Making markets, making laws: non-deliverable currency forwards and the Amendment to Article 1062 of the Russian Civil Code
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Date
2009Author
Milyaeva, Svetlana
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Abstract
Being a part of social studies of finance, i.e. a perspective that, in its narrow sense,
investigates the role of science and technology in financial markets, the thesis suggests
that one can understand science in a wider sense, as an expert knowledge domain. The
social studies of finance, then, can be broadened out to encompass the different ways in
which expert knowledge shapes financial practices. Legal expertise is another
instantiation of expert knowledge in the sense that both (science and law) are different
forms of power; therefore this research aims at answering the question how finance is
shaped by legal expert knowledge.
The study employs the method of ‘opening the black box’ of regulation, and thus it
argues that technicalities of regulation, which embody legal expertise, are crucial for the
construction of financial markets. The thesis demonstrates how ‘just’ a concise
amendment to Article 1062 of the Russian Civil Code has had significant ramifications
for the interbank USD/RUB cash-settled forward market, and explores the controversies
involved in and details of the law making process.
The amendment was made in 2007 and changed the legal status of non-deliverable
forwards, which had been classified by Russian courts as gambling transactions under
Russian law in 1998-1999. Based on the evidence obtained from the study of the legal
developments that resulted in the amendment, the thesis shows that the politics of the
law-making process, as well as shaping the outcome, can in equal measure be disruptive
and result in a delay in legal changes that market participants felt were much-needed.
After almost a decade of painstaking negotiations, the amendment stated that cashsettled
derivatives are legally enforceable under the Russian law. It rendered cash-settled
forwards legally secure, hence encouraged cross-border transactions and enhanced the
market’s liquidity; it is also made possible the introduction of netting as a risk
management tool in the market. The contested, long-delayed amendment is thus an
example of a pervasive process: the constitutive role of law (including esoteric law, little
noticed outside of specialist spheres) in shaping markets.