Clarus Financial Technology

Benchmark Reform – An EONIA replacement is coming very soon!

Background

Back in September 2017, the ECB announced that it will “develop a euro unsecured overnight interest rate”. Since then, this new rate has been christened “ESTER” (Euro short-term rate).

I (somewhat naïvely) assumed that ESTER would become the Risk Free Rate of choice in the Euro area. But hold on! The European Working Group on RFRs has just launched a public consultation to choose the best RFR for the Eurozone.

Let’s take a look at the candidate rates.

Criteria

There are three candidate rates. They will be “judged” versus the criteria outlined in April:

  1. Underpinned by broad-based and reliable market data.
  2. Representative of arm’s-length risk-free borrowing costs.
  3. Reactive to changes in policy rate.
  4. Clear and transparent measure of underlying interest.
  5. Transaction based where possible.
  6. Market data defined and understood.
  7. Market data reliable and accessible.
  8. Determination methodology clear and transparent.

I think these are the 8 criteria worth bearing in mind (there are 12 in total). The consultation document includes a history of the three rates over time:

Let’s go ahead and take a look at the three rates under consideration.

ESTER

ESTER sat alongside Euribor, EURONIA, EONIA and LIBOR as possible unsecured RFRs.

What we know about ESTER so far is that:

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Finally, it is worth noting that the five largest banks in the ESTER data pool have tended to account for 50% of notional volume:

On ESTER, I think that is pretty much it. It seems a strong contender to me!

STOXX GC Pooling Indices

The first of the secured rates under consideration is published by STOXX, based on repo transactions cleared through Eurex. The Working Group has considered the widest possible source of transactions for this index, which is called the “GC Pooling Deferred”. This includes repos that are transacted for value tomorrow, as well as one day tenors covering tom/next and spot/next from previous days trading.

As with SOFR in the US, the transactions underlying the index are general collateral repos, defined thus by Eurex:

There is an in-depth look at the index here. Of note:

From my brief look at this, the STOXX GC rate performs particularly well during times of stress, when central clearing is most attractive. I’m surprised that volumes are not significantly higher than EONIA. For example, in the US SOFR volumes are much higher than Fed Funds.

RepoFunds Rate

I recently came across this fixing when I was looking at collateral optimisation (contact us to see this in CHARM). Their website is very transparent, and well worth checking out:

The index is based on centrally cleared repos executed across both BrokerTec and MTS (RepoFunds Rate is produced by NEX and BrokerTec is part of NEX. MTS is part of LSEG).

NEX produced an in-depth look at the fixing for the Working Group. Of note;

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Of course, we need to see the history versus EONIA as well:

Which does highlight why some people do not like secured rates:

In Summary – Is Size Important?

So there you have it for a brief run-down of the three rates: ESTER vs GC Pooling vs RepoFunds.

Here are the key facts in table form from the ECB:

Going purely on the numbers:

Therefore, size may be a driving factor in deciding whether Europe should go with a secured or unsecured RFR. However, the choice isn’t clear-cut. Look at the relative sizes of secured vs unsecured in four different markets. They are all very different!

The Working Group needs to decide whether European money markets are like the UK. Therefore the quarter end volatility of repo rates may be less attractive compared to a stable secured market with okay volumes.

Or, with EUR and USD swaps markets being roughly equal sizes, should we look to the US? The largest possible pool of transactions for a European RFR are in secured rates.

The market will help decide – responses to the consultation are due in by 13th July, and can be submitted here.

Please feel free to reach out to Clarus if you need any data or help with a submission. We’ll go through our data to see if there is anything further that we can add to the debate.

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