Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation; Notice of Filing of Advance Notice Related to Proposed Changes to The Options Clearing Corporation's Rules, Margin Policy, Margin Methodology, Clearing Fund Methodology Policy, and Clearing Fund and Stress Testing Methodology To Address Specific Wrong-Way Risk, 61114-61120 [2019-24549]
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61114
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Notices
open-end management investment
company under the Act. Applicants
seek relief with respect to ten Funds (as
defined below, and those Funds, the
‘‘Initial Funds’’). The Funds will operate
as ActiveShares ETFs as described in
the Reference Order.2
2. The Adviser, a New York limited
liability company, will be the
investment adviser to the Initial Funds.
An Adviser (as defined below) will
serve as investment adviser to each
Fund. The Adviser is, and any other
Adviser will be, registered as an
investment adviser under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940
(‘‘Advisers Act’’). The Adviser may
enter into sub-advisory agreements with
other investment advisers to act as subadvisers with respect to the Funds (each
a ‘‘Sub-Adviser’’). Any Sub-Adviser will
be registered under the Advisers Act.
3. The Distributor is a Delaware
limited liability company and a brokerdealer registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and
will act as the principal underwriter of
Shares of the Funds. Applicants request
that the requested relief apply to any
distributor of Shares, whether affiliated
or unaffiliated with the Adviser and/or
Sub-Adviser (included in the term
‘‘Distributor’’). Any Distributor will
comply with the terms and conditions
of the Order.
Applicants’ Requested Exemptive Relief
4. Applicants seek the requested
Order under section 6(c) of the Act for
an exemption from sections 2(a)(32),
5(a)(1), and 22(d) of the Act and rule
22c–1 under the Act, under sections 6(c)
and 17(b) of the Act for an exemption
from sections 17(a)(1) and 17(a)(2) of the
Act, and under section 12(d)(1)(J) of the
Act for an exemption from sections
12(d)(1)(A) and 12(d)(1)(B) of the Act.
The requested Order would permit
applicants to offer ActiveShares ETFs.
Because the relief requested is the same
as the relief granted by the Commission
under the Reference Order and because
the Adviser has entered into a licensing
agreement with Precidian Funds LLC in
order to offer ActiveShares ETFs,3 the
Order would incorporate by reference
2 To facilitate arbitrage, an ActiveShares ETF
disseminates a ‘‘verified intraday indicative value’’
or ‘‘VIIV,’’ reflecting the value of its portfolio
holdings, calculated every second during the
trading day. To protect the identity and weightings
of its portfolio holdings, an ActiveShares ETF sells
and redeems its Shares in creation units to
authorized participants only through an unaffiliated
broker-dealer acting on an agency basis.
3 Aspects of the Funds are covered by intellectual
property rights, including but not limited to those
which are described in one or more patent
applications.
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the terms and conditions of the
Reference Order.
5. Applicants request that the Order
apply to the Initial Funds and to any
other existing or future open-end
management investment company or
series thereof that: (a) Is advised by the
Adviser or any entity controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with the Adviser (any such entity
included in the term ‘‘Adviser’’); (b)
operates as an ActiveShares ETF as
described in the Reference Order; and
(c) complies with the terms and
conditions of the Order and of the
Reference Order, which is incorporated
by reference into the Order (each such
company or series and any Initial Fund,
a ‘‘Fund’’).4
6. Section 6(c) of the Act provides that
the Commission may exempt any
person, security or transaction, or any
class of persons, securities or
transactions, from any provisions of the
Act, if and to the extent that such
exemption is necessary or appropriate
in the public interest and consistent
with the protection of investors and the
purposes fairly intended by the policy
and provisions of the Act. Section 17(b)
of the Act authorizes the Commission to
exempt a proposed transaction from
section 17(a) of the Act if evidence
establishes that the terms of the
transaction, including the consideration
to be paid or received, are reasonable
and fair and do not involve
overreaching on the part of any person
concerned, and the transaction is
consistent with the policies of the
registered investment company and the
general purposes of the Act. Section
12(d)(1)(J) of the Act provides that the
Commission may exempt any person,
security, or transaction, or any class of
persons, securities or transactions, from
any provision of section 12(d)(1) if the
exemption is consistent with the public
interest and the protection of investors.
Applicants submit that for the reasons
stated in the Reference Order the
requested relief meets the exemptive
standards under sections 6(c), 17(b) and
12(d)(1)(J) of the Act.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, pursuant to
delegated authority.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–24468 Filed 11–8–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
4 All entities that currently intend to rely on the
Order are named as applicants. Any other entity
that relies on the Order in the future will comply
with the terms and conditions of the Order and of
the Reference Order, which is incorporated by
reference into the Order.
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–87476; File No. SR–OCC–
2019–807]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Options Clearing Corporation; Notice
of Filing of Advance Notice Related to
Proposed Changes to The Options
Clearing Corporation’s Rules, Margin
Policy, Margin Methodology, Clearing
Fund Methodology Policy, and
Clearing Fund and Stress Testing
Methodology To Address Specific
Wrong-Way Risk
November 6, 2019.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
entitled Payment, Clearing and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4(n)(1)(i) 2 under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’ or
‘‘Exchange Act’’),3 notice is hereby
given that on October 10, 2019, the
Options Clearing Corporation (‘‘OCC’’)
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) an
advance notice as described in Items I,
II and III below, which Items have been
prepared by OCC. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the advance notice from
interested persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This advance notice is submitted in
connection with proposed
enhancements to OCC’s Rules, margin
policy and methodology, Clearing Fund
policy, and Clearing Fund and stress
testing methodology to adopt new
margin charges and other risk measures
to address the specific wrong-way risk
presented by certain cleared positions.
The proposed amendments to OCC’s
Rules are included in Exhibit 5A of the
filing. The proposed amendments to
OCC’s Margin Policy and Margins
Methodology are included in Exhibits
5B and 5C, respectively. The proposed
amendments to OCC’s Clearing Fund
Methodology Policy (‘‘CFM Policy’’) and
Stress Testing and Clearing Fund
Methodology Description
(‘‘Methodology Description’’) are
included in Exhibits 5D and 5E,
respectively. Material proposed to be
added to the Rules, Margin Policy and
Margins Methodology as currently in
effect is marked by underlining, and
1 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i).
3 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
2 17
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Notices
material proposed to be deleted is
marked in strikethrough text; however,
the proposed Specific Wrong-Way Risk
Add-On chapter of the Margins
Methodology is presented without
marking to improve readability as the
entire chapter is newly proposed rule
text.4 Material proposed to be added to
the CFM Policy and Methodology
Description is marked by double
underlining, and material proposed to
be deleted is marked in double
strikethrough text.5
The advance notice is available on
OCC’s website at https://
www.theocc.com/about/publications/
bylaws.jsp. All terms with initial
capitalization that are not otherwise
defined herein have the same meaning
as set forth in the OCC By-Laws and
Rules.6
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission,
OCC included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the advance
notice and discussed any comments it
received on the advance notice. The text
of these statements may be examined at
the places specified in Item IV below.
