In Bankruptcy Court, the trustee for Co-mark, a limited partnership, sought to recover the value of an alleged preferential transfer to GreatAmeriean Federal Savings & Loan Association. The transfer occurred when Comark returned $9.25 million worth of securities to GreatAmeriean that were “additional margin” in a securities transaction that the parties cancelled. On cross motions for summary judgment, the Bankruptcy Court ruled that while the transfer was a preferential transfer it was not avoidable because the return of the securities was either a “margin payment” or a “settlement payment.” The district court affirmed.
FACTS
This appeal arises from an adversary proceeding between the trustee (“Comark”) for the debtor Comark and the receiver (“GreatAmeriean”) for the GreatAmeriean Federal Savings & Loan Corporation. Although the transactions invоlved in this appeal are complex, the facts can be sorted out relatively easily.
Comark was involved in a sophisticated business of trading in government securities, known as “Ginnie Maes” (“GNMAs”). Each GNMA represents an interest in a pool of home mortgages. Comark entered into repurchase agreements (“Repos”) and reverse repurchase agreements (“Reverse Repos”). In a Repo arrangement, the dealer sells specified securities to a purchaser, but also agrees to repurchase the securities later at the original price, plus an agreed upon additional amount usually representing interest on the original purchase price. A Reverse Repo basically is the reverse: the dealer buys securities and agrees to resell the securities to the seller in the future. 1 Reverse Repos can function as a loan. The seller receives cash for the securities, but must repurchase the securities in the future at the same price. Thus, the securities “sold” to the dealer can be viewed as being collateral for a loan.
Comark engaged in “matched book” transactions. Comаrk would sell Repos and then buy the equivalent in Reverse Repos, and profit by getting a greater rate of return on the securities it bought than it paid for the securities it sold.
Early in 1982 the parties engaged in the first of the transactions at issue in this appeal. Comark entered into six Reverse Repо agreements with GreatAmeriean. Comark agreed to buy GNMAs, while GreatAmeriean agreed to repurchase these GNMAs in December of 1982, at the same price, plus an additional interest payment. For each of the six Reverse Repos, GreatAmeriean also delivered additional GNMAs to Comark (“Additional GNMAs”), beyond the GNMAs Comark actually purchased. As Comark itself notes, the Additional GNMAs “were intended to provide Comark additional margin for the purchase price.” Shortly after the Comark-GreatAmerican Reverse Repo agreements, Comark entered into six “matching” Repo agreements with other firms.
The Additional GNMAs represented excess margin beyond what GreatAmeriean was obligated to provide. Apparently, GreatAmerican’s operational plans called for it to provide greater than required margin, to protect against additiоnal margin calls in the event that the market value of the GNMAs declined significantly. Co-mark’s book entries denoted the transferred securities as “Additional Securities Required to Meet 65% Loan Ratio.” The Additional GNMAs had a market value of $9,259,208 when they were returned to GreatAmeriean.
*324 In the spring of 1982, Comark began to experience financial difficulties. It decided to withdraw from the securities market. On June 23, 1982, Comark, GreatAmerican, and the firms that “matched” the Comark-GreatAmerican Reverse Repos entered into an agreement. Comark withdrew as an intermediary. GreatAmerican and thе firms on the Repo side contracted to complete the repurchase agreements directly with each other. GreatAmerican released Comark’s obligation to resell the securities according-to the Reverse Repo agreements and the other firms releаsed Comark’s obligation to repurchase securities pursuant to the Repo agreements. Comark gave up its potential for profit.
That left the Additional GNMAs, which were in Comark’s possession. These were returned to GreatAmerican June 18 and 22, and July 7 and 8. 2 Only the Additional GNMAs are involved in this action.
On September 1, 1982, Comark was forced into Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The trustee sought to recover the value of the Additional GNMAs as an avoidable preferential transfer. In response to cross motions for summary judgment, the Bankruptcy Court found that Comark had an interest in the Additional GNMAs; that GreatAmerican was a creditor; Comark wаs insolvent when it transferred the Additional GNMAs back to GreatAmerican; and that the transfer was within ninety days of the bankruptcy filing. Thus, the court held that the return of the Additional GNMAs was a preferential transfer. However, the Bankruptcy Court determined that GreatAmerican was protected from having the transfеr avoided, because the transfer constituted a margin payment or a settlement payment under Bankruptcy Code § 546(e). 11 U.S.C. § 546(e). 3 Comark appealed directly to the district court, which affirmed.
DISCUSSION
A Bankruptcy Court’s conclusions of law are reviewed de novo.
Altura Partnership v. Breninc, Inc. (In re B.I. Fin. Servs. Group, Inc.),
I.
