View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

For release on delivery
1:30 p.m. EST (12:30 p.m. CST)
November 6, 2014

A Financial System Perspective on Central Clearing of Derivatives

Remarks by
Jerome H. Powell
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
“The New International Financial System: Analyzing the Cumulative Impact of
Regulatory Reform”
17th Annual International Banking Conference
Sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and the Bank of England
Chicago, Illinois

November 6, 2014

Thank you for the opportunity to address the important topic of how the financial
system and its regulation have evolved in response to the global financial crisis. I will
focus my remarks on the global initiative to expand central clearing of over-the-counter
(OTC) derivatives. While we have made significant progress in enlisting central clearing
to reduce systemic risks, I will argue that there is a good deal more to do to ensure that
the reforms achieve their potential and minimize the possibility of unintended and
undesirable consequences.1
Prior to the crisis, the then highly opaque market for OTC derivatives grew at an
astonishing and unsustainable pace of nearly 25 percent per annum in a context of
relatively light regulation and bilateral clearing.2 With the benefit of hindsight, we know
that along with this torrid growth came an unmeasured and underappreciated buildup of
risk. The spectacular losses suffered by American International Group, Inc., or AIG, on
its derivatives positions, and the resulting concerns about the potential effect of AIG’s
failure on its major derivatives counterparties, serve as particularly apt reminders of the
wider failures and weaknesses that were revealed by the crisis.
The threats posed were global, and the response was global as well. In September
2009, the Group of Twenty (G-20) mandated that all sufficiently standardized derivatives
should be centrally cleared--a sea change in the functioning and regulation of these
markets. And in the five intervening years, substantial progress has been made in the
United States and abroad to implement this reform and begin to reduce systemic risk in

1

The views expressed here are my own and are not necessarily shared by other members of the Federal
Reserve Board or the Federal Open Market Committee.
2
According to the Bank for International Settlements, the notional amount of OTC derivatives outstanding
grew from $80.3 trillion in December 1998 to $598.1 trillion in December 2008, which corresponds to an
annual growth rate of 22.2 percent per year. For more information, see Bank for International Settlements,
“Derivatives Statistics,” webpage, www.bis.org/statistics/derstats.htm.

-2these markets. According to public data, roughly 20 percent of all credit derivatives and
45 percent of all interest rate derivatives are now centrally cleared--amounts that have
grown substantially since 2009, when central clearing of credit derivatives began and the
amount of cleared interest rate derivatives was at roughly one-half of its current level.3
These amounts should continue to grow over time as central clearing and, especially,
client clearing requirements take effect in more jurisdictions.
Given the global nature of derivatives markets, the success of the reform agenda
depends critically on international coordination. Thus, to support the move to central
clearing and address other lessons from the financial crisis, regulators developed the new
Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures (PFMIs) for the infrastructures that clear
derivatives, securities, and payments.4 The PFMIs are comprehensive international
standards for the governance, risk management, and operation of central counterparties
(CCPs) and other financial market infrastructures. Such standards are essential given
that, in the interest of transparency and improved risk management, policymakers have
encouraged the concentration of activities at these key nodes. And it is particularly
important that the standards be promulgated globally, given the potential for OTC
derivatives to span multiple jurisdictions and to migrate to jurisdictions where standards
and risk management are less robust. Regulators are now engaged in the important work
of translating these principles into national regulations. Only when these strong

3

Financial Stability Board (2014), OTC Derivatives Market Reforms: Seventh Progress Report on
Implementation (Basel, Switzerland: FSB, April),
www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_140408.pdf.
4
See Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems and Technical Committee of the International
Organization of Securities Commissions (2012), Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures (Basel,
Switzerland: Bank for International Settlements and International Organization of Securities Commissions,
April), www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d101a.pdf.

-3international standards have been implemented at CCPs around the world can the risk
reduction promised by the global clearing mandate be fully realized.
Further Challenges Facing Central Clearing
The task is far from complete. We must consider how central clearing and CCPs
fit into the rest of the financial system. From this systemwide perspective, central
clearing raises a number of important issues that should be kept in mind as its use
increases. I will now consider several of those issues and associated challenges in some
detail.
A number of commentators have argued that the move to central clearing will
further concentrate risk in the financial system. There is some truth in that assertion.
Moving a significant share of the $700 trillion OTC derivatives market to central clearing
will concentrate risk at CCPs. But the intent is not simply to concentrate risk, but also to
reduce it--through netting of positions, greater transparency, better and more uniform
risk-management practices, and more comprehensive regulation. This strategy places a
heavy burden on CCPs, market participants, and regulators alike to build a strong market
and regulatory infrastructure and to get it right the first time.
It has also been frequently observed that central clearing simplifies and makes the
financial system more transparent. That, too, has an element of truth to it, but let’s take a
closer look. Charts similar to the ones shown in figure 1 are frequently offered to
illustrate the point that, as a CCP becomes a buyer to every seller and a seller to every
buyer, it causes risks to be netted and simplifies the network of counterparties. The
dizzying and opaque constellation of exposures that exists in a purely bilateral market,
illustrated in the chart on the left, is replaced by a neat hub-and-spoke network that is

