Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE Clear Credit LLC; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change to Amend the ICE Clear Credit Clearing Rules, 83906-83915 [2016-28032]
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other risks. ICC also proposed to adopt
two related sets of new default auction
procedures: initial default auction
procedures and secondary default
auction procedures.3
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–79324; File No. SR–ICC–
2016–013]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE
Clear Credit LLC; Notice of Filing of
Proposed Rule Change to Amend the
ICE Clear Credit Clearing Rules
November 16, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder 2
notice is hereby given that on November
4, 2016, ICE Clear Credit LLC (‘‘ICC’’)
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared primarily by ICC.
The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The principal purpose of the
proposed rule change is to revise the
ICC Rulebook (the ‘‘Rules’’) to amend
the ICC Clearing Rules (‘‘ICC Rules’’)
relating to default management, clearing
house recovery and wind-down, and to
adopt certain related default auction
procedures.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
tatutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, ICC
included statements concerning the
purpose of and basis for the proposed
rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. ICC has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections (A), (B),
and (C) below, of the most significant
aspects of these statements.
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(A) Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
(a) Purpose
ICC submits proposed amendments to
the ICC Rules relating to clearing house
default management, recovery and
wind-down to address the risk of
uncovered losses from a clearing
participant (‘‘Participant’’) default or
series of Participant defaults, among
1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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I. Summary of Proposed Amendments
The amendments would, among other
matters:
(i) Enhance existing tools and
establish new tools and procedures (and
an order of priority for using such tools
and procedures) to manage a Participant
default or series of defaults and return
to a matched book, specifically:
(A) Initial default auctions, to be
conducted in accordance with a defined
set of default auction procedures;
(B) if such initial default auctions are
not fully successful, conducting a
secondary auction of all remaining
positions, to be conducted in
accordance with a defined set of
secondary auction procedures; and
(C) if a secondary auction is
unsuccessful, partial tear-up of
positions of non-defaulting Participants
corresponding to the defaulter’s
remaining portfolio; (Rules 20–605(d)–
(f), 809)
(ii) in connection with the new
default management steps described in
(i) above, eliminate forced allocation as
a default management tool; (Rule 20–
605(c))
(iii) in connection with these default
management steps, provide the ability to
implement reduced gains distributions
(a.k.a., variation margin haircutting)
following exhaustion of other financial
resources for up to five business days;
(Rule 808)
(iv) adopt new governance and
consultation requirements for the use of
these default tools and procedures;
(Rule 20–605(l))
(v) clarify in the Rules the distinction
between the obligation of a Participant
to ‘‘replenish’’ its guaranty fund
contribution and its obligation to meet
additional ‘‘assessments’’ that may be
levied in respect of a Participant default.
Consistent with the existing Rules, a
Participant’s liability for assessment
contributions will remain capped at
‘‘1x’’ its guaranty fund contribution in
respect of any single default; (Rule 803)
(vi) establish a ‘‘cooling-off period’’
triggered by certain Participant defaults
that result in guaranty fund depletion,
3 Although the auction procedures will not be
published, ICC will make such procedures available
to all Participants, subject to existing confidentiality
arrangements between ICC and Participants and the
confidentiality provisions set forth in the auction
procedures. ICC will also make such procedures
available to customers of Participants at the request
of such customers (and/or permit Participants to do
so), subject to confidentiality arrangements.
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in which case the aggregate liability of
Participants for replenishments of the
guaranty fund and assessments would
be capped at ‘‘3x’’ its guaranty fund
contribution for all defaults during that
period; (Rule 806)
(vii) establish a new process under
which a Participant may withdraw from
the clearing house, both in the ordinary
course of business and during a coolingoff period, and related procedures for
unwinding all positions of such a
Participant and capping its continuing
liability to ICC; (Rule 807)
(viii) move ICC’s current ‘‘pro rata’’
contribution to the guaranty fund higher
in the priority waterfall of default
resources; and (Rule 802(b))
(ix) clarify the procedures for full
clearing service termination, where that
is determined to be appropriate by ICC.
(Rule 810)
The proposed amendments are
described in more detail in the
following sections:
II. Revisions to Default Management
Tools and Steps
Rule 20–605, which specifies ICC’s
remedies upon a Participant default, has
been substantially revised, both to
implement the additional recovery tools
discussed herein and to improve overall
clarity. ICC’s existing default remedies
(as modified as discussed herein), such
as initial default auctions, are referred to
in the revised rule as ‘‘Standard Default
Management Actions’’. The additional
default management tools being
adopted, such as secondary auctions,
partial tear-up and reduced gain
distributions, are referred to in the
revised rule as ‘‘Secondary Default
Management Actions’’. As discussed
herein, additional governance and other
requirements apply to Secondary
Default Management Actions.
Overall Structure of Revised Rule 20–
605
Rule 20–605 has been restructured to
reflect the distinction between Standard
Default Management Actions and
Secondary Default Management Actions
referred to in the preceding paragraph,
and to make certain drafting
improvements. In the revised rule:
• Rules 20–605(a) and (b) set out the
definition of Default and ICC’s ability to
declare a Participant in Default, which
are substantially the same as in the
current Rule.
• Rule 20–605(c) specifies the
Defaulting Participant’s resources that
may be used to cover losses (and the
order in which those resources may be
applied). In substance, it is consistent
with the current Rule.
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• Rule 20–605(d) and (e) provide for
Standard Default Management Actions,
which are largely consistent with the
current Rules but include the
improvements to initial default auctions
discussed below. Rule 20–605(e) also
sets out the ability of ICC to defer the
use of Standard Default Management
Actions (which is largely consistent
with the current Rules) or bypass the
use of Standard Default Management
Actions and proceed to the use of
Secondary Default Management
Actions.
• Rule 20–605(f) provides for the
Secondary Default Management
Actions, as discussed below.
• Rule 20–605(l) has been revised to
impose enhanced governance
procedures for Secondary Default
Management Actions and certain other
matters, as discussed below. As revised,
Rule 20–605(l) specifies certain default
management actions to be taken in
consultation with the CDS Default
Committee and other default
management actions to be taken in
consultation with the Risk Committee.
The rule also requires that certain
default management actions be taken by
the ICC Board (and provides that such
decisions may not be delegated to an
officer).
Initial Default Auctions
As revised, Rule 20–605(d)(v)
provides for ICC to run one or more
default auctions with respect to the
remaining portfolio of the defaulting
Participant.
Default auctions are to be conducted
in accordance with a new defined set of
default auction procedures. Under those
procedures, ICC may break the portfolio
into one or more lots, each of which will
be auctioned separately. Participants
will have an obligation to bid for each
lot in a minimum amount determined
by ICC. (A Participant may transfer or
outsource its minimum bid requirement
to an affiliated Participant, and similarly
a Participant may aggregate its own
minimum bid requirement with that of
its affiliated Participant.) A minimum
bid requirement will not apply where
the bid would be in breach of applicable
law or the Rules (including Rules
relating to entry into self-referencing
credit default swaps) or where the
relevant lot includes sovereign credit
default swaps referencing the country in
which the Participant (or its ultimate
parent) is domiciled.
Non-Participants may bid indirectly
through a Participant. In addition, NonParticipants have the option to bid
directly in the auction, provided that (i)
a Participant has confirmed that it will
clear any resulting transactions of the
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Non-Participant; (ii) the Non-Participant
makes a minimum deposit of US$10
million which may be applied by ICC in
the same manner as Participants’
guaranty fund contributions (e.g.,
subject to ‘‘juniorization’’ as described
below); and (iii) the Non-Participant has
entered into an agreement with ICC
pursuant to which it agrees to the
auction terms and confidentiality
requirement in the same manner as they
apply to Participants. If an auction for
any lot or lots fails, as determined in
accordance with the default auction
procedures, ICC may determine to have
a subsequent default auction or auctions
under these auction procedures.
The auction for each lot will be
conducted as a modified Dutch auction,
with all winning bidders paying or
receiving the auction clearing price.
Under Rule 802(b)(i)(B), all available
default resources (both pre-funded
guaranty fund contributions of
Participant, assessment contributions of
Participant and ICC contributions to the
guaranty fund) may be used to pay the
cost of an initial default auction.
Guaranty fund and assessment
contributions of non-defaulting
Participants are subject to
‘‘juniorization’’ and will be applied
using a defined default auction priority
set out in the default auction procedures
based on the competitiveness of their
bids. A portion of each Participant’s
guaranty fund contributions is allocated
to the auction cost of each lot, and is
further divided into three tranches. The
lowest (and first-used) tranche consists
of contributions of Participants that
failed to bid in the required amount in
the relevant auction. The second, or
subordinate, tranche includes
contributions of Participants whose bids
were less competitive than a defined
threshold based on the auction clearing
price. The final, or senior, tranche
includes contributions of Participants
whose bids were more competitive than
a second threshold. (For Participants
who bid in the band between the two
thresholds, their contributions will be
allocated between the senior and
subordinate tranches based on a
formula.) Thus, contributions of
Participants who fail to bid will be used
before those who bid, and contributions
of those who bid uncompetitively will
be used before those who bid
competitively. A parallel juniorization
approach applies to the use of
assessment contributions. With this
design, ICC believes that the default
auction procedures give Participants a
strong incentive to bid competitively,
with the goal of reaching an efficient
auction clearing price that permits the
clearing house to close out the
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defaulter’s portfolio within the
resources of the clearing house.
Secondary Auction
If the initial default auctions are not
fully successful in closing out the
defaulting Participant’s portfolio, ICC
will proceed to use Secondary Default
Management Actions with respect to the
remaining portfolio. The first such step
would be to conduct a secondary
auction with respect to the defaulter’s
remaining portfolio under Rule 20–
605(f)(ii). (As discussed below, ICC may
in certain circumstances invoke reduced
gains distributions in connection with
such an auction.)
The secondary auction will be
conducted pursuant to a separate set of
secondary auction procedures. The
secondary auction will also use a
modified Dutch auction format, with all
winning bidders paying or receiving the
auction clearing price. ICC will
endeavor to auction off the remaining
portfolio in a single lot, although it may
break the portfolio into separate lots if
certain Participants are not able to bid
on particular contracts or it otherwise
determines that doing so would
facilitate the auction process. A
secondary auction for a lot will be
deemed successful if it results in a price
for the lot that is within ICC’s remaining
default resources, which will be
allocated to each lot for this purpose
based on the initial margin requirements
for the lot. The secondary auction
procedures contemplate that nonParticipants may bid directly in the
secondary auction (without need for a
minimum deposit, but provided that a
Participant has confirmed that it will
clear any resulting transactions of the
Non-Participant), or may bid through a
Participant.
Under Rule 802(b)(i)(B), in the case of
a secondary auction, ICC will apply all
remaining clearing house default
resources. Guaranty fund and
assessment contributions of nondefaulting Participants, to the extent
remaining, will be subject to
‘‘juniorization’’ in a secondary auction,
similar to that described above for
initial default auctions, in accordance
with the secondary auction priority set
forth in the secondary auction
procedures.
If a secondary auction is unsuccessful
for any lot, ICC may run another
secondary auction for that lot on a
subsequent business day. ICC may
repeat this process as necessary.
However, pursuant to Rule 808(e), if ICC
has invoked reduced gains distributions,
the last attempt at a secondary auction
(if needed) will occur on the last day of
the five-business-day reduced gain
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distribution period. On that last day, the
secondary auction for each lot will be
successful if it results in a price that is
within the default resources for such lot.
ICC may also determine, for a secondary
auction on that last day, that an auction
for a lot will be partially filled. With
respect to any lot that is not successfully
auctioned, in whole or in part, ICC will
proceed to partial tear-up under Rules
808(e) and 809, as described below.
Partial Tear-Up
If the secondary auction does not
result in the close out of all of the
defaulter’s remaining portfolio within
the clearing house’s remaining
resources, then ICC will proceed to a
partial tear-up of the remaining
positions under Rules 20–605(f)(iii) and
809. Under Rule 809(a), ICC will be
permitted to use partial tear-up only
after it has attempted one or more initial
default or secondary auctions. Pursuant
to revised Rule 20–605(l)(iv) and (v),
ICC must consult with the Risk
Committee before invoking partial tearup, and any decision to use partial tearup must be made by the ICC Board. Rule
809(b) specifies certain notice
requirements in connection with any
partial tear-up.
Pursuant to Rule 809(c), in a partial
tear-up, ICC will terminate positions of
non-defaulting Participants that exactly
offset those in the defaulting
Participant’s remaining portfolio (i.e.,
positions in the identical contracts and
in the same aggregate notional amount)
(‘‘Tear-Up Positions’’). ICC will
terminate Tear-Up Positions across both
the house and customer origin accounts
of all non-defaulting Participants that
have such positions, on a pro rata basis.
Within the customer origin account of a
non-defaulting Participant, Tear-Up
Positions of customers will be
terminated on a pro rata basis. Where
ICC has entered into hedging
transactions relating to the defaulter’s
positions that will not themselves be
subject to tear-up, ICC may offer to
assign or transfer those transactions to
Participants with related Tear-Up
Positions.
ICC will determine a termination
price for all Tear-Up Positions, in
accordance with Rule 809(e) based on
the last established end-of-day mark-tomarket settlement price. Under Rules
809(b)(iv) and (d), tear-up will occur
contemporaneously with the
determination of such price (at 5 p.m.,
New York time). Because the
termination price will equal the current
mark-to-market value as determined
pursuant to the ICC end-of-day
settlement price process (and will be
satisfied by application of mark-to-
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market margin posted (or that would
have been posted but for reduced gain
distribution) under Rule 809(d)), no
additional amount will be owed by ICC
in connection with the tear-up.
