Clarus Financial Technology

KRW and INR Swap Clearing

The CME have announced they are planning to clear Korean Won (KRW) and Indian Rupee (INR) interest rate swaps in the near future.

I wanted to have a look at what these markets look like.  So first things first, I grabbed all trades for non-G4 swaps on the US SDRs, year-to-date.  Did this for both Fixed/Float:

Non-G4 Fixed Float IRS Trade Counts (Jan-Apr 2017)

 

As well as OIS:

Non-G4 OIS Trade Counts (Jan-Apr 2017)

Few things jump out here:

So, from a trade count perspective, by choosing INR OIS and KRW IRS, CME seem to have chosen some of the more active non-clearable swaps.

Interestingly, the CME seem to say they intend to clear CLP, COP, and CNY perhaps later this year, so they are making their way through them all.

Let’s dig into these swaps.

INR

After examining the SDR data, the characteristics of INR swaps seem to be:

More on that last point.  We also have data from local Indian clearing house CCIL for these OIS swaps.  So if I take both SDRView data for bilateral INR swaps, and combine with CCPView data for cleared onshore (Indian) INR swaps, the maturity profiles look similar.  Once again, nothing past 10 years.

Trade counts by Tenor – INR OIS – Both Cleared at CCIL, and Bilateral US SDR

KRW

Pulling KRW data, we find:

NON DELIVERABLE

And of course, the CME will treat the settlements from these swaps as non-deliverable, so they will use local FX fixings to convert KRW and INR to USD.

JUSTIFICATION

So it seems we see, on the US SDRs alone, about 40+ trades per day in these swaps, totalling about $2 billion notional per day.  Not a heck of a lot, but viable.  I thought I’d pull BIS data to see if we could get a global perspective.  Here is the BIS table from the 2016 Triennial survey:

 

Which tells us:

BENEFITS TO USERS

Of course, now that we live in the world of uncleared margin rules (UMR), banks should be incentivised to reduce their number of counterparties, presumably to central counterparties.

While we don’t know (yet) how large the CME Initial Margin will be for KRW and INR swaps, we do know that all phase 1 banks need to support these swaps with SIMM margin.  I wont go into any more detail than we’ve done in various blogs on this topic – but I do want to point out that the risk weights used for the delta component in SIMM places KRW in the same risk-weight table as USD (“Regular Volatility”), while INR would fall in the “High Volatility” table, which is generally 2x the size of “Regular”.

SUMMARY

We will of course keep an eye on things as it rolls out.

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