With Malcolm Warne, Vice President, Product Manager, Risk Management, Nasdaq
There are three main regulatory and market drivers currently affecting clearing houses. The first relates to the forthcoming Basel 3 regulatory changes which will make it more capital effective for banks to clear products. There will be a greater capital incentive to clear products which did not exist before that will encourage CCPs to offer more sophisticated offsetting products.
The second issue is the management and clearing of interest rates swaps, which is coming into play for more currencies and which will have a greater impact in the coming months. In some cases, clearing is mandatory and banks will have to clear an increasing number of products.
The third regulatory driver focuses on the IOSCO set of guidelines that were developed a couple of years ago and which affect intra-day margining and portfolio margining. These guidelines raise the bar in terms of accuracy of CCP risk calculations, so the CCPs will naturally move closer to real time and will also produce increasingly sophisticated margin models.
These three issues combined are driving CCPs towards multi-asset clearing, for banks to clear more through them, and for CCPs to offer more sophisticated and faster margin solutions.
There is also a market-related driver to consider. Banks and their clients are being encouraged by the market to use their capital more efficiently. If, for example, a bank is able to clear interest rate swaps and interest rate futures at the same venue and receive some portfolio offsetting between them, that will lower their margin requirements. It means they post less collateral compared to clearing those two products at different venues and not getting that relief. Many CCPs now offer margin relief if more products are cleared through them, which lowers collateral requirements for the banks and that drives more business for them.
The industry is within reach of a ‘tipping point’ in the sophistication of clearing; as so much more is being cleared, products like capital relief and cross margin become much more interesting. And given that more is being cleared, it makes sense for banks and CCPs to investigate how they can do this as capital efficiently as possible.
Pressure on CCPs
CCPs are starting to offer a wider range of products, listed and OTC, and as a result of that developing new margin model sophistication. Many CCPs are moving towards a value-risk model for OTC derivatives. Many CCPs are looking at ways to optimise margin requirements across different margin regimes. Calculating the optimum set of positions from a listed account to move across to an OTC clearing account to lower the margin requirement for the clearing members requires fast and portfolio based margin models.
Another aspect is that banks are looking more closely at their choice of venues. CCPs are providing incentives to make the CCP a bit more ‘sticky’ for the clearing member. In addition, they are looking to add more value to their services to make them more attractive compared to the competition.
Regulation or market in the driving seat?
Four or five years ago CCPs recognised the need to centrally clear interest rate derivatives, and that it had to happen quickly. They realised that they could make a lot of money from such products and new levels of sophistication, so they welcomed the prospect of having an OTC clearing offering quickly.
One problem with the regulatory drive is that it has been much slower than expected which has meant that the market drivers have been slower too. CCPs are looking at these areas again to examine how they can provide this service at a lower cost, and how to make it more attractive by lowering capital requirements by having clearing across listed and OTC trades. If a clearing house is able to calculate margin and risk in real time, it means they can be less conservative when setting margin requirements as they are able to react quickly to changes in the market. This is of benefit to banks by lowering the amount of capital required without putting any further risk into the system.
Secondly, if a default does occur, knowing risk in real time and being able to very quickly macro-hedge defaulting clearing members’ portfolios insulates the market (basically the CCP and the non-defaulting clearing members) from further losses because the defaulted CCP’s positions have been hedged. Again, this benefits the market significantly.
Legacy infrastructure
The amount of time taken to change the infrastructure towards being increasingly real time will vary widely between clearing houses. The more legacy the environment that a house is moving, the harder it will be. It is difficult to have real time risk without having a clearing system that is capable of giving out real time positions. But, there is certainly interest amongst CCPs to change. Many of the risk systems currently in place are old and the costs involved to change them to meet the IOSCO and other regulatory guidelines are prohibitive. As a result, many CCPs don’t have much choice but to move away to a modern vendor solution, but the migration isn’t easy.
At Nasdaq, one of the things we do is to run the old margin model and the new margin model concurrently, so the CCP and their clearing members can compare the two before making the switch.
Long term future
The best case scenario is a single margin model into which CCPs can plug new products quickly and easily. This will allow them to broaden their product range as new products will be eligible for clearing quickly and efficiently without having to change the way that the margins are calculated. CCPs that can offer new products for clearing without having to significantly change their risk model are the houses that will succeed, especially when it is done within a margin-efficient and capital-efficient framework.
There is an evolutionary change taking place and it will be very interesting to witness the response of the regulators and market participants. A good example of this is the forthcoming Deutsche Borse- LSE merger. The issues are whether to have a wide range of CCPs with multiple choices of venues, or is the market happy with one or two huge players? If one of those players did fail, it would put a huge amount of strain on the financial system.
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Managing Risk In Clearing
The Changing Dynamic Of Post-Trading Operations
With Dean Chisholm, Regional Head of Operations, Asia Pacific, Invesco
Across the post-trade platform, the same trends of the last two to three years are continuing. At a macro level for asset management there has been continued growth in passive products. As a result of this, more products are being sold which increases the volume of trading, which inevitably leads to smaller ticket sizes and an increased level of trading across portfolios. At Invesco, we are having to balance on a more regular basis which has a knock-on effect on the back office because there are more trades to process.