Reduced Gains Distributions
As an additional Secondary Default
Management Action, where ICC has
exhausted its remaining available
default resources (including assessment
contributions), ICC may invoke reduced
gain distributions under Rules 20–
605(f)(i) and 808 for up to five
consecutive business days. Reduced
gain distribution will allow ICC to
reduce payment of variation, or mark-tomarket, gains that would otherwise be
owed to Participants, as it attempts a
secondary auction or conducts a partial
tear-up. Rule 808(b) specified certain
conditions to the commencement of
reduced gain distribution, including
that ICC has exhausted all other
available default resources and has
determined that reduced gain
distribution is appropriate in
connection with a secondary auction or
partial tear-up. Pursuant to revised Rule
20–605(l)(iv) and (v), ICC must consult
with the Risk Committee before using
reduced gain distribution, and any
decision to use reduced gain
distribution must be made by the ICC
Board. Rule 808(c) specifies certain
notice requirements in connection with
reduced gain distributions.4
Pursuant to Rule 808(d), at the end of
each day in the five business day
period, ICC must determine whether it
expects that there will be favorable
conditions for completing a successful
secondary auction. If so, ICC may
continue the reduced gain distribution
for that day.
Under Rule 808(e), if ICC conducts a
successful secondary auction on any
day, any reduced gain distribution
period that is in effect will end. If ICC
has been unable to conduct a successful
secondary auction by the end of the five
business day reduced gain distribution
period, ICC will proceed to conduct a
partial tear-up under Rule 809 as of the
close of business on such fifth business
day.
Pursuant to Rule 808(f) and (h), if
reduced gain distribution applies on any
day, the net amount owed on such day
to each Participant that is deemed to be
a ‘‘cash gainer’’ in respect of its house
or customer origin account (i.e., a
Participant that would otherwise be
entitled to receive mark-to-market
margin or other payments in respect of
4 An error in the description of rule 808(c) was
corrected by SEC staff and confirmed by ICC
counsel via email on November 15, 2016.
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such account) will be subject to a
percentage haircut. Haircuts are
determined independently on each day
of reduced gain distribution. Haircuts
are applied separately for the house and
customer origin accounts. Under Rule
808(p), within the customer origin
account, haircuts are applied on a gross
basis across the different customer
portfolios, such that each customer
portfolio receives the same haircut
percentage. For each day of reduced
gain distribution, ICC will notify
Participants and the market more
generally of the amount of the
reduction, through a circular made
available in the ordinary course on its
Web site and through electronic
distribution, promptly following the
close of business on such day and
completion of the relevant calculations
as of the close of business (which is
expected to be at approximately 7:30
p.m. New York time), in accordance
with Rule 808(c).
Following the conclusion of the
closing-out process for a default, ICC
will apply any recoveries from the
defaulting Participant to make payments
to non-defaulting Participants in an
amount equal to the aggregate net
amount of haircuts made during the
period of reduced gain distributions,
pursuant to Rule 808(m).
Removal of Forced Allocation as a
Default Management Tool
Existing Rule 20–605(c)(vii), which
allowed ICC to make a forced allocation
of positions in the defaulter’s portfolio,
has been removed in light of the new
default management tools described
above.
Governance for Use [sic] Default
Management Tools
The proposed amendments add new
governance requirements around the
ICC’s use of the revised default
management tools.
Under new Rule 20–605(l)(iii), ICC
will consult with its CDS Default
Committee with respect to establishing
the terms for default auctions and
secondary auctions, including defining
different lots for default auctions. In the
context of an initial auction, ICC will
also consult with the CDS Default
Committee as to whether to hold
additional such auctions and/or to
accept a partial fill of any lot in such an
auction. Under existing Rule 20–617,
CDS Default Committee members
consist of experienced trading personnel
at Participants that serve on the CDS
Default Committee on a rotating basis
and who are seconded to ICC to assist
with default management. Under
revised Rule 20–617(g), and consistent
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with current practice, seconded
committee members are required to act
in the best interests of ICE Clear Credit
(rather than in the interests of their
Participant firm). Members of the CDS
Default Committee are expected to work
together with, and under the
supervision of, the ICC risk department,
and are also supported by legal,
compliance and other relevant ICC
personnel. Ultimate decisions as to
matters subject to consultation with the
CDS Default Committee will be made by
ICC management.
Under new Rule 20–605(l)(iv), ICC
will consult with its Risk Committee, to
the extent practicable, with respect to
key decisions involving Secondary
Default Management Actions, including
whether to hold a secondary auction,
invoke reduced gains distribution,
implement a partial tear-up and/or
terminate the clearing service. The
amendments also establish notice and
similar procedures for Risk Committee
consultation in this context, and address
circumstances in which such
consultation is impracticable (in which
case ICC may act without prior
consultation but must generally consult
as soon as is practicable). In particular,
under the ICC Code of Business Conduct
and Ethics for Committee Members,5 the
Risk Committee is charged with acting
in the interests of the clearing house,
rather than the interests of individual
members (or the Participants they may
represent). Consistent with its current
practice, the Risk Committee would be
provided with detailed, confidential
information concerning the proposed
actions to be taken. Under Chapter 5 of
the Rules and the Charter of the Risk
Committee,6 the committee is to have
the resources and authority appropriate
to discharge its function. Under the
Rules, the role of the Risk Committee is
advisory, and accordingly, the final
decision with respect to Secondary
Default Management Actions (like other
actions) will rest with the ICC Board as
discussed below. In practice, ICC
management and the ICC Board have
worked collaboratively with the Risk
Committee, and there is no history of
the ICC Board acting over the objection
of the Risk Committee. As discussed
below, Participants and their interests
are also significantly represented on the
ICC Board.
5 An error in the title of ICC Code of Business
Conduct and Ethics for Committee Members was
corrected by SEC staff and confirmed by ICC
counsel via email on November 9, 2016.
6 An error in the title of Rules and the Charter of
the Board of Managers of ICC was corrected by SEC
staff and confirmed by ICC counsel via email on
November 9, 2016.
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In addition, new Rule 20–605(l)(v)
provides that certain key decisions
involving Secondary Default
Management Actions must be made by
majority vote of the ICC Board (and may
not be delegated to an officer). These
include whether to hold a secondary
auction, invoke reduced gains
distribution, implement a partial tear-up
and/or terminate the clearing service.
Under the existing constitutive
documents of the clearing house,
including the Board charter and
Governance Playbook, a majority of the
ICC Board is required to be independent
of ICC management. In addition, under
the Board charter, four of the eleven
members of the Board are designated by
the Risk Committee (two of which are
independent of Participants and two of
which need not be so independent (and
thus may be representatives of
Participants)).
III. Clarifications of Guaranty Fund
Requirements and Uses
Various clarifications and conforming
changes have been made to the
provisions of Rules 801 and 802, which
address the contributions to and uses of
the guaranty fund. Provisions in Rules
803 and 804 have also been moved and
reorganized. These changes include the
following:
• The changes clarify the distinction
between the obligation of a Participant
to ‘‘replenish’’ its guaranty fund
contribution (Rule 803(a)) and its
obligation to make ‘‘assessment
contributions’’ (Rule 803(b)). These
clarifications do not change the
substance of existing requirements. For
this purpose, an ‘‘assessment’’ provides
additional resources beyond funded
resources to cover losses from a
particular default that has already
occurred. By contrast, a
‘‘replenishment’’ is designed to restore
the required level of the guaranty fund
following application thereof, and thus
replenishments are to be used to cover
future potential defaults.
• Rule 803(b) also permits
assessments to be called in anticipation
of any charge against the guaranty fund
following a default, rather than only
after such a charge.
• A parallel distinction has been
made with respect to ICC’s contribution
to the guaranty fund between required
replenishments and additional
contributions where assessments have
been levied on Participants (subject to a
similar 1x limit per default (which is
$25 million), and an aggregate 3x limit
for replenishments and assessments in a
cooling-off period (which is $75
million)). (Rule 801(b)).
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• ICC’s current ‘‘pro rata’’
contribution to the guaranty fund has
been moved higher in the priority
waterfall, such that it will be used prior
to the application of guaranty fund
contributions of non-defaulting
Participants. Similarly, additional ICC
contributions to the guaranty fund
where assessments have been levied on
Participants will be applied before such
assessments. (Rule 801(b))
• Rule 801(a) has been revised
generally to conform to the revised
assessment limitations set forth in the
other rules in Chapter 8.
• Rules 802(a) and (c), which address
the allocation of recoveries from a
defaulting Participant, have been
simplified and revised to conform to the
other changes in the default waterfall.
• Rule 802(c) has also been revised to
state ICC’s obligations with respect to
seeking recoveries from a defaulting
Participant. Specifically, ICC will
exercise the same degree of care in
enforcement and collection of any
claims against the defaulter as it
exercises with respect to its own assets
that are not subject to allocation to
Participants and others.
IV. Cooling-Off Period
New Rule 806 implements the
‘‘cooling-off period’’ concept. (Related
definitions, including for ‘‘cooling-off
period,’’ ‘‘cooling-off period trigger
event,’’ ‘‘cooling-off termination period’’
and ‘‘sequential guaranty fund
depletion,’’ have been included in Rule
102.) A ‘‘cooling-off period’’ is triggered
by certain calls for assessments or by
sequential guaranty fund depletion
within a 30 calendar day period.
Pursuant to Rule 806(b), liability of
Participants for assessments as a result
of the default or defaults that triggered
the cooling-off period or that occur
during the cooling-off period remains
capped at ‘‘1x’’ the required guaranty
fund contribution per default. In
addition, the total amount of
replenishments and assessment
contributions during the cooling-off
period cannot exceed three times the
required guaranty fund contribution,
regardless of the number of defaults
during the period. The foregoing caps
are based on a Participant’s individual
guaranty fund contribution immediately
prior to the default that triggered the
cooling-off period. Under Rule 806(e),
Participants may also be required to
provide additional initial margin during
the period, which will facilitate ICC’s
ability to continue to satisfy its
regulatory minimum financial resources
requirements.
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V. Participant Withdrawal
New procedures for the withdrawal of
Participants are added in revisions to
Rule 207 and new Rule 807. These
apply both to ordinary course
terminations outside of a default
scenario and termination during a
cooling-off period. Under Rule 807(a),
Participants may withdraw from ICC
during a cooling-off period by providing
an irrevocable notice of withdrawal in
the first 10 business days of the period
(subject to extension in certain cases if
the cooling-off period is extended).
Participants may withdraw from ICC at
other times by notice to ICC under Rule
207. In either case, Participants must
close out all outstanding positions by a
specified deadline, generally within 20
to 30 business days following notice of
withdrawal. Withdrawal is not effective,
pursuant to Rule 807, until the
Participant has closed out all
outstanding positions and satisfied any
related obligations, and a withdrawing
Participant remains liable under Rule
807(b) with respect to charges and
assessments resulting from defaults that
occur before such time. Under Rule
807(f), a Participant that seeks to
withdraw other than during the first 10
business days of a cooling-off period
may, at the direction of ICC, be required
to make a deposit of up to three times
its required guaranty fund contribution
(including any Specific WWR Guaranty
Fund Contribution). Such a deposit
would not impose new liabilities on the
Participant, but provide assurance that
the withdrawing Participant will
continue to meet its obligations in
respect of defaults and potential
defaults before its withdrawal is
effective. It thus reduces the potentially
destabilizing effect that Participant
withdrawal (or a series of Participant
withdrawals) could have on the clearing
house during a stressed situation. Rule
807(a) also specifies the timing for the
return of guaranty fund contributions to
a withdrawing Participant. Certain
related definitions (including
‘‘termination close-out deadline date’’
and ‘‘termination date’’) have been
added in Rule 102.
VI. Clearing Service Termination
New Rule 810 revises and replaces
current Rule 804, and addresses the
procedures for full clearing service
termination. As under current Rule 804,
full termination will occur following an
ICC default as provided in Rule 805, and
in circumstances where termination is
otherwise determined to be appropriate
by the ICC Board in consultation with
the Risk Committee. In the latter case,
pursuant to revised Rule 20–605(l)(iv)
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and (v), ICC must consult with the Risk
Committee before terminating the
clearing service, and any decision to do
so must be made by the ICC Board.
Rule 810(b) specifies more precisely
the time at which termination will
occur, which, in the case of an ICC
default, will be 5 p.m. New York time
on the second business day following
the default. In the case of other
termination scenarios, termination will
occur at the time specified by ICC in the
circular, which must be within one
business day of the issuance of the
circular. Rule 810(c) specifies notice
requirements for full termination. Rule
810(d) establishes a procedure for
determination of the termination price.
ICC will determine a termination price
for all positions (based on the last
established mark-to-market price, if
available, a final price submission
process, or certain other specified
objective sources). Rule 810(e) clarifies
the procedures for determining a net
amount owed to or by each Participant
(separately for its house and customer
accounts) in connection with the
termination. Rule 810(e) in particular
clarifies the treatment of mark-to-market
margin and reduced gain distributions
in the calculation of net amounts owed.
ICC will use all available default
resources and net payments owed by
Participants to make net payments owed
to Participants, and in the event of a
shortfall, available amounts will be
applied on a pro rata basis.
VII. Additional Changes
ICC has proposed certain additional
changes to the Rules that are generally
in the nature of drafting improvements,
clarifications and conforming changes.
In particular, ICC has revised Rule 102
to include, for clarity, additional crossreferences to various terms that are
defined in other parts of the Rules.
