Clarus Financial Technology

How FCM’s survived Brexit

aka “Is being an FCM viable?”

I was curious to see how FCM’s performed on Friday June 24th. How much cash did they have to throw at the business to sustain the market volatility on behalf of their clients?

Thankfully, I recalled coming across some FCM disclosure documents that listed out various gory details. Sure enough, CFTC rule 1.55(o) requires FCM’s to spill the beans every day in a “Daily Seg – FOCUS II” report. Apparently this is the report that, if you are in trouble, would admit such to the world. So I went and grabbed the daily reports for the top 5 FCMs, as per their March 2016 rankings here, for the past week. This meant Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, JP Morgan, and Wells Fargo, for June 20th through the 24th. I then normalized it all into a format one could readily digest.

I then took a crash course in how to interpret a Daily Seg report, which I will share with you now. The table below shows the data for close of business Friday 24-June (Brexit Day). Be slightly cautious as I have renamed each section to make it a bit more sensible. And to be clear, this is just for Cleared Swaps. There are other such reports for Futures as well.

Summary of Cleared Swap Focus Reports for Top 5 FCMs

My explanation:

With the educational part of the blog out of the way, we can now interpret the numbers:

HRI

Let’s take a closer look at this HRI. The real story behind all this excess cash being required at an FCM seems to be twofold:

  1. LSOC. The FCM always has to support client losses, and cannot use other client gains to do so. So, in our example where Client A makes $100 and Client B loses $100, the FCM needs to have $100 sitting around to make good on Client B’s margin call, without effecting Client A.
  2. Intraday Margin Calls. CCP’s (at least one of them) perform margin calls intraday. This is a good conservative measure. However, there is a rub. If the market sells off early in the day and margin calls are triggered, the FCM has to tuck away that cash. However if the market recovers, there is no “margin refund” later in the day.  Friday was a decent example of this, as the market retraced a bit over the course of the day.

Those two combined seem to explain why excess funds jumped on Friday.

It’s important to note that this is not just some accounting number, rather this represents a real funding requirement and poses real liquidity challenges. Imagine asking your boss for “an extra billion” to get through the day. “Let me just run down to the ATM”!

Here is how HRI jumped on Friday:

HRI the Week of June 20-24 2016

It’s for volatile days like Friday that we promote the CHARM web application to monitor expected liquidity requirements.  For example this Risk dashboard with a sample FCM with 6 clients across a couple FCMs, which updates as market data changes and trades are done:

CHARM Dashboard for Intraday Risk Assessment

Customer Required Funds

For those who enjoyed my article on FCM Rankings, I’ll give you a little update on how the top 5 FCM’s have shaken up over the past 3 months. Full disclosure, I have limited my research to only the top 5 as ranked in March, but here is how things have shaken up since then, with Morgan Stanley now having the most Required Funds for Cleared Swaps.  The “Change” is from March 31, 2106 through June 24.

What’s intriguing is just how volatile this number is. Check out the chart below for just last week:

Required Funds over the week June 20-24 2016

It would seem as though many positions were closed on Friday, in a couple cases representing nearly $1bn of margin reductions.

Summary

Thats all I have time for today.  A brief recap:

I’m on vacation for the next couple weeks, so will not be blogging again until later in July.  Unless something catastrophic happens, like Texas voting to leave the USA.  Texit!

Stay informed with our FREE newsletter, subscribe here.

Exit mobile version