Clarus Financial Technology

ARRC Vendor Workshop June 28, 2019

The Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) hosted a vendor workshop recently at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which I attended and in this article I cover some of the key points from the workshop.

Despite an evident consensus on the big rate and trade characteristics, the Q&A session and subsequent networking hinted at a mammoth effort across labyrinthine organizational chains and product flows.  

What I heard below with my interleaved observations and notes.

Summary of the session

  1. Tom Wipf book-ended the session with opening remarks and conclusion.  
  2. David Bowman elaborated SOFR rate and trade characteristics and led the Q&A session.  The presentation was largely based on the SOFR Users Guide.  This document has been well received.
  3. Ellen Hefferan spoke on operational and accounting issues in the loans market.
  4. There was a little post meeting networking though many slipped away after the speeches.
  5. There’s a lot more information in the announcements and publications sections of the ARRC website.  

Tom Wipf’s Speech

The ARRC Chairman and Vice Chairman of Institutional Securities at Morgan Stanley laid the foundation and summed up the meeting.  The headlines were:

Observation: Such decisions demand early and imperfect market risk decisions in 2019 / 2020 despite trader instincts for better liquidity or tighter pricing.   This will entail well-established and empowered LIBOR initiative steering arrangements and early availability of tools which will enable the forward impact of the transition to be assessed.

David Bowman on SOFR Rates

Observation: care is required to carefully calibrate curves / reset processes to handle the date correctly. The suggestion is to take the rate at say 3pm EST so you never have to handle changes.

Observation: while compounding in arrears handling is new and causes work to support, if all the above conveniences are created, rate observation / calculation should be simple.

David Bowman on SOFR Trades

All four interest conventions below are needed and should all be engineered into systems solutions as required per product:

On fallback trades, the spread should not be compounded but instead just added onto the compounded daily rate.

Coupon payment in arrears will require a rate lookback, a payment delay or a rate freeze.  Convergence of market practice on a standard approach / number of days per product variant seems important.

Weekend / holiday accruals for lookback trades are tricky and require upfront specific agreement on handling.   A Friday normally has a 3-day accrual, but if the Friday accrual is based on a fixing on Wednesday due to lookback, how many days should be accrued?  It turns out that the answers 1 and 3 both have some support and market conventions require to be nailed down.

Q&A Session

  1. How will the spread change over time?   David expects the spreads will become more firmly set at the time of LIBOR withdrawal and will converge over a period of about one more year after that to a permanent fixed long-term spread.  As spreads only apply to legacy LIBOR trades using the fallback, they should only apply to a rump of legacy trades after LIBOR withdrawal.
  2. Should the spread remain dynamic?   David’s view is no as this would require a bank survey which is precisely what LIBOR withdrawal is trying to avoid.  
  3. How are portfolios expected to transition over time?   David opined that whether it be derivatives, debt issuance or loans, the bulk of the transition should be about exiting LIBOR before LIBOR withdrawal.
  4. How will FX forward rate curves be constructed in absence of LIBOR use for interest rate parity?   David suggested the expectation is to use an compound average SOFR rates and that this doesn’t require a term reference rate. 
  5. When will SOFR IR volatilities be available to enable SOFR swaption trading?   David’s view that the market may need to make special arrangements to enable transition of options markets before withdrawal
  6. A nasty conversion example: the AB Ports FRNs.  An audience member raised the challenges caused by the conversion of AB Ports FRNs from LIBOR to SONIA.   Even though conversion was done on a coupon date, to avoid splitting a coupon, the coupon set on that date was fixed on LIBOR in advance whilst the future periods were SONIA in arrears.   This led to the need for two strips of delta risk on one trade one for SOFR and one for LIBOR.   This caused a lot of work to handle discounting of both LIBOR and SONIA cash flows with a SONIA curve and to correctly accrue the last LIBOR coupon.

Observation: there was little discussion on the myriad issues of how to exit LIBOR before withdrawal.   No doubt other ARRC sub-groups will tackle this.  We have also blogged on this topic compression auctions and portfolio conversion.

Note: I picked up after the session that some draft proposals around: I was passed A Note on Building Proxy Volatility Cubes by Fabio Mercurio.  I also heard some say that the volatilities may be immaterially different despite the basis so that even the belt and braces approach of using LIBOR vols to price SOFR swaptions may work quite well.

Observation:  trading out and replacement by a new trade / issuance / loan will avoid such dual index problems.  However, there were cases noted in cash markets that cannot easily do that.

Post meeting networking

Residual steam on point 3 was vented in the post meeting networking. There was agreement that portfolio transition from LIBOR to RFR is MUCH bigger than set up of SOFR trading / discounting infrastructure.   The AB Ports example illustrates the type of thing which can happen.   There seems not to be enough time and mental capacity to debate each variant in theory and define a perfect solution.    An element of trial and error at small volume for each variant is thus inevitable.

Further new points opined upon included:

  1. Hedge inaccuracies or hedge accounting failures may arise if a trade and its associated hedge are no longer on the same index due to one being transitioned to SOFR.  
  2. Legacy OIS and FRAs may disappear once SOFR swap liquidity is establishede.g. Fed Funds OIS and USD LIBOR FRAs can be replaced by SOFR swaps (single-period in the case of FRAs). 
  3. MM futures will likely stay with us e.g. Eurodollar futures will transition to SOFR futures (though, even here, SOFR swaps could become liquid enough to hedge SOFR swap portfolios).

Summary of Key Messages

Relevant Clarus Products

Clarus offers four services for IBOR to RFR transitions:

For more information or a demo, please contact us and please mention that this blog prompted your enquiry.

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