OCC has prepared summaries, set forth
in sections A and B below, of the most
significant aspects of these statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Advance Notice
Written comments were not and are
not intended to be solicited with respect
to the advance notice and none have
been received. OCC will notify the
Commission of any written comments
received by OCC.
(B) Advance Notices Filed Pursuant to
Section 806(e) of the Payment, Clearing,
and Settlement Supervision Act
Description of the Proposed Change
Background
As a central counterparty (‘‘CCP’’),
OCC is exposed to wrong-way risk,
which is the risk that arises when
4 OCC
also has filed a proposed rule change with
the Commission in connection with the proposed
changes. See SR–OCC–2019–010.
5 OCC also filed with the Commission proposed
rule change and advance notice filings concerning
enhancements to its CFM Policy and Methodology
Description, which are currently pending
Commission review. See OCC filings SR–OCC–
2019–009 and SR–OCC–2019–806. OCC has marked
proposed changes to the CFM Policy and
Methodology Description described herein in
double marking to clearly differentiate those
changes from other changes currently pending
Commission review.
6 OCC’s By-Laws and Rules can be found on
OCC’s public website: https://optionsclearing.com/
about/publications/bylaws.jsp.
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exposure to a counterparty is adversely
correlated with the credit quality and
probability of default of that
counterparty. Specific wrong-way risk
(‘‘SWWR’’) arises when an exposure to
a participant is highly likely to increase
when the creditworthiness of that
participant is deteriorating.7 For
example, SWWR arises where a Clearing
Member’s cleared positions contain
equity securities issued by the Clearing
Member or its affiliates (i.e., the Clearing
Member Group) (such positions referred
to herein as ‘‘SWWR Equity positions’’)
as the equity issued by the Clearing
Member Group may be assumed to have
a price at or near zero in a default or
bankruptcy scenario, and those
positions (e.g., equity used as a hedge,
stock loans, options on equity, singlestock futures) may experience
substantial losses. In addition, SWWR
may arise where uncollateralized
exchange-traded notes (‘‘ETNs’’) issued
by a Clearing Member or its affiliates
(‘‘SWWR ETN positions’’) are part of the
Clearing Member’s cleared positions
(these positions, collectively with
‘‘SWWR Equity positions,’’ are
hereinafter referred to as ‘‘SWWR
positions’’). SWWR may also arise when
a Clearing Member posts equity
securities or ETNs issued by it or of its
affiliates as margin collateral.
OCC currently accounts for SWWR as
it relates to margin collateral by
generally prohibiting a Clearing Member
from pledging equities issued by it or
one of its affiliates as margin collateral
unless this pledge provides a hedge
against a cleared position in the same
account.8 OCC does not, however,
currently account for SWWR as it relates
to cleared positions. As a result, OCC is
proposing a new ‘‘add-on’’ charge 9 for
its margin methodology, the System for
Theoretical Analysis and Numerical
Simulations (‘‘STANS’’),10 and new
stress test scenarios that may result in
intra-day margin calls and, in more
extreme cases, intra-month increases in
7 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78961
(September 28, 2016), 81 FR 70786, 70816, n. 317
(October 13, 2016) (S7–03–14) (‘‘Standards for
Covered Clearing Agencies’’). See also Committee
on Payment and Settlement Systems and Technical
Committee of the International Organization of
Securities Commissions, Principles for financial
market infrastructures (Apr. 16, 2012), available at
https://www.bis.org/publ/cpss101a.pdf.
8 See OCC Rule 604, Interpretation and Policy .16.
9 Under OCC’s Margin Policy, OCC may
collateralize certain exposures through the use of
add-on charges.
10 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53322
(February 15, 2006), 71 FR 9403 (February 23, 2006)
(SR–OCC–2004–20). A detailed description of the
STANS methodology is available at https://
optionsclearing.com/risk-management/margins/.
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61115
the size of OCC’s Clearing Fund 11 to
address the wrong-way risk of OCC’s
cleared positions involving Clearing
Member-issued securities. In addition,
OCC proposes to introduce certain
restrictions on stock lending activity
related to SWWR positions.
Proposed Changes
OCC proposes to enhance its
management of SWWR by: (1) Imposing
certain restrictions on stock lending
activity at OCC; (2) adopting a new
SWWR margin add-on for STANS
(‘‘SWWR Add-on’’); (3) introducing new
stress test scenarios to capture the
SWWR of cleared positions involving
Clearing Member-issued ETNs beyond
certain pre-defined thresholds; and (4)
making other clarifying and conforming
changes to the CFM Policy and
Methodology Description. The proposed
changes are intended to address the
credit risks arising from SWWR
positions at OCC. The proposed changes
are described in detail below.
1. Prohibition on Lending Clearing
Member/Affiliate-Issued Securities
OCC operates two programs for stock
loan transactions: (1) The Stock Loan/
Hedge Program and (2) the Market Loan
Program (collectively, the ‘‘Stock Loan
Programs’’). In the Stock Loan/Hedge
Program, prospective Lending and
Borrowing Clearing Members identify
each other (independent of OCC), agree
to bilaterally negotiated terms of the
stock loan (in this case, a ‘‘Hedge
Loan’’), and then send the details of the
stock loan to the Depository Trust
Company (‘‘DTC’’) designating the stock
loan as a Hedge Loan for guaranty and
clearance at OCC. The Lending Clearing
Member then instructs DTC to transfer
11 Under OCC’s existing stress testing and
Clearing Fund methodology, OCC runs on a daily
basis a set of stress test scenarios designed to
measure the exposure of the Clearing Fund to the
portfolios of individual Clearing Member Groups
and determine whether any such exposure is
sufficiently large as to necessitate OCC calling for
additional resources so that OCC continues to
maintain sufficient financial resources to guard
against potential losses under a wide range of stress
scenarios, including extreme but plausible market
conditions (‘‘Sufficiency Scenarios,’’ and such
scenarios collectively constituting ‘‘Sufficiency
Stress Tests’’). See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 83714 (July 26, 2018), 83 FR 37570 (August 1,
2018) (SR–OCC–2018–803) and Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 83735 (July 27, 2018), 83 FR 37855
(August 2, 2018) (SR–OCC–2018–008). Under OCC
Rule 609, the CFM Policy, and the Methodology
Description, if a Sufficiency Stress Test identifies
exposures that exceed 75% of the current Clearing
Fund requirement less deficits (the ‘‘75%
threshold’’ or ‘‘Sufficiency Stress Test Threshold
1’’), OCC may require additional margin deposits
from the Clearing Member Group(s) driving the
breach. If a Sufficiency Stress Test identifies
exposures that exceed 90% of the current Clearing
Fund, OCC would perform an intra-month resizing
of the Clearing Fund. Id.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Notices
a specified number of shares of Eligible
Stock 12 to the account of the Borrowing
Clearing Member, and the Borrowing
Clearing Member instructs DTC to
transfer the appropriate amount of cash
collateral to the account of the Lending
Clearing Member. In the Market Loan
Program, stock loans are initiated
through the matching of bids and offers
that are either agreed upon by the
Market Loan Clearing Members or
matched anonymously through a Loan
Market (such stock loans being ‘‘Market
Loans’’). In order to initiate a Market
Loan, the Loan Market sends a matched
transaction to OCC, which in turn sends
two separate but linked settlement
instructions to DTC to effect the
movement of Eligible Stock and cash
collateral between the accounts of the
Market Loan Clearing Members through
OCC’s account at DTC.