Similarly, updated definitions and
cross-references have been added in
new Rule 700 for Chapter 7 of the Rules,
in Rule 901 for Chapter 9 of the Rules,
in new Rule 2100 for Chapter 21 of the
Rules, in Rule 2200 for Chapter 22 of the
Rules,7 and in Rule 26E–102 for Chapter
26E of the Rules. Rule 102 has also been
revised to add new defined terms that
are used in the rule changes discussed
above, such as those relating to coolingoff period and the distinction between
initial phase default resources (generally
available for standard default
management actions) and final phase
7 An error in the citation was corrected by SEC
staff and confirmed by ICC counsel via email on
November 9, 2016.
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default resources (generally available for
secondary default management actions).
Certain other conforming changes
have been made throughout the Rules to
reflect the new default management
tools and provisions discussed above,
including in Rules 207, 209 and 502. In
Rule 312, ICC has clarified its liability
for certain actions in connection with
the default management process, and
made certain other conforming changes.
In Rule 406(g), ICC has clarified its
liability for certain investments of
customer funds, consistent with
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’) requirements. In
Rule 601, ICC has clarified that its
emergency authority does not override
the limitations on Participant liability in
Chapter 8 of the Rules, or permit partial
tear-up of positions except as otherwise
provided in the Rules. Certain other
typographical and cross-reference
corrections have been made throughout
the Rules. Certain incorrect references
in the Rules to the title of ‘‘chief
executive officer’’ have been removed,
in light of the fact that the senior ICC
officer is titled ‘‘president.’’
(b) Statutory Basis
ICC believes that the proposed rule
changes are consistent with the
requirements of Section 17A of the Act 8
and the regulations thereunder
applicable to it, including the standards
under Rule 17Ad–22,9 and in particular
are consistent with the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions and derivative
agreements, contracts and transactions
cleared by ICC, the safeguarding of
securities and funds in the custody or
control of ICC or for which it is
responsible, and the protection of
investors and the public interest, within
the meaning of Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of
the Act.10 As discussed herein, the
proposed rule changes are principally
designed to address the risks posed to
ICC by a significant default by one or
more Participants, as well as certain
other loss events. Although ICC has
established the level of its required
financial resources in order to cover
defaults in extreme but plausible market
conditions, consistent with regulatory
requirements, ICC nonetheless faces the
risk of a loss scenario (however
implausible) that exceeds such
conditions (as a result of which its
financial resources may not be sufficient
to cover the loss in full). The proposed
rule changes are intended to enhance
the ability of ICC to manage the risk of
8 15
U.S.C. 78q–1.
CFR 240.17Ad–22.
10 15 U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
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such a default. ICC does not propose to
change its existing risk methodology or
margin framework, which are its initial
lines of defense against losses from
Participant default. However, as
discussed herein, the amendments
provide additional default tools and
procedures, including initial and
secondary auction procedures and
partial tear-up, that are designed to
permit ICC to restore a matched book
and limit its exposure to potential losses
from a Participant default in extreme
scenarios that may not be able to be
addressed by standard risk management
and default procedures. The enhanced
procedures for full termination also
serve as a means of addressing general
business risk, operational risk and other
risks that may otherwise threaten the
viability of the clearing house.
Moreover, the amendments clarify the
ability of Participants to withdraw from
the clearing house (and specify the
responsibilities and liabilities of the
clearing house and the Participant in
such situations.)
In the proposed rule changes, ICC has
sought to develop default management
tools that permit and incentivize
involvement of both Participants and
customers of Participants in a default
management scenario. For example, the
new default auction procedures are
designed to incentivize competitive
bidding through the possibility of
juniorization of guaranty fund and
assessment contributions. The auction
procedures further contemplate that
customers may participate directly in
default auctions at their election
(subject to making the required clearing
deposit), or alternatively may
participate through a Participant
(without the need for such a deposit).
ICE Clear Credit believes that such
participation will lead to more effective
and efficient auctions, and give
customers of Participants the
opportunity to protect against the
possibility of partial tear-up (to the
extent the consequences thereof are
adverse to them) and reduced gain
distribution through bidding
competitively in the auction.
The amendments also more clearly
allocate certain losses as among ICC,
Participants and their customers. The
amendments are designed to plan for a
remote and unprecedented, but
potentially extreme, type of loss event—
a loss from one or more Participant
defaults that exhausts funded resources
and requires additional recovery or
wind-down steps. Such losses will
necessarily and adversely affect some or
all Participants, customers or other
stakeholders. In ICE Clear Credit’s view,
its current Rules, with the possibility of
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forced allocation, could force certain
risks of loss only on Participants, in a
way that is unpredictable and difficult
to quantify in advance, and that
Participants have strongly stated is
undesirable from their perspective. ICE
Clear Credit believes that the
amendments take a more balanced
approach that distributes potential
losses more broadly, to both Participants
and customers that would otherwise
have potential gains. Specifically, in the
event of a partial tear-up, all market
participants (both Participants and
customers) holding the relevant
positions would be affected on a pro
rata basis. Similarly, losses arising from
reduced gain distribution (which would
be invoked only following exhaustion of
all other resources) would be shared on
a pro rata basis by both Participants and
customers with gain positions. In the
event of a full termination, any shortfall
in resources would similarly be shared
on a pro rata basis across all Participants
and their customers. ICE Clear Credit
also believes that the amendments
provide greater certainty as to the
consequences of default and the
resources that would be available to
support clearing operations, to allow
stakeholders to evaluate more fully the
risks and benefits of clearing.
In light of extensive discussions with
Participants, customers and others, and
the views expressed by industry groups
and others, ICE Clear Credit believes
that the amendments provide an
appropriate and equitable method to
allocate the loss from an extreme default
scenario to both Participants and their
customers on the basis of their
positions. ICE Clear Credit further
believes that the approach taken will
facilitate the ability of the clearing
house to fully allocate the loss so that
it can continue clearing operations and
withstand and/or recover from extreme
loss events. The amendments therefore
further the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of cleared
transactions. The amendments will also
support the stability of the clearing
system, as part of the broader financial
system, and will promote the protection
of market participants from the risk of
default by another market participant
and the public interest more generally.
In light of the importance of clearing
houses to the financial markets they
serve, the policy in favor of clearing of
financial transactions as set out in the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, and the
potential adverse consequences of a
clearing house failure for the financial
markets, the amendments support the
public interest.
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83911
In addition to the Act, the
amendments are designed to satisfy the
requirements of CFTC Rules 39.35 and
39.39 applicable to ICC as a derivatives
clearing organization designated as
systemically important under Title VIII
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act, and to be
consistent with relevant international
standards, including the Principles of
Financial Market Infrastructure
developed by CPMI–IOSCO.
The amendments will also satisfy the
specific relevant requirements of Rule
17Ad–22,11 as set forth in the following
discussion:
Financial Resources. ICC’s funded
margin and guaranty fund resources are
currently designed to be sufficient to
meet ICC’s financial obligations to
clearing members notwithstanding a
default by the two clearing members
creating the largest combined loss, in
extreme but plausible market
conditions, consistent with regulatory
requirements. ICC does not propose to
reduce such funded resources. The
amendments are intended to enhance
and provide greater certainty as to the
additional resources, beyond the funded
margin and guaranty fund resources,
that will be available to support clearing
operations in more extreme Participant
default scenarios. ICC also proposes to
maintain the current level of its own
contributions to default resources, but to
move those resources higher in the
default waterfall (so that they are used
prior to the guaranty fund contributions
of non-defaulting Participants) and thus
provide additional protection for the
contributions of non-defaulting
Participants.
As set forth above, the amendments
would maintain the existing ‘‘1x’’
limitation on assessments per default,
and impose a new limitation on
guaranty fund replenishments and
assessments during a cooling-off period
resulting from guaranty fund depletion.
The amendments will require that
Participants continue to replenish and
meet assessment obligations during the
cooling-off period, subject to a 3x limit.
In addition, in the event the 3x limit is
reached, the amended rules allow ICC to
call on Participants for additional initial
margin in order to ensure that it
maintains sufficient resources to comply
with applicable minimum regulatory
financial resources requirements. In
ICC’s view, these changes provide an
appropriate balance between several
competing interests of the clearing
house and Participants. Although the
amendments may in theory limit the
maximum resources available to the
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clearing house (as compared to the
absence of a cap), the changes will
provide greater certainty for Participants
as to their maximum liability with
respect to the guaranty fund in the event
of defaults (and thus their maximum
amount of mutualized risk), in order to
facilitate their own risk management,
regulatory and capital considerations.
This greater certainty is in turn intended
to help stabilize the clearing house
during a period of significant stress,
including where there are multiple
defaults. In particular, a cooling-off
period and limit on assessments may
reduce the risk of cascading defaults,
where the financial demands placed on
non-defaulting Participants for repeated
assessments or replenishments could
cause such Participants to themselves
experience financial stress or even
default, which could make the default
management process more difficult. The
cooling-off period thus reduces the
potential procyclical effect of requiring
additional mutualized guaranty fund
contributions in times of stress. The
period is designed to give the clearing
house time to work out the default
without exacerbating these stresses,
while also allowing the clearing house
and Participants time to assess whether
the defaults will be able to be resolved
and normal clearing will be able to
resume.
In addition, the amendments will
ensure that ICC maintains sufficient
resources to continue operations in
compliance with minimum regulatory
financial resources requirements, either
through replenishment of the guaranty
fund in the normal course, or in an
extreme situation where the 3x cap is
reached, by providing ICC the ability to
call for additional initial margin. ICC
recognizes that the ability to call for
such additional initial margin,
particularly in times of stress, may have
a potential procyclical impact and
potential liquidity impact on
Participants and their customers that is
greater than guaranty fund
replenishment, because initial margin is
not subject to mutualization. As a result,
the amount of additional initial margin
required may exceed the amount of
guaranty fund replenishment that would
be required in the absence of the 3X cap.
At the same time, ICC believes that
these risks are limited to a particular
remote loss scenario, and are mitigated
by certain factors. ICC expects to limit
the additional margin to the amount
necessary to maintain minimum
regulatory financial resources
compliance, which may be less than the
amount ICC would otherwise require
under its guaranty fund methodology.
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ICC also expects that over the course of
a cooling-off period, aggregate potential
stress losses, and thus the need for
additional financial resources, will
generally decrease. In particular,
Participants (and their customers) have
the opportunity during the cooling-off
period to reduce or rebalance the risk in
their own portfolios, and thus mitigate
potential stress loss and exposure to
initial margin increases. Participants
and their customers can also participate
in default management (through
participation in auctions), which will
help them reduce their own risk profile.
Greater involvement in default
management may enhance competitive
bidding, which in turn may reduce the
likelihood that the 3X cap will be
reached. In addition, and most
importantly, additional initial margin
posted by Participants is not subject to
mutualization and cannot be used to
cover defaults of other Participants. As
a result, while Participants may be
required to post more funds as
additional initial margin than in a
replenishment of a mutualized guaranty
fund, the risk of loss to Participants of
those additional margin funds is
substantially less than for guaranty fund
replenishment. Based on discussions
with its Participants, ICC understands
that for these reasons Participants prefer
the use of additional initial margin in
this remote, but potentially highly
stressed scenario, notwithstanding the
potentially higher procyclical or
liquidity effect.
The clearing house has set the length
of the cooling-off period at a duration of
30 calendar days, which is intended to
be long enough to provide the clearing
house and Participants with a measure
of stability and predictability as to the
use of guaranty fund resources and
avoid incentivizing Participants to
withdraw from the clearing house
following a default. This period is
consistent with the timeframe for the
normal, periodic recalculation of ICC’s
guaranty fund under Rule 801 (which is
done on a monthly basis), a period that
ICC has found appropriately balances
stable guaranty fund requirements with
the ability to make changes as
necessary. ICC also believes, based on
its analysis of the OTC derivatives
markets and historical default scenarios
involving a large OTC market
participant, that 30 days has historically
been an adequate period for the market
to stabilize following a significant
default event. (This was, for example,
observed in the interest rate swap
market following the Lehman
insolvency.) ICC similarly believes that
in the context of a cooling-off period, 30
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calendar days is an appropriate time
horizon to seek to stabilize the clearing
house, in light of the products cleared
by ICC, and reduce stress on nondefaulting Participants (and their
customers) as the clearing house
conducts its default management. It
provides a minimum period for
Participants (and their customers) to
reduce or rebalance their positions in an
orderly manner to facilitate continued
clearing operations once the cooling-off
period ends. The 30-day cooling-off
period will thus help provide stability
for the market and predictability for
Participants and their customers as they
seek to manage their own risks. In ICC’s
view, this may increase the willingness
and ability of Participants and their
customers to participate in a default
auction and absorb the defaulter’s
positions through the default
management process.
A shorter cooling-off period, in ICC’s
view, may result in greater potential
assessment and replenishment liability
for Participants, which in turn may
increase the risk of a default (or series
of defaults) caused by an inability of
Participants to meet such liabilities on
a timely basis. A shorter period may
also give non-defaulting Participants an
incentive to withdraw quickly from the
clearing house following a default. That
may destabilize the clearing house,
make it more difficult to resolve the
default and achieve recovery following
default, and reduce confidence in the
ability of the clearing house to resume
non-distressed clearing operations going
forward. A longer cooling-off period
may thus help stabilize the clearing
system during the default management
process. On the other hand, a longer
cooling-off period may make it more
likely that the 3X cap will be reached,
which could in turn increase the stress
on clearing house resources and make it
more likely that ICC would need to call
additional margin from Participants in
order to meet ICC’s regulatory financial
resources requirements, which can itself
adversely affect Participants. In ICC’s
view, the 30-day cooling-off period and
assessment limits balance the interests
of both the clearing house and
Participants and in the aggregate
enhances the likelihood that the
clearing house can withstand a default.
