and
  2. assume that a reasonable investor will make investment decisions relating to the relevant financial instruments.

The information must therefore be of a precise nature as contrasted with rumours and general talk of questionable accuracy, however, the definition of "information of a precise nature" would appear to include circumstances or events in the future, provided that those circumstances or events may reasonably be expected to occur. Rule 5.10 of the Rules provides that where there is press speculation or market rumour regarding an issuer, the issuer is required to assess whether a disclosure obligation arises. The question as to whether or not a rumour or information concerning future events will constitute "inside information" will be determined on a case by case basis by the application of the principles set out above.

It is not possible therefore to state definitively that any information which is not "inside information" at the time it was obtained will not become inside information at a later date on the basis that circumstances may change and become such as to bring the information obtained within the definition of "inside information" for the purposes of the Regulations. According to the Rules (5.0.1) it is a matter for each issuer to make an initial assessment of whether a particular piece of information amounts to inside information.

The Committee of European Securities Regulators has published a document entitled "Level 3- second set of CESR guidance and information on the common operation of the Directive to the market"4 which includes a non-exhaustive and purely indicative list of events which might constitute inside information.

Regulation 6 of the Regulations provides that a person shall not engage in market manipulation. Market manipulation is defined as including the dissemination of information through the media, including the internet, which gives, or is likely to give, false or misleading signals as to financial instruments. Therefore, while rumour, unless sufficiently precise, may not be insider information, the dissemination of that information may constitute market manipulation which is also prohibited.

Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 prohibits dealing in securities by a person who is connected or has been connected with the Company in the preceding 6 months and who is in possession of information that is not generally available, but, if it were, would be likely to materially affect the price of those securities. It seems that if rumour or information concerning future events consists of information which was not generally available and would be likely to materially affect the price of a company's securities that could constitute inside information for the purposes of the 1990 Act.

3.3 In decision-making processes involving multiple layers of hierarchy (e.g. intention of a company to take over another company), can information regarding each layer (as opposed to the final decision) constitute insider information?

The test which must be used under the Regulations is does the information regarding each layer constitute inside information as defined in 3.2 above. If it does and the person who possesses the inside information uses it to acquire or dispose of financial instruments to which that information relates this could constitute insider dealing for the purpose of the Regulations.

The prohibition on insider dealing applies to any person having acquired the inside information concerned by virtue of their membership of the administrative, management or supervisory bodies of the issuer of the financial instruments, by virtue of that persons holding in the capital of the issuer, by virtue of having access to the information through the exercise of that persons employment, profession or duties, or by virtue of that persons criminal activities.

A person who possesses inside information shall not, pursuant to Regulation 5 of the Regulations, disclose such inside information to any other person unless such disclosures are made in the normal course of the exercise of the first-mentioned persons employment, profession or duties, or recommend or induce other person, on the basis of inside information, to acquire or dispose of financial instruments to which that information relates.

3.4 When is insider information deemed to be made public so that it ceases to be insider information?

The Rules state that for an issuer whose financial instruments are admitted to trading on a regulated market in the State, an announcement may either be made directly to a regulatory information service ("RIS") or indirectly to an RIS through the CAO. Where notification is made through an RIS, the issuer must simultaneously notify the CAO.

Rule 5.7 provides that where an issuer has an internet site it is required to ensure that any information announced via an RIS is made available on its internet site by the close of business following the day of the RIS announcement. Rule 5.8 prohibits an issuer from disclosing inside information on its internet site as an alternative to or in advance of its disclosure via an RIS.

The commentaries on the subject indicate that the test of whether information is public information is whether the information has been reasonably extensively disclosed to the securities market. In considering the issue in Fyffes plc v DCC plc in the High Court Miss Justice Laffoy in delivering her judgment stated that regarding the issue of whether information is generally available (which was not relevant in this case or both parties agreed that the information was not generally available) the test is whether the information is accessible by investors.

3.4.1 Is it necessary that the information be published in the general media?

An issuer of financial instruments must publicly disclose, without delay, inside information which directly concerns the issuer, in a manner that enables fast access and complete, correct and timely assessment of the information by the public in accordance with Regulation 10(1). Please refer to 3.4 above regarding an issuer's obligation to make inside information public.

3.4.2 Would a so-called "sectoral publicity" be sufficient? If yes, please explain such concept.

While disclosure in the form specified in 3.4 and 3.4.1 should meet the test regarding generally availability, there has been no Irish caselaw which has considered the meaning of "general availability" in the context of the Regulations. As the Fyffes decision (which considered the issue in respect of the Companies Act, 1990) placed much reliance on US jurisprudence it is likely an Irish court would consider US caselaw as persuasive authority should the matter come before them in the future.

3.5 Is it sufficient that circumstances are only indirectly linked to (i) the insider securities or (ii) the issuer in order to constitute insider information? Please give examples of less obvious insider information, especially in the context of debt securities

The information must constitute inside information as defined in 3.2. The issue of whether information is directly or indirectly linked to securities or an issuer is irrelevant. Information is only inside information where it satisfies the tests in 3.2.

Appended at Appendix 1 is a list of examples contained in CESR paper reference CESR/06-562b. This CESR paper does provide that information regarding changes in the investment policies of the issuer or information on the withdrawal from or entry into new core business areas may constitute inside information. It would appear therefore that business plans may constitute inside information. Financial projections may also constitute inside information where they are precise, not available to the public and may have a significant price effect.

3.6 Is it sufficient that insider information is only likely to have a significant effect on the exchange or market price of the securities, i.e. is a purely hypothetical effect enough?

