Clarus Financial Technology

CME-LCH Basis – What does the Term Structure tell us?

We analyse the CME-LCH Basis volumes by tenor and look at what the forward curve implies for prices in the future. There are no signs of normalisation trades in the market, with the basis widening over the past week. We suggest some thoughts as to how this may play out for other Currencies and other CCPs.

Amir did a great job looking at the fundamentals of the fast-evolving CCP Basis market last week. It’s clearly a hot topic, so let’s combine some of the data we didn’t use last week with price information from TradX to show how the market expects the basis to evolve over time.

CME-LCH Basis Volume by Tenor

We can imply most of the volume data for CCP Basis through our SEFView app. Whilst there are some articles in Risk that suggest clients are also switching exposures, we assume these volumes are small relative to dealer activity. Therefore, using SEFView we simply look for the “CME” mark-up on Dealer-to-Dealer SEF reports each day to identify CME-LCH Basis trades. Most of the D2D SEFs report this, and ICAP have helpfully provided us with some private data showing their volumes split by tenor (which is not available via their public SEF reporting).

I’ve used the same data as Amir used (30th April – 15th May), but split by DV01 per tenor. This allows us to look at both the market volumes in different maturity buckets, and the market share by SEF (only including ICAP, TradX and Tulletts for now):

As we said last week, the TradX figures are probably a little inflated due to the presence of outright CME trades. However, given that these were very probably hedged at LCH anyway, we are comfortable including those volumes for now. It is worth noting that TradX did have a huge volume day on 30th April, so as with any emerging market, these volume figures can be very sensitive to the exact time window.

Price Data by Tenor

So why bother with volumes by Tenor? What does it tell us? There are 3 significant points I want to highlight:

Back in the day when Libor-OIS and Libor 3m-1m basis were evolving into long-dated markets, the “term structure” (i.e. shape of the curve) was driven by an expectation that “normality” would return. Hence 10yr and 30yr basis was much narrower than the short-end. With this CCP Basis market, this is precisely what we do not see.

I used the price-data from ICAP and Trads to generate a simple model for the forwards in Excel (this hasn’t gone through the proper Clarus forward curve generator, so single curve only).

TradX were kind enough to provide us with updated prices earlier today:

Since Amir published his blog we can see that the basis has continued to widen:

When I plug this into my curve model, I see an upward sloping curve in forward space that shows the market is not expecting this basis to revert to zero:

Two things of note:

This simple analysis already tells us a few things about the market:

Overall, it is telling that market participants do not expect this basis to be trading at zero in five years time – for any maturity. If I were a bond issuer I’d be telling my swap bank to price off the CME curve right now!

Other Currencies and Other CCPs

With this basis clearly a hot topic, it raises natural questions as to the evolution of other CCP-basis markets. For example:

CHARM and CCP Basis

As a quick reminder, the reason Clarus are able to write in-depth about this market already is because of our margin optimisation software, CHARM. Amir has written today about how we monitor the risk at each CCP in CHARM, and I would implore all market participants to at least work out their intrinsic cost of carrying huge IM balances at different CCPs. That at least gives you a base-line for where theoretical CCP “bases” are for your exact portfolio.

This is no longer a hedged portfolio!

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