At a recent global asset managers’ operations conference in Bangalore, discussion focused on the trend towards the gradual globalisation of processing. Much of the processing is moving offshore, away from the trading teams, into global processing centres, mainly in India with some in Malaysia and the Philippines. Traders tend to stay close to the markets with proximity to the trading hubs.
Currently a very large firm will probably have four or five hubs through Asia; they need one in Japan as it is hard to trade Japan unless you are there, Australia is in a different time zone, and then there will be teams in Hong Kong or Singapore. Depending upon the size of the firm, they may also need local market traders in countries such as Indonesia.
However, there are moves within the industry to pull together the processing. The aim is to have a common processing centre behind the front office, ideally in a low cost location. Some support for the trading desk would be left behind and the fund managers would stay in-country, but the bulk processing would move out. The largest firms are likely to have two hubs – one somewhere cheap in North America and one in India.
People strategy
There’s a wider philosophical push when considering where to set up a processing hub. One strategy is to find a city with a good university population; to try and keep the costs down and to leave only a few people close to the traders in New York or San Francisco etc.
If a firm has ten hubs with five people in each hub processing trades, those five people will be pretty stressed each day. One person may be on leave for some reason, so there may actually only be four people who will end up firefighting to get things done.
When that firm moves to a central hub, condensing ten locations into one, there will be, say, 50 people sitting and working together. The firm can then think more objectively about how they recruit, more specifically about graduate recruitment so they can access a different generation of people. If a firm isn’t on a global platform for operations and settlement, then it will be trying to get onto a global platform.
Traditional centres such as Singapore, Hong Kong and Tokyo all have ageing populations and not that many people at the bottom level coming into the industry. Experience has shown that in India there are many more people who are IT literate and confident in using modern tools; so finding ways to automate transactions is making progress there. There is also conversation there around robotic automation processing that can be developed when there is some slack in the system.
There are therefore two trends to watch – one is the cost trend, which is forcing staff out of high cost locations. And there’s the second, which is a positive feedback loop of building that global hub and tapping into new recruitment and processing models.
Once a firm is on a common platform, it can move to the next level of realisation, which is that it requires different people. The focus is no longer on processing the transactions, it is now about automation of those transactions which requires staff with a different skillset entirely.
In today’s modern front office, there should be no excuse for errors because a trader keys in the wrong execution price – if there is a decent front end platform, it should all be automated. Traders can then spend time on the execution quality and the difficult tail of orders which they are trying to achieve. An effective global hub and processing environment can have a similar effect on the back office.
Market structure
Asia has been on T+2 settlement for some time now and the rest of the world is starting to catch up and move to T+2.
When changing settlement cycles, the first pressure is on the market structure. In a T+1 environment that will have an impact on the firm, if the team is processing large volumes and variable levels of volume, they will have no choice but to automate or find themselves in difficulties very quickly. To this end, the brokers probably automated before the fund managers because of these huge volumes. The large fund managers are now virtually all automated or are investing heavily in order to achieve full automation.
Regulatory pressure has been driving the derivatives world. The reality at the moment is that Asian markets are probably a bit behind Europe and North America and each of those markets is taking a slightly different approach to reporting. There is considerably more stress in the derivatives environment and so that is where the focus tends to be from a settlement angle.
Unity of markets
The reality is that the world is made up of many different countries with widely differing political aspirations. In terms of wider settlement and the macro environment, it will not be possible to standardise things like Bank Holidays or times zones. Focusing on Asia, it is unlikely that the Japanese will use the RMB in our lifetime. Realistically, the industry is probably nearing the limit of how far markets can come together.
However, it should be possible to reach a place where T+2 will be the longest of the equity settlement cycles. In addition, there will be some linearisation in a number of the more restrictive markets so they become more ‘normalised’; examples include the gradual opening up of China and Taiwan.
However, traders will be more concerned with liquidity and volatility than the actual market structures, because since the global financial crisis, volatility and liquidity have always been the primary concern.
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Taxing matters [around 871m] : Roger Aitken
TAXING MATTERS.
Tax does not necessarily have to be taxing. However, when it comes to complying and dealing with US Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) impending rule 871m that governs withholding on certain derivatives, notional principal contracts and other ‘equity-linked’ instruments with payments referencing dividends on US equity securities, a recent industry briefing in London heard that matters are far more complex. Roger Aitken reports.
It could be described as akin to a pandora’s box of rules and obligations that firms need to take on board. But whatever the level of complexity, non-US based financial institutions on the buyside as well as the sellside now have around nine months – before the compliance deadline of 1 January 2017 – to get up to speed, install and test systems to track their withholding tax obligations, and train staff.
The onus on firms confronted by these rules should not be underestimated going by this event convened at the British Bankers’ Association (BBA) on 24 February 2016 and hosted by Merit Software, a leading provider of Receivables, Payables and Tax automation solutions.
Extremely Complex Rules
Let’s get straight to the point: the rules under the 871m regulations are extremely complex and come next January there will likely be a few tricky situations for market participants to navigate around.
As one head of securities tax from a leading accountancy firm in The City of London, who has over a decade of experience in the financial services sector and is a qualified lawyer, nicely put it: “It clearly isn’t plain sailing and there are lots of obstacles and rocks in the sea that your ship might crash up against.”
