|
With Britain now outside the EU due to Brexit, Brussels wants to reduce heavy EU reliance on London for clearing euro-denominated derivatives worth trillions of euros, triggering a skirmish between the world's biggest exchanges.
Wrestling business from London will be a long haul, though, given the bulk of clearing in heavily used contracts is based in the UK capital, banks have refused to shift business voluntarily, and the EU has yet to say exactly much volume it wants to see moving, industry officials say.
Clearing, which ensures a trade is completed even if one side of the deal goes bust, is key to amassing the critical liquidity financial centres need to attract investors.
Last month Brussels proposed a draft law that would force banks in the bloc to have an account with an EU-based clearing house to clear a yet-to-be-determined minimum amount of three types of euro derivatives contracts which are widely used by companies.
One of these - euro short-term interest rates contracts or STIR - are mainly cleared outside the EU, dominated by ICE in London to such an extent that EU securities watchdog ESMA described it as monopolist.
Deutsche Boerse's Eurex derivatives arm in Frankfurt, already strong in contracts covering the longer end of the euro yield curve, will offer trading and clearing in a new three-month futures contract from Jan. 23 referencing the estr interest rate compiled by the European Central Bank.
"Expanding the STIR segment underlines our commitment to be the home of the euro yield curve and delivering maximum margin and capital efficiencies to the market," Eurex said.
U.S. derivatives exchange CME already launched its own three-month estr futures contract last October, which banks in the EU can also trade, adding to the challenge faced by Eurex.
ICE's euro STIRs volume is, however, in its huge euribor contract, which traded 365 million lots in 2022, a 66% rise on the prior year as the European Central Bank hiked interest rates sending companies rushing to hedge themselves.
"We are continuously evaluating opportunities to make further adjustments in our STIR offering including our listed euribor futures and options," Eurex said....
more at Reuters