In ICC’s view, the amendments are
thus consistent with the financial
resources requirements of Rule 17Ad–
22(b)(2)–(3).12
Settlement Process and Reduced Gain
Distribution. The amendments
contemplate that as a Secondary Default
Management Action, in extreme cases,
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ICC may implement reduced gains
distributions for up to five business
days where it has exhausted all other
financial resources (including
assessment contributions). In such case,
ICC will continue to collect mark-tomarket margin owed to it from all nondefaulting Participants, but will reduce
outbound payments of mark-to-market
margin owed to Participants to reflect
available resources. ICC will calculate
the haircut amount on a daily basis for
each day of reduced gain distribution,
without consideration of reductions on
prior days. As a result, settlement on
any day of reduced gain distributions
will be final, as ICC does not have any
ability to reverse or unwind the
settlement. As a result, in ICC’s view,
the amendments are consistent with the
requirements of requirements of Rule
17Ad–22(d)(5), (12) and (15) 13 as to the
finality and accuracy of its daily
settlement process.
Default Procedures. The amendments
clarify and augment the Rules and
procedures relating to default
management, with the goal of enhancing
the ability of the clearing house to
withstand extreme default events. The
amendments more clearly distinguish
between standard default management
events, largely covered by its existing
default rules and procedures, and more
extreme default management scenarios,
for which recovery tools may be
appropriate. The amendments include a
new set of initial auction procedures,
designed to facilitate liquidation of the
defaulter’s portfolio through a multi-lot
modified Dutch auction. The auction
procedures require participation of all
Participants (unless outsourced to
another Participant in accordance with
the Rules), and permit direct
participation in the auction by
customers as well as Participants. The
procedures also provide incentives for
competitive bidding through
juniorization of guaranty fund and
assessment contributions, as discussed
above. The amendments further include
a set of secondary auction procedures,
intended to provide for an effective final
auction of the entire remaining
portfolio, prior to the exercise of
recovery tools such as tear-up.
Following extensive consultation with
Participants, ICE Clear Credit is
proposing to remove the existing tool of
forced allocation, which may result in
unpredictable and unquantifiable
liability for Participants. Instead, ICE
Clear Credit will have the option to
invoke a partial tear-up of positions to
restore a matched book in the event that
it is unable to auction the defaulter’s
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remaining portfolio. Partial tear-up, if
used, will occur at the most recent
mark-to-market settlement price
determined by ICC, contemporaneously
with such determination. As a result,
partial tear-up will not result in
additional loss to Participants as
compared to the most recent mark to
market settlement (and if reduced gain
distribution is invoked, partial tear-up
will not entail additional loss beyond
that resulting from such reduced gain
distribution). ICE Clear Credit believes
that this revised set of tools will
maximize the clearing house’s ability to
efficiently, fairly and safely manage
extreme default events. The
amendments further provide for the
allocation of losses that exceed funded
resources, through assessments and
replenishments to the guaranty fund, as
described herein, and the use of reduced
gains distributions when necessary,
following the exhaustion of all other
resources. The amendments thus are
designed to permit ICC to fully allocate
losses arising from default by one or
more Participants, with the goal of
permitting the clearing house to resume
normal operations.
As a result, in ICE Clear Credit’s view,
the amendments will allow it to take
timely action to contain losses and
liquidity pressures and to continue
meeting its obligations in the event of
clearing member insolvencies or
defaults, in accordance with Rule
17Ad–22(d)(11).14
Operational Resources. ICC believes
that its operational systems and
capabilities are sufficient to support the
proposed rule changes and new default
management tools that would be
implemented under those amendments.
ICC contemplates testing of the use of
the new tools and procedures as part of
its regular default management
exercises, in order to identify and
manage any related operational risks.
ICC has developed various automated
systems relating to the default
management process, and has done
significant preparatory work to
incorporate the new recovery tools and
procedures in those systems. Once the
rule amendments are effective, ICC will
complete the incorporation of those
tools into its systems, and test such
systems as part of its regular system
testing process. The results of such
testing will be shared with appropriate
ICC risk and governance committees
and regulators, consistent with the
treatment of the results of other default
management testing. These
arrangements will address relevant
sources of operational risk in the default
14 17
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83913
management process and are designed
to minimize such risks, within the
meaning of Rule 17Ad–22(d)(4).15
Well-Founded Legal Framework. Rule
17Ad–22(d)(1) requires that a clearing
agency have rules and policies
reasonably designed to provide a wellfounded, transparent and enforceable
legal framework for each aspect of its
activities in all relevant jurisdictions.
ICC believes that the amendments will
provide a clearer and more transparent
set of default management procedures
for addressing extreme loss events, and
thus provide greater certainty to the
clearing house, Participants and other
market participants as to the various
tools available to the clearing house and
the potential liabilities of Participants
and others in such events. ICC further
believes that the amendments will
permit the clearing house to conduct an
orderly recovery or, if necessary, winddown process, in accordance with the
requirements of applicable regulations.
ICC has in addition considered and
obtained legal advice, as appropriate, as
to the enforceability of the amendments.
As a result, ICC believes the
amendments are consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad–22(d)(1).
Governance Arrangements. Rule
17Ad–22(d)(8) requires that a clearing
agency have governance arrangements
that are clear and transparent to fulfill
the public interest requirements in
Section 17A of the Act, to support the
objectives of owners and participants,
and to promote the effectiveness of the
clearing agency’s risk management
procedures. ICE Clear Credit believes
the amendments discussed herein
satisfy these requirements. The
amendments are designed to address
extreme loss scenarios resulting from
Participant default, and provide an
orderly means for recovery or winddown of clearing operations if
necessary. The amendments also clarify
the procedures for clearing service
termination, which is designed to
address other extreme loss scenarios
that may necessitate wind-down of
operations, to provide greater certainty
as to the circumstances under which
such termination may occur and the
timing and price of any such
termination, among other matters. The
amendments set out in detail the
responsibilities of ICE Clear Credit
management, the ICE Clear Credit
Board, the ICC Risk Committee
(consisting of representatives of
Participants) and the ICC CDS Default
Committee (consisting of trading
personnel seconded from Participants to
assist with default management) for key
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decisions relating to the use of recovery
and wind-down tools. As discussed
above, the revised Rules build on the
existing procedures (and historical
practice) for consultation with the Risk
Committee and CDS Default Committee,
and provide adequate resources for
those committees to perform their
functions. They also reflect the
collaborative relationship between the
Board and Risk Committee, and the
independence of the Board and the
significant participation of Participants
on the Board. In taking decisions
concerning these matters, the Rules, the
ICC mission statement, and the relevant
governance committee charters will
require the Board to take into
consideration both the interests of
Participants, customers and other
stakeholders and the broader goal of
providing safe and sound central
counterparty services to reduce systemic
risk in an efficient and compliant
manner, consistent with the
requirements of the Act and Rule 17Ad–
22(d)(8). These governance procedures
have been tailored to provide for
meaningful consultation with relevant
stakeholders while preserving the
ability of the clearing house to act
decisively in the exigent and likely
unpredictable circumstances of a major
Participant default or defaults or other
significant loss events.
As noted above, key decisions
involving the use of recovery or winddown tools (including the use of partial
tear-up, reduced gain distribution or full
clearing service termination) are subject
to additional governance requirements
that require consultation with the Risk
Committee and further require that
decisions must be made by the Board
(and cannot be delegated to an officer).
A majority of the members of the Board
are independent of ICE management and
the ICE parent. The interests of
Participants are clearly taken into
consideration, through both the
recommendations of the Risk Committee
and the participation of Participant
representatives on the Board itself. ICC
regularly also takes into account the
feedback of customers of Participants,
both through its buy-side advisory
committee and otherwise. Although ICC
does not provide for direct customer
participation in governance (unlike in
the case of Participants), ICC believes
that approach is appropriate in light of
the particular risks faced by Participants
(in light of their financial
responsibilities to the clearing house)
and the role Participants are required to
play in the default management process.
For the foregoing reasons, ICE Clear
Credit believes that the proposed rule
changes are consistent with the
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16:52 Nov 21, 2016
Jkt 241001
requirements of Section 17A of the
Act 16 and the regulations thereunder
applicable to it, including the standards
under Rule 17Ad–22.17
(B) Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
ICC does not believe the proposed
amendments would have any impact, or
impose any burden, on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance
of the purpose of the Act. The
amendments will apply uniformly to all
Participants (and customers of
Participants). ICC does not anticipate
that the amendments would affect the
day-to-day operation of the clearing
house under normal circumstances, or
even in typical default management
scenarios. ICC is not proposing to alter
the standards or requirements for
becoming or remaining a Participant, or
otherwise using the clearing services it
provides. ICC also does not propose to
change its methodology for calculation
of margin or guaranty fund
contributions. The amendments are
intended to address instead the risk of
extreme loss events, and provide the
clearing house additional tools and
resources to withstand and/or recover
from extreme loss events, so that it can
restore a matched book, fully allocate
any losses, and resume normal clearing
operations. The amendments are
consistent with requirements for
clearing organizations to implement
such procedures under applicable law
and regulation, and relevant
international standards. As a result, ICC
does not believe the amendments will
adversely affect the ability of
Participants or other market participants
to continue to clear CDS contracts. ICC
also does not believe the enhancements
will limit the availability of clearing in
CDS products for Participants or their
customers or otherwise limit market
participants’ choices for selecting
clearing services in CDS.
In the case of an extreme default
scenario, as discussed herein, the
proposed rules and default management
procedures may impose certain costs
and losses on Participants or their
customers, as well as ICC. ICC has
sought to appropriately balance the
allocation of such costs and losses, with
appropriate techniques (such as
competitive auctions) through which
Participants and customers can mitigate
the risks of such losses. The
amendments also remove the tool of
forced allocation, which potentially
forced Participants to face uncertain and
unquantifiable liability in certain
16 15
17 17
PO 00000
U.S.C. 78q–1.
CFR 240.17Ad–22.
Frm 00118
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
default scenarios. The amendments
contain features such as cooling-off
periods, that provide appropriate and
transparent limits on the potential
liability faced by Participants. As a
result, in ICC’s view, while the
proposed amendments may impose
certain costs and losses on market
participants, that allocation is
appropriate in light of the default
management goals of the clearing house,
the goals of promoting orderly clearing
house recovery, and the broader public
interest in the strengthening of the
clearing system to withstand significant
default events. As a result, ICC does not
believe that the proposed rule changes
impose any burden on competition that
is not appropriate in furtherance of the
purpose of the Act.
(C) Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants or Others
The proposed rule changes have been
discussed at length with Participants
(individually and as a group). The
changes have been developed over the
course of several years, and throughout
that time ICC has regularly consulted
with Participants on both the overall
design and the detailed drafting of the
amendments. Several aspects of the
amendments reflect specific requests of
Participants and concerns identified by
Participants, as discussed above,
including the removal of forced
allocation, introduction of a cooling-off
period and establishment of aggregate
limitations on assessments and
replenishments. The introduction of
partial tear-up and reduced gain
distributions as recovery tools have also
been discussed in detail with
Participants, and have been drafted to
take into account and suggestions issues
raised by Participants, including to
define the circumstances in which those
tools may be used and to limit the
adverse impact of such tools on netting,
regulatory capital and other matters.
Certain Participants have expressed
concern in particular with the potential
use of reduced gain distribution as a
recovery tool. While ICC believes
reduced gain distribution is an
important tool for ensuring its ability to
fully allocate losses, ICC has, in light of
such concerns, limited the use of
reduced gain distribution to scenarios in
which all other financial resources of
the clearing house have been exhausted.
ICC has also consulted with Participants
on the details of the initial and
secondary auction procedures, and has
taken into account comments and
suggestions concerning such matters as
minimum bid requirements, use of a
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 225 / Tuesday, November 22, 2016 / Notices
Dutch versus other auction
methodologies, degree and triggers for
juniorization and participation by
customers. Certain of the proposed
governance arrangements in the
amendments also reflect feedback from
Participants, including with respect to
the role of Risk Committee in major
decisions. Throughout the process, ICC
has regularly shared drafts of the
amendments with Participants, and
sought (and received) comment from
Participants and Participants’ internal
and external counsel on such drafts,
which ICC has taken into consideration
in the drafting of the amendments.
ICC has discussed the amendments
individually with members of its buyside advisory committee, which consists
of customers of Participants. ICC also
considered the views of industry groups
representing customers of Participants,
both through discussions with members
of such groups and through the public
statements and positions of such groups.
Certain buy-side customers have
expressed concern with aspects of the
amendments, particularly the
application of partial tear-up and
reduced gain distributions to customer
positions. As discussed above, ICC
believes the use of these recovery tools,
for customer as well as proprietary
positions of Participants, reflects an
appropriate balancing of the legitimate
interests of the clearing house,
Participants and customers in extreme
default scenarios. ICC also believes that
the risks of such recovery tools are
mitigated by the expanded opportunity
for customers to participate, either
directly or indirectly, in default
auctions, as noted above. Other buy-side
customers have expressed concern with
the potential use of reduced gain
distribution before the exhaustion of all
other potential clearing house resources.
As discussed above, in light of such
concerns, ICC has limited the use of
reduced gain distribution to scenarios
where all other financial resources of
the clearing house have been exhausted.
Certain customers have also suggested
that the clearing house increase the
amount of its own contribution to the
guaranty fund, and place such
contribution higher in the priority
waterfall of default resources. As
discussed above, ICC has increased the
priority of its contributions in the
waterfall, to a position prior to the
guaranty fund contributions of nondefaulting Participants (although ICC
has not proposed to change the
aggregate amount of its contribution).
ICC will notify the Commission of any
written comments on the proposed rule
changes received by ICC.