This specialist, who manages global tax issues arising from holding and trading capital market securities, pointed out that 871m throws up “far more questions than answers” in one of three key presentations given during the Merit-hosted briefing.
And, if this tax expert is uttering such words perhaps the industry should sit up pretty sharpish and take note before they stumble over a plethora of Section 817m obligations.
Daniel Carpenter, a director from Merit Software who moderated the proceedings, told a packed room of attendees from both buy- and sell-side institutions that: “Transaction tax is the name of the game here and 871m is yet another Financial Transaction Tax (FTT). However, this isn’t just about calculating tax and applying exoneration rules.”
He added: “It’s about complex calculations based on complex rules and scenarios, and working out what needs to be paid, who is going to pay, to whom, when and how to reclaim it.” So, not too much to consider then or is it?
‘Rules-Based’ Workflow – Key
For the past fifteen years Merit’s focus as a vendor has been to deliver solutions to the market that help to manage such processes and integrate them with in-house systems at financial institutions. Essentially it’s all about having software solutions in place that provided and assist in facilitating a ‘rules-based’ workflow.
In fact, Merit has been looking at rules around Section 871m since the middle of 2015. They saw early on that institutions will have to invest significant time and effort into creating their systems to handle the new US tax rule and that an industry wide solution was both viable and needed.
Clearly the last thing a firm needs – buyside or sellside – is contending with multiple interfaces with the same derivatives system going to an FTT system in one place and an “871m machine” or system in another place. It therefore makes some sense to feed it all into one process, rather than having a whole host of separate systems and trying to interface them all, which leads ultimately to more static and more fails (i.e. transactions).
Offering a word of advice, Carpenter said: “Whatever system and approach your firm ultimately chooses fundamentally you should be building a structure for the future and change – make your system flexible and future proofed for even more Transaction Taxes.”
Furthermore, the new regulation centres on how non-US based investors (dubbed ‘Aliens’) comply with the legislation from the US tax authorities, which many of the attendees were clearly struggling to get their heads around by some of the questions asked at the end of the presentations in the Q&A session.
Indeed, some of the final issues and rules around 871m were still to be clarified at the time of the briefing.
One positive to note perhaps from the proceedings was that apart from the complexity that has been outlined and communicated by the US authorities, they have not indicated or mandated precisely which technology or systems firms should be deployed in order to comply their obligations under the rules. At least that was good to know.
The three tax experts who spoke at the BBA gave insightful presentations spanning the history of 871m, the thinking behind why the US tax authorities had ushered it into play, likely pain points ‘Short’ parties can expect to encounter as well as some key considerations in planning for the impending regulatory deadline.
Issues confronting ‘Long’ parties, which means any party to notional principal contracts entitled to receive a payment of a dividend from sources within the US with respect to underlying securities, was also addressed, as were Qualified Derivatives Dealer (QDD) status, Qualified Foreign Intermediaries (QFI), Qualified Intermediaries (QI) and QSL compliance.
Simple versus Complex Transactions
While ‘Simple’ derivatives transactions are not so hard theoretically to handle under 871m, firms impacted still need to “catch and trap” significant amounts of data according to one speaker.
This encompasses and includes the underlying dividend event, handling new holdings, calculating the tax if Delta is less than 0.8, applying the lower/high rate of withholding tax and subsequently accruing tax payable to the US IRS off the back of underlying dividends.
The final regulations issued by the US tax authorities raised the Delta threshold from 0.7 to 0.8 and provide that Delta is tested only upon initial issuance of a transaction (or upon a material modification) – and not upon a later acquisition.
What Is The Delta of An Instrument?
The Delta of an instrument is a measure of the relationship between changes in value of the instrument and changes in value of the underlying security or stock. Therefore, if an instrument has a Delta of one, changes in the value of the instrument should reflect or mirror changes in the value of the stock exactly (i.e. 1:1).
Should transactions be of a more complex nature, then firms need to choose either a similar ‘Simple’ approach or a benchmark to compare against (i.e. movements up/down by one standard deviation point). If the actual investment is less than a certain benchmark then they have to calculate tax the underlying holdings and associated dividends, withhold tax and DTT. So, it would all hardly appear to be a stroll in the park on the compliance and logistical front by any stretch of the imagination.
A London-based tax practitioner from top accountancy firm and an ex in-house counsel for a leading US investment bank, gave a presentation and a run through of the history and background to the 871m regulations as well as offering insights and practical advice.
The thrust of his presentation sought to answer questions on how to “resolve issues relatively quickly” and make compliance successful. But after digesting his exhaustive presentation the attendees appear somewhat stunned, which might well illustrate how hard it is when it comes to handling Section 871m.
The Role of Different Parties
Referring to a situation akin to “air traffic control” and dependencies in the role of different financial institutions in the value chain – from agents, broker/dealers, the issuers, underwriters, custodians, intermediaries, and clearing organizations – the tax consultant said: “Critically firms need to think about who is party to the transaction and work out their capacity and what their role is.”
He added: “We really also have to work out the rules [behind 871m] as to our capacity. Therefore, are we a withholding agent, a ‘Short’ party, a ‘Long’ party or are we an intermediary?” So, much to consider.
