CL-2018-000297, CL-2018-000404, CL-2018-000590, - [2025] EWHC 2364 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2018-000297, CL-2018-000404, CL-2018-000590, - [2025] EWHC 2364 (Comm)

Fecha: 02-Oct-2025

Solo Model 2014/2015 (Solo 4 to Solo 8, Solo 10 to Solo 15)

Solo Model 2014/2015 (Solo 4 to Solo 8, Solo 10 to Solo 15)

Overview

17.

The Solo Model trading in its second phase in 2014/2015 followed the same core pattern as in 2012/2013 but with the following different features:

there were LabCos as well as USPFs as buyers on whose behalf Tax Agents made refund claims to SKAT;

there was a change in the type of derivative used, from exchange-listed futures to OTC forwards that did not require external bank clearing;

the settlement loops involved additional parties and (in some cases) sub-variants which added complexity:

instead of loops involving a sole broker, stock lender and forward counterparty between the short seller and buyer, there were two brokers, two stock lenders and two forward counterparties, each entering into matching, generally back-to-back transactions, of which Sample Trades Solo 4 to Solo 8 are representative examples. The trading by the forward counterparties was not completely back-to-back because the forwards traded between them had longer expiry dates than those traded by each of them with either the short seller or the buyer;

some trades (of which Sample Trades Solo 10 to Solo 12 are representative examples) involved multiple buyers and multiple short sellers trading between them (through the same brokers, forward counterparties and stock lenders) share volumes that matched in aggregate (Sub-Variant 1);

in some trades (of which Sample Trades Solo 13 to Solo 15 are representative examples), there was a single buyer whose traded volume was matched to the aggregate of sales by more than one short seller (Sub-Variant 2);

in some trades (of which Sample Trades Solo 6 and Solo 7 are representative examples), the forwards traded in conjunction with the initial equity purchase were later extended (rolled over) by the conclusion of a further set of forwards, closing out the original positions and establishing new positions with a later expiry, shortly after which the new positions were in turn closed out by a yet further set of forward trades. That final close-out was still timed, the intervening extra complexity notwithstanding, to coincide with the unwind of the equity purchase and stock lending.