Journal of Financial Market Infrastructures
ISSN:
2049-5404 (print)
2049-5412 (online)
Editor-in-chief: Manmohan Singh
Managing market liquidity risk in central counterparties
Need to know
- CCPs calculate liquidity add-ons by either attempting to directly estimate the cost of liquidating a position or by assuming a sufficiently extended margin period of risk (MPOR) during which liquidation costs are assumed to be minimal.
- We show that the above two approaches are not always equivalent.
- CCPs generally face data constraints in calibrating their concentration add-ons.
- The CCP default waterfall should account for cases of extreme but plausible market illiquidity.
Abstract
In the event of a clearing member’s default, and as part of its default management process, a central counterparty (CCP) will need to hedge the defaulter’s portfolio and close out its positions. However, the CCP may not be able to do this without incurring additional losses if the market is illiquid or the portfolio contains large, concentrated positions. To mitigate this liquidity risk, CCPs often require members to post additional collateral to the initial margin in the form of concentration add-ons. In the absence of a quantitative regulatory standard for calculating concentration add-ons, this paper discusses the different approaches to incorporating market liquidity risk within a CCP’s default waterfall and the challenges that these approaches pose.
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