Comark argues that GreatAmerican did not introduce sufficient evidence to support its construction of the statutory exemption from avoidance of preferential transfers under § 546(e). Comark reasons that because the terms “margin payment” and “settlement payment” are defined in the Bankruptcy Code by reference to common knowledge in the securities industry, see § 741(5), § 741(8), the meaning of the terms must be determined by considering expert evidence.
Comark is trying to turn a question of law into a question of fаct. The courts that have interpreted the meaning of settlement payment and margin payment treat the question as one of statutory construction.
See, e.g., In re Kaiser Steel Corp.,
Comark acknowledges that the Additional GNMAs were given as “additional margin.” It also acknowledges that the Additional GNMAs were returned because the securities were no longer required as collateral once Comark withdrew from the Repo/Reverse Repo transactions. The application of these undisputed facts to § 546(e) is a question of law. Thus, summary judgment was the proper mechanism for resolving the issues.
II.
This appeal raises an important question of bankruptcy and securities law. Evidently Repo market transactions average several hundred billion dоllars a day.
Bevill,
Section 546(e) protects “settlement payments,” as defined in § 741(8), from being avoided as preferential transfers. Section 741(8) defines a “settlement payment” as
a preliminary settlement paymеnt, a partial settlement payment, an interim settlement payment, a settlement payment on account, a final settlement payment, or other similar payment commonly used in the securities trade.
Generally, a settlement is “the completion of a securities transaction.”
See Kaiser Steel Corp.,
In
Bevill,
In
Bevill,
the defendants entered into a Repo agreement, whereby the defendants agreed to buy securities from the plaintiff and then resell the securities to the plaintiff at a future date.
The court extensively and eloquently considered the meaning of the term settlement payment. The court found it “clear that ‘settlement payment’ ... encompasses transfer of the purchased securities to the purchasеr from the dealer.” Id. at 752. The court interpreted settlement payment to “include[ ] transfers which are normally regarded as part of the settlement process, whether they occur on the trade date, the scheduled settlement day, or any other date *326 in the settlement process for the particular type of transaction at hand.” Id. The court held that the transfer of the securities from the plaintiff to the defendant was “a part of the settlement process” and thus a “ ‘settlement payment.’ ” Id. Therefore, the trustee could not avoid the transfer. Id. at 753.
The Tenth Circuit, in the context of a leveraged buy-out (“LBO”), also had occasion to consider the meaning of the term settlement payment, as defined by § 741(8). In
Kaiser Steel Corp. v. Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.,
In its opinion the Tenth Circuit stated thаt the definition of settlement payment is extremely broad and “includes anything which may be considered a settlement payment.”
Id.
at 848 (citations omitted);
accord In re Kaiser Steel Corp.,
We have not yet considered the meaning of the term settlement payment. We now join with the Third and Tenth Circuits and broadly define the term settlement payment. A settlement payment clearly includes a transfer of securities that completes a securities transaction.
Bevill,
Comark attempts to distinguish Bevill by arguing that no trаde “settled” when it removed itself from the transaction in June of 1982. Comark contends that its rescission of the Reverse Repo agreements with GreatAmerican was unusual and therefore the return of the Additional GNMAs cannot be considered “normally” part of a settlement payment.
We reject this argument. In accordance with the Reverse Repo agreement, GreatAmerican sold GNMAs to Comark. GreatAmerican also forwarded the Additional GNMAs to Comark as excess margin. Comark sold the GNMAs it purchased from GreatAmerican to other brokerage firms, but maintained possession of the Additional GNMAs. When Comark decided to back out of the Reverse Repos, the Additional GNMAs had to be dealt with. The return of the Additional GNMAs was a step in the process of “settling” Comark’s withdrawal from the Reverse Repo arrangements. Neither party reasonably could consider Comark’s withdrawal “settled” until GreatAmerican received the over $9 million dollars worth of securities Comark had in its possession.
In light of our decision that the return of the Additional GNMAs was an unavoidable settlement payment, we do not consider the alternative ground relied upon by the district court, that the return of the Additional GNMAs was a “margin payment.” It also is unnecessary for us to address the other arguments raised in defense by GreatAmerican.
The decision of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The opinion in
Bevill, Bresler, & Schulman Asset Management Corporation v. Spencer Savings & Loan Association,
. Although Comark included these dates in its proposed findings of fact before the Bankruptcy Court, which were partially adopted by the court, Comark contends on appeal that all the transfers occurred on June 18. However, Co-mark admits that the GNMAs were returned because, as a result of Comark’s withdrawal from the trades, it "no longer needed to retain these securities as collateral.” As explained in Section II, infra, the dispute over the dates of the transfers is not significant.
. In this opinion, all statutory citations are to the Bankruptcy Code, Title 11 of the United States Code.
. Congress added § 546(f) to make it clear that the § 546(e) protections extend to Repo transactions.
Bevill,