Regardless of whether a transaction is
initiated under the Stock Loan/Hedge
Program or Market Loan Program, OCC
novates the transaction and becomes the
lender to the Borrowing Clearing
Member and the borrower to the
Lending Clearing Member. As the
principal counterparty to the Borrowing
and Lending Clearing Members, OCC
guarantees the return of the full value of
cash collateral to a Borrowing Clearing
Member and guarantees the return of the
Loaned Stock (or value of that Loaned
Stock) to the Lending Clearing
Member.13 As noted above, OCC may be
exposed to SWWR in its Stock Loan
Programs where Clearing Members lend
equity securities or ETNs issued by the
Clearing Member or its affiliates.
Specifically, the lending of Clearing
Member or Member Affiliate-issued
equity or ETNs creates a long exposure
and liability in the case when a Clearing
Member defaults and its own or
affiliated equity or ETN declines.
OCC proposes to mitigate SWWR in
its Stock Loan Programs by prohibiting
Clearing Members from lending any
Eligible Stock issued by such Clearing
Member or any affiliate of such Clearing
Member. The proposed restriction
would apply to both SWWR Equity
positions and SWWR ETN positions.
OCC does not believe that the proposed
restriction on lending SWWR Equity
positions would have a material impact
on Clearing Members in the Stock Loan
Programs as Clearing Members do not
12 OCC’s By-Laws define ‘‘Eligible Stock’’ to
mean, in part, any security that is eligible for
lending in the Stock Loan/Hedge Program and the
Market Loan Program. See Article I, Section 1.E(3)
of the OCC By-Laws. Eligible Stock may include
ETNs issued by OCC’s Clearing Members.
13 Under the Market Loan Program, OCC also
provides a limited guaranty of dividend and rebate
payments.
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17:47 Nov 08, 2019
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typically engage in lending of their own
equity securities and borrowers
typically do not accept equity securities
issued by their lending counterparty.14
The proposed restrictions on lending
SWWR ETN positions would, however,
impact a very small segment of Clearing
Members that lend SWWR ETNs.15 OCC
believes that the impact of the proposed
changes would be limited by the fact
that, unlike listed options, Clearing
Members are able to lend SWWR
positions on an uncleared basis outside
of OCC. The proposed restrictions on
lending activity in the Stock Loan
Programs would not prevent Clearing
Members from lending equities or ETNs
issued by the Clearing Member or any
affiliate of such Clearing Member on a
bilateral basis if members wish to do so.
The proposed prohibition on lending
Clearing Member or Member Affiliateissued Eligible Stock would be included
in new OCC Rules 2202(f) and 2202A(f)
for the Stock Loan/Hedge Program and
Market Loan Program, respectively. OCC
would also make conforming changes to
its Margin Policy and Margins
Methodology to reflect the newly
proposed restrictions in stock lending
activity.
The proposed change would only
apply to stock lending activity as of the
time of implementation of the proposed
change. The proposed change would not
be applied retroactively to existing open
positions, and Clearing Members with
open stock loans involving Clearing
Member or Member Affiliate-issued
Eligible Stock would not be forced to
terminate those existing positions. Any
SWWR stock lending positions in
existence as of the implementation of
the proposed change would be subject
to the SWWR charges described below
until such positions are closed out
14 As of the start of September 2019, OCC had 107
Clearing Members, of which 64 have member or
affiliate-issued securities eligible for lending in the
Stock Loan Programs. OCC analyzed SWWR Equity
lending activity for its Clearing Members from
January 2018 through the beginning of September
2019. During this period, less than 10 Clearing
Members had stock lending activity in SWWR
Equity positions, and loans of SWWR Equity
positions constituted less than three percent of each
of those Clearing Members’ average notional stock
lending activity for the period.
15 OCC analyzed SWWR ETN lending activity for
its Clearing Members from January 2018 through
the beginning of September 2019. Only 11 of OCC’s
107 Clearing Members have member or affiliate
issued ETNs. During this period, less than 10
Clearing Members had stock lending activity for
SWWR ETN positions. For the majority of these
Clearing Members, lending in SWWR ETN positions
constituted approximately 13 percent or less of each
of those Clearing Members’ average notional stock
lending activity for the period. For Clearing
Members that averaged higher notational lending
activity, OCC has observed significant reductions in
this activity over recent months.
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through the normal course stock loan
termination process.
2. SWWR Add-on
OCC proposes to adopt a new margin
add-on (i.e., the SWWR Add-on) to
address SWWR from cleared positions
involving Clearing Member and affiliate
issued equities and ETNs. The SWWR
Add-on would be calculated for each
margin tier account of a Clearing
Member Group having positions related
to either publicly traded equities or
ETNs issued by the Clearing Member
Group and would cover all types of
positions (equity used as collateral,
equity and ETN options, single-stock
futures). The proposed SWWR Add-on
is comprised of three main components:
(1) ‘‘SWWR Equity Charge,’’ (2) ‘‘SWWR
ETN Charge,’’ and (3) ‘‘SWWR
Residual.’’ Each of these components is
discussed below.
a. SWWR Equity Charge
Under the proposal, when a Clearing
Member defaults, it is assumed that the
price of any equity security issued by
the Clearing Member Group would fall
to zero. As a result, OCC would
calculate the SWWR Equity Charge by
assuming that a Clearing Member’s and
its affiliates’ equity securities would be
priced at zero and value all cleared
positions accordingly (i.e., all stocks,
single stock futures, call options, and
put options would be valued at zero) to
provide full protection for the risk of
potential market exposure to products
on a Clearing Member Group’s own
equity in a default or bankruptcy
scenario. In each margin account, the
profit and loss (‘‘P&L’’) of SWWR Equity
positions would be calculated as the
difference of the theoretical value of
such securities (i.e., zero) and the
closing price of the position multiplied
by the net quantity.16 Moreover, any
potential gain from the SWWR positions
would be excluded by flooring the
SWWR Equity Charge at zero.17 As a
result, OCC believes that the proposed
SWWR Equity Charge would adequately
cover the SWWR arising from a Clearing
Member’s SWWR Equity positions.
16 Because SWWR of equity-related positions
would be fully covered as part of margins, these
positions would be removed from Clearing Fund
shortfall calculations under OCC’s stress testing and
Clearing Fund methodology. Accordingly, OCC
proposes to revise its Methodology Description to
reflect the exclusion of SWWR Equity positions
from the synthetic accounts used in OCC’s stress
testing.
