Notice2024-26519
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed Income Clearing Corporation; Notice of No Objection to Advance Notice, as Modified by Partial Amendment No. 1, To Adopt a Minimum Margin Amount at GSD
Primary source
Metadata and text below are from the Federal Register, a public-domain U.S. government work. Always verify the official published version before relying on it for any legal matter.
Published
November 14, 2024
Issuing agencies
Securities and Exchange Commission
Full Text
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 89 Issue 220 (Thursday, November 14, 2024)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 220 (Thursday, November 14, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 90145-90155]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2024-26519]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-101566; File No. SR-FICC-2024-801]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed Income Clearing Corporation;
Notice of No Objection to Advance Notice, as Modified by Partial
Amendment No. 1, To Adopt a Minimum Margin Amount at GSD
November 8, 2024.
On February 27, 2024, Fixed Income Clearing Corporation (``FICC'')
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'')
advance notice SR-FICC-2024-801 pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
entitled the Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(``Clearing Supervision Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4(n)(1)(i) under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'').\2\ In the advance notice,
FICC proposes to add a minimum margin amount calculation to the margin
methodology of FICC's Government Securities Division (``GSD'') to
enhance margin collections during periods of extreme market volatility,
as described more fully below. The notice of filing of the advance
notice was published for comment in the Federal Register on March 15,
2024.<SUP>3 4</SUP> Upon publication of notice of filing of the advance
notice, the Commission extended the review period of the advance notice
for an additional 60 days because the Commission determined that the
advance notice raised novel and complex issues.\5\ On March 22, 2024,
the Commission requested additional information from FICC pursuant to
Section 806(e)(1)(D) of the Clearing Supervision Act, which tolled the
Commission's period of review of the advance notice until 120 days from
the date the information requested by the Commission was received by
the Commission.\6\ On April 26, 2024, the Commission received FICC's
response to the Commission's request for additional information.\7\
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\1\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(1)(i).
\3\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 99712 (March 11, 2024),
89 FR 18981 (March 15, 2024) (SR-FICC-2024-801).
\4\ On February 27, 2024, FICC filed the advance notice as a
proposed rule change with the Commission pursuant to Section
19(b)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,
17 CFR 240.19b-4. The notice of proposed rule change was published
in the Federal Register on March 15, 2024. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 99710 (March 11, 2024), 89 FR 18991 (March 15, 2024)
(SR-FICC-2024-003). On March 25, 2024, the Commission extended the
review period of the proposed rule change, pursuant to section
19(b)(2) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(ii), until June 13, 2024,
as the date by which the Commission shall either approve,
disapprove, or institute proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove the proposed rule change. Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 99769 (March 19, 2024), 89 FR 20716 (March 25, 2024) (SR-FICC-
2024-003). On May 20, 2024, the Commission published in the Federal
Register an Order Instituting Proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed rule change. Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 100141 (May 14, 2024), 89 FR 43915 (May 20, 2024)
(SR-FICC-2024-003). On September 12, 2024, the Commission designated
a longer period for Commission action on the proceedings to
determine whether to disapprove the proposed rule change, until
November 10, 2024. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 100958 (Sept.
6, 2024), 89 FR 74309 (Sept. 12, 2024) (SR-FICC-2024-003).
\5\ Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(H) of the Act, the Commission
may extend the review period of an advance notice for an additional
60 days, if the changes proposed in the advance notice raise novel
or complex issues, subject to the Commission providing the financial
market utility (``FMU'') with prompt written notice of the
extension.12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H); see supra note 3 at 18990
(explaining the Commission's rationale for determining that the
proposed changes in the advance notice raise novel and complex
issues because the proposed changes to FICC's margin model are a
direct response by FICC to address the unique circumstances that
occurred during recent periods of extreme market volatility (i.e.,
the pandemic-related market volatility in March 2020 and the
volatility during the successive interest rate hikes that began in
March 2022).
\6\ See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(D). A memo regarding the Request
for Additional Information and the tolled period of review is
available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-449019-1150022.pdf">https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-449019-1150022.pdf</a>.
\7\ See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E)(ii) and (G)(ii). A memo
regarding receipt of FICC's response to the Request for Additional
Information is available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-471851-1323835.pdf">https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-471851-1323835.pdf</a>.
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On April 5, 2024, FICC filed Partial Amendment No. 1 to the advance
notice to correct errors FICC discovered regarding the impact analysis
filed as Exhibit 3 and discussed in the filing narrative, as well as
correct a typo in the methodology formula in Exhibit 5b.\8\ Partial
Amendment No. 1 corrected percentages and other figures throughout the
filing narrative. The corrections in Partial Amendment No. 1 did not
change the substance of the advance notice. On May 20, 2024, the
Commission published notice of the advance notice, as modified by
Partial Amendment No. 1 (hereinafter, the ``Advance Notice''), for
comment in the Federal Register.\9\
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\8\ FICC has requested confidential treatment pursuant to 17 CFR
240.24b-2 with respect to Exhibit 3 and Exhibit 5b.
\9\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 99712 (May 14, 2024), 89
FR 43941 (May 20, 2024) (SR-FICC-2024-801) (``Notice of Filing'').
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On August 13, 2024, the Commission made a second request for
additional information from FICC pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(D) of
the Clearing Supervision Act, which tolled the Commission's period of
review of the advance notice until 120 days from the date the
information requested by the Commission was received by the
Commission.\10\ On September 26, 2024, the Commission received FICC's
response to the Commission's second request for additional
information.\11\
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\10\ See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(D). A memo regarding the second
Request for Additional Information and the tolled period of review
is available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-506275-1473822.pdf">https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-506275-1473822.pdf</a>.
\11\ See 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E)(ii) and (G)(ii). A memo
regarding receipt of FICC's response to the second Request for
Additional Information is available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-527175-1514362.pdf">https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801-527175-1514362.pdf</a>.
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The Commission has received comments regarding the substance of the
changes proposed in the Advance Notice.\12\ In addition, the Commission
received a letter from FICC responding to the comments.\13\ This
publication serves as notice of no objection to the Advance Notice.
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\12\ Comments on the Advance Notice are available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801.htm">https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-801/srficc2024801.htm</a>. Comments on
the proposed rule change are available at <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-003/srficc2024003.htm">https://www.sec.gov/comments/sr-ficc-2024-003/srficc2024003.htm</a>. Because the proposals
contained in the Advance Notice and the proposed rule change are the
same, the Commission considers all comments received on the
proposal, regardless of whether the comments are submitted with
respect to the Advance Notice or the proposed rule change.
\13\ See Letter from Timothy B. Hulse, Managing Director,
Financial Risk, Governance & Credit Risk, Depository Trust &
Clearing Corporation, (June 24, 2024) (``FICC Letter'').
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I. The Advance Notice
A. Executive Summary
FICC proposes to add a new Minimum Margin Amount (``MMA'')
calculation to the GSD margin methodology to ensure that FICC collects
sufficient margin amounts from its members during sudden periods of
extreme market volatility. Recently, FICC faced increased risk exposure
to its members during two periods of extreme market volatility, i.e.,
the COVID-related volatility in March 2020 and the volatility resulting
from the successive interest rate hikes that began in March 2022. Those
periods of volatility involved market price changes that
[[Page 90146]]
exceeded the GSD margin model's projections, causing FICC to collect
margin amounts that were insufficient to cover FICC's risk exposure to
its members. This highlighted the need for FICC to enhance the GSD
margin methodology to provide better coverage during periods of extreme
market volatility.
FICC proposes to add the MMA calculation to the Value-at-Risk
charge (``VaR Charge'') component of the GSD margin methodology.
Whereas the current VaR Charge is determined as the greater of two
separate calculations, FICC proposes to add the MMA as a third
calculation so that the VaR Charge would be the greater of three
separate calculations. FICC specifically designed the MMA calculation
to be more responsive to volatile market conditions than the two
existing VaR Charge calculations. As described more fully below, the
MMA calculation uses a filtered historical simulation (``FHS'')
approach, which takes historical price data, removes the historical
volatility estimates, and replaces them with volatility estimates that
reflect current market conditions. The FHS approach also incorporates
parameters that would give more weight to recent market events, such
that when market volatility spikes, the MMA calculation would generate
higher amounts and be more likely to exceed the other two VaR Charge
calculations. Conversely, when market volatility subsides, the MMA
calculation would generate lower amounts and be less likely to exceed
the other two VaR Charge calculations.
FICC conducted a 2-year impact study to analyze, among other
things, the actual daily member-level margin amounts and backtesting
results in comparison to the margin amounts and backtesting results had
the MMA calculation been in place. The impact study indicates that if
FICC used the MMA calculation during the 2-year period of analysis,
FICC's margin collections and backtesting coverage would have
significantly improved and enabled FICC to meet its 99 percent
backtesting performance targets.
