MIPRU 4.4 Calculation of capital resources
The calculation of a firm's capital resources
- (1)
A firm must calculate its capital resources only from the items which are eligible to contribute to a firm's capital resources from which it must deduct certain items (see MIPRU 4.4.4 R).
- (2)
If the firm is subject to the Interim Prudential sourcebook for investment businesses, the Prudential sourcebook for Investment Firms and the EU CRR, the General Prudential sourcebook6, the Prudential sourcebook for Banks, Building Societies and Investment Firms or the Credit Unions sourcebook, the capital resources are the higher of:
- (a)
the amount calculated under (1); and
- (b)
the financial resources calculated under those sourcebooks and regulations6.
- (a)
Table: Items which are eligible to contribute to the capital resources of a firm
Item |
Additional explanation |
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1. |
Share capital |
This must be fully paid and may include: |
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(1) |
ordinary share capital; or |
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(2) |
preference share capital (excluding preference shares redeemable by shareholders within two years). |
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2. |
Capital other than share capital (for example, the capital of a sole trader, partnership or limited liability partnership) |
The capital of a sole trader is the net balance on the firm's capital account and current account. The capital of a partnership is the capital made up of the partners': |
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(1) |
capital account, that is the account: |
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(a) |
into which capital contributed by the partners is paid; and |
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(b) |
from which, under the terms of the partnership agreement, an amount representing capital may be withdrawn by a partner only if: |
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(i) he ceases to be a partner and an equal amount is transferred to another such account by his former partners or any person replacing him as their partner; or |
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(ii) the partnership is otherwise dissolved or wound up; and |
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(2) |
current accounts according to the most recent financial statement. |
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For the purpose of the calculation of capital resources, in respect of a defined benefit occupational pension scheme: |
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(1) |
a firm must derecognise any defined benefit asset; |
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(2) |
a firm may substitute for a defined benefit liability the firm's deficit reduction amount, provided that the election is applied consistently in respect of any one financial year. |
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3. |
Reserves (Note 1) |
These are, subject to Note 1, the audited accumulated profits retained by the firm (after deduction of tax, dividends and proprietors' or partners' drawings) and other reserves created by appropriations of share premiums and similar realised appropriations. Reserves also include gifts of capital, for example, from a parent undertaking. |
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For the purposes of calculating capital resources, a firm must make the following adjustments to its reserves, where appropriate: |
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(1) |
a firm must deduct any unrealised gains or, where applicable, add back in any unrealised losses on debt instruments held, or formerly held,3 in the available-for-sale financial assets category; |
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(2) |
a firm must deduct any unrealised gains or, where applicable, add back in any unrealised losses on cash flow hedges of financial instruments measured at cost or amortised cost; |
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(3) |
in respect of a defined benefit occupational pension scheme: |
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(a) |
a firm must derecognise any defined benefit asset; |
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(b) |
a firm may substitute for a defined benefit liability the firm's deficit reduction amount, provided that the election is applied consistently in respect of any one financial year. |
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4. |
Interim net profits (Note 1) |
If a firm seeks to include interim net profits in the calculation of its capital resources, the profits have, subject to Note 1, to be verified by the firm's external auditor, net of tax, anticipated dividends or proprietors' drawings and other appropriations. |
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5. |
Revaluation reserves |
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6. |
General/ collective provisions (Note 1) |
These are provisions that a firm carrying on home financing 1or home finance administration 1holds against potential losses that have not yet been identified but which experience indicates are present in the firm's portfolio of assets. Such provisions must be freely available to meet these unidentified losses wherever they arise. Subject to Note 1, general/collective provisions must be verified by external auditors and disclosed in the firm's annual report and accounts. 1111 |
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7. |
Subordinated loans |
Subordinated loans must be included in capital on the basis of the provisions in this chapter that apply to subordinated loans. |
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Note: |
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1 |
Reserves must be audited and interim net profits, general and collective provisions must be verified by the firm's external auditor unless the firm is exempt from the provisions of Part VII of the Companies Act 1985 (section 249A (Exemptions from audit)) or, where applicable, Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006 (section 477 (Small companies: Conditions for exemption from audit))2 relating to the audit of accounts. 2 |
A firm should keep a record of and be ready to explain to its supervisory contacts in the appropriate regulator the reasons for any difference between the deficit reduction amount and any commitment the firm has made in any public document to provide funding in respect of a defined benefit occupational pension scheme.
Table: Items which must be deducted from capital resources
1 |
Investments in own shares |
2 |
Intangible assets (Note 1) |
3 |
Interim net losses (Note 2) |
4 |
Excess of drawings over profits for a sole trader or a partnership (Note 2) |
Notes |
Notes 1. Intangible assets are the full balance sheet value of goodwill (but not until 14 January 2008 - see transitional provision 1), capitalised development costs, brand names, trademarks and similar rights and licences. 2. The interim net losses in row 3, and the excess of drawings in row 4, are in relation to the period following the date as at which the capital resources are being computed. |
Personal assets
In relation to a sole trader's firm or a firm which is a partnership, the sole trader or a partner in the firm may use personal assets to meet the general solvency requirement and the general capital resource requirement, to the extent necessary to make up any shortfall in meeting those requirements, unless:
- (1)
those assets are needed to meet other liabilities arising from:
- (a)
personal activities; or
- (b)
another business activity not regulated by the appropriate regulator; or
- (a)
- (2)
the firm holds client money or other client assets.
