3rd November, 2022|Global Investor
Phases five and six of the uncleared margin rules have affected market participants and clients in many different ways – and there is still work to be done.
This Thought Leadership article is part of the 2023 Collateral Guide, which can be accessed here.
Over recent years, UMR has focused attention on issues such as data quality and management, the robustness of margin models, how to calculate margin on exotic instruments, and best practice for tracking collateral ownership transfers.
The phase six deadline may now have passed but while a significant number of buy-side firms are in scope in this final phase, a large subset of these firms will remain below the segregated initial margin threshold and therefore will not be required to exchange margin.
Trading under the IM exchange threshold offers in-scope firms temporary relief from initiating segregated IM operations, but this eventually will need to be addressed as long as the firm is being captured under the uncleared margin rules explains O’delle Burke, head of collateral services product and strategy APAC J.P. Morgan.
“Another alternative that is attracting consideration is the advantage of central counterparties or CCPs,” he says. “Some firms are weighing the cost of investment and resources for non-cleared OTC trades that are clearable against the cost of central clearing through clearing brokers. Equities seem to be emerging as a new frontier for IM collateral as well as variation margin collateral, which will make tri-party an indispensable tool for buy-side firms going forward.”
It has been expected for a few years now that the low average aggregate notional amount or AANA threshold (€8bn) would catch a significant number of buy-side entities in the scope of regulatory initial margin.
Many firms have tried to take advantage of the €50 million equivalent threshold to minimise funding costs, but mainly to have more time to finalise the negotiation of the documentation packages explains David Beatrix, head of OTC & collateral services, securities services at BNP Paribas.
“A big part of the readiness projects has been to define the allocation of threshold, simulating initial margins in both SIMM and Grid and defining scenarios to prioritise the negotiation packages (which entities versus which counterparties),” he says.
“The major difference with the previous phases is the huge number of relationships that have to be set up, either to operate margin exchanges from day one or - in most cases - to manage the IM threshold calculation. The post-compliance phase, where relationships will progressively move from an IM monitoring to an executed documentation mode, will last for months (possibly years), hence the need to keep a strong onboarding governance for quite some time.”
For smaller firms, forecasting is fundamental to ensure that collateral buffers are minimised and there are no collateral shortfalls.