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period
up to 90 days (i) as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or (ii) as to which
the self-regulatory organization
consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove
the proposed rule change or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
ICC–2016–013 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to
Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–ICC–2016–013. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. [sic] Copies of
such filings will also be available for
PO 00000
Frm 00119
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
83915
inspection and copying at the principal
office of ICE Clear Credit and on ICE
Clear Credit’s Web site at https://
www.theice.com/clear-credit/regulation.
All comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–ICC–2016–013 and should
be submitted on or before December 13,
2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.18
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–28032 Filed 11–21–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
Upon Written Request, Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–2736
Extension:
Rule 15c3–5, SEC File No. 270–601, OMB
Control No. 3235–0673
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) (‘‘PRA’’), the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) a request for approval of
extension of the previously approved
collection of information provided for in
Rule 15c3–5 (17 CFR 240.15c3–5) under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78a et seq.) (‘‘Exchange Act’’).
Rule 15c3–5 under the Exchange Act
requires brokers or dealers with access
to trading directly on an exchange or
alternative trading system (‘‘ATS’’),
including those providing sponsored or
direct market access to customers or
other persons, to implement risk
management controls and supervisory
procedures reasonably designed to
manage the financial, regulatory, and
other risks of this business activity.
The rule requires brokers or dealers to
establish, document, and maintain
certain risk management controls and
supervisory procedures as well as
regularly review such controls and
procedures, and document the review,
and remediate issues discovered to
18 17
E:\FR\FM\22NON1.SGM
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
22NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 225 (Tuesday, November 22, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 83906-83915]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-28032]
[[Page 83906]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-79324; File No. SR-ICC-2016-013]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE Clear Credit LLC; Notice of
Filing of Proposed Rule Change to Amend the ICE Clear Credit Clearing
Rules
November 16, 2016.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder \2\ notice is hereby given that
on November 4, 2016, ICE Clear Credit LLC (``ICC'') filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and III below, which Items have
been prepared primarily by ICC. The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the proposed rule change from interested
persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Terms of Substance
of the Proposed Rule Change
The principal purpose of the proposed rule change is to revise the
ICC Rulebook (the ``Rules'') to amend the ICC Clearing Rules (``ICC
Rules'') relating to default management, clearing house recovery and
wind-down, and to adopt certain related default auction procedures.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
tatutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, ICC included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule change and
discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule change. The
text of these statements may be examined at the places specified in
Item IV below. ICC has prepared summaries, set forth in sections (A),
(B), and (C) below, of the most significant aspects of these
statements.
(A) Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule Change
(a) Purpose
ICC submits proposed amendments to the ICC Rules relating to
clearing house default management, recovery and wind-down to address
the risk of uncovered losses from a clearing participant
(``Participant'') default or series of Participant defaults, among
other risks. ICC also proposed to adopt two related sets of new default
auction procedures: initial default auction procedures and secondary
default auction procedures.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Although the auction procedures will not be published, ICC
will make such procedures available to all Participants, subject to
existing confidentiality arrangements between ICC and Participants
and the confidentiality provisions set forth in the auction
procedures. ICC will also make such procedures available to
customers of Participants at the request of such customers (and/or
permit Participants to do so), subject to confidentiality
arrangements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Summary of Proposed Amendments
The amendments would, among other matters:
(i) Enhance existing tools and establish new tools and procedures
(and an order of priority for using such tools and procedures) to
manage a Participant default or series of defaults and return to a
matched book, specifically:
(A) Initial default auctions, to be conducted in accordance with a
defined set of default auction procedures;
(B) if such initial default auctions are not fully successful,
conducting a secondary auction of all remaining positions, to be
conducted in accordance with a defined set of secondary auction
procedures; and
(C) if a secondary auction is unsuccessful, partial tear-up of
positions of non-defaulting Participants corresponding to the
defaulter's remaining portfolio; (Rules 20-605(d)-(f), 809)
(ii) in connection with the new default management steps described
in (i) above, eliminate forced allocation as a default management tool;
(Rule 20-605(c))
(iii) in connection with these default management steps, provide
the ability to implement reduced gains distributions (a.k.a., variation
margin haircutting) following exhaustion of other financial resources
for up to five business days; (Rule 808)
(iv) adopt new governance and consultation requirements for the use
of these default tools and procedures; (Rule 20-605(l))
(v) clarify in the Rules the distinction between the obligation of
a Participant to ``replenish'' its guaranty fund contribution and its
obligation to meet additional ``assessments'' that may be levied in
respect of a Participant default. Consistent with the existing Rules, a
Participant's liability for assessment contributions will remain capped
at ``1x'' its guaranty fund contribution in respect of any single
default; (Rule 803)
(vi) establish a ``cooling-off period'' triggered by certain
Participant defaults that result in guaranty fund depletion, in which
case the aggregate liability of Participants for replenishments of the
guaranty fund and assessments would be capped at ``3x'' its guaranty
fund contribution for all defaults during that period; (Rule 806)
(vii) establish a new process under which a Participant may
withdraw from the clearing house, both in the ordinary course of
business and during a cooling-off period, and related procedures for
unwinding all positions of such a Participant and capping its
continuing liability to ICC; (Rule 807)
(viii) move ICC's current ``pro rata'' contribution to the guaranty
fund higher in the priority waterfall of default resources; and (Rule
802(b))
(ix) clarify the procedures for full clearing service termination,
where that is determined to be appropriate by ICC. (Rule 810)
The proposed amendments are described in more detail in the
following sections:
II. Revisions to Default Management Tools and Steps
Rule 20-605, which specifies ICC's remedies upon a Participant
default, has been substantially revised, both to implement the
additional recovery tools discussed herein and to improve overall
clarity. ICC's existing default remedies (as modified as discussed
herein), such as initial default auctions, are referred to in the
revised rule as ``Standard Default Management Actions''. The additional
default management tools being adopted, such as secondary auctions,
partial tear-up and reduced gain distributions, are referred to in the
revised rule as ``Secondary Default Management Actions''. As discussed
herein, additional governance and other requirements apply to Secondary
Default Management Actions.
Overall Structure of Revised Rule 20-605
Rule 20-605 has been restructured to reflect the distinction
between Standard Default Management Actions and Secondary Default
Management Actions referred to in the preceding paragraph, and to make
certain drafting improvements. In the revised rule:
Rules 20-605(a) and (b) set out the definition of Default
and ICC's ability to declare a Participant in Default, which are
substantially the same as in the current Rule.
Rule 20-605(c) specifies the Defaulting Participant's
resources that may be used to cover losses (and the order in which
those resources may be applied). In substance, it is consistent with
the current Rule.
[[Page 83907]]
Rule 20-605(d) and (e) provide for Standard Default
Management Actions, which are largely consistent with the current Rules
but include the improvements to initial default auctions discussed
below. Rule 20-605(e) also sets out the ability of ICC to defer the use
of Standard Default Management Actions (which is largely consistent
with the current Rules) or bypass the use of Standard Default
Management Actions and proceed to the use of Secondary Default
Management Actions.
Rule 20-605(f) provides for the Secondary Default
Management Actions, as discussed below.
Rule 20-605(l) has been revised to impose enhanced
governance procedures for Secondary Default Management Actions and
certain other matters, as discussed below. As revised, Rule 20-605(l)
specifies certain default management actions to be taken in
consultation with the CDS Default Committee and other default
management actions to be taken in consultation with the Risk Committee.
The rule also requires that certain default management actions be taken
by the ICC Board (and provides that such decisions may not be delegated
to an officer).
Initial Default Auctions
As revised, Rule 20-605(d)(v) provides for ICC to run one or more
default auctions with respect to the remaining portfolio of the
defaulting Participant.
Default auctions are to be conducted in accordance with a new
defined set of default auction procedures. Under those procedures, ICC
may break the portfolio into one or more lots, each of which will be
auctioned separately. Participants will have an obligation to bid for
each lot in a minimum amount determined by ICC. (A Participant may
transfer or outsource its minimum bid requirement to an affiliated
Participant, and similarly a Participant may aggregate its own minimum
bid requirement with that of its affiliated Participant.) A minimum bid
requirement will not apply where the bid would be in breach of
applicable law or the Rules (including Rules relating to entry into
self-referencing credit default swaps) or where the relevant lot
includes sovereign credit default swaps referencing the country in
which the Participant (or its ultimate parent) is domiciled.
Non-Participants may bid indirectly through a Participant. In
addition, Non-Participants have the option to bid directly in the
auction, provided that (i) a Participant has confirmed that it will
clear any resulting transactions of the Non-Participant; (ii) the Non-
Participant makes a minimum deposit of US$10 million which may be
applied by ICC in the same manner as Participants' guaranty fund
contributions (e.g., subject to ``juniorization'' as described below);
and (iii) the Non-Participant has entered into an agreement with ICC
pursuant to which it agrees to the auction terms and confidentiality
requirement in the same manner as they apply to Participants. If an
auction for any lot or lots fails, as determined in accordance with the
default auction procedures, ICC may determine to have a subsequent
default auction or auctions under these auction procedures.
The auction for each lot will be conducted as a modified Dutch
auction, with all winning bidders paying or receiving the auction
clearing price.
Under Rule 802(b)(i)(B), all available default resources (both pre-
funded guaranty fund contributions of Participant, assessment
contributions of Participant and ICC contributions to the guaranty
fund) may be used to pay the cost of an initial default auction.
Guaranty fund and assessment contributions of non-defaulting
Participants are subject to ``juniorization'' and will be applied using
a defined default auction priority set out in the default auction
procedures based on the competitiveness of their bids. A portion of
each Participant's guaranty fund contributions is allocated to the
auction cost of each lot, and is further divided into three tranches.
The lowest (and first-used) tranche consists of contributions of
Participants that failed to bid in the required amount in the relevant
auction. The second, or subordinate, tranche includes contributions of
Participants whose bids were less competitive than a defined threshold
based on the auction clearing price. The final, or senior, tranche
includes contributions of Participants whose bids were more competitive
than a second threshold. (For Participants who bid in the band between
the two thresholds, their contributions will be allocated between the
senior and subordinate tranches based on a formula.) Thus,
contributions of Participants who fail to bid will be used before those
who bid, and contributions of those who bid uncompetitively will be
used before those who bid competitively. A parallel juniorization
approach applies to the use of assessment contributions. With this
design, ICC believes that the default auction procedures give
Participants a strong incentive to bid competitively, with the goal of
reaching an efficient auction clearing price that permits the clearing
house to close out the defaulter's portfolio within the resources of
the clearing house.
Secondary Auction
If the initial default auctions are not fully successful in closing
out the defaulting Participant's portfolio, ICC will proceed to use
Secondary Default Management Actions with respect to the remaining
portfolio. The first such step would be to conduct a secondary auction
with respect to the defaulter's remaining portfolio under Rule 20-
605(f)(ii). (As discussed below, ICC may in certain circumstances
invoke reduced gains distributions in connection with such an auction.)
The secondary auction will be conducted pursuant to a separate set
of secondary auction procedures. The secondary auction will also use a
modified Dutch auction format, with all winning bidders paying or
receiving the auction clearing price. ICC will endeavor to auction off
the remaining portfolio in a single lot, although it may break the
portfolio into separate lots if certain Participants are not able to
bid on particular contracts or it otherwise determines that doing so
would facilitate the auction process. A secondary auction for a lot
will be deemed successful if it results in a price for the lot that is
within ICC's remaining default resources, which will be allocated to
each lot for this purpose based on the initial margin requirements for
the lot. The secondary auction procedures contemplate that non-
Participants may bid directly in the secondary auction (without need
for a minimum deposit, but provided that a Participant has confirmed
that it will clear any resulting transactions of the Non-Participant),
or may bid through a Participant.
Under Rule 802(b)(i)(B), in the case of a secondary auction, ICC
will apply all remaining clearing house default resources. Guaranty
fund and assessment contributions of non-defaulting Participants, to
the extent remaining, will be subject to ``juniorization'' in a
secondary auction, similar to that described above for initial default
auctions, in accordance with the secondary auction priority set forth
in the secondary auction procedures.
If a secondary auction is unsuccessful for any lot, ICC may run
another secondary auction for that lot on a subsequent business day.
ICC may repeat this process as necessary. However, pursuant to Rule
808(e), if ICC has invoked reduced gains distributions, the last
attempt at a secondary auction (if needed) will occur on the last day
of the five-business-day reduced gain
[[Page 83908]]
distribution period. On that last day, the secondary auction for each
lot will be successful if it results in a price that is within the
default resources for such lot. ICC may also determine, for a secondary
auction on that last day, that an auction for a lot will be partially
filled. With respect to any lot that is not successfully auctioned, in
whole or in part, ICC will proceed to partial tear-up under Rules
808(e) and 809, as described below.
Partial Tear-Up
If the secondary auction does not result in the close out of all of
the defaulter's remaining portfolio within the clearing house's
remaining resources, then ICC will proceed to a partial tear-up of the
remaining positions under Rules 20-605(f)(iii) and 809. Under Rule
809(a), ICC will be permitted to use partial tear-up only after it has
attempted one or more initial default or secondary auctions. Pursuant
to revised Rule 20-605(l)(iv) and (v), ICC must consult with the Risk
Committee before invoking partial tear-up, and any decision to use
partial tear-up must be made by the ICC Board. Rule 809(b) specifies
certain notice requirements in connection with any partial tear-up.