B. Background
FICC, through its Government Securities Division (``GSD''),\14\
serves as a central counterparty (``CCP'') and provider of clearance
and settlement services for transactions in U.S. government securities,
as well as repurchase and reverse repurchase transactions involving
U.S. government securities.\15\ A key tool that FICC uses to manage its
credit exposures to its members is the daily collection of the Required
Fund Deposit (i.e., margin) from each member.\16\ The aggregated amount
of all members' Required Fund Deposits constitutes the Clearing Fund,
which FICC would access should a defaulted member's own Required Fund
Deposit be insufficient to satisfy losses to FICC caused by the
liquidation of that member's portfolio.\17\
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\14\ The GSD Rules are available at https://www.dtcc.com/~/
media/Files/Downloads/legal/rules/ficc_gov_rules.pdf. Terms not
otherwise defined herein are defined in the GSD Rules.
\15\ GSD also clears and settles certain transactions on
securities issued or guaranteed by U.S. government agencies and
government sponsored enterprises.
\16\ See GSD Rule 4 (Clearing Fund and Loss Allocation), supra
note 14.
\17\ See id.
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A member's Required Fund Deposit consists of a number of
components, each of which is calculated to address specific risks faced
by FICC.\18\ The VaR Charge generally comprises the largest portion of
a member's Required Fund Deposit amount. The VaR Charge is a
calculation of the volatility of the unsettled securities positions in
a member's portfolio.\19\ For each member portfolio, FICC currently
uses two separate methods to calculate amounts, the greater of which
constitutes the member's VaR Charge.\20\
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\18\ Supra note 16.
\19\ See GSD Rule 1 (Definitions--VaR Charge), supra note 14.
\20\ See id.
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FICC's first calculation uses a sensitivity-based VaR methodology
to estimate the possible losses for a given portfolio based on: (1)
confidence level, (2) a time horizon, and (3) historical market
volatility. The sensitivity VaR methodology is intended to capture the
market price risks that are associated with the securities positions in
a member's margin portfolio,\21\ at a 99 percent confidence level. This
methodology projects the potential losses that could occur in
connection with the liquidation of a defaulting member's portfolio,
assuming a portfolio would take three days to liquidate in normal
market conditions. The sensitivity VaR methodology relies on
sensitivity data and historical risk factor time series data generated
by an external vendor to calculate the risk profile of each member's
portfolio. In the event of a vendor data disruption, the GSD Rules
provide for an alternative volatility calculation that relies on
historical market index proxies (the ``Margin Proxy'' calculation).\22\
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\21\ Market price risk refers to the risk that volatility in the
market causes the price of a security to change between the
execution of a trade and settlement of that trade. This risk is
sometimes also referred to as volatility risk.
\22\ See GSD Rule 1 (Definitions--Margin Proxy), supra note 14;
Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 80341 (March 30, 2017), 82 FR
16644 (April 5, 2017) (SR-FICC-2017-801); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 83223 (May 11, 2018), 83 FR 23020 (May 17, 2018) (SR-
FICC-2018-801).
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FICC recognizes that the sensitivity VaR methodology might not
generate margin amounts sufficient to cover its exposure to its members
consistent with its regulatory obligations when applied to certain
types of member portfolios.\23\ Therefore, FICC's second calculation
uses a haircut-based methodology (currently referred to in the GSD
Rules as the ``VaR Floor''),\24\ in which FICC applies a haircut to the
market value of the gross unsettled positions in the member's
portfolio.\25\ The current VaR Floor is not designed to address the
risk of potential underperformance of the sensitivity VaR methodology
under extreme market volatility.\26\ Each member's VaR Charge is either
the sensitivity VaR calculation or the VaR Floor calculation, whichever
is greater.\27\
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\23\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43944. Specifically,
for member portfolios that contain both long and short positions in
different classes of securities that have a high degree of
historical price correlation, the sensitivity VaR methodology can
generate inadequate VaR Charges. See id.
\24\ Supra note 19.
\25\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83362 (June 1,
2018), 83 FR 26514 (June 7, 2018) (SR-FICC-2018-001). Specifically,
FICC calculates the VaR Floor by multiplying the absolute value of
the sum of the portfolio's net long positions and net short
positions, grouped by product and remaining maturity, by a
percentage designated by FICC for such group. For U.S. Treasury and
agency securities, such percentage shall be a fraction, no less than
10 percent, of the historical minimum volatility of a benchmark
fixed income index for such group by product and remaining maturity.
For mortgage-backed securities, such percentage shall be a fixed
percentage that is no less than 0.05 percent. Supra note 19.
\26\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43944.
\27\ Supra note 19.
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FICC regularly assesses whether its margin methodologies generate
margin levels commensurate with the particular risk attributes of each
relevant product, portfolio, and market. For example, FICC employs
daily backtesting \28\ to determine the adequacy of margin collections
from its members.\29\ FICC
[[Page 90147]]
compares each Member's Required Fund Deposit \30\ with the simulated
liquidation gains/losses, using the actual positions in each member
portfolio and the actual historical security returns. A backtesting
deficiency occurs when a member's Required Fund Deposit would not have
been adequate to cover the projected liquidation losses. Backtesting
deficiencies highlight exposures that could subject FICC to potential
losses in the event of a member default.
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\28\ Backtesting is an ex-post comparison of actual outcomes
(i.e., the actual margin collected) with expected outcomes derived
from the use of margin models. See 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(a)(1).
\29\ FICC's Model Risk Management Framework (``Model Risk
Management Framework'') sets forth the model risk management
practices of FICC and states that VaR and Clearing Fund requirement
coverage backtesting would be performed on a daily basis or more
frequently. See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 81485 (Aug. 25,
2017), 82 FR 41433 (Aug. 31, 2017) (SR-FICC-2017-014); 84458 (Oct.
19, 2018), 83 FR 53925 (Oct. 25, 2018) (SR-FICC-2018-010); 88911
(May 20, 2020), 85 FR 31828 (May 27, 2020) (SR-FICC-2020-004); 92380
(July 13, 2021), 86 FR 38140 (July 19, 2021) (SR-FICC-2021-006);
94271 (Feb. 17, 2022), 87 FR 10411 (Feb. 24, 2022) (SR-FICC-2022-
001); 97890 (July 13, 2023), 88 FR 46287 (July 19, 2023) (SR-FICC-
2023-008).
\30\ Members may be required to post additional collateral to
the Clearing Fund in addition to their Required Fund Deposit amount.
See e.g., Section 7 of GSD Rule 3 (Ongoing Membership Requirements),
supra note 14 (providing that adequate assurances of financial
responsibility of a member may be required, such as increased
Clearing Fund deposits). For backtesting comparisons, FICC uses the
Required Fund Deposit amount, without regard to the actual, total
collateral posted by the member to the GSD Clearing Fund.
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FICC believes that its current VaR model has performed well in low
to moderate volatility markets,\31\ though it has not met FICC's
performance targets during periods of extreme market volatility.\32\ As
described more fully below, FICC performed an impact study on its
members' margin portfolios covering the period beginning July 1, 2021
through June 30, 2023 (``Impact Study'').\33\ During the period of the
Impact Study, FICC's VaR model backtesting coverage was 98.86 percent,
with 843 VaR model backtesting deficiencies.\34\ Also, during the
period of the Impact Study, FICC's overall margin backtesting coverage
was 98.87 percent, with 685 overall margin backtesting
deficiencies.\35\ Thus, the Impact Study demonstrates that FICC's
backtesting metrics fell below performance targets during the period of
the Impact Study.\36\ FICC states that the foregoing backtesting
deficiencies are attributable to recent periods of extreme volatility
in the fixed income market caused by monetary policy changes,
inflation, and recession fears, which have led to greater risk
exposures for FICC.\37\ Specifically, FICC states that the periods of
extreme market volatility in March 2020 related to the COVID pandemic
and the successive interest rate hikes that began in March 2022, have
led to market price changes that exceeded the projections of FICC's
current VaR model, resulting in insufficient VaR Charges.\38\
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\31\ During the periods of relatively low to moderate market
volatility from January 2013 to March 2020, the VaR model generally
performed above the 99 percent performance targets. See Notice of
Filing, supra note 9 at 43943.
\32\ During the pandemic-related volatility in March 2020 and
the successive interest rate hikes that began in March 2022, the VaR
model fell below the 99 percent performance targets. See Notice of
Filing, supra note 9 at 43942-44.
\33\ As part of the Advance Notice, FICC filed Exhibit 3--FICC
Impact Study. Pursuant to 17 CFR 240.24b-2, FICC requested
confidential treatment of Exhibit 3.
\34\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43947.
\35\ See id.
