Monday, December 21, 2009

New CDS system to help volumes,liquidity in Asia-ISDA

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

ISDA: Derivatives trade matching faces challenges

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

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Summary of CDS Clearing Initiatives

The first initiatives to set up a central clearing counterparty for CDS originated in the US

  • There were four main initiatives to clear CDS in the US, all of which developed at around the same time in 3Q2008
  • The initiatives for a European clearing counterparty followed US efforts given pressure from the European Commission and the ECB for a European-based clearing mechanism that could be locally regulated
  • Ten banks committed to start using one or more clearing houses in the Eurozone by the end of July 2009
  • The most recent initiatives have been from Asia, with Japan Securities Clearing Corporation (JSCC) and Tokyo Financial Exchange (TFX) working out details on how to clear CDS
  • However, it is unlikely that participants would want or use two Japanese clearing institutions for OTC products, as the Japanese CDS market is a small proportion of global volumes. Currently, Japan accounts for 0.6 per cent of global CDS volumes outstanding
  • Overall, given recent regulatory focus on counterparty risk across derivatives, exchanges and clearing houses are looking to offer centralized clearing services across more derivative products or expand their existing clearing services to include buyside investors where such services were only available to large dealers
  • As of mid-Sep 2009, 15 banks (which include Barclays Capital, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley) have made a pledge to the Fed to clear the majority of credit and interest rate derivatives through central counterparties by the end of the year
  • The banks have pledged to clear 95 per cent of all eligible credit default swaps and 80 per cent of all credit default swaps through a central clearing party. They have further pledged to submit 90 per cent of eligible interest rate derivatives, 70 per cent of new trades, and 60 per cent of all existing interest rate derivatives to be cleared centrally

What’s common among the initiatives

  • All the US based initiatives are from exchanges – CME, Euronext Liffe, Eurex (part of the Deutsche Borse) and Intercontinental Exchange (ICE)
  • The European based initiatives are from clearing providers – Eurex Clearing and LCH.Clearnet – who have been involved in the US effort, Eurex Clearing being the clearing provider for Eurex and LCH.Clearnet being the clearing provider for Euronext Liffe
  • In addition, ICE has set up a European clearing provider so that they can provide a transatlantic solution
  • The Japanese initiatives are from clearing providers - JSCC is 86.3% owned by the Tokyo Stock Exchange and is the clearing house for all Japanese cash equities and derivatives on the Tokyo Stock Exchange; and TFX is owned by its members and specializes in trading and clearing derivatives
  • All the initiatives are focused on applying the central counterparty solution to current CDS contracts rather than creating exchange traded instruments such as futures
  • The plan is for trades to be done under standard ISDAs and linked to the current ISDA auction process for settlement
  • CDS trades will be agreed bilaterally as they are today, but each leg of the trade will be transacted with the central counterparty
  • The central clearing counterparty will then determine a margin amount for each of its counterparties

……

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

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

CME Credit Default Swaps Marketplace (from the CME website)

CME Clearing provides participants with an open-access clearing solution for over-the counter credit default swaps. CME Group's OTC CDS clearing solution builds on the existing over-the-counter (OTC) market, with ISDA-based CDS contracts that are economically equivalent to the current OTC contracts.
The CME Group Cleared OTC CDS solution incorporates the proven benefits of our straight-through-processing clearing model to deliver:

  • A time-tested regulatory segregation and portability framework that protects both customer positions and margin in the event that a clearing member defaults
  • Clearing of CDS trades at the point of execution, which provides immediate cleared trade confirmation and settlement and leaves no window of credit exposure between bi-lateral parties to a trade they wish to clear
  • Backloading of legacy positions into cleared trades, simplified through use of existing market infrastructure
  • The ability for market participants to leverage their existing relationships and connectivity with CME clearing members
  • More than 100 years of experience in clearing, settlement and risk management
CME Clearing enforces a rigorous risk management regime, featuring a multi-factor algorithm specifically developed for CDS products, which efficiently and accurately captures the risk of CDS portfolios. The CME Clearing risk management regime also offers the flexibility to mark positions to market, to ensure that all positions are continuously and adequately collateralized. Because of this proactive and rigorous risk management process, CME Clearing has never suffered a clearing firm default in more than a century of operation….

Read complete article at Credit Risk Chronicles

Publish Date: 16 December, 2009

Source URL: http://creditriskchronicles.blogspot.com/2009/12/cme-credit-default-swaps-marketplace.html

Monday, December 14, 2009

ICE Trust beats buy side deadline

IntercontinentalExchange(R) (NYSE: ICE), a leading operator of regulated global futures exchanges, clearing houses and over-the-counter (OTC) markets, announced that ICE Trust U.S. (ICE Trust) has today begun clearing credit default swap (CDS) contracts for buy-side market participants after receiving U.S. regulatory approval. The first trades were accepted for clearing on a real-time basis shortly after ICE Trust opened for clearing at 8:00 a.m. E.S.T. Twelve clearing members and ten buy-side firms successfully participated in the pre-launch testing and the related preparations in advance of today's launch.

Said Dirk Pruis, President of ICE Trust: "We are pleased to have expanded the important benefits of clearing to the CDS market more broadly and we appreciate the industry's contribution to this initiative. The collaboration of the buy-side and dealer community played a key role in the successful development and launch of customer clearing. ICE Trust has also worked closely with multiple U.S. regulatory agencies to bring this facility for the reduction of systemic risk, increased transparency and safety to these vital markets."
He added, "Customers will benefit from ICE's tested clearing model, global clearing presence and scale. Our customers value our experience clearing over-the-counter markets, in addition to our industry-leading risk management model, strong independent governance and the world's largest default fund."

Developed in conjunction with global buy-side participants and dealers, the buy-side framework introduces trade-date clearing to the CDS market for the first time, as well as providing for segregation of customer funds and enhanced position and margin portability. The open model permits firms to retain important trading and contractual relationships including accepting transactions from a range of competitive existing execution models. In addition, ICE Link provides the infrastructure for connecting the major dealers, inter-dealer brokers and over 400 buy-side firms and enabling product standardization and post-trade processing.

