Clarus Financial Technology

The Latest on Canada and the Transition from CDOR to CORRA

ISDA recently published a very informative webinar on the CDOR Transition:

YouTube Poster

From this, I learned that 30th June 2023 (i.e. Friday!) is a big day for Canada Rates markets. Succinctly, no more new CDOR trading should take place after this date, other than for some well-defined exceptions. The CARR website is a great resource (from the Bank of Canada) and provides the list of allowed exceptions:

From the CARR website.

Whilst that list may look relatively long, it is also pretty clear that your day-to-day, BAU trading activity is now expected to transition to CORRA. Which gives us a great opportunity to check in on how that transition is going.

For some background, we have looked at RFR Transition in Canada a couple of times recently:

ISDA-Clarus RFR Adoption Indicator

Seeing as I started with an ISDA Webinar, let’s check in on the progress CORRA adoption has made recently via the ISDA-Clarus RFR Adoption Indicator. Whilst much has been written about the on-going cessation of USD LIBOR (only three more fixings to go after today!), the data for CAD rates has also been moving in the right direction:

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At 52%, CORRA is a little way behind SOFR adoption (which sits at 66%), but CDOR still has one year to run whilst USD LIBOR is in its final days!

Let’s see if we can learn more about the transition story in more detailed data.

SDRView

There are a few interesting charts here that are well worth considering.

First up, just looking at notional amounts reported as CDOR or CORRA across all Rates products. From SDRView Researcher:

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Running exactly the same time-series but on a DV01 basis shows a much more progressive march toward CORRA trading:

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Another helpful chart is the complete switch of non-linear products to CORRA. Almost no CDOR Swaptions or Caps/Floors have been reported to SDRs since the beginning of May 2023:

Notionals reported to US SDRs of Non Linear CAR products (Swaptions and Caps and Floors). Yellow bars show non-linear products traded versus CORRA (“RFR”).

Clients and Dealers

Staying with SDR data again, we looked previously at the difference in CORRA uptake between Dealer and Client trading. Replicating that same analysis:

On Dealer to Dealer platforms (highlighted above);

Looking at Clients on the other hand;

(Apologies for the switch in colours on this chart, the google auto-generated charts are not 100% foolproof!).

With RFR risk in green this time:

Futures

What is interesting with this transition to CORRA is that Exchange Traded Derivatives are subject to the same timelines as OTC markets. But we know from IBOR transition in other markets that Futures markets are much slower to transition than in OTC. We see this same scenario playing out in Canadian Rates as well. From our CCPView data:

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Some on-going BAX activity is expected as people hedge fixing risk on existing swaps. That will continue until Fallbacks kick-in and the fixings become CORRA-linked instead. However, there is clearly activity outside of fixing-related risk that still needs to transition.

In Summary

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