\36\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43943-44.
\37\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43942-44.
\38\ See id.
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Accordingly, in the Advance Notice, FICC proposes changes to the
VaR model that FICC believes would mitigate the risk of potential
underperformance of the VaR model during periods of extreme market
volatility.\39\
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\39\ The proposed changes would revise the GSD Rules and FICC's
Methodology Document--GSD Initial Market Risk Margin Model (the
``QRM Methodology'') relevant to the VaR model. As part of the
Advance Notice, FICC filed Exhibit 5b--Proposed Changes to the QRM
Methodology. Pursuant to 17 CFR 240.24b-2, FICC requested
confidential treatment of Exhibit 5b. FICC originally filed the QRM
Methodology as a confidential exhibit to proposed rule change SR-
FICC-2018-001. See supra note 25; see also Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 83223 (May 11, 2018), 83 FR 23020 (May 17, 2018) (SR-
FICC-2018-801). FICC has subsequently amended the QRM Methodology.
See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 85944 (May 24, 2019), 84 FR
25315 (May 31, 2019) (SR-FICC-2019-001); 90182 (Oct. 14, 2020), 85
FR 66630 (Oct. 20, 2020) (SR-FICC-2020-009); 93234 (Oct. 1, 2021),
86 FR 55891 (Oct. 7, 2021) (SR-FICC-2021-007); 95605 (Aug. 25,
2022), 87 FR 53522 (Aug. 31, 2022) (SR-FICC-2022-005); 97342 (Apr.
21, 2023), 88 FR 25721 (Apr. 27, 2023) (SR-FICC-2023-003); 99447
(Jan. 30, 2024), 89 FR 8260 (Feb. 6, 2024) (SR-FICC-2024-001).
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C. Proposed Changes
In the Advance Notice, FICC proposes to introduce a new minimum
margin amount (i.e., the MMA) into the GSD margin methodology. FICC
proposes to calculate the MMA for each member portfolio as a supplement
to the existing sensitivity VaR calculation and the haircut-based VaR
Floor calculation described above in Section I.B. FICC proposes to
rename the current haircut-based VaR Floor calculation as the ``VaR
Floor Percentage Amount.'' FICC proposes to revise the existing VaR
Floor definition to mean the greater of (1) the VaR Floor Percentage
Amount, and (2) the MMA. Thus, the greater of the three calculations
(i.e., sensitivity VaR, VaR Floor Percentage Amount, and MMA) would
constitute the member's VaR Charge. Additionally, FICC proposes to
clarify that the VaR Floor would also apply in the event that the
Margin Proxy is invoked. The proposed changes are described in greater
detail below.
1. Minimum Margin Amount Calculation
FICC would calculate the MMA for each portfolio using historical
price returns to represent risk.\40\ FICC would calculate the MMA as
the sum of the following: (1) amounts calculated using an FHS approach
\41\ to assess volatility by scaling historical market price returns to
current market volatility, with market volatility being measured by
applying an exponentially weighted moving average (``EWMA'') to the
historical market price returns with a decay factor between 0.93 and
0.99,\42\ as determined by FICC based on sensitivity analysis,
macroeconomic conditions, and/or backtesting performance; (2) amounts
calculated using a haircut method to measure the risk exposure of those
securities that lack sufficient historical price return data; and (3)
amounts calculated to incorporate risks related to (i) repo interest
volatility (``repo interest volatility charge'') \43\ and (ii)
transaction costs related to bid-ask spread in the market that could be
incurred when liquidating a portfolio (``bid-ask spread risk
charge'').\44\
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\40\ FICC refers to the proposed approach as the ``price return-
based risk representation'' in the QRM Methodology. See Notice of
Filing, supra note 9 at 43944. Given the availability and
accessibility of historical price returns data, FICC believes the
proposed approach would help minimize and diversify FICC's risk
exposure from external data vendors. See id.
\41\ The FHS method differs from the historical simulation
method, which uses historical price return data as is, by
incorporating the volatilities of historical price returns. In
particular, the FHS method constructs the filtered historical price
returns in two steps: (1) ``devolatilizing'' the historical price
returns by dividing them by a volatility estimate for the day of the
price return, and (2) ``revolatilizing'' the devolatilized price
returns by multiplying them by a volatility estimate based on the
current market. For additional background on the FHS method, see
Filtered Historical Simulation Value-at-Risk Models and Their
Competitors, Pedro Gurrola-Perez and David Murphy, Bank of England,
March 2015, at <a href="http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/working-paper/2015/filtered-historical-simulation-value-at-risk-models-and-their-competitors">www.bankofengland.co.uk/working-paper/2015/filtered-historical-simulation-value-at-risk-models-and-their-competitors</a>.
\42\ FICC would provide members with at least one Business Day
advance notice of any change to the decay factor via an Important
Notice.
\43\ The ``repo interest volatility charge'' is a component of
the VaR Charge designed to address repo interest volatility. The
repo interest volatility charge is calculated based on internally
constructed repo interest rate indices. As proposed, FICC would
include the repo interest volatility charge as a component of the
MMA; however, FICC is not proposing to otherwise change the repo
interest volatility charge or the manner in which it is calculated.
See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43944.
\44\ The ``bid-ask spread risk charge'' is a component of the
VaR Charge designed to address transaction costs related to bid-ask
spread in the market that FICC could incur when liquidating a
portfolio. As proposed, FICC would include the bid-ask spread risk
charge as a component of the MMA; however, FICC is not proposing to
otherwise change the bid-ask spread risk charge or the manner in
which it is calculated. See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43944.
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[[Page 90148]]
FHS Method: For the FHS method, FICC would first construct
historical price returns using certain mapped fixed income securities
benchmarks. Specifically, FICC proposes to use the following mapped
fixed income securities benchmarks with the FHS method when calculating
the MMA: (1) Bloomberg Treasury indexes for U.S. Treasury and agency
securities; (2) Bloomberg TIPS indexes for Treasury Inflation-Protected
Securities (``TIPS''); and (3) to-be-announced (``TBA'') securities for
mortgage-backed securities (``MBS'') pools. FICC states that it chose
these benchmarks because their price movements generally closely track
those of the securities mapped to them and that their price history is
generally readily available and accessible.\45\
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\45\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43945.
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After constructing historical price returns, FICC would estimate a
market volatility associated with each historical price return by
applying an EWMA to the historical price returns. FICC would
``devolatilize'' the historical price returns (i.e., remove an amount
attributable to the historical market volatility from the price
returns) by dividing them by the corresponding EWMA volatilities to
obtain the residual returns. FICC would ``revolatilize'' the residual
returns (i.e., add an amount attributable to the current market
volatility to the residual returns) by multiplying them by the current
EWMA volatility to obtain the filtered returns.
FICC proposes to use the FHS method to improve the responsiveness
of the VaR model to periods of extreme market volatility because
historical returns are scaled to current market volatility.\46\ FICC
would use filtered return time series to simulate the profits and
losses of a member's portfolio and derive the volatility of the
portfolio using the standard historical simulation approach.
Specifically, FICC would map each security that is in a member's
portfolio to a respective fixed income securities benchmark, as
applicable, based on the security's asset class and remaining maturity.
FICC would use the filtered returns of the benchmark as the simulated
returns of the mapped security to calculate the simulated profits and
losses of a member's portfolio. Finally, FICC would calculate the MMA
as the 99-percentile of the simulated portfolio loss. In accordance
with FICC's model risk management practices and governance set forth in
the Clearing Agency Model Risk Management Framework,\47\ FICC would
determine the mapped fixed income securities benchmarks, historical
market price returns, parameters, and volatility assessments used to
calculate the MMA.
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\46\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43942.
\47\ See Model Risk Management Framework, supra note 29.
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FHS Parameters: The proposed MMA would use a lookback period for
the FHS and a decay factor for calculating the EWMA volatility of the
historical price returns. Specifically, the MMA lookback period would
be the same as the lookback period currently used for the sensitivity
VaR calculation, which is 10 years, plus, to the extent applicable, a
stressed period. FICC would analyze the MMA's lookback period and
evaluate its sensitivity and impact on margin model performance,
consistent with the VaR methodology outlined in the QRM Methodology and
pursuant to the model performance monitoring required under the Model
Risk Management Framework.\48\
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\48\ The Model Risk Management Framework provides that all
models undergo ongoing model performance monitoring and backtesting,
which is the process of (1) evaluating an active model's ongoing
performance based on theoretical tests, (2) monitoring the model's
parameters through the use of threshold indicators, and/or (3)
backtesting using actual historical data/realizations to test a VaR
model's predictive power. Supra note 29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The decay factor generally affects (1) whether and how the MMA
would be invoked (i.e., applied as a member's VaR Charge), (2) the peak
level of margin increase or the degree of procyclicality, and (3) how
quickly the margin would fall back to pre-stress levels. As proposed,
FICC would have the discretion to set the decay factor between 0.93 and
0.99, with the initial decay factor value set at 0.97. FICC expects
that any adjustment to the decay factor would be an infrequent event
that would typically happen only when there is an unprecedented market
volatility event resulting in risk exposures to FICC that cannot be
adequately mitigated by the then-calibrated decay factor.\49\ FICC's
decision to adjust the decay factor would be based on an analysis of
the decay factor's sensitivity and impact to the model performance,
considering factors including the impact to the VaR Charges,
macroeconomic conditions, and/or backtesting performance.\50\ Any
decision by FICC to adjust the decay factor would be in accordance with
FICC's model risk management practices and governance set forth in the
Model Risk Management Framework.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43946.