To date, ICE has cleared over $4.3 trillion in notional value of CDS indexes in North America and Europe and has aggregate open interest of $344 billion. ICE Trust commenced operations in March 2009 and has cleared more than $3.1 trillion notional of North American index (CDX) contracts to date. ICE Clear Europe began clearing European index (iTraxx) contracts in July 2009 and has cleared euro 807 billion in notional. ICE Clear Europe earlier today announced that it has begun clearing selected European single name CDS contracts.

ICE has established risk frameworks for its U.S. and European CDS businesses that are separate from its futures businesses, including separate risk models, guaranty funds and margin accounts, as well as a CDS-focused risk management system and an independent governance structure. Through ICE's CDS clearing services, ICE provides a common infrastructure to global CDS market participants within their respective regulatory jurisdictions, while leveraging the legal framework, operational and risk management processes, treasury systems and trade warehousing systems currently in use by the industry.

Publish Date – 12 December, 2009

Source URL - http://www.finextra.com/news/announcement.aspx?pressreleaseid=31472

Clearance of CDS passes milestone

The trading of credit default swaps passed a key milestone on Monday as dealers started placing trades executed with their clients into ICE Trust, a central clearing house for over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives.

A rival clearing service from the CME Group is expected to start clearing the customer trades of dealers this week, possibly beginning as soon as Tuesday.

Read full article at Financial Times

Publish Date: December 14, 2009

Source URL: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8ae3eeaa-e8d9-11de-a756-00144feab49a.html

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Caution over OTC clearing

Technorati Tags:

For anyone toiling in the arcane world of clearing, figures out this week showing that the over-the-counter derivative markets were showing signs of life must have sounded like good news.

The Bank for International Settlements reported that, for the six months ending in June, the total notional amount of OTC derivatives contracts outstanding rose 10 per cent to $604,622bn.

Regulators have for months been insisting that many OTC derivatives be shifted to clearing houses as part of the clean-up of the financial system. A clearing house stands between two parties to a trade, guaranteeing that deals are completed if one side defaults.

The two developments should mean a bonanza for businesses that operate clearing houses, including exchanges.

When the US administration unveiled its proposals for reforming the OTC markets in June, industry analysts forecast that clearing would be a boon for exchanges as the crisis hurt their core trading business.

But OTC clearing may not be the big money-spinner many believed.

Read complete article at http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/06ffb0de-cfba-11de-a36d-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

Publish Date: 12 November, 2009

Source URL: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/06ffb0de-cfba-11de-a36d-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

Monday, April 06, 2009

Aleri Develops Real-Time Risk Monitoring Solution

Aleri, a provider of CEP technology, announced the development of a Real-Time (RT) Risk Monitoring solution framework to manage credit and market risk.

Aleri's RT Risk Monitoring solution provides consolidation and analysis of positions in real-time, which can help a firm identify unacceptable levels of exposure along a number of configurable dimensions, including counterparty, trader, asset class, region and industry sector, according to a release.

The solution gives users the ability to determine the underlying cause of the concentration, right down to individual trades.

Additionally, Aleri's event-driven architecture allows for non-intrusive integration with existing systems, making it easy for firms to quickly move from end-of-day monitoring to immediate insight, Aleri said.

"Market volatility and the increased focus on counterparty risk have prompted trading firms to look for better tools to manage their exposure," Jeff Wootton, VP of Product Strategy at Aleri, said in a release.

"The current tools many firms are using can't provide consolidated information on a timely enough basis across their trading operation. Aleri's RT Risk Monitoring solution can quickly provide firms with this capability."

The solution leverages the Aleri CEP platform and provides immediate and continuous monitoring and analysis, eliminating the need to wait for overnight consolidation and batch computations, according to the release.

By extending the capabilities of the Aleri CEP technology with the Aleri Live OLAP server, users can analyze data at any level of aggregation across different dimensions.

Hierarchies applied to each of the dimensions can specify how the data gets rolled up into aggregate values, with the ability to drill down all the way to the individual transaction level.

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=216402958

Monday, March 30, 2009

New Automated Data Feed Between Omgeo’s Crosscheck and DTCC

Omgeo announced the availability of an automated data feed between Omgeo CrossCheck and DTCC's Trade Information Warehouse.

The link is designed to reduce operational risks in the over-the-counter (OTC) credit derivatives market by enabling market participants to align their portfolios with contract records maintained by the Warehouse, a service offering of DTCC's Deriv/SERV unit.

According to a release, Warehouse is the market's first trade database and centralized electronic infrastructure for post-trade processing of OTC derivatives contracts over their lifecycles, from confirmation through to final settlement.

Omgeo CrossCheck is a centrally hosted, exception management solution that automates the comparison of portfolios of derivatives between counterparties.

It helps minimize the risks and consequences of unaligned portfolios in advance of payments, collateral calls, credit events and other situations, according to Omgeo.

As such, firms are better able to scale their business as volumes expand, while effectively managing risk in times of market stress, allowing for high levels of transparency and efficiency, the company said in the release.

The new link enables Omgeo clients that are also customers of DTCC's Deriv/SERV and the Trade Information Warehouse to receive an automatic feed of relevant credit derivative trade data from the Warehouse to CrossCheck. With this feed in place, clients can compare their portfolio records against the Warehouse to ensure agreement with the "golden copy" of trade details for positions with all counterparties who use Deriv/SERV. "Since the debut of Omgeo's counterparty risk management offerings, and specifically our portfolio reconciliation service Omgeo CrossCheck, we've been dedicated to ensuring that the data involved is of the utmost quality," said Steve Matthews, managing director, product at Omgeo. "By linking CrossCheck to the global standard for centralized and secure data for OTC derivatives at DTCC's Trade Information Warehouse, our clients can be assured that their risks are further mitigated throughout the length of their derivatives contracts."