17 For example, suppose the P&L from the SWWR
equity price going to 0 for all SWWR equity-related
positions were a loss of $1 million. The SWWR
Equity Charge in this case would be $1 million. If
the P&L were a gain of $1 million, the SWWR
Equity Charge would be $0.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Notices
b. SWWR ETN Charge
In addition to SWWR that arises from
equity securities issued by a Clearing
Member or its affiliates, OCC is also
exposed to SWWR from open positions
related to the uncollateralized ETNs
issued by a Clearing Member/Group,
which are adversely correlated with the
credit quality of that Clearing Member
Group. These ETNs are generally
equivalent to unsecured senior debt
issued by the Clearing Member/Group.
While a Clearing Member default can be
triggered by its failure to meet other
obligations, the firm may or may not
default on its ETNs. Hence, the recovery
rate for ETNs is uncertain and could be
between 0% and 100%.
To address SWWR presented by ETNs
issued by a Clearing Member/Group,
OCC proposes to calculate an SWWR
ETN Charge as part of the SWWR Addon. OCC notes that, unlike SWWR
Equity positions, for which it is
assumed that the price of any equity
security issued by the Clearing Member
Group would fall to zero, the recovery
rate for ETNs would not necessarily fall
to zero. As a result, the proposed SWWR
ETN Charge would utilize an industry
standard recovery rate assumption
designed to reflect the credit risk
associated with such ETN positions.18
OCC would also adopt additional stress
test scenarios to monitor and measure
SWWR ETN position exposures and
allow for OCC to call for additional
financial resources from its Clearing
Members when certain thresholds are
breached. These SWWR stress test
scenarios are discussed in further detail
below.
c. SWWR Residual
To ensure that OCC appropriately
calculates margins to capture SWWR
Equity and SWWR ETN position
exposures, OCC proposes to include an
SWWR Residual component in SWWR
Add-on. Under the proposal, OCC
would continue to calculate base
STANS margin requirements for
Clearing Members with SWWR
positions including SWWR Equity and
SWWR ETN positions under its current
methodology (i.e., without assuming
that all SWWR Equity positions fall to
a value of zero and without assuming all
SWWR ETN positions are valued at the
recovery rate times their current
18 ETNs issued by a Clearing Member Group
would still be stressed in OCC’s Clearing Fund as
only a part of the credit risk is covered by the
SWWR ETN Charge. Additionally, any credit from
margin assets would be adjusted by the direct
charges related to the risk of the equity and ETNs
issued by each Clearing Member Group.
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17:47 Nov 08, 2019
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price).19 OCC would then also calculate
a residual STANS margin with the
SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
positions removed since for SWWR
their P&L would be captured through
the SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
Charges. The SWWR Residual would
then be the difference between the
residual margin and the base margin. If
the sum of the SWWR Equity Charge,
SWWR ETN Charge and SWWR
Residual would result in a net credit to
the Clearing Member,20 then the SWWR
Residual would be adjusted to ensure
that OCC always uses a more
conservative measure that captures the
greater of either the base STANS margin
or the residual STANS margin plus the
SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
Charges.21
3. Enhancements to Sufficiency Stress
Test Scenarios for ETNs
OCC proposes to revise its CFM
Policy and Methodology Description to
introduce new stress test scenarios
designed to capture SWWR exposures
19 STANS margin requirements are comprised of
the sum of several components, each reflecting a
different aspect of risk. The base component of the
STANS margin requirement for each account is
obtained using a risk measure known as 99%
Expected Shortfall. The Expected Shortfall
component is established as the estimated average
of potential losses higher than the 99% value at risk
threshold. The term ‘‘value at risk’’ or ‘‘VaR’’ refers
to a statistical technique that, generally speaking, is
used in risk management to measure the potential
risk of loss for a given set of assets over a particular
time horizon. This base component is then adjusted
by the addition of a stress test component, which
is obtained from consideration of the increases in
99% Expected Shortfall that would arise from
market movements that are especially large and/or
in which various kinds of risk factors exhibit
perfect or zero correlations in place of their
correlations estimated from historical data
(‘‘Dependence Add-on’’), or from extreme adverse
idiosyncratic movements in individual risk factors
to which the account is particularly exposed
(‘‘Concentration Add-on’’).
20 For example, where a customer of a Clearing
Member has net short positions referencing that
Clearing Member’s issued equities, such positions
may actually present so-called ‘‘right-way risk’’
whereby the position would result in a gain or
margin credit for that account as the credit quality
of the Clearing Member deteriorates.
21 For example, suppose that there are no SWWR
ETN positions and the Expected Shortfall of a
portfolio including all positions was a $10 million
loss and the Expected Shortfall with the SWWR
Equity-related positions removed was a greater loss
of $11 million. In this case, the SWWR Residual
would be ¥$1 million. If the Expected Shortfall
with the SWWR Equity-related positions removed
was reduced to a loss of $9 million then the SWWR
Residual would depend on the SWWR Equity
Charge: If the SWWR Equity Charge was more
negative than ¥$1 million, then the SWWR
Residual would be +$1 million; if the SWWR Equity
Charge was $0, then SWWR Residual would be $0;
and if SWWR Equity Charge was between $0 and
¥$1 million (e.g., ¥$0.4 million), then SWWR
Residual would be positive and the opposite value
of SWWR Equity Charge (e.g., +$0.4 million). Thus,
the sum of the SWWR Equity Charge, SWWR ETN
Charge, and SWWR Residual cannot be positive.
PO 00000
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61117
for Clearing Member-issued ETNs that
are not accounted for in the SWWR ETN
Charge and that exceed certain
thresholds of OCC’s Clearing Fund
(‘‘SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios’’).22
Under the proposal, certain Sufficiency
Scenarios 23 would be evaluated with
Clearing Member-issued ETNs declining
to zero within the respective Clearing
Member’s accounts. Such scenarios
would include, but would not be
limited to, the 1987 ‘‘Black Monday’’
market event on a Cover 1 basis and the
two most extreme moves from the 2008
historical market event on a Cover 2
basis.
SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios would
value Clearing Member-issued ETNs at
a price of zero within their own
accounts capturing impacts to any
cleared positions tied to those ETNs.
Calls, equities, and single-stock futures
would all be valued at zero and puts
would be valued at their strike price.
For these scenarios, margin assets for
shortfall calculations would not be
adjusted by the SWWR ETN Charge. In
addition, other scenarios may be created
that embed the SWWR Equity risk by
not excluding positions related to the
Clearing Member Group’s own equity
but using an equity price of zero to
value all related products.
In the event an SWWR Sufficiency
Scenario identifies exposures that
exceed 75% of the current Clearing
Fund requirement less deficits, OCC
may require additional margin deposits
from the Clearing Member Group(s)
driving the breach. If an SWWR
Sufficiency Stress Scenario identifies
exposures that exceed 90% of the
current Clearing Fund, OCC would
perform an intra-month resizing of the
Clearing Fund. The proposed change
would enable OCC to more accurately
measure its credit risks as they relate to
SWWR and better test the sufficiency of
its overall financial resources and
would allow OCC to call for additional
financial resources when SWWR ETN
position exposures exceed certain
thresholds of OCC’s Clearing Fund. As
a result of these proposed
enhancements, OCC believes it would
have sufficient financial resources to
cover the SWWR associated with
SWWR ETN positions if such positions
were to be liquidated for less than the
assumed recovery rate.
