Clarus Financial Technology

New Brexit Rules Move $4Trn Of Derivatives To The US

Brexit was essentially a “no-deal” trade agreement for the UK financial services industry. There have been some articles in the FT and Risk, plus a recent data analysis from Markit describing the impact of Brexit on trading behaviour. The Markit analysis is well worth a read. By means of introduction, I will borrow part of the Markit article and state that the “no-deal”:

 [L]eft many firms with conflicting and incompatible DTOs in the EU and the UK without equivalence (albeit based on identical rules) and no apparent option other than to trade the relevant derivatives on a US Swap Execution Facility (SEF), or in Singapore.

20 January 2021 by Kirston Winters, Managing Director − MarkitSERV, IHS Markit

We’ve not seen any useful charts to go with the data, so here are five charts that shows what has and hasn’t happened since Brexit:

SEFs have started trading European CDX

Showing;

EUR and GBP IRS Trade on-SEF

Showing;

A couple of interesting notes here:

EUR and GBP SPS Are Taking-Off

Some of this increase in volume on-SEF in IRS alone can be put down to the move away from FRAs (which are “toxic” from a LIBOR fallback perspective). Instead of FRAs, there are now systematically reported Single Period Swaps (SPS) being transacted on-SEF. These can be easily shown by looking at the explosion in volumes of short-dated IRS reported on-SEF in EUR and GBP IRS:

Showing

This is not the whole story, however. Evidently as a result of Brexit, there are also more FRAs being reported on-SEF this year:

Showing;

The Brexit Move is Instrument Specific

The move to on-SEF execution has not occurred across the board. For example, there has been no discernible shift in Swaption trading in EUR and GBP markets:

Showing;

Our working assumption is therefore that instruments subject to the Derivatives Trading Obligation in Europe (and the UK) are the European products that are now being traded on interdealer US SEFs.

This is backed up by the data in EUR and GBP OIS. These are not subject to the DTO either (I think), and we have seen no increase in SEF volumes in these instruments either:

The chart above shows the notional amounts of EUR and GBP OIS swaps transacted each month. It is strange how the market share has completely shifted towards TP and Trads from BGC and IGDL previously. Is that a possible Brexit effect? Doubtful….

There Has Been No Change in Clearing Behaviour

We cannot talk about the Brexit impact here without mentioning the $77bn elephant in the room. Will EUR swap clearing move “onshore” to Eurex?

So far, the data shows there has been no shift toward onshore EUR clearing in 2021:

Showing;

We expect this chart to change over the coming months if EUR participants stop trading FRAs and move to SPS. The FRAs previously reported at Eurex will then be reported as IRS and will increase their market share. We don’t think that is a Brexit effect however. That is an IBOR transition/RFR impact only.

Final Chart

The final chart shows the volume of EUR and GBP products in vanilla IRS, FRAs and CDX Index transacted on Interdealer SEFs so far this year:

I think that says it all! Volumes across these three product classes have increased by ~10 times this year on interdealer SEFs as a result of Brexit. Or put another way:

Stay informed with our FREE newsletter, subscribe here.

Exit mobile version