\50\ See id.
\51\ See Model Risk Management Framework, supra note 29. Similar
to the lookback period described above, FICC would also analyze the
decay factor to evaluate its sensitivity and impact to the model
performance pursuant to the model performance monitoring required
under the Model Risk Management Framework.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Haircut Method: Occasionally, a member's portfolio might contain
classes of securities that reflect market price changes that are not
consistently related to historical price moves. The value of such
securities is often uncertain because the securities' market volume
varies widely. Because the volume and historical price information for
such securities are not sufficient to perform accurate statistical
analyses, the FHS method would not generate an MMA amount that
adequately reflects the risk profile of such securities. Accordingly,
FICC would use a haircut method to assess the market risk of securities
that are more difficult to simulate (e.g., due to thin trading
history).
Specifically, FICC would use a haircut method for MBS pools that
are not TBA securities eligible, floating rate notes, and U.S.
Treasury/agency securities with remaining time to maturities of less
than or equal to one year. FICC would also use a haircut method to
account for the basis risk between an agency security and the mapped
U.S. Treasury index to supplement the historical market price moves
generated by the FHS method for agency securities to reflect any
residual risks between agency securities and the mapped fixed income
securities benchmarks (i.e., Bloomberg Treasury indexes).\52\
Similarly, FICC would use a haircut method to account for the MBS pool/
TBA basis risk to address the residual risk for using TBA price returns
as proxies for MBS pool returns used in the FHS method.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Accounting for the basis risk would enable FICC to
explicitly model and manage the basis risk between an agency
security and the mapped U.S. Treasury index, given that agency
securities are not as actively traded as U.S. Treasury securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ongoing Performance Monitoring: The Model Risk Management Framework
would require FICC to conduct ongoing model performance monitoring of
the MMA methodology.\53\ FICC's current model performance monitoring
practices would provide for sensitivity analysis of relevant model
parameters and assumptions to be conducted monthly, or more frequently
when markets display high volatility.\54\ Additionally, FICC would
monitor each member's Required Fund Deposit and the aggregate Clearing
Fund requirements versus the requirements calculated by the MMA, by
comparing the results versus the three-day profit
[[Page 90149]]
and loss of each member's portfolio based on actual market price
moves.\55\ Based on the results of the sensitivity analysis and/or
backtesting, FICC could consider adjustments to the MMA, including
changing the decay factor as appropriate.\56\ Any adjustment to the MMA
calculation would be subject to the model risk management practices and
governance process set forth in the Model Risk Management
Framework.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See note 29.
\54\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43946.
\55\ See id.
\56\ See id.
\57\ See Model Risk Management Framework, supra note 29.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact Study: As mentioned above in Section I.B., FICC performed an
Impact Study on its members' margin portfolios covering the period
beginning July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2023.\58\ The Impact Study
lists the actual daily and average VaR Charges at both the member-level
and CCP-level during the period of the Impact Study, compared with how
those amounts would have changed if the proposed MMA had been in place.
The Impact Study also lists the actual daily backtesting results at the
member-level during the period of the Impact Study, compared with how
those amounts would have changed if the proposed MMA had been in place.
The Impact Study shows that if the proposed MMA had been in place
during the period of the Impact Study, when compared to the current VaR
methodology: (1) the aggregate average daily start-of-day (``SOD'') VaR
Charges would have increased by approximately $2.90 billion or 13.89
percent; (2) the aggregate average daily noon VaR Charges would have
increased by approximately $3.03 billion or 14.06 percent; and (3) the
aggregate average daily Backtesting Charges \59\ would have decreased
by approximately $622 million or 64.46 percent.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ FICC states that it currently does not use Margin Proxy as
an adjustment factor to the VaR and does not intend to use it as
such in the future. See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43947.
\59\ The Backtesting Charge is an additional charge that may be
added to a member's VaR Charge to mitigate exposures to FICC caused
when the member exhibits a pattern of breaching the target coverage
ratio of 99 percent. See GSD Rule 1 (Definitions--Backtesting
Charge), supra note 14.
\60\ Margin Proxy was not invoked during the period of the
Impact Study. However, if the proposed MMA had been in place and the
Margin Proxy was invoked during the period of the Impact Study: the
aggregate average daily SOD VaR Charges would have increased by
approximately $4.16 billion or 20.97 percent; the VaR model
backtesting coverage would have increased from approximately 98.17
percent to 99.38 percent; and the number of the VaR model
backtesting deficiencies would have been reduced by 899 (from 1358
to 459, or approximately 66.2 percent).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Impact Study indicates that if the proposed MMA had been in
place, the VaR model backtesting coverage would have increased from
approximately 98.86 percent to 99.46 percent during the period of the
Impact Study and the number of VaR model backtesting deficiencies would
have been reduced by 441 (from 843 to 402, or approximately 52
percent). The Impact Study also indicates that if the proposed MMA had
been in place: (1) overall margin backtesting coverage would have
increased from approximately 98.87 percent to 99.33 percent, (2) the
number of overall margin backtesting deficiencies would have been
reduced by 280 (from 685 to 405, or approximately 41 percent), and (3)
the overall margin backtesting coverage for 94 members (approximately
72 percent of the GSD membership) would have improved, with 36 members
who were below 99 percent coverage brought back to above 99 percent.
On average, at the member-level, the proposed MMA would have
increased the SOD VaR Charge by approximately $22.43 million, or 17.56
percent, and the noon VaR Charge by approximately $23.25 million, or
17.43 percent, over the period of the Impact Study. The largest average
percentage increase in SOD VaR Charge for any member would have been
approximately 66.88 percent, or $97,051 (0.21percent of the member's
average Net Capital),\61\ and the largest average percentage increase
in noon VaR Charge for any member would have been approximately 64.79
percent, or $61,613 (0.13 percent of the member's average Net Capital).
The largest average dollar increase in SOD VaR Charge for any member
would have been approximately $268.51 million (0.34 percent of the
member's average Net Capital), or 19.06 percent, and the largest dollar
increase in noon VaR Charge for any member would have been
approximately $289.00 million (1.07 percent of the member's average Net
Capital), or 13.67 percent. The top 10 members based on the size of
their average SOD VaR Charges and average noon VaR Charges would have
contributed approximately 51.87 percent and 53.64 percent of the
aggregated SOD VaR Charges and aggregated noon VaR Charges,
respectively, during the period of the Impact Study had the proposed
MMA been in place. The same members would have contributed to 50.08
percent and 51.52 percent of the increase in aggregated SOD VaR Charges
and aggregated noon VaR Charges, respectively, had the proposed MMA
been in place during the period of the Impact Study.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ The term ``Net Capital'' means, as of a particular date,
the amount equal to the net capital of a broker or dealer as defined
in SEC Rule 15c3-1(c)(2), or any successor rule or regulation
thereto. See GSD Rule 1 (Definitions), supra note 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Clarification of VaR Floor To Include Margin Proxy
As mentioned above in Section I.B., the Margin Proxy methodology is
currently invoked as an alternative volatility calculation if the
requisite vendor data used for the sensitivity VaR calculation is
unavailable for an extended period of time.\62\ FICC proposes to
clarify that the VaR Floor, which does not depend upon any vendor data,
operates as a floor for the Margin Proxy, such that if the Margin
Proxy, when invoked, is lower than the VaR Floor, then the VaR Floor
would be utilized as the VaR Charge with respect to a member's
portfolio. FICC believes this clarification would enable Margin Proxy
to be an effective risk mitigant under extreme market volatility and
heightened market stress because as discussed above in Section I.C.1.,
the proposed VaR Floor would include the MMA calculation.\63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ FICC may deem such data to be unavailable and deploy Margin
Proxy when there are concerns with the quality of data provided by
the vendor. See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43946.