Pursuant to Rule 809(c), in a partial tear-up, ICC will terminate
positions of non-defaulting Participants that exactly offset those in
the defaulting Participant's remaining portfolio (i.e., positions in
the identical contracts and in the same aggregate notional amount)
(``Tear-Up Positions''). ICC will terminate Tear-Up Positions across
both the house and customer origin accounts of all non-defaulting
Participants that have such positions, on a pro rata basis. Within the
customer origin account of a non-defaulting Participant, Tear-Up
Positions of customers will be terminated on a pro rata basis. Where
ICC has entered into hedging transactions relating to the defaulter's
positions that will not themselves be subject to tear-up, ICC may offer
to assign or transfer those transactions to Participants with related
Tear-Up Positions.
ICC will determine a termination price for all Tear-Up Positions,
in accordance with Rule 809(e) based on the last established end-of-day
mark-to-market settlement price. Under Rules 809(b)(iv) and (d), tear-
up will occur contemporaneously with the determination of such price
(at 5 p.m., New York time). Because the termination price will equal
the current mark-to-market value as determined pursuant to the ICC end-
of-day settlement price process (and will be satisfied by application
of mark-to-market margin posted (or that would have been posted but for
reduced gain distribution) under Rule 809(d)), no additional amount
will be owed by ICC in connection with the tear-up.
Reduced Gains Distributions
As an additional Secondary Default Management Action, where ICC has
exhausted its remaining available default resources (including
assessment contributions), ICC may invoke reduced gain distributions
under Rules 20-605(f)(i) and 808 for up to five consecutive business
days. Reduced gain distribution will allow ICC to reduce payment of
variation, or mark-to-market, gains that would otherwise be owed to
Participants, as it attempts a secondary auction or conducts a partial
tear-up. Rule 808(b) specified certain conditions to the commencement
of reduced gain distribution, including that ICC has exhausted all
other available default resources and has determined that reduced gain
distribution is appropriate in connection with a secondary auction or
partial tear-up. Pursuant to revised Rule 20-605(l)(iv) and (v), ICC
must consult with the Risk Committee before using reduced gain
distribution, and any decision to use reduced gain distribution must be
made by the ICC Board. Rule 808(c) specifies certain notice
requirements in connection with reduced gain distributions.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ An error in the description of rule 808(c) was corrected by
SEC staff and confirmed by ICC counsel via email on November 15,
2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to Rule 808(d), at the end of each day in the five
business day period, ICC must determine whether it expects that there
will be favorable conditions for completing a successful secondary
auction. If so, ICC may continue the reduced gain distribution for that
day.
Under Rule 808(e), if ICC conducts a successful secondary auction
on any day, any reduced gain distribution period that is in effect will
end. If ICC has been unable to conduct a successful secondary auction
by the end of the five business day reduced gain distribution period,
ICC will proceed to conduct a partial tear-up under Rule 809 as of the
close of business on such fifth business day.
Pursuant to Rule 808(f) and (h), if reduced gain distribution
applies on any day, the net amount owed on such day to each Participant
that is deemed to be a ``cash gainer'' in respect of its house or
customer origin account (i.e., a Participant that would otherwise be
entitled to receive mark-to-market margin or other payments in respect
of such account) will be subject to a percentage haircut. Haircuts are
determined independently on each day of reduced gain distribution.
Haircuts are applied separately for the house and customer origin
accounts. Under Rule 808(p), within the customer origin account,
haircuts are applied on a gross basis across the different customer
portfolios, such that each customer portfolio receives the same haircut
percentage. For each day of reduced gain distribution, ICC will notify
Participants and the market more generally of the amount of the
reduction, through a circular made available in the ordinary course on
its Web site and through electronic distribution, promptly following
the close of business on such day and completion of the relevant
calculations as of the close of business (which is expected to be at
approximately 7:30 p.m. New York time), in accordance with Rule 808(c).
Following the conclusion of the closing-out process for a default,
ICC will apply any recoveries from the defaulting Participant to make
payments to non-defaulting Participants in an amount equal to the
aggregate net amount of haircuts made during the period of reduced gain
distributions, pursuant to Rule 808(m).
Removal of Forced Allocation as a Default Management Tool
Existing Rule 20-605(c)(vii), which allowed ICC to make a forced
allocation of positions in the defaulter's portfolio, has been removed
in light of the new default management tools described above.
Governance for Use [sic] Default Management Tools
The proposed amendments add new governance requirements around the
ICC's use of the revised default management tools.
Under new Rule 20-605(l)(iii), ICC will consult with its CDS
Default Committee with respect to establishing the terms for default
auctions and secondary auctions, including defining different lots for
default auctions. In the context of an initial auction, ICC will also
consult with the CDS Default Committee as to whether to hold additional
such auctions and/or to accept a partial fill of any lot in such an
auction. Under existing Rule 20-617, CDS Default Committee members
consist of experienced trading personnel at Participants that serve on
the CDS Default Committee on a rotating basis and who are seconded to
ICC to assist with default management. Under revised Rule 20-617(g),
and consistent
[[Page 83909]]
with current practice, seconded committee members are required to act
in the best interests of ICE Clear Credit (rather than in the interests
of their Participant firm). Members of the CDS Default Committee are
expected to work together with, and under the supervision of, the ICC
risk department, and are also supported by legal, compliance and other
relevant ICC personnel. Ultimate decisions as to matters subject to
consultation with the CDS Default Committee will be made by ICC
management.
Under new Rule 20-605(l)(iv), ICC will consult with its Risk
Committee, to the extent practicable, with respect to key decisions
involving Secondary Default Management Actions, including whether to
hold a secondary auction, invoke reduced gains distribution, implement
a partial tear-up and/or terminate the clearing service. The amendments
also establish notice and similar procedures for Risk Committee
consultation in this context, and address circumstances in which such
consultation is impracticable (in which case ICC may act without prior
consultation but must generally consult as soon as is practicable). In
particular, under the ICC Code of Business Conduct and Ethics for
Committee Members,\5\ the Risk Committee is charged with acting in the
interests of the clearing house, rather than the interests of
individual members (or the Participants they may represent). Consistent
with its current practice, the Risk Committee would be provided with
detailed, confidential information concerning the proposed actions to
be taken. Under Chapter 5 of the Rules and the Charter of the Risk
Committee,\6\ the committee is to have the resources and authority
appropriate to discharge its function. Under the Rules, the role of the
Risk Committee is advisory, and accordingly, the final decision with
respect to Secondary Default Management Actions (like other actions)
will rest with the ICC Board as discussed below. In practice, ICC
management and the ICC Board have worked collaboratively with the Risk
Committee, and there is no history of the ICC Board acting over the
objection of the Risk Committee. As discussed below, Participants and
their interests are also significantly represented on the ICC Board.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ An error in the title of ICC Code of Business Conduct and
Ethics for Committee Members was corrected by SEC staff and
confirmed by ICC counsel via email on November 9, 2016.
\6\ An error in the title of Rules and the Charter of the Board
of Managers of ICC was corrected by SEC staff and confirmed by ICC
counsel via email on November 9, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, new Rule 20-605(l)(v) provides that certain key
decisions involving Secondary Default Management Actions must be made
by majority vote of the ICC Board (and may not be delegated to an
officer). These include whether to hold a secondary auction, invoke
reduced gains distribution, implement a partial tear-up and/or
terminate the clearing service. Under the existing constitutive
documents of the clearing house, including the Board charter and
Governance Playbook, a majority of the ICC Board is required to be
independent of ICC management. In addition, under the Board charter,
four of the eleven members of the Board are designated by the Risk
Committee (two of which are independent of Participants and two of
which need not be so independent (and thus may be representatives of
Participants)).
III. Clarifications of Guaranty Fund Requirements and Uses
Various clarifications and conforming changes have been made to the
provisions of Rules 801 and 802, which address the contributions to and
uses of the guaranty fund. Provisions in Rules 803 and 804 have also
been moved and reorganized. These changes include the following:
The changes clarify the distinction between the obligation
of a Participant to ``replenish'' its guaranty fund contribution (Rule
803(a)) and its obligation to make ``assessment contributions'' (Rule
803(b)). These clarifications do not change the substance of existing
requirements. For this purpose, an ``assessment'' provides additional
resources beyond funded resources to cover losses from a particular
default that has already occurred. By contrast, a ``replenishment'' is
designed to restore the required level of the guaranty fund following
application thereof, and thus replenishments are to be used to cover
future potential defaults.
Rule 803(b) also permits assessments to be called in
anticipation of any charge against the guaranty fund following a
default, rather than only after such a charge.
A parallel distinction has been made with respect to ICC's
contribution to the guaranty fund between required replenishments and
additional contributions where assessments have been levied on
Participants (subject to a similar 1x limit per default (which is $25
million), and an aggregate 3x limit for replenishments and assessments
in a cooling-off period (which is $75 million)). (Rule 801(b)).
ICC's current ``pro rata'' contribution to the guaranty
fund has been moved higher in the priority waterfall, such that it will
be used prior to the application of guaranty fund contributions of non-
defaulting Participants. Similarly, additional ICC contributions to the
guaranty fund where assessments have been levied on Participants will
be applied before such assessments. (Rule 801(b))
Rule 801(a) has been revised generally to conform to the
revised assessment limitations set forth in the other rules in Chapter
8.
Rules 802(a) and (c), which address the allocation of
recoveries from a defaulting Participant, have been simplified and
revised to conform to the other changes in the default waterfall.
Rule 802(c) has also been revised to state ICC's
obligations with respect to seeking recoveries from a defaulting
Participant. Specifically, ICC will exercise the same degree of care in
enforcement and collection of any claims against the defaulter as it
exercises with respect to its own assets that are not subject to
allocation to Participants and others.
IV. Cooling-Off Period
New Rule 806 implements the ``cooling-off period'' concept.
(Related definitions, including for ``cooling-off period,'' ``cooling-
off period trigger event,'' ``cooling-off termination period'' and
``sequential guaranty fund depletion,'' have been included in Rule
102.) A ``cooling-off period'' is triggered by certain calls for
assessments or by sequential guaranty fund depletion within a 30
calendar day period. Pursuant to Rule 806(b), liability of Participants
for assessments as a result of the default or defaults that triggered
the cooling-off period or that occur during the cooling-off period
remains capped at ``1x'' the required guaranty fund contribution per
default. In addition, the total amount of replenishments and assessment
contributions during the cooling-off period cannot exceed three times
the required guaranty fund contribution, regardless of the number of
defaults during the period. The foregoing caps are based on a
Participant's individual guaranty fund contribution immediately prior
to the default that triggered the cooling-off period. Under Rule
806(e), Participants may also be required to provide additional initial
margin during the period, which will facilitate ICC's ability to
continue to satisfy its regulatory minimum financial resources
requirements.
[[Page 83910]]
V. Participant Withdrawal
New procedures for the withdrawal of Participants are added in
revisions to Rule 207 and new Rule 807. These apply both to ordinary
course terminations outside of a default scenario and termination
during a cooling-off period. Under Rule 807(a), Participants may
withdraw from ICC during a cooling-off period by providing an
irrevocable notice of withdrawal in the first 10 business days of the
period (subject to extension in certain cases if the cooling-off period
is extended). Participants may withdraw from ICC at other times by
notice to ICC under Rule 207. In either case, Participants must close
out all outstanding positions by a specified deadline, generally within
20 to 30 business days following notice of withdrawal. Withdrawal is
not effective, pursuant to Rule 807, until the Participant has closed
out all outstanding positions and satisfied any related obligations,
and a withdrawing Participant remains liable under Rule 807(b) with
respect to charges and assessments resulting from defaults that occur
before such time. Under Rule 807(f), a Participant that seeks to
withdraw other than during the first 10 business days of a cooling-off
period may, at the direction of ICC, be required to make a deposit of
up to three times its required guaranty fund contribution (including
any Specific WWR Guaranty Fund Contribution). Such a deposit would not
impose new liabilities on the Participant, but provide assurance that
the withdrawing Participant will continue to meet its obligations in
respect of defaults and potential defaults before its withdrawal is
effective. It thus reduces the potentially destabilizing effect that
Participant withdrawal (or a series of Participant withdrawals) could
have on the clearing house during a stressed situation. Rule 807(a)
also specifies the timing for the return of guaranty fund contributions
to a withdrawing Participant. Certain related definitions (including
``termination close-out deadline date'' and ``termination date'') have
been added in Rule 102.
VI. Clearing Service Termination
New Rule 810 revises and replaces current Rule 804, and addresses
the procedures for full clearing service termination. As under current
Rule 804, full termination will occur following an ICC default as
provided in Rule 805, and in circumstances where termination is
otherwise determined to be appropriate by the ICC Board in consultation
with the Risk Committee. In the latter case, pursuant to revised Rule
20-605(l)(iv) and (v), ICC must consult with the Risk Committee before
terminating the clearing service, and any decision to do so must be
made by the ICC Board.
Rule 810(b) specifies more precisely the time at which termination
will occur, which, in the case of an ICC default, will be 5 p.m. New
York time on the second business day following the default. In the case
of other termination scenarios, termination will occur at the time
specified by ICC in the circular, which must be within one business day
of the issuance of the circular. Rule 810(c) specifies notice
requirements for full termination. Rule 810(d) establishes a procedure
for determination of the termination price. ICC will determine a
termination price for all positions (based on the last established
mark-to-market price, if available, a final price submission process,
or certain other specified objective sources). Rule 810(e) clarifies
the procedures for determining a net amount owed to or by each
Participant (separately for its house and customer accounts) in
connection with the termination. Rule 810(e) in particular clarifies
the treatment of mark-to-market margin and reduced gain distributions
in the calculation of net amounts owed. ICC will use all available
default resources and net payments owed by Participants to make net
payments owed to Participants, and in the event of a shortfall,
available amounts will be applied on a pro rata basis.