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=216401750

Friday, March 20, 2009

Markit Launches CDS Data Portal

Markit, a financial information services company, today announced the launch of a credit default swap information portal designed to increase transparency and provide a broader audience with a tool to monitor the market.

The new data portal will make a wide range of Markit's independent CDS data sets publicly available, including: prices for Markit's family of CDS indices, the Markit CDX and Markit iTraxx; the last quote received by Markit before New York close of trading for approximately 450 of the most liquid CDS contracts, including G20 sovereigns, large financial corporations and constituents of Markit's iTraxx and CDX indices; the biggest daily single name CDS movers for North America, Europe and Asia; and daily Markit/ICE TrustTM CDS settlement prices for the most liquid Markit CDX index contracts listed for clearing by ICE Trust.

In support of the industry's migration to a standardized CDS contract and quoting convention, Markit has published a free online calculator that converts CDS spreads into the new upfront quoting convention. Markit will also publish educational material to encourage greater understanding of the CDS market.

"The CDS market is viewed as the barometer of health for the broad credit markets," said Armins Rusis, global co-head of fixed income at Markit. "It is therefore important to make information about this market as widely available as possible. Markit remains committed to increasing transparency in the CDS market and we will continue to work with the industry to help it adapt to a changing environment."

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=216000013

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

SuperDerivatives Upgrades VolSurface Service as Mark-to-Market Data

SuperDerivatives upgraded its VolSurface service as Mark-to-Market Data, enabling cost-effective and self-service derivatives revaluation and risk management.

The company said improvements to the service are based on feedback from over 400 customers around the world, which revealed serious concerns about relying on in-house market data or data from counterparties and other non-independent sources and a need for data that truly reflects the current OTC market.

SD's Mark-to-Market Data is designed to help banks, funds and corporations who wish to manage risk in their portfolio but also control the costs for accessing the best available derivatives market data to inform their decisions and reporting, SuperDerivatives said in a release.

The service provides independent risk reference data for vanilla and advanced derivatives across commodities, energy, equities, FX and interest rates, and can be used as a customizable data feed for risk management systems, replacing makeshift and often inaccurate methods such as capturing data in a spreadsheet, SD said.

The service combines SD's benchmark pricing methodology with market rates collected from a selection of active market participants, delivering an automated and validated volatility feed for a range of both liquid and illiquid markets.

In addition to volatility surfaces, the upgraded service now also offers intraday or end-of-day automated feeds for yield curves, forwards curves, overnight index swaps (OIS) curves, inflation curves, correlations and equity dividend flows.

"The key to derivatives valuation is the quality, accuracy and reliability of data across asset classes and markets which has to be delivered electronically as close to real time as possible in order to allow distribution tools to be automated, and to enable generation of end-of-day reports," Dani Weigert, Mark-to-Market Product Manager, SD said in a release. "Our Mark-to-Market Data service now boasts the widest asset coverage and the most extensive selection of market-accurate risk data, making it a fully-fledged industrial-strength solution for cost-effective risk management."

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=215801619

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Despite Misconceptions, Credit Default Swap Market is Growing

Pre-dating Wall Street's current financial crisis, the credit default swaps market generated heated debate and discussion, moving from an initial focus on confirmation backlogs to a central counterparty clearing model and more recently to the possibility of requiring these products to trade on an exchange. Unfortunately, misconceptions regarding the utility and purpose of credit default swaps continue to spread and the financial industry's efforts to defend these instruments have been met with disdain by legislators seeking oversight of the CDS industry through misguided regulatory efforts.

But according to Kevin McPartland, senior analyst at Tabb Group and author of the new research report, "Credit Default Swaps: Industry Projections," although the outstanding notional value of the CDS market has declined dramatically largely due to trade compression, CDS market revenues from central clearing, electronic trading and existing trade migration will grow to $174 million, growing at 12% CAGR (compound annual growth rate) through 2011.

A new regulatory structure including central clearing and increased electronic trading, says McPartland, will streamline the market, lower barriers to entry for buy-side firms and ultimately increase volumes. "However, beyond the ubiquitous counterparty risk issue, concerns over operational efficiency issues continue to plague the CDS market at the same time that global regulators are pushing the industry to adopt central clearing for CDS trades and increase market transparency."

He explains how four proposed major initiatives from CME/Citadel, NYSE Euronext, Eurex and ICE (which includes Creditex and TCC), each vying to be the central counterparty of choice for the CDS market, will allow trades into their clearing houses from nearly any execution platform, including those operated by their competition. He does caution, however, that even when the first central clearing entity come online, a number of challenges will remain that require further thought and innovation.

Despite strong backing by regulators, he says that there are some in the industry who believe the problems with a central clearing solution for the CDS markets go deeper. "At least one alternative approach, NetDelta, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Knight Trading, currently exists, and others are likely in the works."

Casting an eye to the future, he also identifies three issues worth tracking: CDS market transparency; mandates; and electronic trading

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=215800447

Sunday, March 01, 2009

Managing Risk Key for OTC Derivatives

Risk management and post-trade administration is critical for the growing over-the-counter derivatives market, according to State Street Corporation, which in August launched an OTC derivatives servicing platform.

“It is crucial that the sellside community, the financial services industry and regulators work together to develop new approaches to processing and servicing these complex transactions,” said Jay Hooley, president and chief operating officer of State Street.

The world's largest money manager for institutions on Monday released its sixth in a series of Vision Reports. The latest report on derivatives servicing says volume of OTC trades may present a challenge for legacy technology systems, which were originally designed to process traditional equity and fixed-rate transactions, but are now handling non-traditional trades as well.

A January study by Calypso Technology, a global provider of an integrated trading application suite to the capital markets industry, found that 61 percent of respondents were concerned about improving their internal systems for risk management, and 49 percent were working to improve OTC derivatives processing.

