ISDA Chief Executive Officer Scott O'Malia offers informal comments on important OTC derivatives issues in derivatiViews, reflecting ISDA's long-held commitment to making the market safer and more efficient.
Financial institutions across the world are searching for ways to
overcome squeezed margins by improving efficiency and reducing costs. As
a trade association, ISDA’s driving motivation has been to help our
members achieve that goal, and we’ve developed various mutualized
solutions that do just that. But we think there is an opportunity to go
further – by creating greater alignment and standardization between
derivatives and securities financing transaction (SFT) markets.
In a paper published this week,
we kicked off what we hope will be a constructive discussion across the
industry about the practicality of closer collaboration and improved
consistency between derivatives and SFT markets. That paper sets out the
benefits and challenges of achieving this, and identifies specific
areas where we think increased harmonization will create cost savings
and improved operational, collateral and capital efficiencies.
You might ask why we think now is the time to have this conversation.
The answer lies partly in the current push by financial institutions to
spot opportunities where they can centralize and optimize pre- and
post-trade operations to reduce costs. The other driver is the
increasing shift to digitization and automation, which will require
common standards, terms and documentation in order to be effective and
scalable across markets.
There are a number of areas where greater standardization could be
achieved. The first is to leverage the existing overlap in terminology
to create a common set of definitions, and to document derivatives and
SFTs under a single master agreement. This would cut down on duplication
and complexity, and mean firms could program their systems to reflect
one consistent set of documents and definitions rather than several
similar but not identical ones.
This approach would also expand netting sets, potentially enabling
institutions to reduce credit risk and optimize their use of collateral,
thereby lowering funding costs. As a further benefit, firms could
commission a single set of legal opinions on close-out netting, rather
than sourcing several for each jurisdiction. This alone would unlock
significant savings for the industry.
As well as documentation advantages, greater standardization between
derivatives and SFTs would enable the creation of solutions to allow
firms to implement legal, regulatory or market practice changes on a
consistent basis across these markets.
Take benchmark reform
as an example. ISDA is close to publishing a protocol to allow firms to
efficiently amend existing agreements with other adhering parties to
include new fallbacks for trades that reference key interbank offered
rates. That particular protocol is intended to cover SFTs as well as
derivatives, but that’s more the exception than the rule due to the
complexities of creating amendments that work for multiple different
documents. Imagine the efficiencies that could be achieved if future
amendments of this type could be applied holistically and seamlessly on a
cross-industry basis.
Standardization is also a prerequisite for digitization. Working
together to develop common standards and taxonomies – for instance,
through the Common Domain Model
– would help facilitate automation and interoperability between
derivatives and SFT markets, enabling technologies to be applied at
scale across multiple markets.
We recognize this proposal comes with challenges – there are a number
of areas, for instance, where specificity of product terms is
absolutely necessary in order to preserve the unique characteristics of
each market. However, we think that, by working together, many of the
technical issues can be resolved. In particular, we would like to work
in a collaborative manner with other trade associations to achieve the
alignment in derivatives and SFT documentation, opinions and taxonomies.
Change is never easy – and there’s no doubt this would disturb the
status quo and alter existing behaviors and practices. However, we think
the current trend towards increased digitization and the push by
financial institutions to improve operational and capital efficiency
means we have to start talking about the benefits that alternative
structures could bring.
In 1997, Apple told computer users to ‘think different’ when it
launched the new Mac. In order to realize the maximum efficiencies for
our members, it’s time we did the same.
© ISDA - International Swaps and Derivatives Association
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