VII. Additional Changes
ICC has proposed certain additional changes to the Rules that are
generally in the nature of drafting improvements, clarifications and
conforming changes. In particular, ICC has revised Rule 102 to include,
for clarity, additional cross-references to various terms that are
defined in other parts of the Rules. Similarly, updated definitions and
cross-references have been added in new Rule 700 for Chapter 7 of the
Rules, in Rule 901 for Chapter 9 of the Rules, in new Rule 2100 for
Chapter 21 of the Rules, in Rule 2200 for Chapter 22 of the Rules,\7\
and in Rule 26E-102 for Chapter 26E of the Rules. Rule 102 has also
been revised to add new defined terms that are used in the rule changes
discussed above, such as those relating to cooling-off period and the
distinction between initial phase default resources (generally
available for standard default management actions) and final phase
default resources (generally available for secondary default management
actions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ An error in the citation was corrected by SEC staff and
confirmed by ICC counsel via email on November 9, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certain other conforming changes have been made throughout the
Rules to reflect the new default management tools and provisions
discussed above, including in Rules 207, 209 and 502. In Rule 312, ICC
has clarified its liability for certain actions in connection with the
default management process, and made certain other conforming changes.
In Rule 406(g), ICC has clarified its liability for certain investments
of customer funds, consistent with Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(``CFTC'') requirements. In Rule 601, ICC has clarified that its
emergency authority does not override the limitations on Participant
liability in Chapter 8 of the Rules, or permit partial tear-up of
positions except as otherwise provided in the Rules. Certain other
typographical and cross-reference corrections have been made throughout
the Rules. Certain incorrect references in the Rules to the title of
``chief executive officer'' have been removed, in light of the fact
that the senior ICC officer is titled ``president.''
(b) Statutory Basis
ICC believes that the proposed rule changes are consistent with the
requirements of Section 17A of the Act \8\ and the regulations
thereunder applicable to it, including the standards under Rule 17Ad-
22,\9\ and in particular are consistent with the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities transactions and derivative
agreements, contracts and transactions cleared by ICC, the safeguarding
of securities and funds in the custody or control of ICC or for which
it is responsible, and the protection of investors and the public
interest, within the meaning of Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act.\10\ As
discussed herein, the proposed rule changes are principally designed to
address the risks posed to ICC by a significant default by one or more
Participants, as well as certain other loss events. Although ICC has
established the level of its required financial resources in order to
cover defaults in extreme but plausible market conditions, consistent
with regulatory requirements, ICC nonetheless faces the risk of a loss
scenario (however implausible) that exceeds such conditions (as a
result of which its financial resources may not be sufficient to cover
the loss in full). The proposed rule changes are intended to enhance
the ability of ICC to manage the risk of
[[Page 83911]]
such a default. ICC does not propose to change its existing risk
methodology or margin framework, which are its initial lines of defense
against losses from Participant default. However, as discussed herein,
the amendments provide additional default tools and procedures,
including initial and secondary auction procedures and partial tear-up,
that are designed to permit ICC to restore a matched book and limit its
exposure to potential losses from a Participant default in extreme
scenarios that may not be able to be addressed by standard risk
management and default procedures. The enhanced procedures for full
termination also serve as a means of addressing general business risk,
operational risk and other risks that may otherwise threaten the
viability of the clearing house. Moreover, the amendments clarify the
ability of Participants to withdraw from the clearing house (and
specify the responsibilities and liabilities of the clearing house and
the Participant in such situations.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\9\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22.
\10\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule changes, ICC has sought to develop default
management tools that permit and incentivize involvement of both
Participants and customers of Participants in a default management
scenario. For example, the new default auction procedures are designed
to incentivize competitive bidding through the possibility of
juniorization of guaranty fund and assessment contributions. The
auction procedures further contemplate that customers may participate
directly in default auctions at their election (subject to making the
required clearing deposit), or alternatively may participate through a
Participant (without the need for such a deposit). ICE Clear Credit
believes that such participation will lead to more effective and
efficient auctions, and give customers of Participants the opportunity
to protect against the possibility of partial tear-up (to the extent
the consequences thereof are adverse to them) and reduced gain
distribution through bidding competitively in the auction.
The amendments also more clearly allocate certain losses as among
ICC, Participants and their customers. The amendments are designed to
plan for a remote and unprecedented, but potentially extreme, type of
loss event--a loss from one or more Participant defaults that exhausts
funded resources and requires additional recovery or wind-down steps.
Such losses will necessarily and adversely affect some or all
Participants, customers or other stakeholders. In ICE Clear Credit's
view, its current Rules, with the possibility of forced allocation,
could force certain risks of loss only on Participants, in a way that
is unpredictable and difficult to quantify in advance, and that
Participants have strongly stated is undesirable from their
perspective. ICE Clear Credit believes that the amendments take a more
balanced approach that distributes potential losses more broadly, to
both Participants and customers that would otherwise have potential
gains. Specifically, in the event of a partial tear-up, all market
participants (both Participants and customers) holding the relevant
positions would be affected on a pro rata basis. Similarly, losses
arising from reduced gain distribution (which would be invoked only
following exhaustion of all other resources) would be shared on a pro
rata basis by both Participants and customers with gain positions. In
the event of a full termination, any shortfall in resources would
similarly be shared on a pro rata basis across all Participants and
their customers. ICE Clear Credit also believes that the amendments
provide greater certainty as to the consequences of default and the
resources that would be available to support clearing operations, to
allow stakeholders to evaluate more fully the risks and benefits of
clearing.
In light of extensive discussions with Participants, customers and
others, and the views expressed by industry groups and others, ICE
Clear Credit believes that the amendments provide an appropriate and
equitable method to allocate the loss from an extreme default scenario
to both Participants and their customers on the basis of their
positions. ICE Clear Credit further believes that the approach taken
will facilitate the ability of the clearing house to fully allocate the
loss so that it can continue clearing operations and withstand and/or
recover from extreme loss events. The amendments therefore further the
prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of cleared transactions.
The amendments will also support the stability of the clearing system,
as part of the broader financial system, and will promote the
protection of market participants from the risk of default by another
market participant and the public interest more generally. In light of
the importance of clearing houses to the financial markets they serve,
the policy in favor of clearing of financial transactions as set out in
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, and the
potential adverse consequences of a clearing house failure for the
financial markets, the amendments support the public interest.
In addition to the Act, the amendments are designed to satisfy the
requirements of CFTC Rules 39.35 and 39.39 applicable to ICC as a
derivatives clearing organization designated as systemically important
under Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, and to be consistent with relevant international
standards, including the Principles of Financial Market Infrastructure
developed by CPMI-IOSCO.
The amendments will also satisfy the specific relevant requirements
of Rule 17Ad-22,\11\ as set forth in the following discussion:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Financial Resources. ICC's funded margin and guaranty fund
resources are currently designed to be sufficient to meet ICC's
financial obligations to clearing members notwithstanding a default by
the two clearing members creating the largest combined loss, in extreme
but plausible market conditions, consistent with regulatory
requirements. ICC does not propose to reduce such funded resources. The
amendments are intended to enhance and provide greater certainty as to
the additional resources, beyond the funded margin and guaranty fund
resources, that will be available to support clearing operations in
more extreme Participant default scenarios. ICC also proposes to
maintain the current level of its own contributions to default
resources, but to move those resources higher in the default waterfall
(so that they are used prior to the guaranty fund contributions of non-
defaulting Participants) and thus provide additional protection for the
contributions of non-defaulting Participants.
As set forth above, the amendments would maintain the existing
``1x'' limitation on assessments per default, and impose a new
limitation on guaranty fund replenishments and assessments during a
cooling-off period resulting from guaranty fund depletion. The
amendments will require that Participants continue to replenish and
meet assessment obligations during the cooling-off period, subject to a
3x limit. In addition, in the event the 3x limit is reached, the
amended rules allow ICC to call on Participants for additional initial
margin in order to ensure that it maintains sufficient resources to
comply with applicable minimum regulatory financial resources
requirements. In ICC's view, these changes provide an appropriate
balance between several competing interests of the clearing house and
Participants. Although the amendments may in theory limit the maximum
resources available to the
[[Page 83912]]
clearing house (as compared to the absence of a cap), the changes will
provide greater certainty for Participants as to their maximum
liability with respect to the guaranty fund in the event of defaults
(and thus their maximum amount of mutualized risk), in order to
facilitate their own risk management, regulatory and capital
considerations. This greater certainty is in turn intended to help
stabilize the clearing house during a period of significant stress,
including where there are multiple defaults. In particular, a cooling-
off period and limit on assessments may reduce the risk of cascading
defaults, where the financial demands placed on non-defaulting
Participants for repeated assessments or replenishments could cause
such Participants to themselves experience financial stress or even
default, which could make the default management process more
difficult. The cooling-off period thus reduces the potential
procyclical effect of requiring additional mutualized guaranty fund
contributions in times of stress. The period is designed to give the
clearing house time to work out the default without exacerbating these
stresses, while also allowing the clearing house and Participants time
to assess whether the defaults will be able to be resolved and normal
clearing will be able to resume.
In addition, the amendments will ensure that ICC maintains
sufficient resources to continue operations in compliance with minimum
regulatory financial resources requirements, either through
replenishment of the guaranty fund in the normal course, or in an
extreme situation where the 3x cap is reached, by providing ICC the
ability to call for additional initial margin. ICC recognizes that the
ability to call for such additional initial margin, particularly in
times of stress, may have a potential procyclical impact and potential
liquidity impact on Participants and their customers that is greater
than guaranty fund replenishment, because initial margin is not subject
to mutualization. As a result, the amount of additional initial margin
required may exceed the amount of guaranty fund replenishment that
would be required in the absence of the 3X cap. At the same time, ICC
believes that these risks are limited to a particular remote loss
scenario, and are mitigated by certain factors. ICC expects to limit
the additional margin to the amount necessary to maintain minimum
regulatory financial resources compliance, which may be less than the
amount ICC would otherwise require under its guaranty fund methodology.
ICC also expects that over the course of a cooling-off period,
aggregate potential stress losses, and thus the need for additional
financial resources, will generally decrease. In particular,
Participants (and their customers) have the opportunity during the
cooling-off period to reduce or rebalance the risk in their own
portfolios, and thus mitigate potential stress loss and exposure to
initial margin increases. Participants and their customers can also
participate in default management (through participation in auctions),
which will help them reduce their own risk profile. Greater involvement
in default management may enhance competitive bidding, which in turn
may reduce the likelihood that the 3X cap will be reached. In addition,
and most importantly, additional initial margin posted by Participants
is not subject to mutualization and cannot be used to cover defaults of
other Participants. As a result, while Participants may be required to
post more funds as additional initial margin than in a replenishment of
a mutualized guaranty fund, the risk of loss to Participants of those
additional margin funds is substantially less than for guaranty fund
replenishment. Based on discussions with its Participants, ICC
understands that for these reasons Participants prefer the use of
additional initial margin in this remote, but potentially highly
stressed scenario, notwithstanding the potentially higher procyclical
or liquidity effect.
The clearing house has set the length of the cooling-off period at
a duration of 30 calendar days, which is intended to be long enough to
provide the clearing house and Participants with a measure of stability
and predictability as to the use of guaranty fund resources and avoid
incentivizing Participants to withdraw from the clearing house
following a default. This period is consistent with the timeframe for
the normal, periodic recalculation of ICC's guaranty fund under Rule
801 (which is done on a monthly basis), a period that ICC has found
appropriately balances stable guaranty fund requirements with the
ability to make changes as necessary. ICC also believes, based on its
analysis of the OTC derivatives markets and historical default
scenarios involving a large OTC market participant, that 30 days has
historically been an adequate period for the market to stabilize
following a significant default event. (This was, for example, observed
in the interest rate swap market following the Lehman insolvency.) ICC
similarly believes that in the context of a cooling-off period, 30
calendar days is an appropriate time horizon to seek to stabilize the
clearing house, in light of the products cleared by ICC, and reduce
stress on non-defaulting Participants (and their customers) as the
clearing house conducts its default management. It provides a minimum
period for Participants (and their customers) to reduce or rebalance
their positions in an orderly manner to facilitate continued clearing
operations once the cooling-off period ends. The 30-day cooling-off
period will thus help provide stability for the market and
predictability for Participants and their customers as they seek to
manage their own risks. In ICC's view, this may increase the
willingness and ability of Participants and their customers to
participate in a default auction and absorb the defaulter's positions
through the default management process.
A shorter cooling-off period, in ICC's view, may result in greater
potential assessment and replenishment liability for Participants,
which in turn may increase the risk of a default (or series of
defaults) caused by an inability of Participants to meet such
liabilities on a timely basis. A shorter period may also give non-
defaulting Participants an incentive to withdraw quickly from the
clearing house following a default. That may destabilize the clearing
house, make it more difficult to resolve the default and achieve
recovery following default, and reduce confidence in the ability of the
clearing house to resume non-distressed clearing operations going
forward. A longer cooling-off period may thus help stabilize the
clearing system during the default management process. On the other
hand, a longer cooling-off period may make it more likely that the 3X
cap will be reached, which could in turn increase the stress on
clearing house resources and make it more likely that ICC would need to
call additional margin from Participants in order to meet ICC's
regulatory financial resources requirements, which can itself adversely
affect Participants. In ICC's view, the 30-day cooling-off period and
assessment limits balance the interests of both the clearing house and
Participants and in the aggregate enhances the likelihood that the
clearing house can withstand a default.
