About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

CCP Principles Can be Applied to Bilateral World of OTC Derivatives, Says Adsatis

Subscribe to our newsletter

Following on from its white paper last month, London-based consultancy Adsatis has published another report looking into the clearing counterparty (CCP) approach in comparison to bilateral agreements with regards to OTC derivatives. Adsatis consultant and author of the white paper, Bill Hodgson, reckons firms can apply aspects of the CCP approach to a non-CCP environment.

“Commentators, politicians and regulators have variously suggested hugely complex solutions to the worlds credit exposure crisis, such as a global trade registration system, clearing every single OTC product through a massive CCP, or abolishing OTC products altogether. Our contention is that the framework is already in place to handle the measurement and mitigation processes, but perhaps the market could learn from the CCP approach in how protection layers are constructed,” explains Hodgson.

The white paper, entitled “Comparing the ISDA bilateral exposure management model with a CCP”, like the title suggests, compares the way credit risk is managed using the bilateral ISDA Credit Support Annex (CSA) versus the risk management approach of a CCP. It highlights areas of difference such as membership criteria, quality of protection from credit risk and operational and timing issues.

Hodgson suggests that it may now be time for “CSA 2.0” in order to provide a more “meaningful link between risk and protection” in light of the current financial climate. Principles such as agreed data formats for publishing reconciliation data and the publication of the date on which the last valuation was calculated for a trade, both of which are used in the CCP version, could be adopted in the new version of the CSA, suggests the paper.

Although many OTC products will never be suitable for a CCP, this does not mean CCP principles cannot be applied to the area, Hodgson suggests. He concludes: “Isn’t it time to blend the experience of both markets and upgrade the financial technology to give firms a higher level of protection and a positive feedback loop to associate higher margin levels with illiquid products and to balance banks enthusiasm for such risky trading?”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Leveraging NLP for regulatory compliance

As regulatory compliance becomes more complex, requires larger volumes of data – both structured and unstructured, and comes under greater scrutiny by regulators, financial institutions are looking for RegTech solutions that can help them increase efficiency, reduce costs, and improve the accuracy of regulatory data. One such solution is natural language processing (NLP), which can...

BLOG

Leaders Scrutinise a Changing Industry at A-Team Group’s Annual Data Management Summit New York City

Experts and executives from across the financial data ecosystem gathered at A-Team Group’s Data Management Summit New York 2025 last week to discuss and probe the latest innovations, trends and strategies in our fast-moving industry. From data quality and artificial intelligence agents to modern data architectures and data products, a multitude of current topics were...

EVENT

Buy AND Build: The Future of Capital Markets Technology

Buy AND Build: The Future of Capital Markets Technology London examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

Pricing and Valuations

This special report accompanies a webinar we held a webinar on the popular topic of Pricing and Valuations, discussing issues such as transparency of pricing and how to ensure data quality. You can register here to get immediate access to the Special Report.