\63\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Discussion and Commission Findings
Although the Clearing Supervision Act does not specify a standard
of review for an advance notice, the stated purpose of the Clearing
Supervision Act is instructive: to mitigate systemic risk in the
financial system and promote financial stability by, among other
things, promoting uniform risk management standards for systemically
important financial market utilities (SIFMUs) and strengthening the
liquidity of SIFMUs.\64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ See 12 U.S.C. 5461(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 805(a)(2) of the Clearing Supervision Act authorizes the
Commission to prescribe regulations containing risk management
standards for the payment, clearing, and settlement activities of
designated clearing entities engaged in designated activities for which
the Commission is the supervisory agency.\65\ Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act provides the following objectives and
principles for the Commission's risk management standards prescribed
under Section 805(a): \66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(a)(2).
\66\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
<bullet> to promote robust risk management;
<bullet> to promote safety and soundness;
<bullet> to reduce systemic risks; and
[[Page 90150]]
<bullet> to support the stability of the broader financial system.
Section 805(c) provides, in addition, that the Commission's risk
management standards may address such areas as risk management and
default policies and procedures, among other areas.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission has adopted risk management standards under Section
805(a)(2) of the Clearing Supervision Act and Section 17A of the
Exchange Act (the ``Clearing Agency Rules'').\68\ The Clearing Agency
Rules require, among other things, each covered clearing agency to
establish, implement, maintain, and enforce written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed to meet certain minimum
requirements for its operations and risk management practices on an
ongoing basis.\69\ As such, it is appropriate for the Commission to
review advance notices against the Clearing Agency Rules and the
objectives and principles of these risk management standards as
described in Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act. As
discussed below, the proposals in the Advance Notice are consistent
with the objectives and principles described in Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act \70\ and in the Clearing Agency Rules, in
particular Rule 17ad-22(e)(4)(i), (e)(6)(i), and (e)(23)(ii).\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22. See Securities Exchange Act Release No.
68080 (October 22, 2012), 77 FR 66220 (November 2, 2012) (S7-08-11).
See also Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78961 (September 28,
2016), 81 FR 70786 (October 13, 2016) (S7-03-14). FICC is a
``covered clearing agency'' as defined in Rule 17ad-22(a)(5).
\69\ Id.
\70\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
\71\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(4)(i), (e)(6)(i), and (e)(23)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Consistency With Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act
The proposals in the Advance Notice are consistent with the stated
objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision
Act.\72\ Specifically, the changes proposed in the Advance Notice are
consistent with promoting robust risk management, promoting safety and
soundness, reducing systemic risks, and supporting the broader
financial system.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
\73\ Several of the issues raised by the commenters are directed
at the proposed rule change and will be addressed in that context.
These comments generally relate to the proposal's impact on
competition and its consistency with the Exchange Act. See Letter
from Independent Dealer and Trade Association (May 7, 2024) (``IDTA
Letter'') at 2, 3-6; Letter from Robert Toomey, Head of Capital
Markets, Managing Director/Associate General Counsel, Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association (May 22, 2024) (``SIFMA
Letter'') at 2, 5, 7-8 (commenting on the proposal's impact on
competition). The Commission's evaluation of the Advance Notice is
conducted under the Clearing Supervision Act and, as noted above,
generally considers whether the proposal would promote robust risk
management, promote safety and soundness, reduce systemic risks, and
support the broader financial system.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Promoting Robust Risk Management and Safety and Soundness
Incorporating the proposed MMA into the GSD margin methodology
would be consistent with the promotion of robust risk management and
safety and soundness at FICC. As described above in Section I.B., the
extreme market volatilities during recent stressful market periods led
to market price changes that exceeded the current VaR model's
projections, generating margin amounts that were not sufficient to
mitigate FICC's credit exposure to its members' portfolios at a 99
percent confidence level. FICC's proposed incorporation of the MMA
calculation into the GSD margin methodology would result in margin
levels that better reflect the risks and particular attributes of
member portfolios during periods of extreme market volatility, which is
consistent with promoting robust risk management.
Implementing the MMA would enable FICC to collect additional margin
when the market price volatility implied by the current sensitivity VaR
calculation and VaR Floor calculation is lower than the market price
volatility implied by the proposed MMA calculation. In its
consideration of the proposed MMA, the Commission reviewed and analyzed
the: (1) Advance Notice, including the supporting exhibits that
provided confidential information on the proposed MMA calculation,
Impact Study (including detailed information regarding the impact of
the proposed changes on the portfolios of each FICC member over various
time periods), and backtesting coverage results, (2) FICC's response to
the Commission's requests for additional information; \74\ and (3) the
Commission's own understanding of the performance of the current GSD
margin methodology, with which the Commission has experience from its
general supervision of FICC, compared to the proposed margin
methodology.\75\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ See supra notes 7, 11.
\75\ In addition, because the proposals contained in the Advance
Notice and the proposed rule change are the same, all information
submitted by FICC was considered regardless of whether the
information submitted with respect to the Advance Notice or the
proposed rule change. See supra note 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the Commission's review of the Impact Study, had the
proposed MMA been in place, both the VaR model backtesting coverage and
the overall margin backtesting coverage would have risen above the 99
percent confidence level to 99.46 percent and 99.33 percent,
respectively, over the time period covered by the Impact Study.\76\
Additionally, the number of VaR model backtesting deficiencies and
overall margin backtesting deficiencies would have been reduced by 441
and 280, respectively.\77\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43947.
\77\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed MMA methodology would be more likely to apply as the
VaR Charge during periods of extreme market volatility because the MMA
methodology is more responsive to spikes in market volatility than the
sensitivity VaR calculation. As described above in Section I.C.1., the
MMA calculation relies, in part, on the FHS method, which takes
historical price data, removes the historical volatility estimates, and
replaces them with volatility estimates that reflect current market
conditions. Additionally, as described above in Section I.C.1., the
decay factor used in the FHS method affects (1) whether and how the MMA
would apply to determine a member's VaR Charge; (2) the peak level of
margin increase or the degree of procyclicality; and (3) how quickly
the margin would fall back to pre-stress levels. A faster decay (i.e.,
smaller decay factor value), like the one FICC intends to use
initially, would give more weight to more recent market events, while a
slower decay would give more weight to older market events. Thus, when
market volatility spikes, the MMA calculation would generate higher
amounts and thereby be more likely to apply as the VaR Charge (after
exceeding the sensitivity VaR calculation). Conversely, when market
volatility subsides, the MMA calculation would generate lower amounts
and be less likely to apply.
The Impact Study supports this analysis. If the proposed MMA
calculation had been in place during the period of the Impact Study,
the MMA would have applied primarily during the recent extreme market
volatility events (i.e., those in March 2020 and commencing in March
2022). In contrast, during periods of low to moderate market
volatility, the MMA calculation would generally not be the greatest
amount of the three calculations and thus, would not be invoked.
Instead, in periods of low to moderate market volatility, the
sensitivity VaR calculation is likely to be the VaR Charge for members
whose portfolios do not contain long and short positions in different
classes of securities that share a high degree of price correlation.
For such long/short portfolios, in low to
[[Page 90151]]
moderate volatility markets, the VaR Floor Percentage Amount
calculation is more likely to be the VaR Charge. The sensitivity VaR
calculation and VaR Floor Percentage Amount calculations are likely to
generate sufficient margin levels above FICC's 99 percent performance
targets during periods of low to moderate market volatility. Indeed,
during the periods of low to moderate market volatility from January
2013 to March 2020, the GSD VaR model has generally performed above
FICC's 99 percent backtesting performance targets.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ See Notice of Filing, supra note 9 at 43943.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Implementing the proposed MMA should enable FICC to better manage
its exposure to its members during periods of extreme market volatility
by generating margin levels that meet FICC's 99 percent backtesting
coverage targets. Accordingly, the proposal is consistent with
promoting robust risk management because the MMA would enable FICC to
better manage the relevant risks presented by the securities it clears
in volatile market conditions.
Additionally, FICC proposes to clarify that if the Margin Proxy,
when invoked, is lower than the VaR Floor, then the VaR Floor would be
utilized as the VaR Charge with respect to a member's portfolio.
Although Margin Proxy was not invoked during the period of the Impact
Study, had the proposed changes been in place during that period, the
VaR model backtesting coverage would have increased from approximately
98.17 percent to 99.38 percent and the VaR model backtesting
deficiencies would have been reduced by 899 (from 1,358 to 459). The
Commission agrees that ensuring the VaR Floor operates as a floor for
the Margin Proxy would be more effective at mitigating risks under
extreme market volatility because as proposed, the VaR Floor would
include the MMA calculation. Accordingly, the proposal is consistent
with promoting robust risk management because the enhanced VaR Floor
would enable FICC to better manage the relevant risks, regardless of
whether the sensitivity VaR calculation or Margin Proxy are invoked.