In ICC's view, the amendments are thus consistent with the
financial resources requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(b)(2)-(3).\12\
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\12\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(b)(2)-(3)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Settlement Process and Reduced Gain Distribution. The amendments
contemplate that as a Secondary Default Management Action, in extreme
cases,
[[Page 83913]]
ICC may implement reduced gains distributions for up to five business
days where it has exhausted all other financial resources (including
assessment contributions). In such case, ICC will continue to collect
mark-to-market margin owed to it from all non-defaulting Participants,
but will reduce outbound payments of mark-to-market margin owed to
Participants to reflect available resources. ICC will calculate the
haircut amount on a daily basis for each day of reduced gain
distribution, without consideration of reductions on prior days. As a
result, settlement on any day of reduced gain distributions will be
final, as ICC does not have any ability to reverse or unwind the
settlement. As a result, in ICC's view, the amendments are consistent
with the requirements of requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(d)(5), (12) and
(15) \13\ as to the finality and accuracy of its daily settlement
process.
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\13\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(d)(5), (12) and (15).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Default Procedures. The amendments clarify and augment the Rules
and procedures relating to default management, with the goal of
enhancing the ability of the clearing house to withstand extreme
default events. The amendments more clearly distinguish between
standard default management events, largely covered by its existing
default rules and procedures, and more extreme default management
scenarios, for which recovery tools may be appropriate. The amendments
include a new set of initial auction procedures, designed to facilitate
liquidation of the defaulter's portfolio through a multi-lot modified
Dutch auction. The auction procedures require participation of all
Participants (unless outsourced to another Participant in accordance
with the Rules), and permit direct participation in the auction by
customers as well as Participants. The procedures also provide
incentives for competitive bidding through juniorization of guaranty
fund and assessment contributions, as discussed above. The amendments
further include a set of secondary auction procedures, intended to
provide for an effective final auction of the entire remaining
portfolio, prior to the exercise of recovery tools such as tear-up.
Following extensive consultation with Participants, ICE Clear
Credit is proposing to remove the existing tool of forced allocation,
which may result in unpredictable and unquantifiable liability for
Participants. Instead, ICE Clear Credit will have the option to invoke
a partial tear-up of positions to restore a matched book in the event
that it is unable to auction the defaulter's remaining portfolio.
Partial tear-up, if used, will occur at the most recent mark-to-market
settlement price determined by ICC, contemporaneously with such
determination. As a result, partial tear-up will not result in
additional loss to Participants as compared to the most recent mark to
market settlement (and if reduced gain distribution is invoked, partial
tear-up will not entail additional loss beyond that resulting from such
reduced gain distribution). ICE Clear Credit believes that this revised
set of tools will maximize the clearing house's ability to efficiently,
fairly and safely manage extreme default events. The amendments further
provide for the allocation of losses that exceed funded resources,
through assessments and replenishments to the guaranty fund, as
described herein, and the use of reduced gains distributions when
necessary, following the exhaustion of all other resources. The
amendments thus are designed to permit ICC to fully allocate losses
arising from default by one or more Participants, with the goal of
permitting the clearing house to resume normal operations.
As a result, in ICE Clear Credit's view, the amendments will allow
it to take timely action to contain losses and liquidity pressures and
to continue meeting its obligations in the event of clearing member
insolvencies or defaults, in accordance with Rule 17Ad-22(d)(11).\14\
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\14\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(d)(11).
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Operational Resources. ICC believes that its operational systems
and capabilities are sufficient to support the proposed rule changes
and new default management tools that would be implemented under those
amendments. ICC contemplates testing of the use of the new tools and
procedures as part of its regular default management exercises, in
order to identify and manage any related operational risks. ICC has
developed various automated systems relating to the default management
process, and has done significant preparatory work to incorporate the
new recovery tools and procedures in those systems. Once the rule
amendments are effective, ICC will complete the incorporation of those
tools into its systems, and test such systems as part of its regular
system testing process. The results of such testing will be shared with
appropriate ICC risk and governance committees and regulators,
consistent with the treatment of the results of other default
management testing. These arrangements will address relevant sources of
operational risk in the default management process and are designed to
minimize such risks, within the meaning of Rule 17Ad-22(d)(4).\15\
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\15\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(d)(4).
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Well-Founded Legal Framework. Rule 17Ad-22(d)(1) requires that a
clearing agency have rules and policies reasonably designed to provide
a well-founded, transparent and enforceable legal framework for each
aspect of its activities in all relevant jurisdictions. ICC believes
that the amendments will provide a clearer and more transparent set of
default management procedures for addressing extreme loss events, and
thus provide greater certainty to the clearing house, Participants and
other market participants as to the various tools available to the
clearing house and the potential liabilities of Participants and others
in such events. ICC further believes that the amendments will permit
the clearing house to conduct an orderly recovery or, if necessary,
wind-down process, in accordance with the requirements of applicable
regulations. ICC has in addition considered and obtained legal advice,
as appropriate, as to the enforceability of the amendments. As a
result, ICC believes the amendments are consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(d)(1).
Governance Arrangements. Rule 17Ad-22(d)(8) requires that a
clearing agency have governance arrangements that are clear and
transparent to fulfill the public interest requirements in Section 17A
of the Act, to support the objectives of owners and participants, and
to promote the effectiveness of the clearing agency's risk management
procedures. ICE Clear Credit believes the amendments discussed herein
satisfy these requirements. The amendments are designed to address
extreme loss scenarios resulting from Participant default, and provide
an orderly means for recovery or wind-down of clearing operations if
necessary. The amendments also clarify the procedures for clearing
service termination, which is designed to address other extreme loss
scenarios that may necessitate wind-down of operations, to provide
greater certainty as to the circumstances under which such termination
may occur and the timing and price of any such termination, among other
matters. The amendments set out in detail the responsibilities of ICE
Clear Credit management, the ICE Clear Credit Board, the ICC Risk
Committee (consisting of representatives of Participants) and the ICC
CDS Default Committee (consisting of trading personnel seconded from
Participants to assist with default management) for key
[[Page 83914]]
decisions relating to the use of recovery and wind-down tools. As
discussed above, the revised Rules build on the existing procedures
(and historical practice) for consultation with the Risk Committee and
CDS Default Committee, and provide adequate resources for those
committees to perform their functions. They also reflect the
collaborative relationship between the Board and Risk Committee, and
the independence of the Board and the significant participation of
Participants on the Board. In taking decisions concerning these
matters, the Rules, the ICC mission statement, and the relevant
governance committee charters will require the Board to take into
consideration both the interests of Participants, customers and other
stakeholders and the broader goal of providing safe and sound central
counterparty services to reduce systemic risk in an efficient and
compliant manner, consistent with the requirements of the Act and Rule
17Ad-22(d)(8). These governance procedures have been tailored to
provide for meaningful consultation with relevant stakeholders while
preserving the ability of the clearing house to act decisively in the
exigent and likely unpredictable circumstances of a major Participant
default or defaults or other significant loss events.
As noted above, key decisions involving the use of recovery or
wind-down tools (including the use of partial tear-up, reduced gain
distribution or full clearing service termination) are subject to
additional governance requirements that require consultation with the
Risk Committee and further require that decisions must be made by the
Board (and cannot be delegated to an officer). A majority of the
members of the Board are independent of ICE management and the ICE
parent. The interests of Participants are clearly taken into
consideration, through both the recommendations of the Risk Committee
and the participation of Participant representatives on the Board
itself. ICC regularly also takes into account the feedback of customers
of Participants, both through its buy-side advisory committee and
otherwise. Although ICC does not provide for direct customer
participation in governance (unlike in the case of Participants), ICC
believes that approach is appropriate in light of the particular risks
faced by Participants (in light of their financial responsibilities to
the clearing house) and the role Participants are required to play in
the default management process.
For the foregoing reasons, ICE Clear Credit believes that the
proposed rule changes are consistent with the requirements of Section
17A of the Act \16\ and the regulations thereunder applicable to it,
including the standards under Rule 17Ad-22.\17\
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\16\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\17\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22.
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(B) Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Burden on Competition
ICC does not believe the proposed amendments would have any impact,
or impose any burden, on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the purpose of the Act. The amendments will apply
uniformly to all Participants (and customers of Participants). ICC does
not anticipate that the amendments would affect the day-to-day
operation of the clearing house under normal circumstances, or even in
typical default management scenarios. ICC is not proposing to alter the
standards or requirements for becoming or remaining a Participant, or
otherwise using the clearing services it provides. ICC also does not
propose to change its methodology for calculation of margin or guaranty
fund contributions. The amendments are intended to address instead the
risk of extreme loss events, and provide the clearing house additional
tools and resources to withstand and/or recover from extreme loss
events, so that it can restore a matched book, fully allocate any
losses, and resume normal clearing operations. The amendments are
consistent with requirements for clearing organizations to implement
such procedures under applicable law and regulation, and relevant
international standards. As a result, ICC does not believe the
amendments will adversely affect the ability of Participants or other
market participants to continue to clear CDS contracts. ICC also does
not believe the enhancements will limit the availability of clearing in
CDS products for Participants or their customers or otherwise limit
market participants' choices for selecting clearing services in CDS.
In the case of an extreme default scenario, as discussed herein,
the proposed rules and default management procedures may impose certain
costs and losses on Participants or their customers, as well as ICC.
ICC has sought to appropriately balance the allocation of such costs
and losses, with appropriate techniques (such as competitive auctions)
through which Participants and customers can mitigate the risks of such
losses. The amendments also remove the tool of forced allocation, which
potentially forced Participants to face uncertain and unquantifiable
liability in certain default scenarios. The amendments contain features
such as cooling-off periods, that provide appropriate and transparent
limits on the potential liability faced by Participants. As a result,
in ICC's view, while the proposed amendments may impose certain costs
and losses on market participants, that allocation is appropriate in
light of the default management goals of the clearing house, the goals
of promoting orderly clearing house recovery, and the broader public
interest in the strengthening of the clearing system to withstand
significant default events. As a result, ICC does not believe that the
proposed rule changes impose any burden on competition that is not
appropriate in furtherance of the purpose of the Act.
(C) Self-Regulatory Organization's Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From Members, Participants or Others
The proposed rule changes have been discussed at length with
Participants (individually and as a group). The changes have been
developed over the course of several years, and throughout that time
ICC has regularly consulted with Participants on both the overall
design and the detailed drafting of the amendments. Several aspects of
the amendments reflect specific requests of Participants and concerns
identified by Participants, as discussed above, including the removal
of forced allocation, introduction of a cooling-off period and
establishment of aggregate limitations on assessments and
replenishments. The introduction of partial tear-up and reduced gain
distributions as recovery tools have also been discussed in detail with
Participants, and have been drafted to take into account and
suggestions issues raised by Participants, including to define the
circumstances in which those tools may be used and to limit the adverse
impact of such tools on netting, regulatory capital and other matters.
Certain Participants have expressed concern in particular with the
potential use of reduced gain distribution as a recovery tool. While
ICC believes reduced gain distribution is an important tool for
ensuring its ability to fully allocate losses, ICC has, in light of
such concerns, limited the use of reduced gain distribution to
scenarios in which all other financial resources of the clearing house
have been exhausted. ICC has also consulted with Participants on the
details of the initial and secondary auction procedures, and has taken
into account comments and suggestions concerning such matters as
minimum bid requirements, use of a
[[Page 83915]]
Dutch versus other auction methodologies, degree and triggers for
juniorization and participation by customers. Certain of the proposed
governance arrangements in the amendments also reflect feedback from
Participants, including with respect to the role of Risk Committee in
major decisions. Throughout the process, ICC has regularly shared
drafts of the amendments with Participants, and sought (and received)
comment from Participants and Participants' internal and external
counsel on such drafts, which ICC has taken into consideration in the
drafting of the amendments.
ICC has discussed the amendments individually with members of its
buy-side advisory committee, which consists of customers of
Participants. ICC also considered the views of industry groups
representing customers of Participants, both through discussions with
members of such groups and through the public statements and positions
of such groups. Certain buy-side customers have expressed concern with
aspects of the amendments, particularly the application of partial
tear-up and reduced gain distributions to customer positions. As
discussed above, ICC believes the use of these recovery tools, for
customer as well as proprietary positions of Participants, reflects an
appropriate balancing of the legitimate interests of the clearing
house, Participants and customers in extreme default scenarios. ICC
also believes that the risks of such recovery tools are mitigated by
the expanded opportunity for customers to participate, either directly
or indirectly, in default auctions, as noted above. Other buy-side
customers have expressed concern with the potential use of reduced gain
distribution before the exhaustion of all other potential clearing
house resources. As discussed above, in light of such concerns, ICC has
limited the use of reduced gain distribution to scenarios where all
other financial resources of the clearing house have been exhausted.
Certain customers have also suggested that the clearing house increase
the amount of its own contribution to the guaranty fund, and place such
contribution higher in the priority waterfall of default resources. As
discussed above, ICC has increased the priority of its contributions in
the waterfall, to a position prior to the guaranty fund contributions
of non-defaulting Participants (although ICC has not proposed to change
the aggregate amount of its contribution).
ICC will notify the Commission of any written comments on the
proposed rule changes received by ICC.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period up to 90 days (i) as the
Commission may designate if it finds such longer period to be
appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) By order approve or disapprove the proposed rule change or
(B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml); or
Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number SR-ICC-2016-013 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-ICC-2016-013. This file
number should be included on the subject line if email is used. To help
the Commission process and review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The Commission will post all comments on
the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all
written statements with respect to the proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change between the Commission and any person, other
than those that may be withheld from the public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. [sic] Copies of such filings will also be
available for inspection and copying at the principal office of ICE
Clear Credit and on ICE Clear Credit's Web site at https://www.theice.com/clear-credit/regulation.
All comments received will be posted without change; the Commission
does not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You
should submit only information that you wish to make available
publicly. All submissions should refer to File Number SR-ICC-2016-013
and should be submitted on or before December 13, 2016.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\18\
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\18\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-28032 Filed 11-21-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P