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Sea of Change Regulatory reforms – charting a new course International OTC derivatives reforms Chris Bates, Partner, Clifford Chance, London September 2012
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Clifford Chance Forces shaping regulation of OTC derivatives 2 Regulation is being shaped by several powerful forces The financial crisis The euro crisis The G20 agenda Global rebalancing Competition policy Politics Differing views from global regulatory bodies The effects are beginning to profoundly alter the shape of the OTC derivatives market There is a lot of legislation and still a long way to go......
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Clifford Chance Market reform Clearing* Trading* Reporting* Margining* Risk mitigation Transparency Licensing Capital and structure Basel III* Bank structure (Volcker, US push-out, Vickers, Liikanen) Recovery and resolution* Other Uncovered sovereign CDS Financial Transaction Taxes FATCA Etc. The international agenda *G20 agenda item 3 International OTC derivatives reforms
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Clifford Chance Sea of Change Regulatory reforms – charting a new course “All standardized OTC derivative contracts should be traded on exchanges or electronic trading platforms, where appropriate, and cleared through central counterparties by end-2012 at the latest. OTC derivative contracts should be reported to trade repositories. Non- centrally cleared contracts should be subject to higher capital requirements.” G20 Pittsburgh, September 2009 Market reforms – G20 commitments 4
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Clifford Chance Obligation for counterparties to clear eligible OTC derivatives with registered central counterparties (CCPs) Obligation to execute eligible transactions through a trading system, not bilaterally Obligation to report all transactions to a registered trade repository Obligation to collect/post initial or variation margin on uncleared transactions Regulation of confirmation process, portfolio reconciliation, trade compression and client documentation Pre- and post-trade transparency for OTC transactions Position limits/position management powers for commodity derivatives Licensing or registration requirements for dealers and systemically important end-users Business conduct rules for market participants, extension of market abuse rules Regulation of CCPs and trade repositories Simple instructions, complex outcomes 5 International OTC derivatives reforms
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Clifford Chance Different pace of reform around the world US, EU, Asia Clearing, reporting, margining vs. trading, transparency Scope issues Instruments: e.g. FX, physical commodities and securities Entities: e.g. treatment of end-users, intra-affiliate trades, pension funds, central banks Margining of uncleared trades Initial margin and collateral thresholds Extraterritoriality and overlapping, conflicting rules Different approaches to territorial nexus e.g. location of counterparties, arranger, transaction underlying Extra-territorial application of licensing rules Regulation of CCPs and trade repositories Points of difference
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Clifford Chance Basel III supplemented by national initiatives to raise bank capital EU and US stress tests Additional capital buffers e.g. UK, Sweden, Austria, Switzerland More, better quality capital and enhanced deductions from capital Focus on equity and additional buffers, including G-SIB buffers Plus unweighted leverage ratio Increased risk weights for assets affect OTC derivatives CVA: credit valuation adjustment Additional capital charge for exposures to large financial institutions Capital charges for client business cleared with a CCP Trading book review Liquidity risk regulated through liquidity coverage ratio and net stable funding ratio Basel III 7 International OTC derivatives reforms
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Clifford Chance US Volcker rule: bans proprietary trading and sponsorship of private funds Push out rule: limits OTC derivatives in insured bank UK Mandatory ring fencing of retail deposit-taking activities Limits on derivatives activities of ring- fenced entities EU Mandatory subsidiarisation of trading activities (press reports) Bank structural initiatives *G20 agenda item 8 International OTC derivatives reforms
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Clifford Chance International convergence of resolution regimes Financial Stability Board publishes key attributes Requirement for recovery and resolution planning Possible resulting structural changes to banks to facilitate resolution Recognition that ordinary insolvency regimes inadequate for systemically important institutions US FDIC/orderly liquidation regime, UK Banking Act, German regime, EU proposed directive Debate over the role of “bail-in” as a resolution tool Write down of junior and senior liabilities or conversion into equity Impact on derivatives Recovery and resolution 9 International OTC derivatives reforms
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Clifford Chance Restriction on banks’ derivatives capacity Client and bank response may result in regional booking silos Reduction in product range Increased barriers to entry for smaller market participants Increasing importance of CCPs Focus on financial stability issues and market structure Possible new market entrants: “shadow banks” Winners and losers Market outcomes 10 International OTC derivatives reforms
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Clifford Chance, 10 Upper Bank Street, London, E14 5JJ © Clifford Chance LLP 2012 Clifford Chance LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales under number OC323571 Registered office: 10 Upper Bank Street, London, E14 5JJ We use the word 'partner' to refer to a member of Clifford Chance LLP, or an employee or consultant with equivalent standing and qualifications
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