ESMA identifies areas for improvement in EU CCP supervision

22 December 2016

ESMA presented the results of a peer review, it conducted into how national competent authorities ensure that central counterparties comply with margin and collateral requirements under the European Markets Infrastructure Regulation.

The report identified a number of areas where supervisory approaches differ between NCAs and includes recommendations to improve consistency in supervisory practices.

ESMA compared the supervisory approaches of the 16 NCAs supervising the 17 CCPs established in the EU at the time of the launch of the review, on 1 September 2015. The review focused on margin and collateral requirements but also identified areas for improvement regarding risk model validation and regular reviews under on-going supervision.  

ESMA identified certain areas where divergences emerged in NCAs’ supervisory approaches, these included:

- CCPs’ back testing and sensitivity analysis reports;

- the adequacy of CCPs’ confidence levels; and

- the liquidation period and the efficiency of counter-cyclical tools used by CCPs.

Recommendations to enhance supervisory convergence

ESMA identified the following areas for improvement in order to enhance supervisory convergence, including:

With respect to collateral requirements, ESMA has identified areas where supervisory convergence could be further enhanced, including the on-going review of CCP collateral policies, such as the level of risk of eligible collateral, its liquidity, wrong-way risk requirements, and the potential pro-cyclical effects of changes in collateral haircuts.

ESMA’s review also identified a number of good practices, including having direct access to supervised CCPs data and requesting the CCPs to verify the marketability of collateral and reliability of prices. 

Next steps

ESMA will use the findings of its peer review to enhance supervisory convergence between NCAs. ESMA has a coordination role between NCAs and across CCP colleges with a view to building a common supervisory culture and consistent supervisory practices, ensuring uniform procedures and consistent approaches, and strengthening consistency in supervisory outcomes.

Full peer review


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