Related Author: Niki Mehta, Trainee Solicitor, Mayer Brown
On 15 November 2021, P.R.I.M.E. Finance – the Panel of Recognised International Market Experts in Finance - launched its revised Arbitration Rules (the "2022 Rules") which came into effect on 1 January 2022 and which, like their predecessors, are designed for the arbitration of complex financial disputes. The 2022 Rules is the third iteration of P.R.I.M.E. Finance's Arbitration Rules, and are said to have undergone "the most ambitious revision of its rules since its inception", following an "extensive global public consultation". It is apparent that the changes made to the rules seek to address the feedback and reservations of financial market participants ("FMPs") regarding previous versions of these rules, and possibly arbitration as a dispute resolution forum for financial disputes more generally.
This Update takes a close look at the key features of the 2022 Rules by reference to some of the reservations that have been expressed in the past, and includes a brief comparison with other major institutional rules.
Arbitrating financial disputes
Traditionally, arbitration has not been as popular in the finance sector for the resolution of disputes as it is in other industries, such as energy, construction, or shipping. Concerns expressed regarding arbitration in general include the following perceptions:
Whilst FMPs have historically turned more to the courts in key financial jurisdictions such as New York, England & Wales, and Hong Kong to resolve disputes, arbitration is not uncommon for certain types of finance transaction or involving certain kinds of counterparty, particularly in deals involving emerging markets, or those involving state-owned enterprises. In these cases, there may be reasons from the outset as to why litigating a potential dispute in national courts might not be appropriate or desirable. For example, it might be felt that not all national courts have the same level of technical expertise and working knowledge of complex financial products; nor are they all equally able to resolve disputes speedily; and in some circumstances confidentiality may be of primary concern.
There are some data available from which to observe trends. For example, the finance sector is one of the top three sectors comprising the caseload of the London Court of International Arbitration ("LCIA") in recent years. In 2019, the sector comprised 32% of the LCIA's total cases and in 2020 it comprised 20%1. Similarly, in 2019 the ICDR-AAA reported a 58% year-on-year increase in disputes in financial services, having already reported a 78% increase in 2018. Although the 2020 figures show a slight decrease, it does not belie the apparent direction of travel.
Background to P.R.I.M.E. Finance and the 2022 Rules
Against the backdrop of the global financial crisis, P.R.I.M.E. Finance was established by legal and finance practitioners and experts in 2012 as an organisation dedicated to the resolution of disputes concerning complex financial products. On its launch, P.R.I.M.E. Finance also released the first version of its Arbitration Rules, which were based on the 2010 UNCITRAL Rules. Following a revised version in 2016 (the "2016 Rules"), the 2022 Rules will apply to P.R.I.M.E. Finance arbitrations commencing on or after 1 January 2022 (unless the parties specify that an earlier version should apply).
As is evident from the statistics cited above, a considerable volume of finance-related disputes are already arbitrated under the rules of established arbitral institutions. P.R.I.M.E. Finance's offering appears to be underpinned by the following characteristics:
Key features of the 2022 Rules
Like many rule revisions made by mainstream arbitral institutions, the 2022 Rules purport to reflect current best practice in arbitration – including provision for remote hearings and paperless hearings. Other key features of the 2022 Rules appear to be aimed at addressing the concerns outlined at the outset of this Update by:
Each of these features is examined below.
Increased transparency and publication of awards
Interim relief, emergency arbitration and early determination
Multi-party and multi-contract arbitrations
Given the contractual basis of arbitration, consent is required from all parties in order to join a non-party or to consolidate two cases, which is often unattainable after a dispute arises. The risks generated by parallel arbitral or court proceedings include procedural and systemic inefficiencies (workload duplication, competing tribunals, higher costs) as well as inconsistent awards, and enforcement problems. The 2022 Rules include various mechanisms which make provision for multi-party and multi-contract arbitrations.
