Clarus Financial Technology

What You Need to Know About INR Swaps

Where do INR Swaps Rank on the Global Picture?

CCPView allows us to compare the relative size of INR swap markets to other currencies. Taking out the “G6” – USD, EUR, GBP, AUD, CAD and JPY – we see the below:

Notional in $m equivalents of cleared OTC Interest Rate Derivatives. Source: CCPView

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Let’s look further into the INR Swaps market.

Two Thirds of Cleared Volumes are at LCH

It is an interesting competitive landscape for INR swap clearing, something I wasn’t aware of before looking into the data:

Notional Cleared in INR OTC swaps in $m equivalents. Source: CCPView

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For readers who may not be aware, CCIL is the Clearing Corporation of India.

Clearing in INR Markets

Taking US SDRs data as a representative slice of the market, Clearing is becoming more and more prevalent in the market:

Percentage of INR swaps (OIS and IRS) Cleared as reported to US SDRs. Source: SDRView

A few things jump out here:

OIS are Much Larger than IRS

Talking about the traded products, there are some volumes versus both IRS and OIS products reported in November 2023:

Trade count of INR swaps reported to SDRs in November 2023. Source: SDRView

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Source: CCIL Stats

So in theory we have up to four rates to trade in INR swaps. In reality, it feels like liquidity is almost all concentrated in the “MIBOR-OIS” reference index.

Onshore or Offshore

SDR data includes a “Settlement Currency” column. This might seem redundant in a lot of cases (for example, it is typically left blank for a vanilla USD SOFR OIS). But for markets bifurcated into onshore and offshore market places, it is very handy to see when an INR swap is settled in INR or when it is settled in USD.

For those unaware, LCH SwapClear offer a Non-Deliverable OIS in INR, referencing MIBOR OIS:

Source: SwapClear

Whilst the CCIL documentation states that the swaps are settled via accounts held at the RBI, therefore inferring they are all subject to local INR settlement:

Source: CCIL

In a perfect world we would then be able to “scrape” SDR data and tell you for Cleared swaps with Settlement Currency “INR”, that is a swap cleared at CCIL. And for a Cleared swap with Settlement Currency “USD” that is most likely cleared at LCH SwapClear.

The data, however, is far from perfect in this respect, even for SEF-traded swaps (normally the “gold standard”):

SEFs are reporting these trades as settled in “USD” or blank. Let’s assume that the blank is therefore consistent with how SEFs report “vanilla” trades and they are actually settled in INR (Nearly 100% of INR trades reported on-SEF are Cleared by the way).

It is when you get into the murky world of off-SEF and uncleared swaps that the data is “dirtier”. We see both INR and USD reported as the Settlement Currency:

It is likely that there is some normalisation work that we can do here to identify which trades are Onshore INR settled and which are Offshore vs USD – one to look at for our users.

SEF Trading

Finally, we look at how much is traded on-SEF in INR Swaps. From SDRView;

Percentage of INR swaps executed on-SEF by notional. Source: SDRView

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Looking at SEFView, we see the following market share for SEFs:

Notional in $m equivalents of INR Interest Rate Derivatives traded on SEF. Source: SEFView

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In Summary

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