OCC notes that, under its current CFM
Policy, in the event results of a daily
Sufficiency Stress Test over the final
22 OCC notes that it may also develop additional
Informational Scenarios to monitor SWWR;
however, these Informational Scenarios would not
be used to call for additional financial resources
from Clearing Members.
23 See supra note 1111.
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five business days preceding the
monthly Clearing Fund sizing exceed
90% of the projected Clearing Fund size
for the upcoming month, the Clearing
Fund size is set such that the peak
Sufficiency Stress Test draw is no
greater than 90% of the Clearing Fund
size. OCC proposes to revise the CFM
Policy to provide that OCC generally
does not intend to mutualize exposures
resulting from the proposed SWWR
Sufficiency Scenarios and therefore
SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios would not
be included for purposes of this antiprocyclicality measure. The proposed
change is generally aligned with OCC’s
intention to appropriately charge
individual Clearing Members based on
the SWWR they bring to OCC.
4. Other Clarifying and Conforming
Changes to CFM Policy and
Methodology Description
In addition to the proposed changes
described above, OCC would revise the
CFM Policy and Methodology
Description to provide that, with respect
to stress test portfolio construction,
SWWR single-name equity positions
would be removed from stress test
portfolios as they are fully collateralized
in margins. Additionally, the
Methodology Description would be
revised to provide that when adding
STANS margin asset amounts to
scenario gains and losses, the SWWR
Equity Charge, SWWR ETN Charge, and
certain other Add-ons from STANS
margin asset amounts are excluded.
Finally, OCC would revise its
Methodology Description to clarify that
for Idiosyncratic Scenarios,24 the four
riskiest names used to calculate
idiosyncratic stress test exposures
would exclude any equity issued by the
Clearing Member’s own firms and make
other clarifying, non-substantive
changes to the Methodology Description
concerning stress testing price shocks
for products with multiple risk factors
and Idiosyncratic Scenarios that are
unrelated to the proposal described
herein.
Clearing Member Outreach
To inform Clearing Members of the
proposed changes, OCC has provided an
overview of the proposed changes to the
Financial Risk Advisory Council
(‘‘FRAC’’), a working group comprised
24 OCC has proposed in separate proposed rule
change and advance notice filings to adopt a new
set of stress scenarios to be used in the monthly
sizing of OCC’s Clearing Fund that are designed to
capture the risks of extreme moves in individual or
small subsets of securities (‘‘Idiosyncratic
Scenarios’’). These Idiosyncratic Scenarios would
consider the four single-name securities with the
worst P&L in a Clearing Member’s portfolio. See
supra note 5.
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of exchanges, Clearing Members and
indirect participants of OCC. OCC has
also performed direct outreach to
Clearing Members that would be most
impacted by the proposed changes. Todate, OCC has not received any material
objections or concerns in response to
this outreach.
Implementation Timing
OCC expects to implement the
proposed changes within sixty (60) days
after the date that OCC receives all
necessary regulatory approvals for the
proposed changes. OCC will announce
the implementation date of the
proposed change by an Information
Memorandum posted to its public
website at least two (2) weeks prior to
implementation.
Expected Effect on and Management of
Risk
The proposed changes are designed to
enhance OCC’s overall framework for
managing credit risk and reduce the
overall level of risk presented to and
presented by OCC. OCC believes that
prohibiting Clearing Members from
lending their own or Member Affiliateissued securities in the Stock Loan
Programs and introducing the proposed
SWWR Add-on charge would improve
OCC’s ability to manage the credit risks
presented by its Clearing Members’
SWWR positions and would reduce the
risk that OCC’s financial resources
would be insufficient in the event of a
Clearing Member default. As a result,
the proposed change is designed, in
general, to enhance OCC’s framework
for measuring and managing its credit
risks so that it can continue to provide
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities and derivatives
transactions in the event of a Clearing
Member default.
In addition, OCC believes that
introducing new SWWR Sufficiency
Scenarios designed to capture SWWR
exposures for Clearing Member-issued
ETNs that are not accounted for in the
SWWR ETN Charge would provide OCC
with a more comprehensive approach to
managing OCC’s credit risks as they
relate to SWWR ETN positions. The
proposed change would enable OCC to
more accurately measure its credit risks
and better test the sufficiency of its
overall financial resources and would
allow OCC to call for additional
financial resources when those
exposures exceed certain thresholds of
OCC’s Clearing Fund.
OCC also proposes a number of other
clarifying and conforming changes to its
CFM Policy and Methodology
Description required to implement the
proposed SWWR Add-on and SWWR
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Sufficiency Scenarios described herein
and to more clearly describe OCC’s
stress testing practices. OCC believes
that these changes would enhance
OCC’s overall framework for measuring
and managing its credit risks so that it
can continue to provide prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities in the event of a Clearing
Member default.
Consistency With the Payment, Clearing
and Settlement Supervision Act
The stated purpose of the Clearing
Supervision Act is to mitigate systemic
risk in the financial system and promote
financial stability by, among other
things, promoting uniform risk
management standards for systemically
important financial market utilities and
strengthening the liquidity of
systemically important financial market
utilities.25 Section 805(a)(2) of the
Clearing Supervision Act 26 also
authorizes the Commission to prescribe
risk management standards for the
payment, clearing and settlement
activities of designated clearing entities,
like OCC, for which the Commission is
the supervisory agency. Section 805(b)
of the Clearing Supervision Act 27 states
that the objectives and principles for
risk management standards prescribed
under Section 805(a) shall be to:
• promote robust risk management;
• promote safety and soundness;
• reduce systemic risks; and
• support the stability of the broader
financial system.
OCC believes that the proposed
changes described herein are consistent
with the objectives and principles of
Section 805(b) of the Clearing
Supervision Act 28 and the risk
management standards adopted by the
Commission in Rule 17Ad–22 under the
Act for the reasons set forth below.29
OCC believes the proposed changes
are consistent with the objectives and
principles of Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act.30 The
proposed changes are designed to
improve OCC’s overall framework for
managing SWWR brought by its
Clearing Members. OCC believes that
prohibiting Clearing Members from
25 12
U.S.C. 5461(b).
U.S.C. 5464(a)(2).
27 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
28 Id.
29 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22. See Securities Exchange
Act Release Nos. 68080 (October 22, 2012), 77 FR
66220 (November 2, 2012) (S7–08–11) (‘‘Clearing
Agency Standards’’); 78961 (September 28, 2016),
81 FR 70786 (October 13, 2016) (S7–03–14)
(‘‘Standards for Covered Clearing Agencies’’). OCC
is a ‘‘covered clearing agency’’ as defined in Rule
17Ad–22(a)(5) and therefore must comply with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad–22(e).