Further, by helping to ensure that FICC collects margin amounts
sufficient to manage the risk associated with its members' portfolios
during periods of extreme market volatility, the proposed MMA changes
and Margin Proxy clarifications would help limit FICC's exposure in a
member default scenario. These proposed changes would generally provide
FICC with additional resources to manage potential losses arising out
of a member default. Such an increase in FICC's available financial
resources would decrease the likelihood that losses arising out of a
member default would exceed FICC's prefunded resources and threaten the
safety and soundness of FICC's ongoing operations. Accordingly, the
proposals are also consistent with promoting safety and soundness at
FICC.
2. Reducing Systemic Risks and Supporting the Stability of the Broader
Financial System
Consistent with the objectives and principles of the Clearing
Supervision Act, the Commission also considers whether the proposals in
the Advance Notice would reduce systemic risks and support the
stability of the broader financial system.\79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ See 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed MMA changes and Margin Proxy clarifications are
consistent with reducing systemic risks and supporting the stability of
the broader financial system. As discussed above in Section I.B., FICC
would access its Clearing Fund should a defaulted member's own margin
be insufficient to satisfy losses to FICC caused by the liquidation of
the member's portfolio. FICC proposes to add the MMA calculation to the
GSD margin methodology to collect additional margin from members during
periods of extreme market volatility to cover such costs, and thereby
better manage the potential costs of liquidating a defaulted member's
portfolio. Similarly, FICC's proposal to clarify the application of the
VaR Floor to include Margin Proxy would ensure FICC's ability to
collect additional margin from members if the Margin Proxy, when
invoked, is lower than the VaR Floor. These changes and clarifications
to the GSD margin methodology could reduce the possibility that FICC
would need to mutualize among the non-defaulting members a loss arising
out of the close-out process. Reducing the potential for loss
mutualization could, in turn, reduce the potential resultant effects on
non-defaulting members, their customers, and the broader market arising
out of a member default.
One commenter states that FICC's implementation of the proposed MMA
would increase costs for market participants, leading to negative
effects on the broader U.S. Treasury markets.\80\ Specifically, the
commenter states that markets with high margin costs generally have
fewer market participants, decreased market liquidity, wider bid/offer
spreads, and encourage market participants to either exit the market or
pass additional expenses to their customers.\81\ In response, FICC
states that the proposed MMA is not designed to advantage or
disadvantage capital formation.\82\ Instead, FICC states that the
purpose of the proposed MMA is to manage the risk associated with
member portfolios during periods of extreme market volatility.\83\ FICC
states that although the proposal's increased margin requirements could
lessen liquidity for members, it is necessary and appropriate to
mitigate the relevant risks.\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ See IDTA Letter at 5-6.
\81\ See id.
\82\ See FICC Letter at 5.
\83\ See id.
\84\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In considering the comments opposing FICC's implementation of the
MMA calculation as proposed, the Commission considered the Advance
Notice filing materials including the Impact Study, comment letters,
FICC's response letter, and the Commission's own understanding of the
GSD margin methodology based on the Commission's general supervision of
FICC. As stated above in Section II.A.1., during the period of the
Impact Study, the actual GSD VaR model backtesting coverage and overall
margin backtesting coverage both fell below the 99 percent confidence
level. These shortfalls are specifically attributable to the periods of
extreme market volatility of March 2020 and commencing in March 2022.
The Impact Study demonstrates that had the proposed MMA calculation
been in place during that period, margin amounts would have exceeded
the 99 percent backtesting coverage levels. Thus, implementing the MMA
calculation would have better enabled FICC to calculate and collect
margin amounts sufficient to mitigate the risks presented by its
members' portfolios during periods of extreme market volatility.
The Commission acknowledges that implementing the proposed MMA
would increase margin requirements during periods of extreme market
volatility. However, as detailed above in Section I.C.1., the Impact
Study demonstrates that the increased margin requirements attributable
to the MMA at the member-level would represent relatively small
percentages (i.e., typically a fraction of one percent) of members'
average Net Capital,\85\ which
[[Page 90152]]
indicates that members would likely have access to sufficient financial
resources to meet the increased MMA obligation if invoked during
periods of extreme market volatility. Therefore, the comment that the
increased margin costs attributable to the MMA would decrease market
liquidity, widen bid/offer spreads, and encourage market participants
to either exit the market or pass additional expenses to their
customers, do not appear likely based on the limited size of increased
VaR Charges from the Impact Study. Additionally, by helping to ensure
FICC collects sufficient margin to cover its exposure to members,
implementing the MMA would decrease the likelihood of loss
mutualization in the event of a member default, which could encourage
greater market participation. Moreover, FICC has a regulatory
obligation to have policies and procedures to calculate and collect
margin amounts sufficient to mitigate the relevant risks presented to
it by its members' portfolios.\86\ Indeed, FICC's role as a CCP that
reduces systemic risk and promotes market stability is dependent on
effectively managing the relevant risks, which includes FICC's
collection of sufficient margin from its members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ See GSD Rule 1 (Definitions--Net Capital) (defining Net
Capital'' to mean, as of a particular date, the amount equal to the
net capital of a broker or dealer as defined in SEC Rule 15c3-
1(c)(2) or any successor rule or regulation thereto) and 17 CFR
240.15c3-1(c)(2) (requiring that every broker or dealer at all times
have and maintain net capital no less than a particular requirement,
as set forth in the Rule).
\86\ See 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(4)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter states that the proposed MMA would negatively affect
markets by having a detrimental effect on certain trading strategies
that rely on margin offsets across maturity buckets.\87\ The commenter
states that the MMA would eliminate such offsets, resulting in gross
margining across maturity buckets and decreased liquidity.\88\ In
response, FICC states that the proposed MMA would not eliminate such
margin offsets across maturity buckets.\89\ Specifically, FICC states
that the MMA would not differ from the current VaR model insofar as the
FHS approach would likewise offset the market risk of long positions in
one maturity bucket with the market risk of short positions in another
maturity bucket.\90\ Based on the Commission's review and understanding
of FICC's proposed changes to the QRM Methodology,\91\ the Commission
agrees with FICC's response that the FHS approach allows for similar
offsetting as the current GSD VaR model regarding the market risk of
long positions in one maturity bucket offsetting the market risk of
short positions in another maturity bucket.\92\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See IDTA Letter at 5 (discussing trading strategies that
involve Treasury securities in separate maturity buckets, such as
buyers at Treasury auctions ``rolling backwards'' ahead of the
auction by short-selling one issue and buy a different outstanding
Treasury, Butterfly Spread, and ``roll down the curve'').
\88\ See id.
\89\ See FICC Letter at 5.
\90\ See id.
\91\ Supra note 40.
\92\ See FICC Letter at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Another commenter states that FICC's proposal did not adequately
address the procyclicality risk \93\ associated with the MMA
calculation.\94\ The commenter suggests that FICC should consider
revising the MMA calculation to include anti-procyclical measures that
would avoid extreme reactions to changes in market volatility.\95\ In
response, FICC states that it considered and evaluated a number of
anti-procyclical measures when developing the MMA proposal.\96\
However, FICC states that, based on the outlook for interest rate
volatility, FICC determined to rely on the decay factor to control the
MMA's responsiveness to market volatility.\97\
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\93\ Procyclicality risk with respect to margin requirements is
the cycle created when a decrease in the mark-to-market value of the
securities in a portfolio triggers an increase in margin
requirements, which in turn, causes a further decrease in portfolio
value.
\94\ See SIFMA Letter at 6-7.
\95\ See SIFMA Letter at 7.
\96\ See FICC Letter at 5-6.
\97\ See id.
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The Commission disagrees with the comment that FICC's proposed MMA
calculation does not adequately address procyclicality risk. The decay
factor affects, among other things, the speed of the MMA calculation's
responsiveness to spikes in extreme market volatility, as well as the
speed with which the MMA calculation would generate lower numbers after
such volatility subsides. FICC chose to initially set the decay factor
at 0.97--a relatively fast decay factor--to respond to market
volatility relatively quickly.\98\ FICC's data demonstrate that had the
MMA been in place during the period of the Impact Study, the MMA would
have been invoked in a targeted manner (i.e., specifically during
periods of extreme market volatility, but not during periods of low to
moderate market volatility). Further, the Commission understands that
FICC would be able to use the decay factor to address future interest
rate volatility that may occur. Thus, the Impact Study supports FICC's
assertion that including the decay factor in the MMA calculation would
have mitigated any procyclical results.
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\98\ FICC could adjust the decay factor in accordance with the
Model Risk Management Framework. FICC would analyze the decay factor
to evaluate its sensitivity and impact to the model performance
pursuant to the model performance monitoring required under the
Model Risk Management Framework. Supra note 29.