Efficiency and cost-effectiveness
Brief comparison with other arbitration rules
The 2022 Rules combine elements of other major arbitration rules, including the LCIA Rules 2020, the ICC Rules 2021, and the SIAC Rules 2016, all of which are likely to have influenced the 2022 Rules during the feedback and revision process.
They reflect certain aspects of ICC arbitrations, such as the default application of expedited rules for claims of a certain value, the publication of awards, party nominations in a multi-party scenario, and the requirement to disclose those with an economic interest in the outcome (albeit, under the 2022 Rules, the requirement is limited to "significant interest[s]" only).
The 2022 Rules are similar to the LCIA Rules 2020 in many regards including: the default appointment of a sole arbitrator, the institution's role in confirming appointments, the early determination procedure, and the ability to recover any substitute deposit paid. The coordination procedure also appears very similar to the ability, in LCIA arbitrations, for tribunals to conduct concurrent arbitrations in multi-party and multi-contract scenarios.
A focus of recent rule revisions has been multi-party and multi / related-contract disputes, such that there are many similar provisions in the market to those in the 2022 Rules. The joinder, consolidation and "single arbitration under multiple contracts" provisions in the 2022 Rules are closely aligned with the SIAC Rules 2016. As expected, though, all institutional rules have their nuances. One key difference between the 2022 Rules and the SIAC Rules is that there is no express provision for a tribunal to order consolidation under the 2022 Rules, as this responsibility rests with the PCA. Interestingly, if the PCA decides to consolidate, it can revoke arbitral appointments already made (and appoint or reappoint arbitrators), since all parties are deemed to have waived their right to appoint an arbitrator in this scenario.
The 2022 Rules also go further than the above-mentioned institutional rules in certain respects, including in relation to non-party intervention, security for costs, and the ability to choose between an ad-valorem and time-based system for arbitrator fees.
Concluding comments
Even before the launch of the 2022 Rules, ISDA had been recommending P.R.I.M.E. Finance as an institution for finance-related arbitrations since P.R.I.M.E.'s Model Clauses feature in its 2018 Arbitration Guide. But beyond this, the popularity of the 2016 Rules has been hard to gauge due to a lack of published data.
With the changes aimed at increasing transparency, expressly granting tribunals and the PCA wide-ranging powers, promoting efficiency and cost-effectiveness, and facilitating effective management of multi-party and multi-contract arbitrations, the 2022 Rules look to address some important concerns raised by FMPs and aspire to provide a credible regime for the resolution of complex banking and finance disputes.
The 2022 Rules are, of course, not the only arbitration rules in the market designed for finance disputes (for example, there are the CIETAC Financial Disputes Arbitration Rules). Other institutions – like HKIAC – have also launched specific panels of arbitrators for financial services disputes. Further, the LCIA and ICDR-AAA statistics may suggest that FMPs will remain happy using these mainstream arbitration rules rather than looking for industry-specific arbitration rules.
However, as finance transactions become increasingly complex, and as relatively new product areas arising from fintech and sustainable finance continue to develop, the need for technical expertise in resolving disputes may become increasingly important to FMPs. Given the breadth of expertise offered by P.R.I.M.E.'s Panel, which arguably remains the 2022 Rules' most distinguishing feature (but no longer with an expectation to nominate arbitrators only from the Panel), there may be reason to believe that the 2022 Rules will prove to be more popular than their predecessors. Ultimately, the real uptake and impact of the 2022 Rules can only be meaningfully assessed in the years to come, to the extent that disputes arise out of transactions in which the parties elect arbitration as their dispute resolution forum and choose the 2022 Rules to govern.
1 The 2019 figure was unusually high due to a large group of 41 arbitrations which accounted for more than one third of the banking and finance cases. See pages 10-11 of LCIA's Annual Casework Report 2020: https://lcia.org/LCIA/reports.aspx
2 The ISDA Arbitration Guide, for example, includes a range of P.R.I.M.E. Finance model arbitration clauses designed to be used with the ISDA Master Agreements (1992 and 2002).
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