-4both known and more comprehensible, illustrated in the chart on the right. The CCP and
its regulators are then in a position to observe the CCP’s entire network, which can be
important in the event that one or more clearing members become impaired. CCPs may
also be able to coordinate a response to problems in their markets in ways that individual
clearing members would find very difficult.
Figure 2 shows that, at the same time, in the real world CCPs bring with them
their own complexities. As the figure shows, we do not live in a simple world with only
one CCP. We do not even live in a world with one CCP per product class, since some
products are cleared by multiple, large CCPs.5 Also, significant clearing members are
often members of multiple CCPs in different jurisdictions. The disruption of a single
member can have far-reaching effects. Accordingly, while CCPs simplify some aspects
of the financial system, in reality, the overall system supporting the OTC derivatives
markets remains quite complex.
To carry out their critical functions, CCPs rely on a wide variety of financial
services from other financial firms, such as custody, clearing, and settlement. Many of
these services are provided by the same global financial institutions that are also the
largest clearing members of the CCPs. The failure of a large clearing member that is also
a key service provider could disrupt the smooth and efficient operation of one or multiple
CCPs, and vice versa. In the event of disorderly CCP failures, the netting benefits and
other efficiencies that CCPs offer would be lost at a point when the financial system is
already under significant stress. Ultimately, the system as a whole is only as strong as its
weakest link.

5

As an example, both the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Intercontinental Exchange clear credit
default swaps.

-5People often think of these relationships between CCPs and clearing members in
terms of credit exposures, but there are also important interconnections in the need for
and use of liquidity. Historically, some CCPs viewed liquidity in terms of daily
operational needs. From a macroprudential perspective, this view of liquidity is far too
narrow. If a CCP is to act as a buffer against the transmission of liquidity shocks from a
clearing member’s default, the CCP itself must have a buffer of liquidity it can draw on
to make its payments on time even during periods of market stress. The PFMIs
introduced a new liquidity standard that requires CCPs to cover, at a minimum, the
liquidity needs of the CCP on the failure of the single clearing member and its affiliates
with the largest aggregate position, in extreme but plausible market conditions. Liquidity
needs are to be met with a predefined list of liquid resources, starting with cash.
Moreover, the largest clearing members participate in many CCPs around the
world. Cash management at these clearing members, particularly intraday cash
management, involves interconnected cash flows to and from a clearing member’s
various CCPs, other market infrastructures, and other financial institutions. If a clearing
member were to default, cash flows and needed financial services could be disrupted
simultaneously at several CCPs. Failure of one or more CCPs to pay margin or settle
obligations as promised could impair the ability of a clearing member to meet other
obligations and transmit liquidity risk to others in the financial system. Accordingly,
CCPs require a liquidity profile that will allow them to absorb rather than amplify the
liquidity shocks that are likely to materialize during a period of financial stress following
a member’s default.

-6Of course, clearinghouses have been around for quite some time and have
generally stood up well even in severe crises.6 But let’s look a little deeper at the risks.
During the global financial crisis, governments around the world took extraordinary
actions to shore up many of the large financial institutions that are also large clearing
members. While it is not possible to say with confidence what would have happened if
these measures had not been taken, it is surely the case that whatever pressures CCPs
faced would have been many times greater, and the potential consequences much greater
as well. Moreover, as CCPs grow into their enhanced role in the financial system, they
will represent an ever larger locus for systemic risk. It is therefore important not to be
lulled into a false sense of security that past performance is a guarantee of future CCP
success.
After the crisis, governments firmly resolved that even the largest financial
institutions must be allowed to fail and be resolved without taxpayer support and without
threatening the broader financial system or the economy. CCPs therefore need to adapt
to a world in which their largest clearing members will be allowed to fail and to be
resolved without taxpayer support. And, as I will discuss a little later, the same is true of
CCPs--they, too, should have no expectation of taxpayer support if they fail. To say it as
plainly as possible, the purpose of all of this new infrastructure and regulation is not to
facilitate the orderly bailout of a CCP in the next crisis. Quite to the contrary, CCPs and

See, for example, Jerome H. Powell (2013), “OTC Market Infrastructure Reform: Opportunities and
Challenges,” speech delivered at the Clearing House 2013 annual meeting, New York, November 21,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/powell20131121a.htm; and Ben S. Bernanke (2011),
“Clearinghouses, Financial Stability, and Financial Reform,” speech delivered at the 2011 Financial
Markets Conference, a meeting sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, held in Stone Mountain,
Ga., April 4, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20110404a.htm.
6

