Financial History Issue 123 (Fall 2017) | Page 35

Reflecting on the World’s Most Important Financial Instruments By Joshua Tobias Herbstman The Depository Trust and Clearing Cor- poration (DTCC) is undoubtedly the largest financial services company no one has ever heard of. To be sure, those who work in investment finance often have to deal with the DTCC in one capacity or another. But it is surprising how many well-established retail level financial advisors are unaware of who they are or what they do. So, what is the DTCC? In a nutshell, it is a post-trade clearing settlement firm responsible for the lion’s share of finan- cial transactions within the United States. From stocks, bonds and mutual funds, to mortgage-backed securities, OTC deriva- tives and futures contracts, the DTCC processed some $1.5 quadrillion in securi- ties transactions in 2015. Beyond the myriad of clearing and set- tlement services that the DTCC provides (and there are other institutions that have similar roles within the global financial system), it also serves as a custodian for over $37 trillion in customer assets. (On a somber note: one five-minute phone call by the SEC to the DTCC would have stopped Bernard Madoff years before his scheme collapsed, as the records would have shown his account to be bare.) The safekeeping functions of the DTCC allow it to clear and settle trades very efficiently. To accomplish this, it employs a network of powerful and sophisticated servers. But this was not always the case. At one time, trust companies had to process millions of individual paper secu- rities: stocks, bonds and their coupon interest payments. Trades, redemptions, changes of registry, etc. — everything was recorded and transacted on paper. As the global financial system grew, more secu- rities were created and transacted. Daily trading volumes increased. Giant trading $1,000 US Treasury Bond, dated August 15, 1978 and due August 15, 2008. backlogs were constant. Couriers would often hand deliver securities in Manhattan. Even in the safest of institutions, cer- tificates would get misplaced or sent to a wrong address. Tens of millions of indi- vidual interest coupons were hand clipped by employees. The impracticality of paper securities was obvious, although there was (and probably still is) a segment of the investment community that longs for the days of high denomination paper in bearer form. Today, in an age where billions and trillions are regularly used in describing financial matters, the $100 bill is the big- gest bearer instrument the federal gov- ernment issues. Gone are the days of the $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 bills. Gone are the days of the paper $100,000 Treasury Bills, $1,000,000 Treasury Bonds and $500,000,000 Treasury N