A sole trader or a partner may use any personal assets, including property, to meet the capital requirements of this chapter, but only to the extent necessary to make up a shortfall.
Subordinated loans
A subordinated debt must not form part of the capital resources of the firm unless it meets the following conditions:
- (1)
(for a firm which carries on insurance mediation activity, home finance mediation activity1 (or both) but not home financing 1or home finance administration1) it has an original maturity of:
1111 - (2)
(for all other firms) it has an original maturity of:
- (3)
the claims of the subordinated creditors must rank behind those of all unsubordinated creditors;
- (4)
the only events of default must be non-payment of any interest or principal under the debt agreement or the winding up of the firm;
- (5)
the remedies available to the subordinated creditor in the event of non-payment or other default in respect of the subordinated debt must be limited to petitioning for the winding up of the firm or proving the debt and claiming in the liquidation of the firm;
- (6)
the subordinated debt must not become due and payable before its stated final maturity date except on an event of default complying with (4);
- (7)
the agreement and the debt are governed by the law of England and Wales, or of Scotland or of Northern Ireland;
- (8)
to the fullest extent permitted under the rules of the relevant jurisdiction, creditors must waive their right to set off amounts they owe the firm against subordinated amounts owed to them by the firm;
- (9)
the terms of the subordinated debt must be set out in a written agreement or instrument that contains terms that provide for the conditions set out in this rule; and
- (10)
the debt must be unsecured and fully paid up.
- (1)
This rule applies to a firm which:
- (a)
carries on:
- (i)
- (ii)
home finance mediation activity 1(or both); and
1
- (b)
in relation to those activities, holds client money or other client assets;
- (a)
but is not carrying on home financing1orhome finance administration1.
1111- (2)
In calculating its capital resources, the firm must exclude any amount by which the aggregate amount of its subordinated loans and its redeemable preference shares exceeds the amount calculated as follows:
four times (a - b - c); |
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where: |
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a |
= |
items 1 to 5 in the Table of items which are eligible to contribute to a firm's capital resources (see MIPRU 4.4.2 R) |
b |
= |
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c |
= |
the amount of its intangible assets (but not goodwill until 14 January 2008 - see transitional provision 1). |
If a firm wishes to see an example of a subordinated loan agreement which would meet the required conditions, it should refer to the Forms page.
1Reversion providers: additional requirement for instalment reversions
- (1)
1If the reversion provider agrees under the terms of an instalment reversion plan to pay the reversion occupier for the qualifying interest in land over a period of time, then the provider must:
- (a)
take out and maintain adequate insurance from an insurance undertaking authorised in the EEA or a person of equivalent status in:
- (i)
a Zone A country; or
- (ii)
the Channel Islands, Gibraltar, Bermuda or the Isle of Man; or
- (i)
- (b)
enter into a written agreement with a credit institution;
to meet these obligations in the event that the reversion provider is unable to do so.
- (a)
- (2)
This rule does not apply if:
- (a)
the instalment reversion plan is linked to an investment and it is reasonably anticipated that the amounts due to the reversion occupier under the plan will be paid out of the proceeds of the investment to the occupier by a product provider other than the reversion provider; or
- (b)
the reversion provider acquires its interest in the property in steps proportionate to the instalments paid.
- (a)
The additional requirement for reversion providers aims to protect the reversion occupier against the insolvency of the reversion provider where the reversion occupier has agreed to receive the price for the part of the qualifying interest in land sold in instalments rather than in a lump sum. The requirement does not arise, for example, in relation to reversions linked to annuities as the reversion occupier has no credit risk on the reversion provider. Also, the requirement does not arise in relation to 'mini-reversions' (or 'staged reversions') as under these plans the reversion occupier continues to own the qualifying interest in land.
Regulated sale and rent back agreements: additional requirement
4If a SRB agreement provider agrees, under the terms of a regulated sale and rent back agreement, to account to the SRB agreement seller for any monetary sum, whether after a qualifying period, over a period of time, on the occurrence of a contingent event or otherwise, the provider must:
- (1)
take out and maintain adequate insurance from an insurance undertaking authorised in the EEA or a person of equivalent status in:
- (a)
a Zone A country; or
- (b)
the Channel Islands, Gibraltar, Bermuda, or the Isle of Man; or
- (a)
- (2)
enter into a written agreement with a credit institution;
to meet these obligations in the event that the SRB agreement provider is unable to do so.
4An example of where this additional requirement would apply would be a term of a regulated sale and rent back agreement under which the SRB agreement seller was to receive from the SRB agreement provider a refund of an agreed percentage of the discount on the sale price of the property to which the agreement relates after an agreed qualifying period.