-7their members must plan to stand on their own and continue to provide critical services to
the financial system, without support from the taxpayer.
The Road Ahead: Meeting the Challenges
As you can see, central clearing represents the confluence of critical market
infrastructure and systemic financial institutions. As a result, the regulation and
supervision of CCPs present particular challenges. What matters most is the stability of
the entire system, not that of one sector or another. In the United States, CCPs are
primarily regulated by either the Commodity Futures Trading Commission or the
Securities and Exchange Commission. Under authority provided by the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, the Federal Reserve also plays
a role in supervising and regulating systemically important CCPs and other financial
market utilities.7 In addition, the Federal Reserve is the holding company supervisor of a
number of the largest clearing members. The challenge is to ensure that regulation and
supervision take into account the broad implications of derivatives trading for CCPs, their
members, and the broader financial system. Close collaboration between regulators--both
domestically and internationally--will be necessary to ensure that central clearing can
promote the kind of financial system resiliency that will be required when another severe
crisis threatens.
While central clearing and CCPs do present a number of complex and unique
challenges, these challenges are not insurmountable. Several measures should be
considered in the near term to further strengthen the market and regulatory infrastructure

The Federal Reserve Board’s authority to supervise systemically important CCPs is provided in title VIII
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
7

-8relating to liquidity, transparency, stress testing, “skin in the game,” and recovery and
resolution.
Liquidity
The adoption of the PFMIs around the world is driving improvements in CCP
liquidity.8

Ultimately, CCPs and their supervisors will need to maintain vigilance to

ensure that liquid resources are sufficient to withstand the kinds of liquidity shocks that
would likely accompany a member’s default. In addition, it is crucial that liquidity
scenario analysis be a regular part of a CCP’s stress-testing program to help ensure that
appropriate liquidity planning does not suffer from a lack of vision or imagination.
Transparency
Enhanced transparency is central to the reform agenda, and there has been some
progress in this area. But CCPs need to provide still greater transparency to their clearing
members and to the public. The G-20’s central clearing mandate shifted a significant
amount of activity and control away from dealers to CCPs. With this shift, CCPs took on
the responsibility of managing risks in a way that is transparent to the clearing members
who are subject to the decisions of the CCP. Clearing members need a full and detailed
understanding of their risk exposure to CCPs, which means that clearing members must
have detailed and appropriate information on stress-test results, the specification and
application of margin models, and the sizing of default funds to cover losses. Without a
clear picture of a CCP’s risk profile, clearing members cannot make informed decisions

8

In the United States, these standards were implemented by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
for derivative-clearing organizations in November 2013 and by the Federal Reserve for certain financial
market utilities that are designated as systemically important by the Financial Stability Oversight Council
in October 2014.

-9about whether to clear with a particular CCP or how to judge their exposures to it. All
major stakeholders--clearing members, clients, regulators, and the broader market-should be aware of the risks involved so that they can take appropriate steps to mitigate
them.
Stress testing
The disclosure of CCP stress-test results to clearing members is important so that
clearing members can have a full understanding of a CCP’s risk profile. This disclosure,
however, would be of little help if the stress tests themselves were insufficiently
comprehensive and robust. For example, consider a case in which a bank belongs to two
CCPs that clear similar products but the disclosed stress tests for the CCPs are based on
materially different scenarios. This state of affairs could easily result in more confusion
than clarity.
It is time for domestic and international regulators to consider steps to strengthen
credit and liquidity stress testing conducted by CCPs. Currently, most major CCPs
engage in some form of stress testing. However, both clearing members and regulators
need a more systematic view of what stress tests are performed, at what frequency, with
what assumptions, and with what results. Aside from these issues involving individual
stress tests, there are also important questions about the comparability of stress scenarios,
assumptions, and results across similar and different types of CCPs. A related issue is
whether regulators should consider some sort of standardized approach to supervisory
stress testing. Not all CCPs are alike. But there may be approaches that could bring
some of the benefits of standardization while allowing tailoring of some scenarios to the
activities of particular CCPs or groups of CCPs. Clearly, a greater degree of uniformity

