Clarus Financial Technology

Consolidated Tape: Don’t let perfection be the enemy of good for derivatives

Dutch regulators have today stated with regards to European transparency data:

We could not have put it better ourselves. With the European Commission’s review of MIFIR set to be published imminently, we highlight that a consolidated tape for derivatives using European Transparency data is eminently possible, if only we were allowed to use and access the data.

AFM Consolidated Tape Work

Many thanks to Dan Barnes (no relation!) for sticking the below onto my Twitter feed this morning:

This is the direct link to the Dutch regulators report. (For the purposes of disclosure, Clarus are NOT one of the fintechs involved in this pilot). It states that the review of MIFIR by the European Commission is expected to be published on 23rd November 2021. Has anyone seen it yet this week? I’ve delayed this week’s blog as much as possible expecting to see it!

ETA: See here for the report publication details.

So this may well be out of date by the time you read it, but please bear in mind we wrote two years ago what we think needs to be done to make transparency work in Europe:

The key takeaways were:

This all results in most volumes in Europe being considered “dark” by any reasonable assessment of transparency:

Scrap Deferrals

Can a “Consolidated Tape” therefore ride to the rescue? If we just stick to “post trade” prices, the pure concept can be distilled as:

I think the AFM must read our blog…..

As the AFM report duly notes:

  1. Significant regulatory changes are needed to simplify the current fixed income post-trade deferral regime.
  2. Define common data standards, to set required data fields, and to agree on data access.
  3. Trading venues and APAs [need] to contribute the required data fields and supporting commercial models.

(Emphasis is mine).

I mean, I could not have put it better myself if I was allowed to write these regulatory reports! The only thing I would note on (3) is that why do Trading Venues and APAs need to “support commercial models” for anyone actually publishing a Consolidated Tape? So long as the data is made public and unencumbered, people should be able to do whatever they want with the data. This would surely remove a load of complications from the regulatory process, and all ESMA would have to do is put up with some carping from the APAs and Trading Venues. Well, the TVs and APAs could have avoided that by playing ball with the spirit of the regulations from day one.

A Consolidated Tape for Derivatives

Our eagle-eyed and well informed readers will no doubt have realised that all of the AFM commentary related to Fixed Income markets. In a cleared and standardised world, I largely consider this to cover vanilla interest rate swaps as well, but I understand ESMA may consider cash and derivatives as different ball games.

So I want to make it clear that the Clarus view aligns with that of AFM for derivatives as well. If the data were made available within 15 minutes, we believe that we could create a consolidated tape for derivatives, using the ISIN identifiers.

How Would That Work Exactly?

Of course, ISINs are far from ideal. We covered that on the blog, and we note that there are now nearly 70 million ISINs in existence, which undoubtedly hampers transparency. WHY ANNA/DSB would proudly advertise this on their website is beyond me. IT IS NOT A GOOD THING!

Fortunately, derivatives market participants are used to distilling complexity into something simple to understand (a bit like the ethos of this blog).

Therefore, we can rely on existing standardised identifiers of derivatives trades to create a more meaningful Consolidated Tape for derivatives.

At Clarus, we already take data from Bloomberg, Nasdaq, Tradeweb. We are not allowed to sell it on, but that doesn’t stop us from still making a damn good data product from it.

Our (internal only) MIFIDView therefore assigns “Tickers” that are recognisable to all market participants to most linear Rates trades we see reported in MIFID data:

Showing;

The main point here is yes, we can align ISINs with recognisable tickers with the data as it stands today.

Perfection as the enemy of good

We know that a “tape” of this sort would be appreciated by the market. How do we know? Because we create exactly this for our SDRView Pro clients using US data. It is used across the market by both brokers and market-makers:

We have a simple filter allowing market participants to look at any combination of:

  1. Spot, Forward, IMM starting
  2. Non standard
  3. Single Period Swaps
  4. Packages covering butterflies, spreads, spreadovers, spreads of spreadovers etc

Some filters are based on the start date of the swap. That specific data field isn’t explicitly included in the ISIN description right now, but there are plenty of pragmatic solutions that can be applied to make sure this isn’t a problem. For example:

We urge regulators to make the data available, for free and unencumbered, and let market participants such as Clarus solve these problems using our analytics.

Let’s get it right this time

This blog is obviously way too late in the game to serve any influential purpose. We just really want European markets to be able to operate on an equal footing with the gold standard in the US. Let’s not waste this opportunity. Get the data out there, accessible for free and unencumbered, and we can be confident that a usable consolidated tape for derivatives will follow.

In Summary

In the words of AFM, the Dutch financial regulators:

Make European transparency data available publicly, for free and unencumbered and a consolidated tape for derivatives will follow. We firmly believe that.

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