Furthermore, there is the US definition of a withholding agent to consider, which this practitioner noted is “quite broad”. For example, an organization could be a Short party and a withholding agent, or a Long party and a withholding agent.
“So where are the particular rules?” he opined. “You have to work it out and understand the ordering, the dependencies and look at some scenario planning to where all this fits together.” This calls for a clear business plan to be formulated and documented. And, probably sooner rather than later.
Raising a question in front of the audience at the BBA he asked: “Who is going to be a QDD (Qualified Derivatives Dealer) in the chain. It’s not as if you just sign up to be a QDD – right?”
If, for example, you are a Short party you are the “responsible party”, he pointed out, adding: “Generally, the broker/dealer is going to be the responsible party. And, if there isn’t any other one [i.e. party] it will basically be whoever is the Short party in the transaction.” A point worth noting even if it’s a bit fuzzy.
In relation to simple or complex transactions, the speaker explained that if it’s simple then we have the Delta test, while for complex transactions there is the ‘Substantial Equivalence’ test, which was developed by a “rocket scientist” where “the devil is the detail” he said.
This is because firms need to look at the “probabilities of different payments” as he also acknowledged that the Substantial Equivalence test was “really tough”. Once firms have figured out what set of rules to apply and know if it is simple or complex, they then have to apply the rules.
They need also to think about ‘in-scope’ and ‘out-of scope’ products and exceptions (e.g. qualified indices). Further, on this latter score – due bills and certain compensation-related payments are out-of-scope under the 871m regulations, as are payments made by US insurance companies and certain foreign insurance companies.
Of course depending on the size of a buy- or sell-side institution, firms ultimately need to address “scoping and scale” too as well as work out how big the problem they face is and how many instruments are in/out of scope.
However, even if firms work all that out mechanically and what the withholding tax looks like, subsequently they have to communicate this out to the market and deal with various incoming requests.
The 10-Day Rule
Here there is the ‘10-day rule’ and the IRS says in relation to this that such communication can be by mail, fax, email or other mechanisms.
But as this tax expert pointed out “10 days is not a huge amount of time to go through the process and identify, then communicate to appropriate parties whether it [an instrument] is in scope and then try to understand what the withholding implications are.” Some firms’ calculations could be “fairly large and tricky” too he said. Clearly, having an “871m machine” in place might well be the answer to many firms’ pain points.
And, just to illustrate how confusing matters can be, the tax consultant revealed that he had actually heard someone on the trading floor ask: ‘When exactly is issuance for a batch of structured notes?’ Is it, for example, when they [the notes] are dropped into Clearstream or Euroclear and you effectively place them into the market? It all certainly raises an awful lot of questions.
Operational Issues
Whatever else, firms need to be cognizant that there are many steps to consider as regards the operational issues in dealing and complying with 871m and the tax calculations.
As well as identifying and processing ‘Simple’ versus ‘Complex’ transactions appropriately, they also need to make checks for taxation on Substantial Equivalence, initiate a proof/audit of the benchmark equivalence used, accrue and track tax and payments, ensure 10-day confirmation and 2-day validation, handle Withholding Tax/DTT treatment, where required reclaim tax, and then ultimately file returns.
Decision Time For Firms
Generally the 1 January 2017 deadline for 871(m) might seem far away in the distance, but realistically with around nine months to go before the industry reaches that point firms need to quickly make some decisions about how they address their obligations under the regulations.
Patently there are significant amounts of data/items that require pulling together – statics and trades across many instrument types. It’s a tight deadline for sure given that typical projects of this size can take at least nine months to bed down within organizations.
One also has to appreciate the backdrop of current in-house IT initiatives at some firms is already being stretched on numerous other mandatory projects and banks are downsizing internally. So, that begs the question: Who will help your firm address the big 871m compliance issue and pain points?”
Furthermore, 871m is one of many transaction taxes alongside others like FTT in the European Union and an area that is only set to grow further. The bottom line, as Merit’s Carpenter asserted, is that firms need to “future proof” their platforms and technology. Carpe diem.
Potential Unintended Consequences From 871m
Question: Could the Section 871m regulations potentially drive market participants away from the derivatives products covered by the US Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) rules?
Answer: At this stage the issue had “certainly been discussed” according a senior tax specialist and FATCA practitioner presenting on QI and QDD at the Merit Software’s event.
“There are some institutions, particularly where they are not in this business in a large way, that are thinking obviously about whether they want to run products through the UK or an open entity elsewhere,” he revealed. He added: “This is because of the compliance and the risks around withholding tax, And, I think people are having discussions around this right now.”
However, it may not be as simple as deciding not to trade certain derivatives products covered by the 871m rules from next January. As a head of securities tax at a leading accountancy firm remarked: “In the context of securities lending we have found that clients have been unable to switch off US securities – even if they wanted to.”
He explained: “They [firms] would go out to say ‘We just don’t offer any service in US securities’, but inevitably they end up with it because they receive it in the form of collateral for example.”
Consequently, his firm’s experience has been that it was “impossible to tail-off US products.” Such products referred to here could encompass an index or a basket of securities where a US company name pops up.