30 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
26 12
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lending their own or Member Affiliateissued securities in the Stock Loan
Programs and introducing the proposed
SWWR Add-on charge would enhance
OCC’s ability to manage the credit risks
presented by its Clearing Members’
SWWR positions and would reduce the
risk that OCC’s financial resources
would be insufficient in the event of a
Clearing Member default. In addition,
OCC believes that introducing new
SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios designed
to capture SWWR exposures for
Clearing Member-issued ETNs that are
not accounted for in the SWWR ETN
Charge would provide OCC with a
comprehensive approach to managing
OCC’s credit risks as they relate to
SWWR ETN positions. The proposed
change would enable OCC to more
accurately measure its credit risks and
better test the sufficiency of its overall
financial resources and would allow
OCC to call for additional financial
resources when those exposures exceed
certain thresholds of OCC’s Clearing
Fund. OCC also proposes a number of
other clarifying and conforming changes
to its CFM Policy and Methodology
Description required to implement the
proposed SWWR Add-on and SWWR
Sufficiency Scenarios described herein
and to more clearly describe OCC’s
stress testing practices. Accordingly,
OCC believes the proposed changes are
designed to promote robust risk
management, promote safety and
soundness, reduce systemic risks, and
support the stability of the broader
financial system.
OCC also believes the proposed
changes are consistent with the risk
management standards adopted by the
Commission in Rule 17Ad–22 under the
Act. Rule 17Ad–22(b)(2) 31 requires a
registered clearing agency that performs
CCP services to establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to,
in part, use margin requirements to limit
its credit exposures to participants
under normal market conditions and
use risk-based models and parameters to
set such margin requirements. In
addition, Rules 17Ad–22(e)(6)(i) and
(v) 32 require a covered clearing agency
that provides CCP services to establish,
implement, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to cover its credit
exposures to its participants by
establishing a risk-based margin system
that, at a minimum: (1) Considers and
produces margin levels commensurate
with the risks and particular attributes
of each relevant product, portfolio, and
31 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(b)(2).
32 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(i) and (v).
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17:47 Nov 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
market, and (2) uses an appropriate
method for measuring credit exposure
that accounts for relevant product risk
factors and portfolio effects across
products.
The proposed changes to OCC’s
margin and Clearing Fund policies and
methodologies to adopt the SWWR Addon would utilize a risk-based model
designed to limit OCC’s credit
exposures to Clearing Members that
present SWWR exposure to OCC
through the clearing of Clearing
Member-issued equity and ETN
positions. OCC believes the proposed
SWWR Add-on is reasonably designed
to produce margin levels commensurate
with the risks and particular attributes
SWWR Equity and ETN positions and
would use an appropriate method for
measuring credit exposure that accounts
for relevant product risk factors such as
SWWR.
The proposed SWWR Add-on would
include both an SWWR Equity Charge
and SWWR ETN Charge to address the
SWWR attributes and exposures
presented to OCC by each type of
product. For example, the SWWR
Equity Charge assumes that when a
Clearing Member defaults the price of
any equity security issued by the
Clearing Member Group would fall to
zero. As a result, OCC would calculate
the SWWR Equity Charge by assuming
that a Clearing Member’s and its
affiliates’ equity securities would be
priced at zero and value all cleared
positions accordingly to provide full
protection for the risk of potential
market exposure to products on a
Clearing Member Group’s own equity in
a default or bankruptcy scenario.
Moreover, the SWWR Add-on charge
would include an SWWR Residual
component to ensure that OCC takes the
more conservative of the base STANS
margin requirement or margin
requirements including the SWWR
Equity Charge (particularly in
circumstances where using the SWWR
Equity Charge would result in a net
credit to the Clearing Member).
In addition, OCC would adopt an
SWWR ETN Charge to address the
SWWR presented by Clearing Memberissued ETNs. ETNs have different
characteristics than equity securities
and more closely reflect those
characteristics of other unsecured debt
obligations. For example, if a Clearing
Member defaults that does not
necessarily imply that it will
automatically default on its ETNs.
Therefore, ETNs are not necessarily
valued at 0 and in fact may retain 100%
of their value and be exposed to normal
market risk. OCC proposes to measure
the risk of these positions using an
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
61119
industry standard recovery rate
assumption designed to calculate a
margin charge that reflects the expected
credit risk associated with such ETN
positions. The potential market risk of
the ETNs would still be covered by
including ETNs in regular margin
calculations, whereas the SWWR Equity
positions are assumed to be heading
towards bankruptcy and necessarily
valued near 0 in a default situation.
For these reasons, OCC believes the
proposed SWWR Add-on would
enhance OCC’s margin system by
providing for a risk-based model that:
(1) Sets margin requirements designed
to limit OCC’s SWWR exposures to its
participant; (2) considers and produces
margin levels commensurate with the
risks and particular attributes SWWR
positions cleared by OCC; and (3) uses
an appropriate method for measuring
such SWWR exposures consistent with
the requirements of Rules 17Ad–
22(b)(2), (e)(6)(i) and (e)(6)(v).33
Rules 17Ad–22(e)(4)(iii) and (vi) 34
require that a covered clearing agency
establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to effectively
identify, measure, monitor, and manage
its credit exposures to participants and
those arising from its payment, clearing,
and settlement processes, including by:
(1) Maintaining additional financial
resources at the minimum to enable it
to cover a wide range of foreseeable
stress scenarios that include, but are not
limited to, the default of the participant
family that would potentially cause the
largest aggregate credit exposure for the
covered clearing agency in extreme but
plausible market conditions and (2)
testing the sufficiency of its total
financial resources available to meet
these minimum financial resource
requirements. OCC believes that
introducing new SWWR Sufficiency
Scenarios designed to capture SWWR
exposures for Clearing Member-issued
ETNs that are not accounted for in the
SWWR ETN Charge would enable OCC
to more accurately measure its credit
risks and better test the sufficiency of its
overall financial resources, particularly
in stressed marked conditions. The
proposed change would also allow OCC
to call for additional financial resources
when those exposures exceed certain
thresholds of OCC’s Clearing Fund. The
proposed change is therefore designed
to enhance OCC’s overall framework for
measuring and managing its credit risks
and would reduce the risk that OCC’s
financial resources would be
33 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(b)(2), (e)(6)(i), and
(e)(6)(v).
34 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(4)(iii) and (vi).
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Notices
insufficient in the event of a Clearing
Member default consistent with Rules
17Ad–22(e)(4)(iii) and (vi).35
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(4) 36 generally
requires that a covered clearing agency
establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to effectively
identify, measure, monitor, and manage
its credit exposures to participants and
those arising from its payment, clearing,
and settlement processes. By prohibiting
Clearing Members from lending Eligible
Stock issued by the Clearing Member or
any affiliate of such Clearing Member,
OCC would mitigate the SWWR that
currently exists in its Stock Loan
Programs and thereby reduce the risk
that OCC’s financial resources would be
insufficient in the event such a Clearing
Member would default. OCC believes
the proposed change is therefore
reasonably designed to help OCC
manage the credit risks associated with
SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
positions in the Stock Loan Programs
and is therefore consistent with Rule
17Ad–22(e)(4).37
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Advance
Notice and Timing for Commission
Action
The proposed change may be
implemented if the Commission does
not object to the proposed change
within 60 days of the later of (i) the date
the proposed change was filed with the
Commission or (ii) the date any
additional information requested by the
Commission is received. OCC shall not
implement the proposed change if the
Commission has any objection to the
proposed change.
