EFAMA responds to draft RTS on OTC-derivatives

14 July 2014

According to EFAMA, to ensure that small and medium size counterparties are not commercially forced to deliver initial margins, the 8 billion thresholds should be reinforced through the generalization of a Minimum Transfer Amount applicable on the Initial Margin for entities below the threshold.

EFAMA feel that in certain cases – e.g. G7 government debt–haircuts are a more appropriate measure given the quality of that debt. We also feel there should be a de-minimis cut-off for concentration limits at €100 million.  Beside the reduction of operational cost and difficulties in splitting small amounts of collateral over several issuers, the de-minimis rule applying on the diversification ration of collateral will not introduce any systemic risk. EFAMA insist on the crucial need to maintain the capability to deliver eligible collateral in the most efficient manner for both the collateral giver and collateral taker. The group warns that a bad calibration of eligible criteria would raise the following difficulties:

Making concentration limits regarding securities collateral mandatory for all financial counterparties will lead to the consequence that UCITS and other regulated investment funds could be forced to provide cash collateral even if, in general, eligible securities collateral would be available.

 

Full EFAMA response


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