The information must be price sensitive, in that if disclosed it is likely to have a significant effect on the price of the securities being traded. Purely hypothetical effect is enough as per 3.2 above for the purpose of the Regulations as the Regulations apply a reasonable investor test. In the absence of direct evidence on the effect of the information, Courts would have to rely on expert evidence as to the effect of the information on a reasonable investor.

In the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Fyffes plc v DCC plc5 in a case concerning an action taken by Fyffes pursuant to Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 against DCC regarding the disposal of shares by DCC which it held in Fyffes, the Supreme Court gave consideration to how one would determine price sensitivity.

The facts of the case are that at the time of the disposal, Jim Flavin, the Chief Executive of DCC was a non-executive director of Fyffes. Fyffes alleged that DCC had access to price sensitive information at the time of disposal, being trading statements in November and December 1999 which were only circulated to directors of Fyffes, by virtue of Mr Flavin's position.

One of the tests adopted by the Supreme Court in determining whether the information would materially affect the share price was to firstly determine the generality or "total mix" of information available, then to determine the information which was not generally available but available to the dealer and then to determine whether that information, if generally available and having regard to the total mix of information available, would materially affect the price of the share. The Court held that the evidence generally available to it was the evidence of experts and evidence of market movements on some or all of the evidence becoming available as did occur with the release of a March 2000 trading statement which contained information similar to those statements given to directors in November and December 1999. In the absence of any of the inside information becoming available, purely hypothetical effect would appear to be sufficient, based on the Fyffes decision and the Regulations.

3.6.1 If yes, from whose perspective and at which point in time is such hypothetical effect to be determined?

The Regulations have adopted a reasonable investor test in determining whether the information would have a significant effect on the price of financial instruments. According to the Supreme Court in Fyffes the court must for the purpose of Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 evaluate the state of the market at the relevant time and then, with such evidence as it has available to it, make a decision as to whether the share price would be materially affected if the information had been generally available.

3.6.2 If yes, does this perception change if it turns out that the information actually does not have a significant effect on the price of the securities?

The Supreme Court in the Fyffes case in determining whether the information was price sensitive stated that post market events could be of evidential value in certain circumstances. Mr Justice Fennelly in his decision overruled the decision of the High Court not to take account of a March 2000 trading statement which was similar to the November and December 1999 trading statements which were only circulated to the board. Mr Justice Fennelly took account of the fact that the March 2000 trading statement caused the share price in Fyffes to decrease significantly. He ruled that the November and December trading statements constituted price sensitive information as the March trading statement indicated what would have occurred if the information in the November and December trading statements had been released, given that the information in the March trading statement was similar, but less detailed than the information contained in the November and December trading statement.

Based on the Fyffes decision, a court must determine objectively whether the hypothetical test of the information having a significant effect on the price of the securities which is set out in Part V of the Companies Act, 1990 has been met. If the information which was alleged to have constituted inside information was later released to the market (or information similar to that information was later released) and was shown not to have a significant effect on the price of the securities, the information may not constitute inside information.

The test in the Regulations is whether a reasonable investor would use the information as part of the investor's investment decisions. If the information or similar information (as per the March 2000 trading statement in Fyffes), was released after the alleged instance of insider dealing and did not have a significant effect on the market price of the financial instruments, this would, as per the Fyffes decision, be something a court would be likely take into account.

3.6.3 Would information regarding company personnel constitute insider information?

Please see paragraph 3.2 which sets out the definition of inside information. If the information relating to personnel was of a precise nature and was information which if it was made public would have a significant effect on the price of the securities being traded, then the information regarding company personnel could constitute insider information.

3.7 Can anybody be an insider, or only certain groups of people?

For the purposes of the insider dealing regime, insiders may be divided between primary and secondary insiders. The former are those who, on account of their position vis a vis the company or the market, have ready access to the information. The latter are "tipees" and others who obtain the information from the former.

Primary insiders are those who have obtained the information by virtue of their position as (i) members of the administrative, management or supervisory bodies of the issuer, (ii) shareholders of the company, (iii) persons having access to the information through their employment, profession or duties (e.g. the company's auditors, lawyers and stock brokers) or (iv) those who obtained the information by virtue of their criminal activities, such as by corrupting the company's management or employees, or otherwise stealing the information. In the case of a legal person, the prohibition on insider dealing applies to any natural persons who take part in the decisions to carry out for the account of the legal person any transaction in financial instruments.

The secondary category of insider is defined as those that know or ought to know that the information is inside information regardless of how they obtained it.

Footnotes

1 Article 6 of the Investment Funds, Companies and Miscellaneous Provisions Act 2005 (Commencement) Order 2005 (SI 323/2005), designating 6 July 2005 as the date of commencement of section 31, does so only for the purposes of regulated markets operated by a recognised stock exchange. This means that the Companies Act 1990, Part V continues in force insofar as it concerns securities of companies admitted to trading on the Irish Stock Exchange markets other than its main market for listed securities (often called the Official List). Part V will remain in place to cover dealings in respect of companies securities listed on unregulated markets operated by the Irish Stock Exchange such as ("IEX")

2 "financial instrument" means (a) transferable securities as defined in Article 4 of Council Directive 93/22/EEC of 10 May 1993 on investment services in the securities field, (b) units in collective investment undertakings (c) moneymarket instruments, (d) financial futures contracts, including equivalent cash-settled instruments, (e) forward interest rate agreements, (f) interest-rate, currency and equity swaps, (g) derivatives on commodities, (h) any other instrument admitted to trading on a regulated market in a Member State or for which a request for admission to trading on such a market has been made, and (i) options to acquire or dispose of any instrument falling into any of paragraphs (a) to (h) of this definition, including equivalent cash-settled instruments in particular options on currency and on interest rates;

3 EU Member States, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway. Liechtenstein has not yet implemented the MAD.

4 CESR/06-562b

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.