“So, even though we’ve had clients who very consciously disavowed any kind of US strategy, they still end up with them [securities] – like it or not. I think while sounds potentially doable…in practice it’s impossible. For sure firms can limit their exposure but they cannot exclude these kinds of products altogether.”
Furthermore, this expert revealed that his firm have also had discussions about whether – if you were on the ‘Long’ side – you could always use a US broker so that you would never have withhold (i.e. through a ‘W9’ form).
He pointed out here that the Markets In Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) in Europe and best execution requirements means that this cannot be done. “So, all the sensible things one might think you could do just don’t work,” he said.
For more information contact, Daniel Carpenter
daniel.carpenter@merit-soft.com
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Transformational Trends in Asian Trading
A Recap of the 14th Asia Pacific Trading Summit
By William Haskins, for GlobalTrading
Technology and innovation were the common themes of the 14th Asia Pacific Trading Summit in Hong Kong, as traders and technologists gathered to discuss the issues facing Asian markets.
A record-setting 630 attendees gathered for a day of panel discussions as well as breakout sessions for the buy-side and technologists, organised by the FIX Trading Community.
Smarter technology
There are good use cases for blockchain in the post-trade space, explained Peter Tierney, MD and CEO of DTCC’s Asia data repository (DDRS). We are current exploring 2, one in the processing of tri-party repos and another in the processing of Credit Default Swaps. It is most likely that blockchain will be applied to specific solutions in whitespace rather than directly supplanting existing systems, Tierney told the full auditorium.
Achieving this will require building a legal language in contracts to complement the code, noted Alistair Duff, Consultant with R3CEV, a bank-backed blockchain consortium.
The advance of AI and machine learning has many concerned about the role of human traders, yet these concerns are misplaced according to Andrew Freyre-Sanders, Head of Equity Execution Services for CIMB Securities. Citing the recent contest between one of the world’s top Go players, Lee Se-dol, and Google’s AI AlphaGo programme, Freyre-Sanders pointed out that even with millions of practice matches, the human was still able to beat the computer. However, traders must invest in themselves and attain greater focus to remain relevant, he added.
The panel on fintech, moderated by ITG’s Clare Witts, discussed the role new firms are playing in bringing innovation back into banking and asset management. As established financial services firms focused on regulation and compliance since the GFC, fintech firms have stepped in to fill the ‘innovation gap’, and are now often partnering with established firms to bring new tools to market in a cost-conscious environment where everyone is trying to do more with less, she added.
The Influence of HFT
US market structure has split into asymmetric trading environments catering to particular niche customers claimed SEC whistleblower, Haim Bodek. HFT-oriented features have proliferated among exchanges, many of which effectively circumvented Regulation NMS, according to Bodek, who now runs a consulting practice, Decimus Capital Markets. HFT strategies have long been active in Asia, and they tend to share similarities with US/Euro HFT futures algorithmic trading tradition, Bodek shared in his keynote address.
The “secret sauce” of HFTs often amounts to little more than exchange innovations in order types, order modifiers, port settings dictating order treatment and price feed interfaces in their intended usage scenarios, Bodek explained. All of this stems from the unintended consequences of Reg NMS including the circumvention of market access and order protection rules, abuse and non-disclosure of HFT-oriented order types and the cross-pollination of latency and regulatory arbitrage.
Formerly of Hull Trading/Goldman Sachs, UBS and HFT options trading firm, Trading Machines, Haim Bodek was an early high profile case for the SEC’s whistleblower program. Bodek provided the SEC with data that led the agency to fine BATS Global Markets $14 million to settle charges that two exchanges formerly owned by Direct Edge Holdings gave advantages to certain HFT firms.
Trading China
Investors need to be patient as regulator is learning, attendees were told in the regulatory panel. It was suggested the CSRC is likely to implement high level rules and preserve its flexibility. Guidance on the program trading rules, for example, may not be public, but it will be there.
Speaking on a panel on optimising trading, attendees were told China was still an attractive long-term market as the ratio of market capitalisation to GDP showed room for growth. Speaking of the possible inclusion of A-shares in the MSCI indices, it was suggested the initial weighting for the A-share in the GEM index could be around 1.5%, assuming a 5% inclusion of A-share floatable market cap, which could attract US$15-20bn inflows from passive funds.
Better markets
On the panel featuring fresh buy-side perspectives, TCA tools for FX were called out as needing improvement, as currently, there is not enough data for benchmarking. Electronic trading platforms for FX and fixed income also need more traction. New formats of information flow are required, according to another panelist. Traders need to find the third dimension of information, pulling data across multiple sources.
Meanwhile, Hani Shalabi, Head of AES APAC for Credit Suisse, shared analysis suggesting 90% of fills on the Hong Kong exchange trigger the HK$2 minimum fee. Shalabi suggested the average transaction fee for the whole market is 0.76bps per trade, which is roughly double those on the Australian Stock Exchange and three times comparable fees on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Whether its more optimised trading, outsmarting HFT strategies or achieving more efficient access to Chinese markets, Bodek’s concluding statement applies equally well: “You have to do your homework.”
For a round-up of the day, please click here to view the GlobalTrading video.