The Commission may extend the
period for review by an additional 60
days if the proposed change raises novel
or complex issues, subject to the
Commission providing the clearing
agency with prompt written notice of
the extension. A proposed change may
be implemented in less than 60 days
from the date the advance notice is
filed, or the date further information
requested by the Commission is
received, if the Commission notifies the
clearing agency in writing that it does
not object to the proposed change and
authorizes the clearing agency to
implement the proposed change on an
earlier date, subject to any conditions
imposed by the Commission.
OCC shall post notice on its website
of proposed changes that are
implemented. The proposal shall not
take effect until all regulatory actions
35 Id.
36 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(4).
37 Id.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:47 Nov 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
required with respect to the proposal are
completed.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
By the Commission.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–24549 Filed 11–8–19; 8:45 am]
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the advance notice is
consistent with the Clearing
Supervision Act. Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–87475; File No. SR–OCC–
2019–806]
• 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–
OCC–2019–807 on the subject line.
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Options Clearing Corporation; Notice
of Filing of Advance Notice Related to
Proposed Changes to The Options
Clearing Corporation’s Rules, Clearing
Fund Methodology Policy, and
Clearing Fund and Stress Testing
Methodology
Paper Comments
November 6, 2019.
Electronic Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–OCC–2019–807. 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 website (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the advance notice that
are filed with the Commission, and all
written communications relating to the
advance notice 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 website 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. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the self-regulatory organization.
All comments received will be posted
without change. Persons submitting
comments are cautioned that we do not
redact or edit personal identifying
information from comment submissions.
You should submit only information
that you wish to make available
publicly.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–OCC–2019–807 and should
be submitted on or before November 27,
2019.
PO 00000
Frm 00116
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
entitled Payment, Clearing and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4(n)(1)(i) 2 under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’
or ‘‘Act’’),3 notice is hereby given that
on October 10, 2019, the Options
Clearing Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) an
advance notice as described in Items I,
II and III below, which Items have been
prepared by OCC. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the advance notice from
interested persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This advance notice is submitted in
connection with proposed
enhancements to OCC’s Clearing Fund
and stress testing rules and
methodology designed to: (1)
Incorporate a new set of stress test
scenarios to be used in the monthly
sizing of OCC’s Clearing Fund that are
designed to capture the risks of extreme
moves in individual or small subsets of
securities; (2) enhance OCC’s stress
testing methodology for modeling
certain volatility index futures; (3)
modify OCC’s methodology for
allocating Clearing Fund contribution
requirements to standardize the margin
risk component of the allocation
formula for all Clearing Members; (4)
adopt an additional threshold for
notifying senior management of intra1 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i).
3 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
2 17
E:\FR\FM\12NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 218 (Tuesday, November 12, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 61114-61120]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-24549]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-87476; File No. SR-OCC-2019-807]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation;
Notice of Filing of Advance Notice Related to Proposed Changes to The
Options Clearing Corporation's Rules, Margin Policy, Margin
Methodology, Clearing Fund Methodology Policy, and Clearing Fund and
Stress Testing Methodology To Address Specific Wrong-Way Risk
November 6, 2019.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, entitled Payment, Clearing
and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010 (``Clearing Supervision Act'')
\1\ and Rule 19b-4(n)(1)(i) \2\ under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (``Act'' or ``Exchange Act''),\3\ notice is hereby given that on
October 10, 2019, the Options Clearing Corporation (``OCC'') filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') an advance
notice as described in Items I, II and III below, which Items have been
prepared by OCC. The Commission is publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the advance notice from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(1)(i).
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This advance notice is submitted in connection with proposed
enhancements to OCC's Rules, margin policy and methodology, Clearing
Fund policy, and Clearing Fund and stress testing methodology to adopt
new margin charges and other risk measures to address the specific
wrong-way risk presented by certain cleared positions.
The proposed amendments to OCC's Rules are included in Exhibit 5A
of the filing. The proposed amendments to OCC's Margin Policy and
Margins Methodology are included in Exhibits 5B and 5C, respectively.
The proposed amendments to OCC's Clearing Fund Methodology Policy
(``CFM Policy'') and Stress Testing and Clearing Fund Methodology
Description (``Methodology Description'') are included in Exhibits 5D
and 5E, respectively. Material proposed to be added to the Rules,
Margin Policy and Margins Methodology as currently in effect is marked
by underlining, and
[[Page 61115]]
material proposed to be deleted is marked in strikethrough text;
however, the proposed Specific Wrong-Way Risk Add-On chapter of the
Margins Methodology is presented without marking to improve readability
as the entire chapter is newly proposed rule text.\4\ Material proposed
to be added to the CFM Policy and Methodology Description is marked by
double underlining, and material proposed to be deleted is marked in
double strikethrough text.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ OCC also has filed a proposed rule change with the
Commission in connection with the proposed changes. See SR-OCC-2019-
010.
\5\ OCC also filed with the Commission proposed rule change and
advance notice filings concerning enhancements to its CFM Policy and
Methodology Description, which are currently pending Commission
review. See OCC filings SR-OCC-2019-009 and SR-OCC-2019-806. OCC has
marked proposed changes to the CFM Policy and Methodology
Description described herein in double marking to clearly
differentiate those changes from other changes currently pending
Commission review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The advance notice is available on OCC's website at https://www.theocc.com/about/publications/bylaws.jsp. All terms with initial
capitalization that are not otherwise defined herein have the same
meaning as set forth in the OCC By-Laws and Rules.\6\
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\6\ OCC's By-Laws and Rules can be found on OCC's public
website: https://optionsclearing.com/about/publications/bylaws.jsp.
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II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, OCC included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for the advance notice and
discussed any comments it received on the advance notice. The text of
these statements may be examined at the places specified in Item IV
below. OCC has prepared summaries, set forth in sections A and B below,
of the most significant aspects of these statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Advance Notice
Written comments were not and are not intended to be solicited with
respect to the advance notice and none have been received. OCC will
notify the Commission of any written comments received by OCC.
