Global Custodian Clearing and Settlement Issue 2018 | Page 25

[ M A R K E T in place. They are having the balance sheet and liquidity benefits, and for the smaller players that can’t manage multiple repo accounts, it gives them a better liquidity profile.” However, the extent to which all of the buy-side are taking part in volun- tary clearing has been limited, says Nick Rustad, global head of clearing at JP Morgan, in which the major- ity of activity in NDF and inflation clearing has been the inter-dealer community. “The banking and inter-dealer com- munity has been active in non-man- dated voluntary cleared trades, however you have yet to see demand from the client clearing side reach that level.” “For OTC derivatives, demand is still in those mandated categories i.e. G4 interest rate swaps, some emerging markets currency swaps and index CDS. The most client interest for non-mandated products are in instruments where there is a cost and liquidity difference at the point of execution. If that changes or you get to a point where banks only want to quote on a cleared basis, you may see a shift to voluntary clearing,” says Rustad. Certainly, a lot of buy-siders have taken a wait-and-see approach, each one interested in moving to clearing but wary of being the first mover. Furthermore, smaller-sized asset managers and hedge funds may not have the infrastructure in place to clear their trades or even the tools to quantify the impacts of the collateral requirements on their portfolio and the cost differences in moving to clearing. Commerzbank’s Scott believes it is up to their sell-side partners to provide these tools and help facilitate this move. “It is therefore incumbent upon the service community, i.e. custodians that offer clearing services, to be able to help clients in both understanding and impact assessment,” says Scott. “Once the commercial and coun- terparty risk benefits are better un- derstood, there should be no reason R E V I E W | D E R I V AT I V E S C L E A R I N G ] “The most client interest for non-mandated products are in instruments where there is a cost and liquidity difference at the point of execution.” NICK RUSTAD, GLOBAL HEAD OF CLEARING, JP MORGAN why you wouldn’t move most of your activities and operate in a cleared world. “Early on Commerzbank developed a ‘what-if’ scenario capability where clients can backload or frontload their portfolios and see the specific impacts in terms of balance sheet and pricing. However, across the buy-side community this capability is generally lacking, as they do not have sufficient tools and expertise to properly assess and for many it’s not mandatory for them to do so.” It is also on banks and other clear- ing infrastructures to provide both the access and the capabilities for the buy-side to move into clearing. Direct clearing models are large step to help this, but take-up has been very slow. Furthermore, liquidity will continue to be one of the main de- terminations for where the buy-side clear and what banks they use. “Given these new products are being established all the time, there are more clearinghouses expanding in to OTC. However, some clearers are struggling with scale, and this is where more client clearing volumes will concentrate with the top FCMs,” adds JP Morgan’s Rustad. BNP Paribas’ Smith says it has become easier for banks to clear bi- lateral derivatives, given most banks went through a learning phase with the first set of products. However, there remains challenges on the risk management side for client clearing, such as whether the default manage- ment processes are appropriate for certain products. “FCMs and CCP’s will have to adapt their products, but clients will want their banks to be able to clear a wide range of models and be involved in various access models to CCPs,” Smith says. To a large extent, the ability to venture into voluntary clearing is there amongst the buy-side. The tools are there for the larger players that have the scale to clear their bilateral trades, but for many that are in wait-and-see mode, they will have to rely on their banks and brokers to migrate from bilateral to a cleared world. Furthermore, even for those larger asset managers, voluntary clearing will mean a rejig of broker relationships. “For large and active OTC players this means that clearing is some- times spread across multiple clearing relationships. The move towards voluntary clearing will lead to organ- isations being more strategic towards their clearing brokers and who they partner with,” says Scott. Summer 2018 globalcustodian.com 25