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11 March 2022

FSB, CPMI and IOSCO analysis highlights need to continue work on CCP financial resources


A first part of the analysis assessed the current use, composition and amount of financialresources and tools available to cover CCP losses in a sample of CCPs that are consideredsystemically important in more than one jurisdiction.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB), the Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures
(CPMI) of the Bank for International Settlements and the International Organization of
Securities Commissions (IOSCO) have today published a report analysing existing financial
resources and tools for central counterparty (CCP) recovery and resolution, which confirmed
the need for further work on CCP financial resources.


In November 2020, the Chairs of the FSB, CPMI, IOSCO and of the FSB’s Resolution Steering
Group publicly committed to collaborate on and conduct further work on CCP financial
resources in recovery and resolution. This report presents the results of the evidence gathering
and analysis on existing financial resources and tools for CCP recovery and resolution carried
out in 2021.


A first part of the analysis assessed the current use, composition and amount of financial
resources and tools available to cover CCP losses in a sample of CCPs that are considered
systemically important in more than one jurisdiction. The analysis was based on default and
non-default loss scenarios potentially extreme enough to require the use of recovery and
resolution tools. For default losses, all the CCP service lines were able to absorb all losses. To
do so, about half of the 15 CCP service lines had to use recovery tools, but none needed
resolution. For non-default losses, a cyber theft scenario was considered, and resolution
authorities would have needed to trigger resolution for the majority of CCPs to generate
sufficient resources to cover the loss. In another non-default scenario, liquid resources and
liquidity arrangements of one CCP were not sufficient.


A second part of the analysis assessed the potential financial stability implications from the
use of the financial resources and tools covered by the existing CPMI-IOSCO guidance on
recovery of financial market infrastructures and FSB guidance on CCP resolution. Based on a
quantitative analysis, the use of cash calls and variation margin gains haircutting had a limited
impact on bank clearing members’ liquidity and solvency. A qualitative review concluded that
different recovery and resolution tools could have varying consequences in terms of knock-on effects on the wider financial system, performance risk, and impact on market and public confidence in CCPs.

The analysis was subject to a number of limitations and assumptions that suggest the results
should be interpreted cautiously. In particular, the system-wide, aggregate effects could not be
considered due to data availability and confidentiality constraints.


The FSB has agreed to continue to:
■ Review the sufficiency of the existing toolkit for CCP resolution, focusing in particular
on non-default loss scenarios. Further work will consider the need for, and costs and
benefits of, potential alternative financial resources and tools for CCP resolution. This
further work, to be undertaken in cooperation with CPMI-IOSCO, will be initiated in Q2
2022.
■ Monitor whether resolution authorities have access to an adequate set of resolution
tools. This will be undertaken through continued efforts to conduct and enhance
implementation monitoring of the FSB guidance on CCP resolution.
In addition, CPMI-IOSCO are currently analysing CCP non-default losses in resilience and
recovery and will continue monitoring the implementation of the Principles for Financial Market
Infrastructures (PFMI), including CCP financial resources and tools for resilience and recovery.
The FSB welcomes stakeholder views as input in the further work on the sufficiency of the
existing toolkit for CCP resolution, in particular on non-default loss scenarios, and the need
for, and costs and benefits (including effectiveness and impact on incentives) of potential
alternative financial resources and tools for CCP resolution. Comments should be sent to
fsb@fsb.org by 29 April 2022 with the subject line “CCP resolution”. All comments will be
published on the FSB website unless requested otherwise.

IOSCO



© IOSCO


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