- 10 would be helpful to clearing members that are comparing test results across several CCPs
and to regulators that are considering systemwide stability. For example, there are likely
some financial market stresses, such as rapid and significant increases in market
volatility, that would be expected to have broad effects across financial markets and
participants. Coordinated stress tests could also help us better understand the
macroprudential risks around liquidity that I discussed earlier. Understanding the effect
of such correlated stresses on a wide array of CCPs will be important for ensuring overall
system resiliency. Going forward, regulators will need to work collaboratively to ensure
that stress tests are robust, informative, and appropriately comparable.
Skin in the game
A number of commentators have urged U.S. authorities to consider requiring
CCPs to place significant amounts of their own loss-absorbing resources in front of the
mutualized clearing fund or other financial resources provided by clearing members.
These skin-in-the-game requirements are intended to create incentives for the owners of
CCPs for careful consideration of new products for clearing, for conservative modeling
of risks, and for robust default waterfalls and other resources to meet such risks as may
materialize.9 The issue is a complex one, however, and a number of factors would need
to be considered in formulating such a requirement.
Recovery and resolution
I have focused so far on what we can do to ensure that CCPs do not fail: more
transparency, enhanced stress testing, more robust capital and default waterfalls, stronger

9

See, for example, the related discussion in Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (2010),
Market Structure Developments in the Clearing Industry: Implications for Financial Stability (Basel,
Switzerland: Bank for International Settlements, November), www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d92.pdf.

- 11 liquidity, and increased incentives to appropriately manage risks. I will conclude my
remarks today by discussing what happens when all of these efforts encounter a severe
stress event. Try as we might to prevent the buildup of excessive risk, we need to be
prepared for the possibility that a CCP may fail or approach failure in the future. When
and if such a crisis materializes, CCPs will be called on to stand on their own. CCPs and
regulators need to develop clear and detailed CCP recovery and resolution strategies that
are well designed to minimize transmission of the CCP’s distress to its clearing members
and beyond.
Recovery and resolution planning is a matter of intense focus among regulators
and industry participants. Just last month, the Committee on Payments and Market
Infrastructures and the Board of the International Organization of Securities
Commissions released their final report on the recovery of financial market
infrastructures.10 The report is part of an ongoing effort to provide guidance on
implementing the PFMI requirements for recovery planning. On the same day, the
Financial Stability Board released a new report on the resolution of financial market
infrastructures and their participants to supplement its earlier work on the report Key
Attributes of Effective Resolution Regimes for Financial Institutions.11
These reports stress that CCPs must adopt plans and tools that will help them
recover from financial shocks and continue to provide their critical services without
government assistance. It has been a challenge for some market participants to confront

10

See Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures and Board of the International Organization of
Securities Commissions (2014), Recovery of Financial Market Infrastructures (Basel, Switzerland: Bank
for International Settlements and International Organization of Securities Commissions, October),
www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d121.pdf.
11
See Financial Stability Board (2014), Key Attributes of Effective Resolution Regimes for Financial
Institutions (Basel, Switzerland: FSB, October),
www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_141015.pdf.

- 12 the fact that risks and losses, however well managed, do not simply disappear within a
CCP but are ultimately allocated in some way to the various stakeholders in the
organization--even if the risk of loss is quite remote. This realization has generated a
healthy debate among CCPs, members, and members’ clients and regulators that has
provided fertile ground for new thinking about risk design, risk-management tools, and
recovery planning. To ensure that CCPs do not themselves become too-big-to-fail
entities, we need transparent, actionable, and effective plans for dealing with financial
shocks that do not leave either an explicit or implicit role for the government.
Conclusion: Realizing the Promise of Central Clearing
A key question posed at this conference is whether the reforms instituted in
response to the crisis have improved the strength and stability of the financial system. In
my view, the answer for OTC derivatives reform--and central clearing, in particular--is a
positive one. But final pronouncements are premature. Post-crisis reforms and the rise of
central clearing have started us down a path toward greater financial stability. At the
same time, central clearing brings with it a number of complexities that relate to the
interaction between CCPs and the rest of the financial system, especially the global
systemically important financial institutions that represent many of their largest clearing
members. Given the increasingly prominent role that central clearing will play in the
financial system going forward, it is critical that we collectively get central clearing right.
To do so, I have argued that it is imperative that we consider central clearing from a
systemwide perspective, and that regulators will need to continue to work collaboratively
with each other, both domestically and internationally.

Figure 1. Bilateral and Centrally Cleared Networks

Bilaterally Cleared Network

Centrally Cleared Network

Note: The figure on the left shows a bilateral network in the credit default swap (CDS) market for a single and highly traded CDS contract. The figure on the right shows the
hypothetical network that would exist if the contract were cleared through a single central counterparty. In each figure, a red circle denotes a protection seller and a blue one
denotes a protection buyer. The size of the circle represents the amount of protection bought or sold.
Source: Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation.

Figure 2. Direct Links between LISCC Banks and Global CCPs

Note: The figure illustrates the network between banks in the portfolio of the Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee (LISCC), represented by blue circles, and
central counterparties (CCPs), represented by red circles. Each connection indicates the relationship between a member bank and the CCP.
Source: Federal Reserve Board.