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Driving IOI Reform
With George Molina, Director of Asian Trading, Franklin Templeton
As a buy-side group, we have been working on IOI reform for over four years, trying to find the best guidelines, drawing up a code of conduct and planning to push those reforms out into the industry. For a while, progress slowed due to disagreements over the definition of “Indication of Interest”, specifically around the natural/non-natural flow. Over the last three to four months however, progress has picked up again after the Investment Association and AFME in Europe worked on a code of conduct for IOI.
Here in Asia, we have met as a buy-side group three times in the last six weeks and are due to release guidelines at our forum in May. We have also been working with the sell-side, who have taken up the initiative, as well as Bloomberg, who are running an IOI system from their terminal. The next stage is to push the reforms out to the rest of the industry.
Real IOIs
The main concern the regulators have is about what is real and what is not real. This concern is warranted, because it is important that the liquidity is there when the broker puts out an IOI, and it is a good starting place to begin constructing these new standards.
Whether this should be regulated behaviour or a behaviour driven by the industry is an interesting question. On the buy-side, we would like to take this initiative and drive forward our interpretation of IOIs. Having said that, we have been trying to do this for several years, and still haven’t come up with a proper code.
The problem with IOIs has always been the lack of transparency because of the perceived interpretation that brokers sometimes were fishing with IOIs – that they weren’t real. But on closer examination, it appears that they were not fishing, it was just the way in which they interpret their flow. For some brokers, if they were going to commit their capital and hedge a position, they would need to buy those shares, and as such would send out an IOI. For others on the buy-side, they may not actually have that position. It comes down to the different interpretations of what an IOI is, which is why we are trying to put these guidelines in place.
Another problem relates to the updating of IOIs. For example, an IOI is sent out in the morning. As the day progresses, you would expect to see the size of the IOI decrease as it is updated, but that does not seem to happen. Why aren’t those IOIs being updated? Why aren’t they more accurate or more transparent? This may relate to the cost of the systems. System costs are high and there doesn’t seem to be much of a technology budget on the sell-side to develop them. It will ultimately fall to the houses that have already been working on this for several years to design and implement better systems.
Much of the reform effort involves altering the existing parameters in systems that people are currently using to make them a more workable framework that people can continue to use without having to redesign systems from the bottom up.
And as MiFID II comes along, there will be increased scrutiny on why specific brokers are chosen by the buy-side. We have the flow in place, but an IOI is going to be another tool which can be used to prove to our clients and the regulators why we are working with a specific broker. It is the buy-side taking further control of its liquidity – a trend that is likely to continue.
It hasn’t been easy to come up with the definitions and it has been a real challenge trying to find a solution that the brokers agree on. Previously, we had given anonymous feedback to the brokers when we felt that the IOI wasn’t transparent enough. Unfortunately, that didn’t work as Bloomberg had made the ranking buy-side trader information public.
New technologies
Standardisation of transparency works both ways. The buy-side can see more clearly whether what the brokers have is real or not real. The sell-side is then better able to judge interests from the buy-side and as such know who they should be targeting with the IOIs. It is likely that the IOS landscape will become more competitive when there is more widespread recognition that IOIs are an important tool for both the buy-side and the sell-side.
Execution management systems will already have the IOIs installed and it is simply a matter of these systems being further upgraded. A key feature is that this is an area that has not been driven by specific regulation, which means that developers can develop new products with relative freedom.
The future of IOIs
As IOIs grow in importance, there are likely to be further developments regarding how they work: they can become target IOIs, or actionable IOIs. Depending upon regulation and on where the trading desk sits, they may also end up being anonymous IOIs from buy-side to buy-side. There are many ways in which IOIs can reduce market impact by increasing anonymous flow back to both the buy-side and sell-side. This is also helping to bring back some of the liquidity sitting on the trader’s pad which they are not willing to stop, because of concern that it might be leaked.
Another thing that is important with IOIs is that everybody has to participate. If there is a broker or a client who does not want to use IOIs, then they should not be receiving IOIs from anyone else. This was a challenge faced by the industry where some firms were asking to see everything but not letting brokers show their flow.
The role of the broker
The ultimate responsibility lies with the broker as they have to know how much of the flow should be shopped to which type of client. There can be too much information on IOIs, and the buy-side needs to trust the broker’s expertise here.
IOIs need to be made to work successfully. Given that they have been around for over ten years, the information is out there but in order to find the best way of execution, we need to make it useful for everyone.
One concern is how this would impact the smaller brokers. In terms of technology cost, a smaller broker might be at a disadvantage if they do not have these tools. This is where the FIX Trading Community plays a very important role. As they continue building up their coding to accept more of these different IOI definitions, this will ultimately make it easier for the smaller buy-side and sell-side firms.
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If Regulation Is Black And White, Why Is Compliance So Grey?
By Brian Lynch, CEO, Risk Focus
A common theme in articles and conferences on trade and transaction reporting is the concern that firms are not meeting regulators’ expectations with respect to ‘adequate controls and oversight’. This is in spite of trades and transactions being reported on a regular basis and is true whether firms rely on direct or delegated reporting. In truth, the acceptable level of control and oversight is difficult to define and the problem is exacerbated by the lack of harmonisation and enforcement across various global regulatory jurisdictions.
