(1) An eligible counterparty is a client that is either a per se eligible counterparty or an elective eligible counterparty.
(2) A1, client can only be an eligible counterparty in relation to eligible counterparty business (PRIN 1 Annex 1 R is an exception to this).1
(1) an investment firm;
(2) a credit institution;
(3) an insurance company;
(4) a collective investment scheme authorised under the UCITS Directive or its management company;
(5) a pension fund or its management company;
(6) another financial institution authorised or regulated under 2EU2 legislation or the national law of an EEA State;
(7) an undertaking exempted from the application of MiFID under either Article 2(1)(k) (certain own account dealers in commodities or commodity derivatives) or Article 2(1)(l) (locals) of that directive;
(8) a national government or its corresponding office, including a public body that deals with the public debt;
(9) a central bank;
(10) a supranational organisation.
(1) the client is an undertaking and:
(a) is a per se professional client (except for a client that is only a per se professional client because it is an institutional investor under COBS 3.5.2 R (5)) and, in relation to business other than MiFID or equivalent third country business:1
(i) is a body corporate (including a limited liability partnership) which has (or any of whose holding companies or subsidiaries has) called up share capital of at least £10 million (or its equivalent in any other currency at the relevant time); or1
(ii) meets the criteria in the rule on meeting two quantitative tests (COBS 3.5.2 R (3)(b)); or1
(b) requests such categorisation and is an elective professional client, but only in respect of the services or transactions for which it could be treated as a professional client; and
(2) the firm has, in relation to MiFID or equivalent third country business, obtained express confirmation from the prospective counterparty that it agrees to be treated as an eligible counterparty.