Last month, the U.S. House Agriculture Committee introduced the Derivatives Markets Transparency and Accountability Act of 2009, which would require that virtually all OTC derivatives be either be settled and cleared through a derivatives clearing organization (DCO) regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a clearing organization regulated by the Securities Exchange Commission, a regulated foreign clearing organization, or reported to the CFTC.

Neil Wright, senior vice president and product manager for derivatives servicing at State Street, said: “With increasing volumes and complexity, the range of procedures to confirm, process and otherwise manage the trade life-cycle of OTC derivatives needs to be automated. In addition, providers will need to keep pace with the increasingly sophisticated analytics needed for derivatives trades.”

State Street OTC Hub is currently in production with PIMCO, the world's largest manager of bond funds and long-time State Street customer.

Source URL: http://www.marketsmediaonline.com/news_details.htm?wP=1&wPI=1&cN=3146

Saturday, February 28, 2009

When Counterparties Fail (Waters Special Report)

The demise of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers has thrown the default threat onto center stage. Credit risk is guiding trading strategies like never before as technologists scramble to provide the front office with real counterparty risk measurement. By Joe Morgan

When Bear Stearns collapsed in the spring of last year it completely changed the thinking of risk managers across the globe. Gone were the days when capital markets firms could simply focus their attention upon the risks of financial products blowing up. Buy- and sell-side firms now had to ask the question: Will the firm we are doing business with still be around tomorrow?

Anyone misguided enough to believe that it could still be "business as usual" in the capital markets after the demise of Bear Stearns had their illusions shattered when Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last September.

"Counterparty credit risk came to the forefront after Bear Stearns. The fact that even a major global bank could disappear scared everyone," says Kevin McPartland, a senior analyst at consultancy firm Tabb Group in New York. The collapse of giants in the financial world has completely changed capital markets firms' attitude toward counterparty credit risk. It would have previously been unthinkable that a credit default swap (CDS) purchased from a bulge-bracket firm would become worthless in the wake of the bank failing. Now risk managers have to consider the dual threats of both the underlying financial risk that a CDS is taken out to protect against, and the risk of the bank arranging the trade collapsing. This has increased the overlap between risk management and trading like never before.

Market analysts point out that capital markets firms are increasingly providing traders with the facility to check with the firm's credit risk models before executing trades. Those without automated processes in place to link a credit department's risk data with its trading desks are requiring traders to pick up the phone more often and speak with risk managers, particularly before executing major transactions.

Chicago-based complex event processing (CEP) technology vendor Aleri claims it has experienced a recent upsurge in demand-particularly among sell-side firms-for its suite of solutions. CEP technology consolidates trades, market prices, and settlement reports, enabling a firm to obtain an updated view of risk exposure in real time. In addition, a firm can impose pre-trade limits and caps on the exposure dealers can take with a particular counterparty.

"The bottom line is that many firms that have collected information in the past have not done so in a timely enough fashion," says Jeff Wootton, vice president at Aleri in Chicago. He says the CEP system takes native data from different risk and trading systems within a firm and aggregates it along different dimensions in real time. "From the consolidated view, you can then drill down all the way to the individual transaction level, managing trading positions and exposure in a certain asset class, location or with a particular counterparty."

Buy-side and sell-side firms have also been forced to replace risk models in the wake of the financial crisis. PJ Di Giammarino, CEO of JWG-IT Group, a financial services think tank based in London, describes the counterparty risk management framework used by capital markets firms a year ago as "fundamentally flawed." He says there is now a need for more timely and granular customer information on demand. "However, this higher quality data needs to be distributed across the firm without slowing down its trading desk. Reducing latency of changes in the customers' state is critical. Time is a luxury firms do not have," he says.

Bob Giffords, an independent banking and technology analyst based in the UK, says risk models now have to be redesigned and recalibrated for new correlation risks and to fit them into "the rapidly diminishing interstices between trades." He expects this to require more hardware along with a closer scrutiny of the links between financial products, especially via liquidity, contagious market sentiment, or external political events. "Multi-model strategies may well start to emerge as we've seen for investment," says Giffords. Different models show different risk factors and are then weighted based on market or even political conditions. "When the market is jittery and trading is thin, sentiment models may dominate, while during more confident, liquid periods we would expect to see models based on fundamentals to increase their weighting," he says.

Rohan Douglas, CEO of Quantifi, a financial software vendor in London, says the current financial crisis has resulted in regional banks and many large buy-side participants adopting a sophisticated approach to counterparty credit risk that was previously the almost exclusive purview of bulge-bracket firms such as Goldman Sachs. Risk modeling techniques used to price financial instruments are being used to measure the counterparty risk on individual trades. However, Douglas says that firms scrambling to implement more stringent counterparty credit checks now in the wake of the current market turmoil are still in danger. "The main thing that will come out of this the financial crisis is that you really need these tools and infrastructure in place before a crisis takes place," he says.

More CPR Power

Douglas says he believes that credit and counterparty risk will continue to loom larger in the minds of buy-side and sell-side firms, regardless of the current market turmoil. "The longer term trend will be that credit and the measuring of counterparty risks will be increasingly important," he says.

Buy-side and sell-side firms' increasing focus on measuring counterparty credit risk will provide technologists with significant challenges. Capital markets firms will have to gather more information on levels of risk exposure to counterparties and process it in a shorter amount of time while also distributing the information between credit risk and trading departments. "High-performance computing (HPC) technology is being used to crunch numbers faster. Whereas before a firm's risk exposure would be calculated overnight it is now being done in just one hour," says McPartland.

