Clarus Financial Technology

CCP Basis Spreads: What Next?

Given the recent activity in CME-LCH Basis Spreads (see November review or Spreads Blow Out), we often get asked what further developments we see happening and specifically whether a basis will manifest between non-USD currencies and between other Clearing Houses. This article will look at both of these questions.

Indicative CCP Basis Quotes

Lets start with a screenshot of the ICAP 19983 page on Reuters from 2 Dec 2015.

This is titled Indicative CCP Basis Composite and shows:

Interesting and definitely worth exploring in more detail.

CME-LCH Basis in USD

But first a re-cap of the rationale behind the large basis we see in USD.

Clients at CME have a preference to pay fixed on swaps and Swap Dealers taking the other side (receive fixed) need to hedge by paying fix and historically had a preference to do so on LCH. As client business at CME increased significantly in 2014 and the first part of 2015, this imbalance in a Swap Dealers house portfolios at CME and LCH became very large and the margin cost prohibitive in terms both of funding cost and regulatory cost. Resulting in Swap Dealers adjusting their prices to make it more expensive to pay fixed at CME.

We can show this quantitatively by using CHARM to calculate Initial Margin for par swaps on major tenors.

Showing that:

In reality, a Swap Dealer should not be looking at the stand-alone IM of each trade, but the incremental change in IM of the new trades on their  portfolio. As the imbalance grows between the Dealers House Account being massively Received Fixed USD at CME and massively Pay Fixed USD at LCH, another effect comes into play. The fact that one or both accounts are now above a liquidity threshold and so incur an additional IM charge; further increasing the IM and its cost. The net result being a further upward pressure on the basis spread.

Using CHARM, we can model both the portfolio impact and the liquidity add-on, both at time zero and over the life of the trade. However this recap is in danger of becoming the whole article, so I will stop there (contact us if you have further interest in this topic).

Except to note that given in November we saw $75 billion of CME-LCH Switch trade volume, there is clearly a two way market; meaning that not all Swap Dealers are the same way on CME and LCH or that there is a significant difference in opinion on what the true Basis Spread should be.

CME-LCH Basis in Non-USD Currencies

Back to the CAD, GBP, EUR & CHF currencies shown on the ICAP page.

Lets corroborate by looking at what Tradition show on their Bloomberg page.

While this is from 23 Nov, given the Thanksgiving holiday in-between, still comparable to 2 Dec:

So generally the Tradition and ICAP pages are consistent, with small differences of 0.05bps on some tenors.

Cleared Volumes

Lets now look at Cleared Volumes at CME and LCH for these currencies.

Using CCPView, we first produce a table of November 2015 volume in USD millions.

Then Outstanding Notional as at Nov 30, 2015.

Showing that:

Interestingly for GBP swaps at 30Y there is significant asymmetry between pay and rec at both CME & LCH.

Compare the pink bars for 30Y Pay with the adjacent green bars for 30Y Rcv.

In summary EUR and GBP have the potential for the CME-LCH Basis to be volatile going-forward.

Basis between other CCPs – LCH/Eurex

Lets now look at other CCPs.

The ICAP page quotes LCH/Eurex spreads in EUR & CHF.

First the global cleared volumes as before, this time including JPY; first volumes in November.

Then Outstanding Notional at November 30.

Showing that:

We will need to wait for EU Mandatory Clearing (end 2016 for Category 2 firms) to see what happens to Eurex volumes and the LCH/Eurex basis.

It now appears trickier for Eurex to gain traction given that Swap Dealers will be reluctant to hedge client business on Eurex with dealer hedges at LCH, for fear of losses arising from a similar scenario to CME-LCH. Consequently supply and demand (pay vs rec) will need to be better balanced and the benefits of portfolio margining with Bund Futures more significant than hitherto seen in the US with CME Futures.

Basis between LCH/JSCC?

Lets now look at JPY and JSCC volumes:

However we don’t have an ICAP or Tradition basis quote page.

So where else can we look?

Luckily if you follow our Japan ETP blogs, you will know that there is now post-trade disclosure of price and size of 5Y, 7Y, 10Y Swaps Cleared at JSCC.

And if you know our SDRView product, you will know that JPY Swap trades executed by US persons are publicly disclosed, which from the above volumes we know are dominantly LCH.

So we can look for evidence of a LCH/JSCC Basis in actual transactions.

Lets try for Friday 4-Dec and 10Y JPY Swaps.

Unfortunately there are only 7 trades on the US DTCC repository and 15 on ETPs. Even so lets create a table and sort by time.

Showing:

Assuming that the bid-offer is 0.25bps, the prices do not show any evidence of a basis.

We would want to repeat for more days, more tenors and more volume to be sure.

Possibly JSCC participants are operating in a domestic liquidity pool and LCH participants in a separate foreign liquidity pool, both of significant size and on the same economic instrument.

However Client Clearing of JPY IRS is still in its infancy in Japan and it is possible that when these volumes build up, we will see new pressures on supply and demand, an increase in activity between the JSCC and LCH and a LCH/JSCC Basis Spread develop.

Summary

We are starting to see evidence of non-USD CCP Basis.

Both ICAP and Tradition have indicative quote pages.

Currently the quotes range from -0.20 bps to +0.30 bps.

So are not significant.

There is a possibility of these becoming significant.

In EUR, GBP, JPY, CAD, CHF?

And including other CCPs e.g. LCH/Eurex, LCH/JSCC.

But not until Client Clearing is mandatory and significant in Europe and Japan.

Or possibly not even then.

Only time will tell.

Stay informed with our FREE newsletter, subscribe here.

Exit mobile version