Regulations are at times vague on control expectations, demanding suitable, adequate, or indeed reasonable efforts. Sometimes they are silent. For example, in Europe, the EMIR texts aren’t explicit and it’s the local NCAs (National Competent Authorities) that police the quality and appropriateness of controls. That said, regulators are paying more attention to data and don’t always like what they see. ESMA has steadily expanded its demands for specific data content and quality rules for EMIR (including ESMA Level 2 Validations and the impending EMIR Rewrite). In addition, the grace period for bedding-in EMIR reporting and establishing good data quality is widely believed to be nearing an end and it’s only a matter of time until EMIR enforcement begins. The CFTC is not far behind, with a comprehensive advisory letter from the Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight (December 2015) along with the Draft Technical Specifications on Certain Swap Data Elements issued for comment through the early part of 2016.
How are firms dealing with the problem? What I am seeing in top-tier sell-side organisations, i.e. primarily swap dealers in the US and derivatives trading firms in Europe, is institutions investing significant sums in control teams and infrastructure. Unfortunately, this level of investment is out of reach of most tier 2 & 3 organisations and is not being considered by most of the buy-side organisations I speak with. This is understandable, considering that trade and transaction reporting is already costing firms millions of dollars at a time when they are looking to reduce costs. That said, no one wants to be held responsible to regulators, so the recurring question is: “What can firms do to beef up their controls without breaking the bank?”
I believe that an ‘adequate’ supervisory framework is one that will allow a firm to answer four key questions:
- Did [we/they] report the appropriate trade and transaction events?
- Did [we/they] report in a timely manner?
- Did [we/they] send complete and accurate representations of these events?
- Did [they] (SDR, ARM or TR) receive and process our data correctly?
Answering these questions requires access to at least 3 core components:
- Up-to-date data quality rules that describe what accurate, complete and timely data looks like,
- Reporting determination and eligibility rules that define what events are reportable,
- A rich reconciliation platform to compare data sets i.e. expected vs. actual or external vs. internal.
Building and maintaining these components and the underlying rules is not easy, so how can these services be offered at a reasonable price? The answer lies in embracing the Cloud and secure, scalable SaaS. While tier 1 firms are spending millions building custom solutions with large support teams, smaller firms with less data to report can be more nimble and take advantage of the Cloud in a way that the ‘big’ firms are unable or unwilling to do. Smaller firms still need controls that allow them to meet or exceed the regulators’ expectations without increasing headcount or buying new hardware. This can be achieved through hosted, managed services integrated with firms’ data to provide simple, exception-based reports that can quickly identify potential issues and alert the appropriate resources.
Leveraging a hosted product means that investment firms, asset managers, hedge funds and small- to medium-sized sell-side firms do not need to invest in servers, data centres, system administrators, developers and business analysts. Existing compliance and control resources can receive output via email or file, or they can log into a secure portal to review the results. Data can be stored for seven years to meet regulators’ expectations and used to report and prove that the firm has been proactive in providing controls to trade and transaction reporting systems, which includes checking what third parties have done on their behalf.
While it’s difficult to describe or measure ‘acceptable control’, that’s not an excuse to do nothing. The innovators in RegTech are working as hard as tier 1 firms to prove robust, cost-effective solutions that are more than just ’adequate’, helping firms to meet their regulatory obligations.
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Trends in Fixed Income Trading 2016: Metamodern Meditations on the Future Market Structure
Trends in Fixed Income Trading 2016: Metamodern Meditations on the Future Market Structure
This report forecasts how the structure of trading in the fixed income market could change over the next five-to-10 years. Specifically, the report reviews trends observed in the marketplaces for government bonds, interest rates swaps, corporate bonds and single-name credit default swaps over the course of the second half of 2015 and into 2016 impacting the ability of buyside and sellside market participants to access fixed income liquidity and form prices.
https://research.greyspark.com/2016/trends-in-fixed-income-trading-2016/
Connecting Market Participants In The Evolving Fixed Income Landscape
By Ganesh Iyer, CAIA, Global Product Marketing Director, Financial Markets Network, IPC
More than 60% of Fixed Income firms will spend 15% or more of their annual budgets on new technology in the year ahead according to a recent report from Worldwide Business Research. Why are technology investments demanding such a big chunk? New regulations have made connectivity for sourcing market liquidity an ever more important component to trading success.
Profound changes in market structure, regulation and business models have significantly affected capital markets following the global financial crisis in 2008. No asset class or product, spanning from equities, fixed income, the foreign exchange markets, commodities and their derivatives, has been immune from experiencing major shifts. The changes have been particularly pronounced within the fixed income markets with a push towards increased transparency, rigorous risk management practices and a stronger regulatory regime. Given these factors, we are now seeing several major trends in the global fixed income markets:
- Traditional market makers are retreating due to stricter capital requirements and leverage limits.
- Shrinking dealer balance sheets have minimised liquidity.
- New institutional players, including non-bank entities, are attempting to fill the void left by exiting major dealers.
- The market is fragmenting with new platforms attempting to facilitate liquidity.
- Traditional trading models are being supplemented with increased buy-side to buy-side trading.
