Clarus Financial Technology

Calculating MVA under ISDA SIMM™

What is a Margin Valuation Adjustment (MVA)?

As Amir stated back in May this year;

MVA arises when Initial Margin is required on a Derivatives trade….and is an adjustment for the funding cost of IM. [W]e are not just interested in the IM today, but over the life of the trade.

There are some excellent papers and books linked in Amir’s original article which are well worth a read.

How do we calculate MVA?

To calculate MVA under ISDA SIMM™, we need four pieces of information:

  1. Risk Profile of the swap – not just today but also projected forward in time.
  2. The Initial Margin calculated as per ISDA SIMM associated with this risk profile at each point in time.
  3. The discount curve as at today.
  4. The cost of financing the Initial Margin. This is typically expressed as a margin over the discount curve being used.

This blog will demonstrate how we use this 4-step process to arrive at a Margin Valuation Adjustment for a standalone Pay Fixed 10 year USD IRS under ISDA SIMM.

Step One – Risk Profile

CHARM is our real-time margin and risk management tool. Pardon the gratuitous use of YouTube above – I realise that some of our clients will have this video hidden behind firewalls. But I do think it’s pretty cool that I can type in “Pay $50m 10y” and produce my what-if trades. We also have some natural language processing within this text string, which will overcome typos and certain nuances. You can even type a bit of broker slang with “Mine 10 years” if you feel like it….no Alexa link yet though.

CHARM also provides a Forward Scenario of risk, producing a grid that shows the risk at a number of points in the future – see below:

Delta Forward Scenario

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Step Two – ISDA SIMM™ Calculator

We will now combine our analysis from CHARM with the ISDA SIMM in Excel calculator that we built a month ago. We simply copy and paste each of the columns in turn into the Excel spreadsheet:

ISDA SIMM Calculator in Excel

Step Three – Discount Curve as at Today

Whilst we are concerned with how IM evolves over the lifetime of our swap, we are still calculating MVA according to the state of the market today. Therefore, we need to know what our discount curve looks like right now. CHARM allows us to export daily discount factors for our curves, giving us perfect granularity:

CHARM Curve View

Step Four – MVA Calculation

Finally, MVA is calculated as:

\( \ MVA = \sum\limits_{t=0}^{T} InitialMargin * Margin Rate * df_{t+1} * \frac{Days}{365} \)

Where;

Initial Margin is calculated at discrete points in time according to the projected delta profile of risk at that point in time.

Margin Rate is defined as our cost of raising funds over the risk free discount rate. Here, we are using 50 basis points over Fed Funds.

\( {df_{t+1}}\) is the discount factor at time t+1.

Comparing the MVA

Using the above calculations, we can plot the IM profile of a standalone 10 year USD swap at LCH, CME and bilaterally under ISDA SIMM:

Initial Margin projections under ISDA SIMM and 2 CCPs

When we calculate the MVA for these three charts, it is equivalent to calculating the area under each of the three plots. These amounts are shown in the table below, which remember are for a standalone pay-fixed 10 year USD Swap in 50k DV01.

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In Summary

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