Repo, MVA and securitisation
The week on Risk.net, July 8–14, 2016
REPO basis blowout hits JP Morgan interbank clients
MVA forces dealers to term-fund initial margin when volumes climb
SECURITISATION losses rattle peer-to-peer lenders
COMMENTARY: Clarity is key
In markets, lack of clarity in regulation is a perpetual concern. This was evident during the past week when it came to developments related to the Fundamental review of the trading book (FRTB), non-cleared swaps and derivatives bail-in.
A key test in the Basel Committee's FRTB is still being debated by regulators, six months after the new capital rules were finalised. The debate centres on the profit-and-loss attribution test, which helps deteremine whether banks can model their own capital requirements or face a tougher standardised capital treatment. Banks argue valuation adjustments should be left out of the model approval process, fearing the test will be harder to pass if the add-ons are included. They say further studies should be undertaken before a decision is made – but that could delay attempts to clearly define the test.
Elsewhere, a lack of clarity around the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission's floor trader exemption is reported to be stopping non-banks from acting as swap market-makers. The exemption allows principal trading firms to act as market-makers in the cleared, electronically traded interbank swap market without having to register as a swap dealer, but it's uncertain whether this carve-out applies to bilateral, non-cleared trades. Non-banks complain the agency is discouraging competition and needs to modify the rule.
In Hong Kong, questions are being raised over derivatives bail-in, with banks seeking specific guidance from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). The regulator is seeking to enforce total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) requirements from the Financial Stability Board (FSB), which state that capital and other subordinated debt instruments are most likely to be subject to write-downs or conversion. Derivatives liabilities, which can raise challenges in terms of valuation, do not satisfy the FSB's standards as eligible instruments for meeting minimum TLAC requirements. But the HKMA has added a caveat that it "should have sufficient flexibility to manage an institution's failure", which would give it the power to bail-in derivatives liabilities.
STAT OF THE WEEK
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
"The securitisation market relies on a great deal of trust that everyone who is responsible is doing their job. Unfortunately, I don't think you can make that statement [anymore]", Gyan Sinha, founder of New Jersey-based Godolphin Capital Management
ALSO THIS WEEK
Lack of sellers could hold back Chinese CDS market
Demand for credit protection increases, but traders say sellers will be hard to find
Brexit roils UK electricity firms' carbon hedging plans
Utilities may unwind hedges amid uncertainty over EU emissions market
Regulatory miasma makes life difficult for Ocwen CRO
Op risk veteran Marcelo Cruz says firm faces "absurd" quantity of rules in US mortgage market
Negative rates force decline in yen life products
Japan's life firms are increasingly focused on foreign-currency products
Technology holds the key to easing KYC, says FCA director
UK regulator promotes use of financial technology to smooth compliance wrinkles
What Brexit teaches operational risk management
Receptiveness, resilience and reflection are crucial for avoiding nasty surprises
$1.5bn subprime hit at HSBC dwarfs other op risk losses
Megan van Ooyen from SAS rounds up the top five op risk losses for June
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