Capital markets firms are taking a two-fold approach to enhancing the computational power that can be used to power risk management systems: complex calculations are being spread out across multiple processors, while firms are also undertaking initiatives to more efficiently utilize their computing resources. Grid technology-which is already being increasingly utilized by capital markets firms absorbing cutbacks in IT spending-is being used to fulfill more risk management tasks. Instead of running models through Microsoft Excel spreadsheets on local desktops the number crunching is now being done in a grid environment. Server blades in datacenters are also increasingly being shared. McPartland of the Tabb Group says the "cloud computing idea"-where employees book a certain amount of processors for an agreed length of time-is gaining traction among capital markets firms. "This way you get access to what you need to do, such as carry out a report, before the computational resources go back into the pool," he says. "The old way of doing things would be for a couple of servers to be used for two hours and then left idle for the rest of the day." (For more on cloud computing, please turn to page 46.)

Buy-side and sell-side firms specializing in high-speed, high-frequency trading strategies are increasingly incorporating graphics processing unit (GPU) technology to reduce latency. GPUs were originally developed by Santa Clara, Calif.-based Nvidia to support 3D graphics in the computer gaming industry in 1999. The visual computing technology vendor has since launched its Tesla product to provide capital markets firms with high-performance computing solutions that can reduce the latency of risk management applications. "The use of GPUs is still cutting-edge," says McPartland. "The firms that utilize this type of technology do not like to talk about it as they are often quite secretive about their trading strategies." Bulge-bracket sell-side firms, proprietary trading firms and hedge funds are among those believed to be adopting GPU technology in their counterparty credit risk systems.

The use of GPUs can speed up number-crunching tasks such as performing Monte Carlo simulations for the pricing of derivatives. The technology is being used for data storage. For example, in an options contract, multiple data needs to be stored, including its strike price, whether it is a "call" or a "put" and the underlying security the option is linked to. "Different firms store data on options in different ways. GPUs can be used to quickly turn the data into a consistent format in real time, enabling the information to be more easily analyzed," says McPartland. The technology is also being used to enhance and normalize streaming market data before it is transferred to risk models and algorithmic trading engines. The capacity to process data into a consistent format before being incorporated into a front-end trading system is becoming increasingly vital in the risk management processes of buy-side and sell-side firms, which increasingly rely upon different types of data from multiple exchanges and trading platforms.

CDSes GO ELECTRONIC

In October last year the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and Chicago-based alternative investment firm Citadel Investment Group unveiled plans to set up an independent electronic trading platform for trading CDSes. The platform will function as an electronic exchange for CDS trading, with CME Clearing acting as a central counterparty to guarantee trades. Major CDS market participants have been invited to join the platform as founding members by allocating up to 30 percent of the equity in the venture and committing to becoming market-makers when the platform is launched later this year.

Across the pond, the European Commission is spearheading drives for a centralized clearing model for derivatives instruments such as CDSes. Three exchanges are vying for this business: NYSELiffe, in conjunction with London-based LCH.Clearnet; Frankfurt-based Deutsche Börse's Eurex Clearing; and Atlanta-based IntercontinentalExchange (ICE), which is in talks with UK regulators about allowing its London-based ICE Clear Europe to clear CDSes. Nine of the major dealer firms in the CDS markets have committed to the use of central counterparty clearing for CDSes in Europe by July this year. In a letter sent to EU Commissioner Charlie McCreevy in February, the nine banks-Barclays Capital, Citigroup Global Markets, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and UBS-agreed to work closely with infrastructure providers, regulators and the European Commission to resolve technical, regulatory, legal and practical hurdles. Each firm will make its own choice on which central clearinghouse or houses might best meet its risk management criteria.

A source who works for a trading technology vendor that is providing technology from its core credit risk platform to some of the parties involved in the current bidding war to become a central counterparty for CDSes says market participants are "waking up to the fact that counterparty credit risk is real." The source-who reports a recent increase in demand from insurance companies for credit risk solutions-says: "There will be increasing moves toward a centrally cleared infrastructure for liquid products in the capital markets while more bespoke instruments continue to be traded on a bilateral basis."

The demand among market participants for a centrally cleared model for the trading of credit products is likely to increase as volatile financial markets remain unstable and in uncharted territory, with traditional providers of liquidity such as hedge funds retreating from the market place. These conditions will also result in greater investment in risk management technology as firms try to navigate-and survive-the current market conditions. Developing risk and trading models that provide appropriate levels of protection against the risk of default-while also enabling the firms to profit from the turbulent market terrain-will be vital.

Observers note that this will make latency increasingly important as capital markets firms monitor their trading positions in real time. Few risk managers will be willing to wait until the next day before checking up on exposure to any counterparty, no matter how big the name. After all, no investment firm wants to be the next Lehman Brothers.

 

Source URL: http://www.watersonline.com/public/showPage.html?page=printer_friendly&print=845244

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Markit Launches First Multi-Dealer Valuations Platform

Markit, a financial information services company, announced the launch of the first multi-bank, cross-asset client valuations platform.

Markit Valuations Manager provides a secure, standardized view of over-the-counter (OTC) derivative positions and derivative and cash instrument valuations across counterparties on a single electronic platform, according to the company.

Subscribers to Markit's Portfolio Valuations service will be able to view the bank counterparty valuations alongside Markit's independent valuations.

Markit is launching the platform with six banks - Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citi, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and UBS - and expects to add additional participating banks over the coming months.

The new platform incorporates a dispute mechanism and workflow tools with full audit trail to enhance the price challenge process, Markit said.

The platform is integrated with Markit's Trade Processing PortRec service to enable full life cycle support for OTC derivative positions including counterparty position data delivery. "As an active member of several buy-side working groups in Europe, we welcome the ability to access normalized position and valuation data from the banks in a standardized way. Markit has not only delivered the normalization, but it is it is consolidating the information in a single electronic portal across banks. I think this is a great step forward for the industry," Patrick Finn, Head of Operations at BlueCrest Capital Management LLP in London, said in a release.

Markit says a recent survey it conducted of 50 asset managers highlighted the urgent need for an electronic, secure valuations process.

Portfolio managers currently receive numerous statements from their counterparties in multiple formats, requiring many hours of manual consolidation, the company said.

The survey found that 17% of respondents said that a single file delivery of counterparty statements would save them between 50 and 1,000 hours of work a month. On average, respondents estimated time savings of more than 49 hours a month.

