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I N D I R E C T H O L D I N G S

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favour. For that to occur the securities to which the trust relates need to be identified. When securities are held in pooled accounts, an investor will acquire equitable ownership in the securities when the bulk of which the securities form part has been identified; it is not necessary for the intermediary to segregate specific securities out of that bulk and to appropriate them to the investor.

7.4 Summary of the analysis

The purpose of this chapter was to determine the circumstances in which investors who do not wish to hold securities directly have property rights in the securities that they hold through intermediaries.

In England, the law of trust operates as the tool through which investors are able to avail themselves of proprietary rights in indirectly held securities. An investor holds a proprietary interest in securities held on her behalf by an intermediary if a trust has been established in her favour by the intermediary. This proprietary interest is enforceable in the intermediary’s insolvency and prevails over charging orders issued by general creditors of the intermediary. It subsides only if legal title to the securities is transferred to a purchaser in good faith and for value.

Under the trust law analysis, the intermediary holds legal title and the investor holds equitable title to the securities. If securities are held through a chain of multiple intermediaries, the ultimate investor’s immediate intermediary does not hold legal title because its name is not entered in the securities register. Instead the investor’s immediate intermediary holds equitable title securities held by another intermediary on its behalf. In these circumstances, the ultimate intermediary holds an equitable title to the entitlement held by its immediate intermediary.

England is in the process of introducing law reform clarifying property rights in relation to securities held by intermediaries. The proposals put forward in this context are based upon the analysis currently adopted by English law. No attempt has been made to create a system for indirect holdings of securities that would operate according to rules that are independent of the current legal analysis; this is evidence that English law is likely to continue its path-dependent development.

It will be shown in part II that both German and Austrian law enable investors who hold securities indirectly through intermediaries to enjoy property rights in these securities. German and Austrian law use

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a different legal doctrine to achieve this result.54 Nevertheless, in terms of outcomes, the level of protection in the three jurisdictions is similar. Under both approaches investors hold property rights to securities that have preferred status in the intermediary’s insolvency and that take priority over claims raised by the intermediaries’ unsecured creditors. One difference between English law, on the one hand, and German and Austrian law, on the other, is the point in time at which the respective property rights arise. In English law, assuming that the underlying documentation does not regulate the matter differently, the buyer acquires equitable title to securities when the requirements imposed by the three certainties have been satisfied. This frequently occurs before the securities have been credited to the buyer’s account.55 In Germany and in Austria, co-ownership to securities usually passes to the buyer when the securities are credited to her account.

54See section 12.3.

55Law Commission, Project on Intermediated Investment Securities, Second Seminar 25.