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Accordingly, the Commission finds that FICC's adoption of the
proposed MMA and changes to the Margin Proxy would be consistent with
the reduction of systemic risk and supporting the stability of the
broader financial system.
For the reasons stated above, the changes proposed in the Advance
Notice are consistent with Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision
Act.\99\
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\99\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
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B. Consistency With Rule 17ad-22(e)(4)(i)
Rule 17ad-22(e)(4)(i) requires that FICC establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to effectively identify, measure, monitor, and manage its
credit exposures to participants and those arising from its payment,
clearing, and settlement processes, including by maintaining sufficient
financial resources to cover its credit exposure to each participant
fully with a high degree of confidence.\100\
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\100\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(4)(i).
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The proposals in the Advance Notice are consistent with Rule 17ad-
22(e)(4)(i) under the Exchange Act.\101\ As described above in Section
II.A.1., the current GSD VaR model generated margin amounts that were
not sufficient to mitigate FICC's credit exposure to its members'
portfolios at the 99 percent backtesting confidence level during
periods of extreme market volatility, particularly during March 2020
and beginning in March 2022. The Impact Study demonstrates that had the
proposed MMA calculation been in place during that period, margin
amounts would have exceeded the 99 percent backtesting coverage levels.
Therefore, adding the MMA calculation to the GSD margin methodology
should better enable FICC to calculate and collect margin amounts that
are sufficient to mitigate FICC's credit exposure to its members'
portfolios during periods of extreme market volatility.
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\101\ See id.
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Additionally, FICC proposes to clarify that if the Margin Proxy,
when invoked, is lower than the VaR Floor, then the VaR Floor would be
utilized as the VaR Charge with respect to a member's portfolio.
Although Margin Proxy was not invoked during the period of the Impact
Study, had the proposed changes been in place during that period, the
VaR model backtesting coverage would have been increased to exceed the
99 percent backtesting coverage level.
[[Page 90153]]
Therefore, the proposed clarifications regarding the applicability of
the VaR Floor when Margin Proxy is invoked would help ensure FICC's
ability to manage its credit exposures to members by maintaining
sufficient financial resources to cover such exposures fully with a
high degree of confidence.
Accordingly, for the reasons discussed above, the proposed MMA
changes and Margin Proxy clarifications are reasonably designed to
enable FICC to effectively identify, measure, monitor, and manage its
credit exposure to participants, consistent with Rule 17ad-
22(e)(4)(i).\102\
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\102\ See id.
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C. Consistency With Rule 17ad-22(e)(6)(i)
Rule 17ad-22(e)(6)(i) requires that FICC establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to cover its credit exposures to its participants by
establishing a risk-based margin system that, at a minimum, considers,
and produces margin levels commensurate with, the risks and particular
attributes of each relevant product, portfolio, and market, and
calculates margin sufficient to cover its potential future exposure to
participants.\103\
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\103\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(6)(i).
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The proposals in the Advance Notice are consistent with Rule 17ad-
22(e)(6)(i). As described above in Section II.A.1., the Impact Study
demonstrates that the current VaR model generated margin deficiencies
during periods of extreme market volatility, whereas implementing the
proposed MMA changes and Margin Proxy clarifications would result in
VaR Charges that reflect the risks of member portfolios during such
periods better than the current GSD VaR model. Moreover, FICC's
inclusion of the decay factor in the MMA calculation appropriately
limits invoking the MMA as the VaR Charge to periods of extreme market
volatility. As described above in Section II.A.1., the decay factor
affects, among other things, the peak level of margin increase or the
degree of procyclicality and how quickly the margin would fall back to
pre-stress levels. FICC chose to initially set the decay factor at
0.97--a relatively fast decay factor--to be quickly responsive to
market volatility.\104\ FICC's data demonstrate that had the MMA been
in place during the period of the Impact Study, the MMA would have been
invoked in a targeted manner (i.e., specifically during periods of
extreme market volatility, but not during periods of low to moderate
market volatility). Thus, the MMA is specifically designed to enable
FICC to collect margin amounts commensurate with the relevant risks
associated with member portfolios during periods of extreme market
volatility. The proposal would provide FICC with a margin methodology
better designed to enable FICC to cover its credit exposures to its
members by enhancing FICC's risk-based margin system to produce margin
levels commensurate with the relevant risks during periods of extreme
market volatility.
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\104\ FICC could adjust the decay factor in accordance with the
Model Risk Management Framework. FICC would analyze the decay factor
to evaluate its sensitivity and impact to the model performance
pursuant to the model performance monitoring required under the
Model Risk Management Framework. Supra note 29.
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Several commenters addressed FICC's Impact Study. Specifically, one
commenter states that the Impact Study is too limited, providing
backtesting data with extremely uneven daily impacts, thereby rendering
it impossible to properly assess the MMA's impacts.\105\ Another
commenter states that FICC underestimates the MMA's impacts by using
the full two-year period of the Impact Study to calculate average
impacts when the actual period of increased volatility only covers a
nine-month period.\106\ This commenter states that while FICC expressed
the increase in margin requirements in terms of long-term averages,
broker-dealers actually plan for capitalization based on meeting their
largest margin requirement rather than their average capital
usage.\107\ These commenters state that while FICC's impact analysis
cited examples of members with the largest average percentage and
dollar increases resulting from the MMA, those market participants are
either too small or too large to be representative of the proposal's
impact on other members.\108\ The commenters state that the actual
effects of the MMA on middle-market dealers will be higher than FICC's
cited examples.\109\ These two commenters suggest that alternative
impact measurements would provide a more accurate analysis of the
proposed MMA's impacts.\110\
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\105\ SIFMA Letter at 6.
\106\ See IDTA Letter at 3 (arguing that calculating averages
using a two-year period instead of a nine-month period decreases the
average 2.66 times).
\107\ See IDTA Letter at 3.
\108\ See IDTA Letter at 3; SIFMA Letter at 6.
\109\ See e.g., IDTA Letter at 3-4 (contrasting FICC's Impact
Study analysis that expresses the largest member increase that would
have resulted from the MMA as 0.21 percent of net capital, against
the average margin increase that the MMA would have added for IDTA
members of 5.1 percent of net capital, or 16.0 percent of net
capital for the top 100 days in terms of margin increases); see
SIFMA Letter at 6.
\110\ See IDTA Letter at 3-4, 7; SIFMA Letter at 6. For example,
one commenter suggests that FICC should express the impact as the
average percent increase for the top 100 most stressful days. See
IDTA Letter at 3-4 (stating that the average percentage increase for
the top 100 most stressful days in terms of margin increases for
IDTA members, the more relevant metric in terms of capital planning
in actual practice was 37.23 percent or $27.52 million). The other
commenter suggests that a better measure of liquidity impact than
average daily data would be the peak aggregate additional margin
that would be required for both a 1-day and 5-day period. See SIFMA
Letter at 6.
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In response to these comments, FICC states that due to
confidentiality restrictions on releasing member-level data, the
public-facing Advance Notice filing narrative analyzed the Impact Study
using anonymized data and averages of maximum dollar and percentage
changes.\111\ However, FICC provided the Commission with expanded and
detailed daily member-level Impact Study data confidentially, as part
of the Advance Notice filing in Exhibit 3.\112\ FICC further states
that both prior and subsequent to filing the Advance Notice, FICC
actively engaged with members on multiple occasions, conducting
outreach to each member in order to provide notice of the proposal
along with individualized anticipated impacts for each member.\113\
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\111\ See FICC Letter at 7.
\112\ See id.
\113\ See FICC Letter at 6.
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In considering the comments critical of the Impact Study and FICC's
analyses thereof, the Commission considered the Advance Notice
(including the Impact Study \114\ and other confidentially filed data
\115\), comment letters, FICC's
[[Page 90154]]
response letter, and the Commission's own understanding of the GSD
margin methodology based on its general supervision of FICC. Based on
the Commission's review and analysis of these materials, the Commission
disagrees with the comments suggesting that FICC's Impact Study and
analyses are inaccurate and/or misleading. In the Advance Notice
narrative, FICC described the Impact Study in anonymized terms,
highlighting averages and maximum dollar and percentage changes, due to
the confidential nature of the member-level transactions that comprise
the underlying data. However, FICC filed the confidential member-level
data with the Commission in Exhibit 3 to the Advance Notice filing.
FICC also provided relevant confidential data in its response to the
Commission's requests for additional information.\116\ Additionally, in
the Commission's supervisory role, the Commission routinely collects
confidential margin-related data from FICC. These data sources enable
the Commission to evaluate the effects of the MMA on a member-by-member
basis.