The study also revealed that more complete position information and a standard statement format across all counterparties ranked as the most important improvements required, followed by an efficient price challenge mechanism. Overall, 66% of respondents said they received their counterparty statements by email, underlining the potential security risk of misplaced or incorrectly forwarded emails, Markit said in a release.

Over 65% of respondents said they were under pressure to conduct more frequent reconciliation with counterparties and provide more frequent NAV computation to investors.

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=214503027

Thursday, February 19, 2009

BNY Mellon Debuts Derivatives Collateral Netting Service

The Bank of New York Mellon this week rolled out a new netting service for derivatives dealers called Derivatives Collateral Net. The service uses a technology that, according to BNY Mellon, enables derivatives dealers to post only their net obligations against all other participants in the system, greatly reducing their gross collateral requirements and the risks and costs associated with derivative transactions.

"Derivatives Collateral Net represents the implementation of the International Swaps and Derivative Association's strategic vision for dramatically reducing the operational challenges associated with the margin process between counterparties," said Art Certosimo, executive vice president and head of Broker-Dealer Services at the Bank of New York Mellon. "We're making the process more efficient without affecting the fundamental bilateral nature of the credit relationship between the parties."

"As the global capital markets expand and evolve, our commitment to researching and developing innovative services will provide significant benefits to our clients and strengthen our competitive position around the world," said Kurt Woetzel, chief information officer and senior executive vice president at The Bank of New York Mellon. "Derivatives Collateral Net is the latest example of a new service developed in-house that improves our ability to service our clients."

The Bank of New York Mellon's tri-party collateral management services business services more than $1.8 trillion in tri-party balances worldwide.

Source URL:http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=214502079

Cooperation Announced Between Global CDS CCP Regulators

Representatives from regulatory agencies with direct authority over one or more of the existing or proposed credit-default swap central counterparties (CDS CCP) discussed today possible information sharing arrangements and other methods of cooperation within the regulatory community.

Today’s discussion follows an initial meeting held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on January 12, 2009. The discussions included representatives from the Federal Reserve, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, U.K. Financial Services Authority, the German Federal Financial Services Authority (BaFin), Deutsche Bundesbank, the New York State Banking Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the European Central Bank and the Hungarian Financial Services Authority in their roles as co-chairs of the joint ESCB-CESR Working Group on Central Counterparties.

The primary objectives of the effort discussed today include:

• Mutually supporting each regulator in carrying out its respective authorities and responsibilities with respect to CDS CCPs; and

• Applying consistent standards and promoting consistent public policy objectives and oversight approaches for all CDS CCPs.

To facilitate communication among the regulatory community with respect to all CDS CCPs, CDS CCP regulators plan to host a workshop in the near future with representatives of other interested regulators and governmental authorities that are currently considering CDS market matters, to discuss the CDS CCP regulatory interests and information needs of other authorities and the market more broadly.

Source URL: http://www.anotherfp.com/newsite/story.php?id=889

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

CDS dealers bow to pressure and commit to EU clearing counterparty

Nine of the leading dealer firms in the credit default swaps markets have committed to the use of central counterparty clearing for CDS in the European Union by end-July 2009.

In a letter to EU Commissioner Charlie McCreevy, the nine dealers - Barclays Capital, Citigroup Global Markets, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and UBS - have agreed to work closely with infrastructure providers, regulators and the European Commission in resolving outstanding technical, regulatory, legal and practical issues. Each firm will make an individual choice on which central clearing house or houses might best meet its risk management objectives, subject to regulatory approval of any such clearing house in Europe.

The move follows the threat of legislative action by the European Commission after the industry failed to meet an end-December deadline to deliver a detailed plan for CDS clearing in the eurozone.

Last week, London-based LCH.Clearnet announced plans to launch a clearing service for credit default swaps in the Eurozone by December 2009.

The initiative has sparked a flurry of activity in France, where the central bank has called on eurozone countries to come up with an alternative solution to counter the challenge posed by the creation of systemically-significant clearing bodies in London and the US.

In a document seen by the FT, the Banque de France called for the creation of a "consortium of eurozone banks and shareholders of major infrastructures with the objective of developing a common strategy for the integration of several of the eurozone's prinicple clearing houses".

Separately, IntercontinentalExchange, which is looking to set up a global clearing house from the US, has announced plans to set up a European equivalent, dubbed ICE Trust Europe and set a H1 2009 launch date.

 

Source URL: http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=19659

Wholesale Market Brokers Association Defends OTC Derivatives Against WFE’s Statement

Association backs central counterparty for clearing, but rejects exchange execution platforms.

The Wholesale Market Brokers Association (WMBA) rebuffed a statement by the World Federation of Stock Exchanges that blamed over-the-counter derivatives markets (OTC) for the recent financial crisis. The statement reported in press coverage said that "unregulated (OTC) markets were at the core of the recent crisis and that OTC markets are unregulated," according to the WMBA.

The WMBA, representing the world's largest interdealer brokers contends the crisis is the result of "several seismic economic and financial forces." WMBA attributes the crisis to the transformation of bank lending into highly complex credit products, that originators, rating agencies, buyers, and sellers of protection found difficult to value correctly, find liquidity for, or to hedge, according to WMBA's statement.

Refuting the perception that the OTC derivatives markets are unregulated, WMBA said the primary regulatory focus in OTC markets is on the participants themselves based on their activity, the nature of counterparties and types of assets involved. According to WMBA, it is misleading to suggest that exchange traded markets have a more robust regulatory model. There are still instances of failure in the exchange- traded model, it points out, implying that individuals or organizations should be the focus of supervision.

