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[ B U Y- S I D E I N T E R V I E W naturally going to alter the way the instrument trades. The notional trade size will decrease and the pricing may become wider as mar- ket markers know they are in com- petition with others. Beyond that, changes in capital requirements for the sell-side as well as margin rules, are factored into pricing giv- en by the liquidity providers. Has regulation impacted the num- ber of counterparties you trade and clear with? SV: We are in an evolutionary envi- ronment, and it is prudent to have a number of strong and dependable counterparties that you trade with. In general, we have increased the number of counterparties we trade with over that past few years. In certain areas where the market structure has allowed for a segrega- tion of execution and clearing, the counterparties list has naturally increased. Electronic platforms are efficient meeting places for many types of participants to trade with each other which may not have been possible bilaterally. In most 56 TheTrade Summer 2017 | B L A C K R O C K ] “Diversity of thought brings forth better solutions and we encourage all levels to keep enhancing our trading capabilities.” asset classes we have increased the use of venues that have strong busi- ness models to aggregate liquidity by bringing a number of market participants together. Is there potential for the buy-side to become market makers or direct clearing members? SV: It depends on whether a firm is willing to take principal risk and put capital at risk. You are seeing some of the proprietary trading firms becoming more active market makers. I can see the buy-side taking a more active role as a price maker. A price maker is different from a market maker – as a price maker are you willing to declare the price at which you will buy or sell a security. Being a price maker can be beneficial if there is a mar- ket event or for liquidity constraint products. There are conversations taking place on whether buy-side firms should become direct clearing members. I believe there is a lot of work that needs to get done in order for asset managers to consider this option. It would be more of a defensive strategy if clearing costs keep going up or the number of clearing members keeps decreasing. How can your sell-side partners im- prove their services for derivatives trading? SV: We would like to see more clearing members as there are only a handful in Europe and the US for interest rate swaps and credit derivatives. In certain markets that are liquidity constrained, the buy-side and sell-side should work together to create pools of liquidity and all-to-all trading capabilities. There are certain areas where we can collectively improve, such as the options trading infrastructure. You now see, on a voluntary basis, the adoption of swaptions and single name CDS trading as cleared products, which is a positive outcome. We wouldn’t mind seeing improvement in portability of port- folios or positions between clearing members. In many products there