gmsla framework

Overview

Parthenon Fi uses the ISLA Global Master Securities Lending Agreement (GMSLA 2010) as the legal foundation for all credit transactions. The GMSLA is the industry-standard master agreement used by major banks, prime brokerages, and institutional investors worldwide for securities lending.

The agreement is supplemented with the Clifford Chance Digital Assets Annex (August 2024), which extends the GMSLA to cover blockchain-native assets.

Why GMSLA

Traditional DeFi lending protocols rely on Terms of Service — click-wrap agreements with limited enforceability in court. Parthenon uses the GMSLA because:

  • Court-tested: The GMSLA has been tested in English courts and across multiple jurisdictions. Its close-out netting provisions are supported by ISLA netting opinions.

  • Institutional standard: Banks, funds, and prime brokerages already have GMSLA infrastructure. Using a familiar legal framework reduces onboarding friction.

  • Netting efficiency: Close-out netting allows a party to net all outstanding obligations upon default, reducing credit exposure to a single amount.

  • ADGM enforceability: ADGM operates under English common law. The GMSLA (governed by English law) is directly enforceable without legal "translation" risk.

Digital Assets Annex

The Clifford Chance Digital Assets Annex (August 2024) extends the GMSLA to three categories of digital assets:

Category
Definition
Examples

Asset-Backed Digital Assets

Tokenized representations of real-world securities

Tokenized US Treasuries, tokenized real estate

Platform Transferred Securities

Traditional securities recorded on DLT

Securities issued or transferred via Canton

Digital Cash

Digital representations of money

CBDCs, tokenized deposits, e-money (incl. USDC)

The Annex preserves the GMSLA's title transfer mechanics, Events of Default, and close-out netting provisions while adapting them for blockchain-specific considerations (e.g., hard forks, airdrops, network outages).

Multi-Party Structure

Traditional GMSLA execution is bilateral (borrower + lender). Parthenon's multi-party structure adds the custodian and platform as named parties:

Party
GMSLA Role

Borrower

Transferor of collateral under title transfer (or pledgor under security interest model)

Lender

Transferee of collateral / provider of loan principal

Custodian

Collateral agent — holds and manages collateral under the Account Control Agreement

Platform

Infrastructure provider — matching, lifecycle automation, LPT registry. Not a lending counterparty.

Sign Once, Transact Many

Participants sign the Multi-Party GMSLA once at onboarding. Each subsequent loan transaction references this master agreement through the Loan Position Token's gmslaRefHash field. This eliminates per-transaction legal documentation — a major source of friction and cost in institutional lending.

Collateral Models

Title Transfer (GMSLA 2010)

The default model. Full ownership of collateral passes to the lender (via custodian as agent) upon transfer:

  • Simpler legal structure

  • Established case law for enforcement

  • Borrower retains contractual right to equivalent collateral at maturity

  • Additional tokens (airdrops) vest in borrower unless Term Sheet specifies otherwise

Security Interest (GMSLA 2018)

Alternative model for counterparties requiring pledge-based structures:

  • Lender receives security interest without ownership transfer

  • Borrower retains title to collateral

  • Preferred by certain institutions for regulatory or accounting reasons

  • Requires UCC Article 12 "control" for perfection in US jurisdictions

Netting Opinions

ISLA's 2025 netting opinions cover six jurisdictions:

Jurisdiction
Opinion Status

Belgium

Confirmed

England

Confirmed

France

Confirmed

Germany

Confirmed

Luxembourg

Confirmed

Switzerland

Confirmed

United States

Pending evaluation

These opinions confirm that GMSLA close-out netting is enforceable under each jurisdiction's insolvency law — a critical protection for institutional counterparties with multi-transaction exposure.