At OCC, we constantly are searching for ways to promote stability and market integrity through effective and efficient clearance, settlement and risk management services, while providing thought leadership and education to market participants and the public about the prudent use of the products we clear.
Enhancing our resiliency as a Systemically Important Financial Market Utility (SIFMU) is critical to our ability to reduce systemic risk, increase market transparency, and provide capital and collateral efficiencies for the users of the US exchange-listed options markets. One step in this strategic process is our Financial Safeguards Framework (FSF), which determines how OCC sizes its clearing fund and allocates contributions to the clearing fund from OCC’s clearing members. With the approval of the FSF by the US Securities and Exchange Commission on 27 July 2018, OCC plans to implement the FSF starting on 4 September 2018.
Our current clearing fund methodology, which has been in place since 2012, needed significant modifications in order to meet new and evolving regulatory requirements and industry best practices. Our new FSF will provide a significantly improved methodology and enhanced resources to our clearing firms and liquidity providers.
Market participants will see several key benefits from OCC’s new clearing fund methodology:
Improved Methodology: The size of OCC’s clearing fund will now be based on stress testing results that include historical and other “extreme but plausible scenarios” rather than trebling margin variances:
Enhanced Resources: OCC’s new clearing fund will now be sized to cover the simultaneous default of its two largest clearing members (“Cover Two”) versus a default by its single largest clearing member (“Cover One”):
Risk-Based Allocation: The new FSF more appropriately risk-weights OCC’s allocation of clearing fund contribution requirements to each of its clearing members. OCC’s clearing fund now will be allocated to clearing members based on 70 percent margin risk, 15 percent open interest, and 15 percent cleared volume, rather than 35 percent margin risk, 50 percent open interest, and 15 percent cleared volume under the current methodology. Margin risk provides a transparent and easily understood metric for clearing firms and aligns incentives with clearing members by increasing the allocation to members with more margin risk.
OCC’s new FSF builds upon other enhancements to our financial resources and resiliency as a SIFMU. Over the last several years, we have significantly expanded and diversified our access to liquidity by:
OCC is committed to providing market participants with high quality and efficient clearing, settlement and risk management services, with a particular focus on elevating our risk management capabilities. Enhancing OCC’s resiliency as a SIFMU is critical to our ability to reduce systemic risk, increase market transparency, and provide capital and collateral efficiencies for the users of the US exchange-listed options and futures markets.