Delivery Versus Payment (DVP): What It Is and How It Works

Delivery Versus Payment (DVP): A guarantee that the transfer of securities only happens after payment has been made.

Investopedia / Julie Bang

What Is Delivery Versus Payment (DVP)?

Delivery versus payment (DVP) is a securities industry settlement method that guarantees the transfer of securities only happens after payment has been made. DVP stipulates that the buyer's cash payment for securities must be made prior to or at the same time as the delivery of the security.

Delivery versus payment is the settlement process from the buyer's perspective; from the seller's perspective, this settlement system is called receive versus payment (RVP). DVP/RVP requirements emerged in the aftermath of institutions being banned from paying money for securities before the securities were held in negotiable form. DVP is also known as delivery against payment (DAP), delivery against cash (DAC), and cash on delivery.

Key Takeaways

  • Delivery versus payment is a securities settlement process that requires that payment is made either before or at the same time as the delivery of the securities.
  • The process is meant to reduce the risk that securities could be delivered without payment or that payments could be made without the delivery of securities.
  • The delivery versus payment system became a widespread industry practice in the aftermath of the October 1987 market crash.

Understanding Delivery Versus Payment (DVP)

The delivery versus payment settlement system ensures that delivery will occur only if payment occurs. The system acts as a link between a funds transfer system and a securities transfer system. From an operational perspective, DVP is a sale transaction of negotiable securities (in exchange for cash payment) that can be instructed to a settlement agent using SWIFT Message Type MT 543 (in the ISO15022 standard).

The use of such standard message types is meant to reduce risk in the settlement of a financial transaction and allow for automatic processing. Ideally, the title to an asset and payment are exchanged simultaneously. This may be possible in many cases such as in a central depository system such as the United States Depository Trust Corporation.

How Delivery Versus Payment Works

A significant source of credit risk in securities settlement is the principal risk associated with the settlement date. The idea behind the RVP/DVP system is that part of that risk can be removed if the settlement procedure requires that delivery occurs only if payment occurs (in other words, that securities are not delivered prior to the exchange of payment for the securities). The system helps to ensure that payments accompany deliveries, thereby reducing principal risk, limiting the chance that deliveries or payments would be withheld during periods of stress in the financial markets and reducing liquidity risk.

By law, institutions are required to demand assets of equal value in exchange for the delivery of securities. The delivery of the securities is typically made to the bank of the buying customer, while the payment is made simultaneously by bank wire transfer, check, or direct credit to an account.

Delivery versus payment (DVP) is a settlement method that requires that securities are delivered to a particular recipient only after payment is made.

Special Considerations

Following the October 1987 worldwide drop in equity prices, central banks in the Group of Ten strengthened settlement procedures to eliminate the risk that securities were delivered without payment. The DVP procedure reduces or eliminates the counterparties' exposure to this principal risk.

Article Sources
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  1. Fannie Mae. "Comparison of Delivery vs. Payment (DVP) and Delivery vs. Free (DVF or Free)." Page 1.

  2. Keith Dickinson. "Financial Markets Operations Management," Pages 211-215. John Wiley & Sons, 2015.

  3. Cornell University, Legal Information Institute. "12 CFR § 3.136 - Unsettled transactions."

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