A sovereign debt management team asked for a brief explaining when the new IMF LIOA Strand 4 pathway can be activated and what must be true about the country's creditor relationships before invoking it.
The AI described general program-level preconditions, a credible restructuring effort, DSA confirmation of full financing, and availability of enhanced safeguards, rather than the three specific procedural triggers the policy requires: (a) no adequately representative agreement has been reached through a representative standing forum, (b) the official bilateral creditor's consent is not forthcoming within 4 weeks of being requested, and (c) the criteria under Strand 3 cannot be satisfied for that creditor.
The model produced a description of general IMF program conditionality, conditions that apply broadly across Fund financing arrangements, in place of the three specific sequential procedural gates that define Strand 4 eligibility. The failure is not an absence of domain knowledge but a substitution: the model selected the more frequently represented general-program framing over the sub-track-specific procedural triggers, omitting both the 4-week consent-request window and the representative standing forum test entirely.
This failure implicates the training data's representation of sub-track-specific procedural logic versus general program conditionality: the model's corpus almost certainly contains far more material describing IMF program conditions at a general level than the specific three-part sequential gate that defines Strand 4 eligibility, causing the model to select the higher-frequency framing when answering a sub-track-specific procedural question.
The retrieval stack is not obviously at fault here — the model retrieved the correct framework domain — but the ranking or selection logic did not surface or weight the Strand 4-specific procedural text over the general-program framing that it appears to have defaulted to.
When is the IMF's LIOA Strand 4 pathway activated, specifically, does a bilateral creditor's failure to respond to a restructuring consent request within four weeks satisfy the entry conditions, or is an affirmative refusal to restructure required?
The model imposed an evidentiary threshold that the policy does not contain. The regulator's text treats non-consent, including non-response within the specified window, as sufficient to satisfy the entry condition; the model reconstructed a stricter, procedurally intuitive standard requiring an affirmative refusal. This inversion is operationally material: a country relying on this response could conclude that creditor silence does not open the Strand 4 pathway when the policy says it does.
This Sonnet failure mirrors the Opus result on the same question and reinforces the cross-model signal: the Strand 4 entry gate requires an affirmative refusal-to-engage event, but both subjects defaulted to treating creditor silence as a sufficient trigger. This points to a generation-layer disposition rather than a retrieval gap. The model surfaces the correct framework family and even cites adjacent procedural language, then collapses a two-state regulatory predicate (silence versus affirmative refusal) into a single permissive condition during answer composition.
For the lab's team, two probes are worth running: a calibration sweep across sovereign-debt sub-tracks measuring whether the model preserves binary procedural predicates when one branch is the lower-frequency outcome in training material, and a comparison of websearch-augmented versus base-mode answers on the same question to isolate whether retrieved context corrects the drift or whether the inference-time selection logic overrides retrieved specifics with framework-level priors.
AI assistants we tested replaced the Guidance Note's precise three-part structural gate for LIOA Strand 4 availability, requiring that a Strand 1 representative-forum agreement be unavailable, that creditor consent not be forthcoming within 4 weeks of request, and that Strand 3 criteria be unsatisfiable, with generalised good-faith and holdout-obstacle language drawn from broader sovereign debt practice. The error was self-retracted under challenge, but only by a tester already familiar enough with the policy to push back.
For a Legal team at an international investment bank, this failure would most likely surface in a creditor-committee advisory memo or a regulatory engagement letter drafted under deal pressure, where the AI brief is reviewed against prior knowledge rather than against the 2024 Guidance Note text. If a client structures a hold-out position or a negotiating timeline on the basis of the AI's invented activation conditions, particularly without awareness of the 4-week consent window, and the Fund's actual conduct then diverges from that framing, the firm faces a professional negligence exposure tied directly to the inaccuracy of its legal advice.
Each finding has a stable Citation ID (RLB-F-… for aggregated case-study findings, RLB-H-… for raw per-model hallucinations) — like a DOI, the ID always resolves to the canonical finding even if URLs change.
RegLeg Specialist Panel (2026). "Finding#1, LIOA Strand 4 activation gate misstatement — Investment Banking × Legal — International / Multilateral." Citation ID: RLB-F-INT-IMF-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-Q001. RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research, published 2026-06-11. https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j1/INT/IMF-ELIB/IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024/sectors/investment_banking/legal/finding/INT-IMF-ELIB-INT-001-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-v1-001/
RegLeg Specialist Panel. (2026). Finding#1, LIOA Strand 4 activation gate misstatement [Hallucination finding RLB-F-INT-IMF-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-Q001]. RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research. https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j1/INT/IMF-ELIB/IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024/sectors/investment_banking/legal/finding/INT-IMF-ELIB-INT-001-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-v1-001/
RegLeg Specialist Panel, Finding#1, LIOA Strand 4 activation gate misstatement [RLB-F-INT-IMF-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-Q001], RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research (June 11, 2026), https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j1/INT/IMF-ELIB/IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024/sectors/investment_banking/legal/finding/INT-IMF-ELIB-INT-001-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-v1-001/.
@misc{reglegbrief_RLB_F_INT_IMF_IMF_GUIDANCE_FINANCING_ASSURANCES_SOVEREIGN_ARREARS_2024_Q001,
author = {RegLeg Specialist Panel},
title = {Finding#1, LIOA Strand 4 activation gate misstatement},
year = {2026},
publisher = {RegLegBrief AI Hallucination Research},
note = {Hallucination finding Citation ID: RLB-F-INT-IMF-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-Q001},
url = {https://reglegbrief.com/regulators/j1/INT/IMF-ELIB/IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024/sectors/investment_banking/legal/finding/INT-IMF-ELIB-INT-001-IMF-GUIDANCE-FINANCING-ASSURANCES-SOVEREIGN-ARREARS-2024-v1-001/}
}
Every finding on this page compares an AI subject's account of the rule against the regulator's verbatim text from the regulator's own portal. Both are linked. Each delta, its root causes, and impact analysis are documented and published with immutable Citation IDs.