Clarus Financial Technology

BREXIT: Moving Euro clearing conflicts with G20 Market Reforms

LCH made a public statement last week

We are focusing on Xavier Rolet’s headline this week. For those of you who did not read his commentary, the CEO of LSEG said;

We support the commission’s proposal to enhance the supervisory regime due to Brexit. We also oppose its location policy — mandating all euro-denominated transactions to be cleared only within the eurozone.

Why is the article of interest for us? Mainly because LSEG provided us with an additional piece of information on the cleared swaps market that we haven’t previously enjoyed:

LCH, clears 90 per cent of global interest rate swaps, 28 per cent of which are denominated in euros. Euro swaps originating from EU-based entities comprise 7 per cent of LCH’s interest-rate swaps flows.

For a data-driven blog such as this, the “7%” figure above is something we can work with. So let’s combine with our public sources of data to see what this means in terms of EUR flows per day.

There are a lot of members of LCH SwapClear who are based in the Eurozone

With Clearing Mandates now active around the globe (US, EU, Japan, Mexico, Canada et al) a geographically diverse range of banks must be able to clear and/or offer clearing services to their clients. It is not that surprising that the largest clearing house in the world has many members across many countries – see the list here.

The geographic location of the LCH members does not give us any information about activity. For example, from CCPView, we know that 57% of LCH volumes in 2017 have been USD-denominated, compared with just 28% in EUR. You would not guess that by just looking at where the membership is based (only 27% of members are US-based).

To state the blindingly obvious, we cannot simply assume that Eurozone banks just trade Euros, US banks just trade USD and that market activity is split equitably between members. This is why the data that LSEG chose to share is important to us.

€125bn per day trades “onshore” in Europe

CCPView confirms that 28% of volumes cleared at LCH SwapClear in 2017 have been in EUR. Confident that we are looking at the same data as LSEG, we can look in detail at what is meant by “7% of the LCH interest rate swap flows”.

Crunching the numbers shows that this onshore EUR component equates to 25% of all LCH EUR swap activity, meaning:

So where are most counterparties based who trade EUR swaps?

EUR swap volumes have the following geographic split:

Where are the counterparties based that transact EUR swaps?

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Dodd Frank shows that liquidity is the key concern

Current data shows that;

Bank of England

Prior to Dodd Frank, US entities were far more involved in the EUR swap markets, accounting for up to 30% of volumes (see chart).

This 30% of the market moved overnight.

It was the smaller, US portion of the market that moved legal entities, in order to retain access to the greatest amount of liquidity possible.

 A geographic mandate to clear conflicts with G20 market reforms

Consider the following:

  1. Do the same systemic concerns that bring EUR clearing on-shore also exclude any EU-based clearing house from clearing all other currencies?
  2. Uncleared margin rules have regulatory approval for multi-currency netting across all currencies, including Euros.

If a clearing house only clears a single currency, they will probably be at a disadvantage compared to the uncleared margin rules. It doesn’t matter why a clearing house only clears one currency.

I wanted to prove this to myself. Using CHARM we model a typical European Rates trading portfolio. Consider a Scandinavian asset manager for example. They might have a small balanced portfolio in clearing of just 4 trades:

A typical European swaps portfolio

Showing;

What is the IM requirement if this is all cleared at a single clearing house? Our currency-weighted Taylor expansion shows an IM requirement of about $3.6m at LCH:

$3.6m in IM is required to clear this portfolio at LCH

What if this portfolio were bilateral (i.e. uncleared)? Uncleared Margin Rules mean that IM would have to be posted. Under SIMM, the IM required is $8.5m – much higher than within clearing. This is consistent with regulatory reforms intended to promote clearing to reduce systemic risk in OTC markets.

An IM of $8.5m is required if this portfolio were left uncleared

What happens if we have to move the EUR portion of the cleared portfolio to a clearing house based in the Eurozone? First, my IM at LCH for these cleared trades increases – to $5.8m. This is because I lose all diversification benefits from the EUR portion of my Rates portfolio.

The LCH IM requirement is now $5.8m. Ouch.

And I will now have to post IM against my EUR position in the Eurozone. This is a very directional position and would require a further $4.8m

My total IM in Clearing is now higher than leaving all my trades uncleared….

Uh-oh. My total Cleared IM requirement now sits at $10.6m. If all of these trades were uncleared, it would be only $8.5m.

European market participants may therefore find it economically beneficial to leave a multi-currency swaps portfolio uncleared. In this case, it offers a 25% saving. Crazy…..

This appears to be in direct conflict with the intentions of the G20 OTC market reforms.

Enhanced Supervision is the right path forward

Every way I look at this, enhanced supervision from the ECB of offshore markets is the best way to go.

I think Mario Draghi echoed the sensible position of LSEG this week:

“[It is] crucial that [the ECB] can at least preserve the current level of involvement over systemically important euro-denominated clearing activities, regardless of the framework adopted by the EU legislator and of the terms of the future EU-U.K. relation.”

It seems sensible that the ECB should have a supervisory role in the regulation of EUR clearing wherever it takes place.

In Summary

Market participants such as European banks and asset managers need to be aware of the risks to their business due to policy changes. To do this, they need to understand and be able to optimise both cleared and uncleared margin requirements.

Please reach out to us to find out how CHARM does this for you.

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