Instead, there is a danger that policy decisions are being made that could force OTC products onto exchanges, resulting in a dramatic reduction in liquidity and flexibility in markets essential for trading and hedging. WMBA contends that OTC markets are more appropriate for hedging non-standardized risks. It pointed out that billions of Euros of OTC trades are currently centrally cleared on a daily basis, adding there should be no confusion

However, WMBA supports the move towards a central counterparty (CCP) as an effective step to improve the settlement of credit default swaps and other OTC products generally. Acknowledging that there will be regulatory changes as a response to the crisis, WMBA insists the focus should be on" regulation of participants and not on mandating of monopolies in the execution of financial products."

Source URL: http://www.financetech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=214501800

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Risk Management Evolves for Risky Times

As the new presidential administration and regulators continue to try to pick up the pieces of the shattered U.S. economy, the heat is on financial institutions to make sure their risk management practices are fully aligned with rapidly changing economic and market conditions. For most Wall Street firms, this means a growing demand for real-time systems, particularly for the valuation of securities, and increased automation, according to experts.

"Whether you're a business or a regulator, I wouldn't be surprised if in the near term more real-time systems are brought into play," says John Jay, a senior analyst with Boston-based Aite Group. "People before weren't paying attention. Now, knowing implosions have occurred, they're moving forward, and the trend is toward real time."

And with so much information flowing so quickly, automation is a key component of any risk management strategy. "If firms have significant assets, they would be foolish to still be using spreadsheets," Jay asserts.

"Size is an issue," he continues. "Over the past few years values have come down, but maybe the line items are still there. So for a lot of sell-side companies that are buying and selling all day long, particularly with over-the-counter derivatives, they might have tens of thousands of line items. And that's just a small portion of their business. So to have a spreadsheet would be rather dangerous."

As recently as a year ago, with the credit crunch and financial crisis looming, many firms relied on reactive and manual processes, confirms Dave Stewart, director of risk solutions for Misys and global solutions manager for the vendor's Misys Opics Plus front-to-back-office multi-asset-class processing platform. "They needed to put data in a spreadsheet, do analysis, get information to be aware of their positions of risk and have a bunch of metrics to enable them to make decisions for business," he says. "That type of practice has not been very effective. That practice doesn't give them the level of transparency or visibility to make the right decisions."

To avoid the kind of systemic meltdown that caused the financial crisis in the first place, companies need much better access to information in real time, Stewart stresses. "A lot of how they monitor their business can be improved dramatically if they have the ability to be aware of what's going on in a more holistic and real-time manner," he comments.

Finding a Good Value

One of the main issues financial firms are facing today is valuing their over-the-counter derivatives, according to Robert Park, CEO of FINCAD, a Surrey, British Columbia-based provider of derivatives analytics tools, who says firms increasingly are interested in getting independent valuations of derivatives positions. "Most of the assets being traded are Level 2 instruments for which there is no market quote available," Park explains. "So getting an independent valuation is one of the key concerns in the marketplace today."

Reliance on valuation models also is greater than in the past, adds Jason Hahn, SVP of market risk management for the mortgage lending division at BB&T Corp., a Winston-Salem, N.C.-based financial holding company with $137 billion in assets. But the models face their own challenges, he notes.

"A lot of people have taken the stance that fair-value accounting has been detrimental to the financial system's stability," Hahn relates, referring to the mark-to-market practice of valuing financial instruments using available market prices. "To do that in cases where the instruments are really easily tracked is good, but for more-esoteric instruments, some market value might be available for a benchmark, but you also need to have financial models that allow you to translate the benchmark to your simple calculation."

Further, many valuation models do not consider counterparty risk, points out Tom Driscoll, VP, sales and marketing, Charles River Development. "Institutions once deemed quite solid are not," he observes. "That puts pressure on flexibility and the models to make assumptions that a year or two ago would have been quite outrageous but, given the current situation, are likely a much greater risk now. That counterparty risk and how valuations are done need to be more flexible." He adds, "There's a lot of pressure for firms to not use a standard model to look at risk and valuation."

Ultimately, however, the financial analytics software itself shouldn't change all that much, suggests BB&T's Hahn. Rather, it is how the software is used -- what kinds of numbers are fed into it -- that will change. "Do you feed market data that is current, or a historical-average number?" Hahn poses. "Perhaps how you use the model might change -- the role that a model value has compared to market value, and how you go about reporting that."

Adapting Models to New Regulations

Another variable in Wall Street's risk models is emerging regulations, notes Aite's Jay. "Change is upon firms whether they like it or not -- not only internally but with regulations, too," he points out.

As a result, stress-testing systems -- not just for extreme market conditions but also for regulatory scenarios -- are becoming increasingly important. "In more-robust systems, we will see some of these compliance tools incorporate randomly generated scenarios subjected to constraints," Jay predicts.

"But what some systems may or may not capture is ... the effect of compliance if such a scenario came into play," he continues. "So if you're just looking at economics over a scenario, the economics might work and come up with a number. But you may also be violating liquidity constraints."

The bottom line, then, is that executives need to understand their own risk systems and what those systems are trying to say, Jay asserts. This is crucial when faced, for example, with rogue traders who have a lot to gain if they are successful and stand to lose little if they are caught, such as Jerome Kerviel, the former Societe Generale trader who was responsible for a $7 billion loss at the French bank by circumventing the risk management system.

"As far as risk managers are concerned and very senior guys, they need to understand from a compliance perspective the little loopholes but also the analytics, and understand what those risk management systems are telling them, and what they're not telling them," says Jay. "A senior officer ... now has to go beyond [trading volume] and see what his concentration and exposure is, [trades] on the books, those that are about to settle or will in the future, who the counterparties are, and whether some have incorporated regulatory requirements."

No Escaping Accountability

Overall, the key issue for everyone -- right up to a company's senior officials -- is to truly understand the instruments that are being traded, asserts Aite's Jay. "[Madoff whistle-blower] Harry Markopolos said the SEC was asleep at the wheel," Jay notes. "He said regulators don't understand the financial instruments. But that could be said for a lot of executives at buy-side and sell-side firms."

That lack of understanding, Misys' Stewart adds, contributed to organizations extending their risk exposure. Too often, he suggests, those who should have been accountable for their firms' positions weren't aware of the level of risk involved in certain holdings.

