Clarus Financial Technology

What’s New in CCP Quant Disclosures – 1Q22?

Clearing Houses have published their latest CPMI-IOSCO Quantitative Disclosures:

Background

Under the CPMI-IOSCO Public Quantitative Disclosures, CCPs publish over two hundred quantitative data fields covering margin, default resources, credit risk, collateral, liquidity risk, back-testing and more.

CCPView has over 6 years of these quarterly disclosures for 43 Clearing Houses, each with multiple Clearing Services, covering the period from 30 Sep 2015 to 31 Mar 2022. This disclosure data provides insights into trends over time at one CCP and comparisons between CCPs.

Let’s take a look at the latest disclosures.

Initial Margin for IRS

IM at major IRS CCPs (usd billions)

Total IM for IRS at $269 billion, is close to the record high of $271 billion on 31-Mar-20.

Eurex OTC IRS is now the second largest CCP for IRS (in terms of amount of IM).

Initial Margin for CDS

IM at major CDS CCPs (usd billions)

IM increasing at each CCP in the quarter.

Initial Margin for ETD

IM at selected ETD CCPs (usd billions)

ETD IM rising QoQ by $63b or 12% in the quarter, largely due to the increased price volatility in markets, particularily commodities, with large QoQ IM increases at CME Base, ICE Europe, Eurex, JSCC and HKEX.

LME Disclosures

Let’s turn now to Commodity markets and the London Metal Exchange (LME).

On March 8, 2022, LME suspended trading and canceled trades in the Nickel market after prices doubled to over $100,000 per tonne; a Clearing crisis with few if any comparables in modern times. What does Disclosures data show, both for the period before the crisis and at the end of the quarter?

First Default Resources on 31-Dec-21:

Other disclosures of interest from 31-Dec-21 or earlier:

The same disclosures on 31-Mar-22:

A huge jump in 4.4.6 from $51.7 million to $2 billion and 4.4.8 with a $600 million deficit.

LME published Notes on key data points from Q1 2022, available here, which specifies that this $600 million shortfall was met by calling for additional default funds (from commited) on the evening of March 7th.

For Disclosure 6.8.1 Maximum aggregate initial margin call on any given day, the Notes state:

The background section states that Nickel prices on March 7th close had moved up by 78% over the previous 2 business days, prior to which the largest upward 2-day price move was 26%. Giving us some insight into the contentious decision to suspend trading at 8:15 am on March 8th, as Nickel prices doubled.

LME taking the view that the Nickel market had become disorderly and not only suspending trading but canceling all trades that day to revert to March 7th close, as there was concern that multiple clearing members would have defaulted had LME made margin calls on March 8th, leading to a systemic crisis.

We don’t know the theoretical figure of there margin calls, but persumably it was higher than the $7 billion call the prior day. So two consecutive calls with a cummulative amount greater than $15 billion, would have been more than 3 times total default resources (prefunded and committed)! So while certainly a contentious decision and the subject of litigation, one can understand LME’s decision.

The real issue is not so much what actions were taken on the day, as these will have followed the Exchange rule book, but how LME allowed trading in one of it’s markets to reach a point where it threatened losses far higher than its CCPs total default resources.

The answer to that, we will have to wait for the FCA and Bank of England reviews.

Other Disclosures of Interest

Next let’s do a quick scan of 31-Mar-22 disclosures, highlighting a few historically significant ones:

There are a lot more Clearing Services and Disclosures but I will stop there and leave it to those of you with your own CCPView access to analyze further changes.

As well as a Web UI, we also offer an API to programatically access this data.

IOSCO Quantitative Disclosures

CCPView has disclosures from 43 Clearing Houses, each with many Clearing Services, covering Equities, Bonds, Futures, Options and OTC Derivatives with over 200 quantitative data fields each quarter and quarterly figures from September 2015 to March 2022.

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