CLO Risk Retention Rules

Risk retention regulations, implemented post-2008 financial crisis, require CLO managers or arrangers to retain at least 5% of the economic interest in CLOs they issue. This "skin in the game" requirement aligns manager incentives with investor outcomes and prevents "originate-to-distribute" models where managers had no downside risk.

The 5% Retention Requirement

U.S. Rules (2014-Present)

Regulation: Dodd-Frank Act Section 941, implemented via risk retention rules (2014, reinstated 2018 after D.C. Circuit challenge)

Requirement: CLO manager or sponsor must retain at least 5% of "credit risk" in one of several permitted forms

EU Rules (2019-Present)

Regulation: EU Securitization Regulation (Regulation 2017/2402)

Requirement: Similar 5% retention by originator, sponsor, or original lender

Permitted Retention Methods

Managers can satisfy the 5% requirement through multiple structures:

1. Vertical Slice (Most Common)

2. Equity Retention (Popular Alternative)

3. Eligible Horizontal Residual Interest

Purpose and Impact

Intended Benefits

Actual Market Impact

Holding Period Requirements

Minimum hold period: Manager must retain the 5% interest for:

Hedging restrictions: Manager cannot hedge or transfer the economic risk of retained interest

Key Takeaways

Learn more about CLO equity →