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

Uncleared Margin Rules Extension: Building a Roadmap for the Buy-side

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Vikas Srivastava, Chief Revenue Officer at Integral.

On the surface, news that BCBS and IOSCO have granted an extension to the final phase of the Uncleared Margin Rules (UMR) is likely to be welcomed by asset managers currently trading uncleared derivatives with a notional between $8 billion and $50 billion. The extension pushes the initial margin compliance date out by exactly one year to September 2021 for an estimated 8,000 firms.

However, this additional year does not apply to the 1,000+ firms that have a notional threshold between $50 billion and $750 billion. And to be honest, the truth is that much elbow grease is still needed in the coming months to prepare for what is essentially a major structural change, regardless of whether an asset manager falls under Phase 5 or Phase 6.

In addition to new documentation requirements, affected firms will also need to gain a new understanding of collateral optimisation, wherein each additional counterparty adds to the level of complexity and exacerbates the inability to realise netting benefits. Since FX is overwhelmingly an OTC market based on bilateral relationships, the challenges of collateral optimisation that large and medium-scale asset managers face across multiple counterparties is not an easy one to tackle. In addition, because the new UMR rules will result in much more exchange of margin than previously experienced, it will lead to more monitoring, reporting, reconciliation and operational burdens.

What asset managers are left with is a realisation that they must now weigh the liquidity benefits of having several counterparties versus the costs of exchanging margin with each and every one on a bilateral basis. More and more asset managers will begin to consider trading technologies that help unbundle liquidity benefits from credit restraints. Not only can separating liquidity from credit help solve the primary issue of reducing administrative burden, but it actually adds secondary benefits. These benefits include new access to all forms of liquidity that were previously out of reach, including non-bank liquidity, as well as client-to-client matching models.

Asset managers pulled into the final two phases should have a roadmap for their respective deadlines. From shifting towards clearing certain instruments, to considering the use of prime brokerage, there are many things that the buy-side should think about and consider. As the burden of managing many more counterparties grows, we should expect to see a movement towards credit intermediation models and toward technology vendors that have a strong understanding and deep experience in facilitating credit intermediated trading.

Those who place their technology spend on platforms that allow unbundling of liquidity from credit restrictions will undoubtably be better placed to weather the initial margin storm.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: New solutions to the old problems of compliance with communications surveillance regulation

Communications surveillance is an integral element of trading at financial institutions, and its functions are clearly set out in jurisdictional regulations – to capture, record and retain all communications. Essentially, all business related communications must be recorded whatever the underlying mechanism – be it a work phone, personal mobile phone, text, video and so on...

BLOG

Investment Banks Can’t Afford Not to MIND the Front Office Risk GAP

By Oliver Blower, CEO of VoxSmart. A phrase heard by so many only to be listened to by so few. “Mind the gap”, synonymous with the mundane morning commuter grind, currently takes on a far greater significance for City traders travelling to work. Not dissimilar to the cost conundrum facing the rail industry recently, when...

EVENT

ESG Data & Tech Briefing APAC

Join us in one of the greenest cities in the world as we bring together thought leading ESG specialists to explore how financial institutions are adapting to the evolving ESG regulatory and market infrastructure.

GUIDE

Dealing with Reality – How to Ensure Data Quality in the Changing Entity Identifier Landscape

“The Global LEI will be a marathon, not a sprint” is a phrase heard more than once during our series of Hot Topic webinars that’s charted the emergence of a standard identifier for entity data. Doubtless, it will be heard again. But if we’re not exactly sprinting, we are moving pretty swiftly. Every time I...