Clarus Financial Technology

Will UMR lead to a further material shift to clearing?

In my previous post Counterparty Risk: Some Way to Go for Derivatives, I concluded that uncleared OTC counterparty risk is bigger than the 80% cleared traded notional volumes might imply.  Of all counterparty risk about two thirds (65%) or more is uncleared and about half (49%) or more is linear delta.  A lot is riding on participants’ response to the uncleared margin rules (UMR) which start to catch the larger buy-side players as roll out completes in September 2020 and portfolios transition afterwards.

Here I look at which products contain the most uncleared risk and whether conventional clearing can solve the problem of reducing uncleared risk to make uncleared margin manageable.

Summary

What can we learn from the BIS uncleared notional figures?

At lest two things: cleared vs uncleared trends and uncleared product breakdown.

Cleared vs Uncleared Trend

Let’s take a look at the trend over time.   With a bit of transcription of numbers from BIS reports, and pulling out central counterparties from the others in a spreadsheet and comparing H1 2016 (before the first UMR date in September 2016) with the most recent figures, we can see the following:

Source: BIS OTC Derivatives Outstanding H1 2018 and H1 2016

Current Uncleared Product Breakdown

Next let’s take a look at the uncleared notional by product to get a sense of what is still to be tackled.

I re-organized the latest end-June 2018 BIS notional outstanding numbers by Linear vs Non-Linear product instead of asset class.   I also brought in the BIS’s own cleared and uncleared split figures for IR, FX and Equity derivatives from detailed sub-analyses.   These are not available for Credit and Commodities so I made some guesstimates for them to complete the picture.

Source: BIS OTC Derivatives Outstanding H1 2018

 I have highlighted the big chunks of uncleared notional highlighted in orange and yellow.   All are interest rate or FX products.

Before analyzing it’s worth noting a key point on relative riskiness – FX volatility is much higher than Rates volatility.  Anecdotally, FX VAR is approximately 10:1 with IR VAR in a typical cross-currency swap which is a product which comprises both an FX swap and an IR swap.

Ignoring non-linear risk for a moment, the notionals highlighted break out $114tn IR vs $93tn FX.  In terms of UMR caught products we have $114tn IR vs $13tn FX.  This shows that the FX delta contained in linear FX deliverable swaps (forwards, swaps, cross-currency swaps principal exchanges) is probably the largest component of uncleared risk and is exempt UMR.

This also may explain why anecdotally FX risk is the largest component of SIMM IM even though this is only driven by FX options.

IR and FX linear swaps further clearing potential

Reviewing the products with large uncleared notional (highlighted orange above):

Cleared FX Derivatives Monthly Notional Outstanding by CCP ($m)

In summary, moderate further elective clearing shifts are likely in IR swaps, possible in single name CDS and likely in FX NDFs as UMR 4 and 5 happen.  This will lead to FX deliverables becoming a greater and more singular blot on the landscape of uncleared counterparty risk.

Options potential for clearing

When we look at non-linear OTC derivatives, the clearing profile changed in 2018.

Cleared OTC options (Monthly notional outstanding $m)

Source: ClarusFT CCPView

Options clearing pitfalls – It’s worth noting some potential option specific pitfalls which can lead us to doubt the feasibility of clearing dominating OTC options volume:

In summary, whilst the first chart looks dramatic the scale of OTC options clearing remains tiny in context of the total OTC options outstanding notional.  Sustainable OTC options clearing has not yet been established.

Let’s see whether ramping up and new initiatives combined can get OTC options to say $1tn of cleared outstanding notional.

Complementary market solutions

In parallel with the long range clearing dynamic, some complementary solutions have emerged partly by initiative directly between counterparties and partly through third party vendors.

For now, I list the terms I use and will elaborate more in my next post.  The solutions include:

All of these happen today at some scale, though the actual volumes are hard to gauge given that these are not disclosed and are difficult to isolate in public reporting.

A few unique features of these solutions:

Conclusion

Clearing has delivered a lot of counterparty risk netting so far.  Time will tell how much more it has to offer for clearable products and whether further products will clear successfully.

It feels like the new complementary market solutions have a bigger part to play in this wave of uncleared risk reduction.

Watch out for my next post where I will elaborate these further.

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