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\114\ Exhibit 3 includes, among other things, the following
confidentially filed information covering the period from July 1,
2021 through June 30 2023: actual daily VaR amounts for each member;
daily VaR amounts for each member had MMA been implemented; daily
VaR increase (reflected in dollars, percent, and percent of Net
Capital), if any, attributable to MMA; average member-level VaR
amounts (reflected in dollars and average of Net Capital); average
member-level VaR amounts had MMA been implemented; average member-
level VaR increase (reflected in percent and percent of Net
Capital), if any, attributable to MMA; further analysis of the
foregoing data to determine minimum, maximum, and average increases
to member-level VaR amounts, Net Capital amounts, and CCP-level VaR
amounts; member-level VaR amounts had Margin Proxy been invoked
(daily and summarized); and member-level backtesting results (daily
and summarized).
\115\ FICC's responses to the Commission's requests for
additional information include, among other things, the following
confidentially filed information: FICC's proprietary information
regarding the GSD margin methodology; backtesting data and analyses
of daily member-level sensitivity VaR, Margin Proxy, and MMA amounts
with alternative stress periods; daily member-level backtesting,
sensitivity VaR, and MMA amounts during the Impact Study period
specific to bond and MBS positions; and daily member-level
sensitivity VaR and MMA amounts for the period of February 1, 2024
through July 31, 2024, with analysis relating to the FICC-CME cross-
margining arrangement.
\116\ Supra notes 7, 11.
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The purpose of the Impact Study and FICC's analyses thereof in the
publicly available Advance Notice filing materials is to highlight
comparisons of the GSD VaR model's performance with and without
incorporating the MMA and to highlight the proposal's general impacts
on members using anonymized data and averages of maximum dollar and
percentage changes. FICC did not state that its public discussion of
the Impact Study was the sole source of data for the Commission and the
public to utilize in evaluating the proposals in the Advance Notice.
Rather, FICC provided additional detailed member-level data
confidentially, both to members and the Commission, to more fully
evaluate the impacts of the proposals in the Advance Notice. Regarding
the comments that FICC's analysis of the Impact Study data presented an
inaccurate picture of the MMA's impacts,\117\ the Commission recognizes
that FICC provided individual impact studies for each member that
included the average impact for the entire period of the Impact Study
as well as the average impact on those days that the proposed MMA would
have been applied for each member.\118\ Therefore, the commenters'
concerns regarding the Impact Study do not take into account that both
the Commission and FICC's members also reviewed more detailed
confidential data to better understand the specific member-level
impacts of the proposals. The comment that FICC's public discussion of
the Impact Study presented limited data, rendering it impossible to
properly evaluate the MMA's impacts, does not take into account that
FICC provided more comprehensive confidential data to the Commission
and members that was sufficient to properly assess the MMA's impacts.
Specifically, such data includes, among other things, actual daily VaR
Charge for each member, hypothetical daily VaR Charge for each member
had the MMA been in place, hypothetical daily VaR Charge for each
member had Margin Proxy been invoked, analyses of increases
attributable to the MMA, and numerous backtesting analyses. The comment
that FICC's public discussion of the Impact Study underestimated the
MMA's impacts by calculating the average impacts based on the full two-
year period rather than the nine-month period of volatility does not
take into account that FICC confidentially provided individual impact
studies for each member that included average impacts on each day that
the MMA would have applied to the member.\119\ Similarly, the comment
that FICC's public discussion of the Impact Study expressed the
increase in margin requirements in terms of long-term averages as
opposed to largest margin requirements does not take into account that
FICC confidentially provided individual impact studies for each member
indicating maximum margin increases on each day that the MMA would have
applied to the member.\120\ The comment that FICC's public discussion
of the Impact Study cited impacted members that are not representative
and underestimate the MMA's impacts on middle-market participants does
not take into account that FICC provided member-level impact data to
each member.\121\
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\117\ These comments include regarding: FICC's use of the two-
year period of the Impact Study instead of the 9-month period of
extreme market volatility when presenting average impacts (see IDTA
Letter at 3); FICC's use of long-term average margin increases
instead of maximum margin increases resulting from implementing the
MMA (see id.); FICC's examples of members with the largest average
percentage and dollar increases resulting from the MMA (see IDTA
Letter at 3; see SIFMA Letter at 6); and preferred alternative
impact measurements (see IDTA Letter at 3-4; see SIFMA Letter at 6).
\118\ See FICC Letter at 7.
\119\ See id.
\120\ See id.
\121\ See id.
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One commenter also states that FICC should expand the Impact Study
to cover the March 2020 period of stress in light of FICC's statements
that the MMA proposal was driven, in part, by the VaR model's
underperformance during that period.\122\ In response, FICC states that
inclusion of that data is not necessary because the Impact Study's two-
year period achieves the purpose of demonstrating the effectiveness of
the proposed MMA during periods of both low and high market
volatility.\123\ The Commission agrees that the Impact Study's two-year
period sufficiently demonstrates the performance of the proposed MMA
during periods of both low and high market volatility, as the two-year
study period also included periods of both low and high market
volatility. Inclusion of March 2020 in the Impact Study is not required
for the Commission to evaluate the responsiveness of the MMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ See SIFMA Letter at 6.
\123\ See FICC Letter at 6.
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Accordingly, the proposals in the Advance Notice are consistent
with Rule 17ad-22(e)(6)(i) because the new MMA margin calculation and
Margin Proxy clarifications should better enable FICC to establish a
risk-based margin system that considers and produces relevant margin
levels commensurate with the risks associated with liquidating
participant portfolios in a default scenario during periods of extreme
market volatility.\124\
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\124\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(6)(i).
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D. Consistency With Rule 17ad-22(e)(23)(ii)
Rule 17ad-22(e)(23)(ii) requires that FICC establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to provide sufficient information to enable participants to
identify and evaluate the risks, fees, and other material costs they
incur by participating in FICC.\125\
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\125\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(23)(ii).
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One commenter states that FICC's proposals in the Advance Notice
lack transparency, quick implementation, and tools and resources to
support market preparedness to identify risks and costs associated with
how FICC calculates margin amounts.\126\ Specifically, the commenter
urges FICC to provide members with (1) daily VaR calculations, (2) an
MMA calculator, and (3) a phased implementation of the MMA, including a
parallel run period
[[Page 90155]]
where the MMA is calculated but not invoked.\127\
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\126\ See SIFMA Letter at 7-8.
\127\ See id.
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In response, FICC states that it provides tools and resources to
enable members to determine their margin requirements and the impact of
FICC's proposals.\128\ Specifically, FICC maintains the Real Time
Matching Report Center, Clearing Fund Management System, FICC Customer
Reporting Service, and FICC Risk Client Portal which are client
accessible websites for accessing risk reports and other risk
disclosures.\129\ These resources enable members to view Clearing Fund
requirement information and margin component details, including
portfolio breakdowns by CUSIP and amounts attributable to the
sensitivity-based VaR model.\130\ Members are also able to view data on
market amounts for current clearing positions and associated VaR
Charges.\131\ Additionally, the FICC Client Calculator enables members
to, among other things, enter ``what-if'' position data to determine
hypothetical VaR Charges before trade execution. FICC states that as of
June 24, 2024, FICC is in the process of enhancing the FICC Client
Calculator to incorporate the MMA and FICC expects the enhancement to
be available to members prior to implementation of the MMA, subject to
the Commission's approval.\132\ FICC also states that it is currently
developing a tool that would enable non-members to assess potential VaR
Charges (including MMA) as well.\133\
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\128\ See FICC Letter at 7.
\129\ See id.
\130\ See id.
\131\ See id.
\132\ See id.
\133\ See id.
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The extensive tools and resources that FICC makes available to
members should enable members to obtain individualized information to
determine their Clearing Fund requirements, margin component details,
and assess the impact of FICC's proposals. Additionally, FICC's
multiple member outreach efforts (before and after development of the
proposals in the Advance Notice) provided members with relevant
individualized impact analyses with which to evaluate the proposals in
the Advance Notice. Accordingly, FICC has provided tools and resources
sufficient for its members to evaluate their daily VaR and other
margin-related calculations, rendering a phased implementation of the
proposed MMA unwarranted.
Based on the foregoing, FICC has provided sufficient information,
tools, and resources to enable members to identify and evaluate the
relevant risks and costs associated with the changes proposed in the
Advance Notice, consistent with Rule 17ad-22(e)(23)(ii).\134\
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\134\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(e)(23)(ii).
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III. Conclusion
It is therefore noticed, pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(I) of the
Clearing Supervision Act, that the Commission does not object to
Advance Notice (SR-FICC-2024-801) and that FICC is authorized to
implement the proposed change as of the date of this notice or the date
of an order by the Commission approving proposed rule change SR-FICC-
2024-003, whichever is later.
By the Commission.
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024-26519 Filed 11-13-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P
</pre></body>
</html>Indexed from Federal Register on November 14, 2024.
This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.