Clarus Financial Technology

EMIR Trade Reporting and Public Data: What is the Point?

It is now more than two months since European EMIR Trade Reporting came into operation. Time to see whether teething problems have been solved and look at what the public data shows.

Those of you that read my articles on Swap Data Repositories will know that I am a great proponent of the value of the CFTC regulated real-time public dissemination feeds available in the US. So it was with great interest and anticipation that I went to the European Trade Repository websites. I knew that current EMIR trade reporting regulation is not real-time but T+1 and the public data is to be published weekly. Despite this I expected to find interesting and valuable information.

Lets start with the three major trade repositories; DTCC, UnaVista and Regis-TR.

And focus on two Asset Classes: Interest Rate and Credit.

 

DTCC Repository

The DTCC Derivatives Repository Limited Public Data can be found here.

What does it show?

Firstly for each Asset Class and split for OTC and ETD there are weekly reports of Outstanding positions and number of contracts.

These start from 14 Feb 2014 (the commencement of EMIR reporting) and the last one is for the week ending 11 April 2014, so two weeks old.

Lets show the Interest Rate data from each weeks Table 1 report.

              

From which we can see that:

 

Now aggregate totals for outstanding notional and number of trades is of limited value.

Even comparing the weekly changes is fraught with difficulties; maturing trades, terminations, new trades etc.

What we need is not only outstanding volumes by currency, product, maturity but also the new transactions in the same period by currency, product and maturity.

Unfortunately while there are place holders on the DTCC page for such reports, there is no data.

We cannot see currency, product, maturity.

The data currently available is only of passing academic interest.

So I will show a table of Credit Volumes and move swiftly on.

 

UnaVista Trade Repository

What can we get from the LSE UnaVista Repository?

The public data is available here (registration required).

After registration, the only data I was able to see is the following:

Overall the UnaVista public data is even more under-whelming than the DTCC public data.

Probably not even of passing academic interest.

Onward.

 

REGIS-TR Trade Repository

What can we get from REGIS-TR?

The public data is available here.

And there are two reports available; aggregate open positions and aggregate transaction volumes.

Both have weekly and monthly versions.

The Aggregate Open Positions at least has currency breakdowns.

However again there is no OTC and ETD breakdown!

Lets take a look at the Aggregate Open Positions data.

And the transaction volumes report?

The total transactions in the week of April 7-11, by Asset Class.

Presumably this includes both OTC and ETD trades making it much less useful.

So there you have it.

 

Summary

EMIR Trade repository public data reporting is now operational.

Aggregate weekly reports are being published.

The three main TRs; DTCC, UnaVista and REGIS-TR are publishing on their websites.

The data is very disappointing.

It has no real-world use.

EMIR regulations have failed so far to produce anything useful in terms of public data.

This is because:

What more can I say?

 

Some Thoughts

I really hope that the new MIFID II Directive provides some sanity and clarity to this.

Just following the CFTC Trade reporting regulations would produce a far far superior outcome.

Otherwise what is the point of all that investment in trade reporting?

No benefit is being realised in the transparency provided to the public.

Is some benefit being realised by regulators?

Your guess is as good as mine.

In the meantime, I would say to each of the Trade Repositories.

Please improve the granularity of your public data, as far as possible within the current regulations.

And there is a lot of room for improvement within these.

It is also incumbent on all of us in the industry to point out the failings in the regulations.

As European tax payers, we expect our politicians and institutions to create and implement effective regulations.

Anything less is a waste of time and money.

A missed opportunity.

 

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