The very active secondary debt market is heavily dependent on communication, collaboration and connectivity in trading government securities, mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities, corporate bonds, convertibles, money markets and credit derivatives. In today’s financial environment, investment managers, dealers, liquidity venues, custody banks and clearing/depository organisations require reliable infrastructure in order to effectively execute fixed income trading strategies (Figure 1). This Fixed Income Ecosystem is further complicated by the vast range of buy-side firms trading the asset class – hedge funds, asset managers, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, corporate treasuries, foundations, endowments, insurance companies, family offices and even private equity firms.
As a result of these far-reaching changes, fixed income players now require increased connectivity throughout the trade lifecycle and access to a ready-made ecosystem of diverse market participants to drive the search for assets and conduct transactions. More and more fixed income traders are taking advantage of specialised technology and managed services to source liquidity, generate alpha and mitigate risk. In summary, groundbreaking technology solutions are now taking centre stage to address increasing challenges firms are facing in trading fixed income securities.
Innovative technology solutions facilitate liquidity and support compliant all-to-all trading by linking market participants to one another. Managed connectivity, communications and collaboration solutions are particularly important in the fixed income market as trading strategies become increasingly complex. Below we explore four different fixed income strategies which showcase how connectivity and access to a ready-made ecosystem is pivotal to successful trade execution and alpha generation.
Swap spread arbitrage
A swap spread arbitrage is a complex strategy that involves an arbitrageur taking positions in an interest rate swap, a treasury bond and a repo rate (Figure 2). The first leg of the strategy is the swap spread – the spread between the fixed rate and the interest rate of the treasury bond. The strategy’s second leg is the floating spread which is the difference between LIBOR and the repo rate. The difference between the swap spread and the floating spread is the arbitrageur’s profit.
MBS Arbitrage
A mortgage-backed security (MBS) strategy consists of buying MBS and hedging the interest rate exposure with swaps. Changes in clearing, reporting and trading requirements for interest rate swaps have transformed the landscape for the asset class.
Why is Connectivity Critical? The different entities that play a role in the interest rate swap trade lifecycle need to connect and communicate with one another.
Capital Structure Arbitrage
This strategy takes advantage of the mispricing between a firm’s debt and equity by buying an undervalued security and selling the same firm’s overvalued security and profiting.
Why is Connectivity Critical? This cross-asset trading strategy centres on reliable access to fixed income and equity liquidity venues.
Convertible Arbitrage
Convertible bonds have features of fixed income, equity and options. A typical convertible arbitrage strategy involves taking a long position in an underpriced convertible bond and a simultaneous short position in the underlying stock to neutralise equity risk. This strategy can quickly become complex since arbitrageurs often have to hedge risks associated with a number of other factors including volatility, interest rates, foreign exchange rates, credit spreads, stock dividend yield and credit recovery rate.
Why is Connectivity Critical? Like the other strategies discussed here, communications and connectivity play a vital role in the execution of a convertible arbitrage strategy since multiple asset classes are often involved. Additionally, implementing effective hedging and risk management depends on reliable connectivity and communications.
Investing in technology helps source liquidity, link market participants and enable all-to-all trading Given the dynamics in the fixed income asset class and the number of complex strategies being utilised, there are several specific areas where institutional investors, hedge funds and asset managers are employing innovative communication solutions such as financial extranets, Ethernet services, managed virtual private networks, voice recording and data archiving. These solutions enable:
- Maintaining reliable connectivity to brokers/dealers, investment banks and liquidity venues to generate alpha, source liquidity, achieve best trade strategy execution and discover prices.
- Efficiently accessing market data and trade lifecycle services such as order management, execution management, risk management and portfolio management systems.
- Improving collaboration among traders, analysts, portfolio managers, economists and risk managers to execute investment strategies and manage risk.
- Facilitating superior communications between fund managers and prime brokers to facilitate securities lending and margin financing.
The most successful fixed income traders generate alpha not only through their use of various investment strategies but also through the implementation and use of state-of-the-art communications solutions and managed services. Technology that provides connectivity throughout the trade lifecycle and access to a diverse financial ecosystem is critical to effective investment of the trillions with which institutional investors and asset managers have been entrusted.
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Innovative Use of Drop Copies: Software Capable of Deriving Simplicity from Complexity in Volume
Innovative Use of Drop Copies: Software Capable of Deriving Simplicity from Complexity in Volume
GreySpark Partners presents a whitepaper exploring how, in 2016, drop copy data received from an exchange is increasingly being used by trading firms for risk mitigation purposes as well as for trade reconciliation and risk management reasons. This transition of drop copy data use from risk management to risk mitigation is occurring because of post-financial crisis regulations in the EU and US requiring trading firms to comply with new levels of pre- and post-trade transparency.
https://research.greyspark.com/2016/innovative-use-of-drop-copies/
Big Data Use Cases in Financial Services: The who, what, where, when and why of Big Data.
Big Data Use Cases in Financial Services: The who, what, where, when and why of Big Data.
This report covers nine key use cases for Big Data technology in the financial sector. The use cases are demonstrated by descriptions of Big Data implementations across a range of financial institutions.
https://research.greyspark.com/2016/big-data-use-cases-in-financial-services/