See http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/Securities-Category9/csa_20101102_91-401_cp-on-derivatives.pdf
Source: Canadian Securities Administrators Derivatives Committee
Collection of publications, Articles and Events in the OTC Derivatives Space
See http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/Securities-Category9/csa_20101102_91-401_cp-on-derivatives.pdf
Source: Canadian Securities Administrators Derivatives Committee
See http://www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_101025.pdf
Source: Financial Stability Board(FSB)
This is the Report of the Financial Stability Board to G20 Leaders.
See http://www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_100627c.pdf
Source: Financial Stability Board(FSB)
Credit default swaps in Asia will now follow a standardised trading format designed to facilitate centralised clearing, improve transparency and in the long-run raise transaction volumes, a trade body said on Monday.
From Monday on, CDS or insurance-like contracts that protect against defaults and restructuring, will adopt standard coupon sizes and the payment of full first coupons, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association said in a statement.
following similar changes in Europe and North America entities in Japan will now trade CDS with standard coupons of 25 basis points (bps), 100 bps and 500 bps and full first coupons going forward.
In the rest of Asia CDS will adopt standard coupons of 100 bps and 500 bps and full first coupons going forward, said ISDA, which represents participants in the privately negotiated derivatives industry.
The move follows similar changes in Europe and North America earlier this year.
"The purpose of creating standardised contracts is it concentrates liquidity and that should facilitate the move to central clearing," said Keith Noyes, ISDA Regional Director, Asia Pacific.
"Pricing will become more transparent and liquidity may increase as everyone is quoting the same thing," he told Reuters.
Under the current system, single-name CDS contracts trade at a par spread -- the level that makes the contract's value at the outset equal to zero for both the buyer and seller of protection.
The new convention will instead fix a coupon at the outset of a contract.
For example, a CDS now quoted at 150 basis points would be quoted with a coupon of 100 basis points plus an additional upfront payment equal to the 50 basis points.
The fixed coupon and variable price make it easier for the dealer or central counterparty to match trades on the same underlying name, even though they are executed at different times and at different spreads.
"We have not seen any notable impact from the changes themselves but over the longer term this will help liquidity and trade volumes," said Richard Cohen, Head of Credit Trading Asia Pacific for Credit Suisse.
The U.S. market took the lead in adopting the new trading conventions in early April but with only two available coupon options at 100 and 500 basis points.
Europe followed in June with four coupons for new trades and two other coupon options to remake existing trades. The two other coupons are 300 and 750 bps.
"The ISDA changes do make clearing easier as they standardise contracts. They would definitely make exchange-based trading a lot easier as well," Cohen said.
Markit, a data provider and index administrator, said the spread widening on many sovereigns makes the move a timely one as standardisation reduces risk.
"The trading of CDS contracts is a global phenomenon and greater standardisation promotes greater operational efficiency and reduced systemic risk," it said in a note.
Publish Date: December 21, 2009
Source URL: http://in.reuters.com/articlePrint?articleId=INTOE5BK09420091221
Frequent trade matching is touted as one initiative that can help reduce risk in the $450 trillion, privately traded derivatives markets, though a number of challenges may complicate its wider practice, according to an industry study released on Monday.
Concerns about derivatives exposures, and whether collateral posted against the trades would be sufficient to cover losses if a dealer failed, added to stresses in the financial system last year and helped spark runs on banks including Lehman Brothers.
Differences in the way that derivatives trading partners record trades, which may include whether or not a trade was entered into or variations in a trade's size, terms or value, can be risky as they can leave parties with exposures that they are unaware of.
Disputes over trades can also hold up the exchange of an estimated $4 trillion in collateral that is used to back derivatives and mitigate losses in the event of a counterparty failure.
Large derivatives dealers in June adopted daily trade matching of exposures with each other, known as portfolio reconciliation, a practice which now accounts for around 60 percent of derivatives volumes, the study, conducted by trade association the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, found.
ISDA plans to publish documents detailing best practices and minimum market standards by the end of the year to encourage more of the market to undertake the procedure.
Variations in technology used to compare trades portfolios, and concerns over the quality of data used in the systems, however, pose challenges for expanding the practice to the other 40 percent of the market, ISDA said.
To ensure greater use of the practice, a solution is needed to overcome differences in technology and reticence among some participants to make results from reconciliation transparent to their counterparty.
By Karen Brettell
Publish Date: 21 December, 2009
Source URL: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2123301220091221
The first initiatives to set up a central clearing counterparty for CDS originated in the US
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Read complete article at Credit Risk Chronicles
Publish Date: December 21, 2009
Source URL: http://creditriskchronicles.blogspot.com/2009/12/summary-of-cds-clearing-initiatives.html