"It's one thing to be in business and make your assets under management grow, but another to not be held accountable to what they are," says Aite's Jay. "There has to be an increased knowledge base from senior folks. You can't get a free pass anymore by saying, 'Our risk people are dealing with that.' "

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=214500781

Friday, January 30, 2009

JPMorgan sacrifices CDS engine to open source in bid to stave off legislation

JPMorgan is to hand over its inhouse-developed CDS analytical engine to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association to run as an open platform in an effort to increase transparency in credit default swaps pricing and stave off legislation.

The CDS analytical engine, originally developed by the Quantitative Research group at JPMorgan, is widely used in the industry to price CDS contracts.

Isda says it will make the technology available as open source code, thereby increasing transparency around CDS pricing.

Robert Pickel, executive director and chief executive officer, Isda, describes the initiative as another measure of the industry's efforts to raise transparency and increase standardisation in CDS trading.

"JPMorgan has invested a lot of intellectual capital in this analytical engine," he says. "Its willingness to assign this to Isda for us to make it available as open source to the entire industry demonstrates our collective commitment to the integrity of the CDS product."

The move comes as Isda fights a draft US bill proposed by congressman Collin Peterson that would ban most forms of CDS trading.

"This bill would increase the cost and reduce the availability of essential risk management tools while failing to address the true causes of the credit crisis," says Eraj Shirvani, Isda chairman and head of European and Pacific credit sales and trading at Credit Suisse.

 

Source URL: http://www.finextra.com/fullstory.asp?id=19587

Monday, January 12, 2009

DTCC to Support All Central Counterparties for OTC Credit Derivatives

In an effort to bring greater certainty and safety to the market for credit derivatives, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) said it will support all central counterparty solutions for credit default swaps, in a non-discriminatory manner, with its Trade Information Warehouse, whose capabilities include central net settlement and asset servicing.

Through its DTCC Deriv/SERV subsidiary, the company is currently working with ICE Trust/The Clearing Corporation, CME/Citadel, LIFFE/LCH, and Eurex to facilitate their efforts to provide CCP services trade guarantees for credit default swaps (CDS). The Trade Information Warehouse, as the market's central registry and industry-recognized post-confirm infrastructure for credit derivatives, is optimally equipped to support any and all CCPs that are established in the CDS market. Virtually all dealers and buy-side participants along with 15 third-party service providers in the global CDS market are already linked to the Warehouse and utilize its functionality.

"From the outset of our involvement in the OTC derivatives market in 2003, DTCC has been committed to bringing automation, certainty and reduced risk to trading in CDS and other derivatives instruments," said Peter Axilrod, managing director, business development and Deriv/SERV, at DTCC, in a press release. "By utilizing the Warehouse's post-trade processing infrastructure rather than investing valuable resources to build their own, CCPs can achieve the objectives of CCP clearing, that is, to mitigate and mutualize counterparty risk and increase market liquidity, at the lowest cost and the greatest efficiency to their CCP members. Our support of CCP providers will give the industry standard centralized asset servicing across both cleared and bilateral trades," he said.

Source URL: http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212800098

Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Hedge Funds Outsource to Independent Fund Administrators

With the events of last year in the credit markets and the Madoff scandal sounding another alarm bell, hedge funds are turning to independent fund administrators to validate the net asset value of their funds and calm investors.

Yesterday, Millennium Management LLC, a global multi-strategy investment management firm with over $13 billion in assets under management, said it outsourced fund administration to GlobeOp Financial Services. GlobeOp is an independent financial technology specialist that provides integrated middle and back-office, administration and reporting services to hedge funds and asset management firms.

"Given what's happened last year and given the Madoff situation, you can't be careful enough," commented Hans Hufschmid, CEO of Globe Op who is based in London.

While Millennium had used GlobeOp for independent valuation, share registry and transfer services for the Millennium International fund since 2006, the outsourcing firm received the expanded mandate a few weeks ago, said Hufschmid. "We'll do everything that is required to essentially verify the books and records, positions, trade records and valuations," said GlobeOp's chief executive.

Though Hufschmid said he had not see a position sheet, in general multi-strategy funds means a fund manager is trading all sorts of different strategies including equities and fixed income and most likely is involved with over-the counter derivatives. According to its Web site, Millennium allocates capital globally across a diverse set of strategies and asset classes including relative value/fundamental equity, merger arbitrage, futures/currency arbitrage, statistical arbitrage, options arbitrage and distressed investing.

Previously, Millennium did the fund administration itself. But there is pressure from investors to pick independent fund administrators, said Hufschmid. "You want someone else to trust and verify," he said, noting that the fund administrator must verify all the cash positions, trading positions and make sure the fund pricing is correct. Statements go out monthly to investors but the work of reconciliations and pricing goes on daily.

The independent fund administrator trend has been evolving for a while but has been pushed hard now by investors, he said. Investors are asking for an independent fund administrator for every hedge fund they make an investment in, said Hufschmid.This is common practice for a lot of hedge funds, but those that started more than 20 years ago, are doing their own investor reporting as a legacy operation. "Now they are basically getting inline with everybody else," said Hufschmid.

In a white paper released yesterday on hedge fund outsourcing strategies, Paladyne Systems wrote that fund administrators will play an increasingly important role in hedge fund outsourcing strategies, but they will need to expand their service offerings in client-facing technology, intra-day reporting and middle-office services to remain competitive. Paladyne predicted in the white paper that fund administrators would team up with turnkey-service providers to offer a "shared platform "combining technology with middle-office services.

While some fund administrators are owned by banks or prime brokers, Hufschmid said that his firm's independence is turning into a competitive advantage. "We don't hold securities. We don't trade securities. We are not in this business to do executions. We are in the business to provide middle back "office and fund administration services," he said, adding that the firm is "totally unconflicted."

 

Source URL:http://www.wallstreetandtech.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212700968