(B) Advance Notices Filed Pursuant to Section 806(e) of the Payment,
Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act
Description of the Proposed Change
Background
As a central counterparty (``CCP''), OCC is exposed to wrong-way
risk, which is the risk that arises when exposure to a counterparty is
adversely correlated with the credit quality and probability of default
of that counterparty. Specific wrong-way risk (``SWWR'') arises when an
exposure to a participant is highly likely to increase when the
creditworthiness of that participant is deteriorating.\7\ For example,
SWWR arises where a Clearing Member's cleared positions contain equity
securities issued by the Clearing Member or its affiliates (i.e., the
Clearing Member Group) (such positions referred to herein as ``SWWR
Equity positions'') as the equity issued by the Clearing Member Group
may be assumed to have a price at or near zero in a default or
bankruptcy scenario, and those positions (e.g., equity used as a hedge,
stock loans, options on equity, single-stock futures) may experience
substantial losses. In addition, SWWR may arise where uncollateralized
exchange-traded notes (``ETNs'') issued by a Clearing Member or its
affiliates (``SWWR ETN positions'') are part of the Clearing Member's
cleared positions (these positions, collectively with ``SWWR Equity
positions,'' are hereinafter referred to as ``SWWR positions''). SWWR
may also arise when a Clearing Member posts equity securities or ETNs
issued by it or of its affiliates as margin collateral.
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\7\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 78961 (September 28,
2016), 81 FR 70786, 70816, n. 317 (October 13, 2016) (S7-03-14)
(``Standards for Covered Clearing Agencies''). See also Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems and Technical Committee of the
International Organization of Securities Commissions, Principles for
financial market infrastructures (Apr. 16, 2012), available at
https://www.bis.org/publ/cpss101a.pdf.
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OCC currently accounts for SWWR as it relates to margin collateral
by generally prohibiting a Clearing Member from pledging equities
issued by it or one of its affiliates as margin collateral unless this
pledge provides a hedge against a cleared position in the same
account.\8\ OCC does not, however, currently account for SWWR as it
relates to cleared positions. As a result, OCC is proposing a new
``add-on'' charge \9\ for its margin methodology, the System for
Theoretical Analysis and Numerical Simulations (``STANS''),\10\ and new
stress test scenarios that may result in intra-day margin calls and, in
more extreme cases, intra-month increases in the size of OCC's Clearing
Fund \11\ to address the wrong-way risk of OCC's cleared positions
involving Clearing Member-issued securities. In addition, OCC proposes
to introduce certain restrictions on stock lending activity related to
SWWR positions.
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\8\ See OCC Rule 604, Interpretation and Policy .16.
\9\ Under OCC's Margin Policy, OCC may collateralize certain
exposures through the use of add-on charges.
\10\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 53322 (February 15,
2006), 71 FR 9403 (February 23, 2006) (SR-OCC-2004-20). A detailed
description of the STANS methodology is available at https://optionsclearing.com/risk-management/margins/.
\11\ Under OCC's existing stress testing and Clearing Fund
methodology, OCC runs on a daily basis a set of stress test
scenarios designed to measure the exposure of the Clearing Fund to
the portfolios of individual Clearing Member Groups and determine
whether any such exposure is sufficiently large as to necessitate
OCC calling for additional resources so that OCC continues to
maintain sufficient financial resources to guard against potential
losses under a wide range of stress scenarios, including extreme but
plausible market conditions (``Sufficiency Scenarios,'' and such
scenarios collectively constituting ``Sufficiency Stress Tests'').
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83714 (July 26, 2018), 83 FR
37570 (August 1, 2018) (SR-OCC-2018-803) and Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 83735 (July 27, 2018), 83 FR 37855 (August 2, 2018) (SR-
OCC-2018-008). Under OCC Rule 609, the CFM Policy, and the
Methodology Description, if a Sufficiency Stress Test identifies
exposures that exceed 75% of the current Clearing Fund requirement
less deficits (the ``75% threshold'' or ``Sufficiency Stress Test
Threshold 1''), OCC may require additional margin deposits from the
Clearing Member Group(s) driving the breach. If a Sufficiency Stress
Test identifies exposures that exceed 90% of the current Clearing
Fund, OCC would perform an intra-month resizing of the Clearing
Fund. Id.
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Proposed Changes
OCC proposes to enhance its management of SWWR by: (1) Imposing
certain restrictions on stock lending activity at OCC; (2) adopting a
new SWWR margin add-on for STANS (``SWWR Add-on''); (3) introducing new
stress test scenarios to capture the SWWR of cleared positions
involving Clearing Member-issued ETNs beyond certain pre-defined
thresholds; and (4) making other clarifying and conforming changes to
the CFM Policy and Methodology Description. The proposed changes are
intended to address the credit risks arising from SWWR positions at
OCC. The proposed changes are described in detail below.
1. Prohibition on Lending Clearing Member/Affiliate-Issued Securities
OCC operates two programs for stock loan transactions: (1) The
Stock Loan/Hedge Program and (2) the Market Loan Program (collectively,
the ``Stock Loan Programs''). In the Stock Loan/Hedge Program,
prospective Lending and Borrowing Clearing Members identify each other
(independent of OCC), agree to bilaterally negotiated terms of the
stock loan (in this case, a ``Hedge Loan''), and then send the details
of the stock loan to the Depository Trust Company (``DTC'') designating
the stock loan as a Hedge Loan for guaranty and clearance at OCC. The
Lending Clearing Member then instructs DTC to transfer
[[Page 61116]]
a specified number of shares of Eligible Stock \12\ to the account of
the Borrowing Clearing Member, and the Borrowing Clearing Member
instructs DTC to transfer the appropriate amount of cash collateral to
the account of the Lending Clearing Member. In the Market Loan Program,
stock loans are initiated through the matching of bids and offers that
are either agreed upon by the Market Loan Clearing Members or matched
anonymously through a Loan Market (such stock loans being ``Market
Loans''). In order to initiate a Market Loan, the Loan Market sends a
matched transaction to OCC, which in turn sends two separate but linked
settlement instructions to DTC to effect the movement of Eligible Stock
and cash collateral between the accounts of the Market Loan Clearing
Members through OCC's account at DTC.
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\12\ OCC's By-Laws define ``Eligible Stock'' to mean, in part,
any security that is eligible for lending in the Stock Loan/Hedge
Program and the Market Loan Program. See Article I, Section 1.E(3)
of the OCC By-Laws. Eligible Stock may include ETNs issued by OCC's
Clearing Members.
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Regardless of whether a transaction is initiated under the Stock
Loan/Hedge Program or Market Loan Program, OCC novates the transaction
and becomes the lender to the Borrowing Clearing Member and the
borrower to the Lending Clearing Member. As the principal counterparty
to the Borrowing and Lending Clearing Members, OCC guarantees the
return of the full value of cash collateral to a Borrowing Clearing
Member and guarantees the return of the Loaned Stock (or value of that
Loaned Stock) to the Lending Clearing Member.\13\ As noted above, OCC
may be exposed to SWWR in its Stock Loan Programs where Clearing
Members lend equity securities or ETNs issued by the Clearing Member or
its affiliates. Specifically, the lending of Clearing Member or Member
Affiliate-issued equity or ETNs creates a long exposure and liability
in the case when a Clearing Member defaults and its own or affiliated
equity or ETN declines.
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\13\ Under the Market Loan Program, OCC also provides a limited
guaranty of dividend and rebate payments.
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OCC proposes to mitigate SWWR in its Stock Loan Programs by
prohibiting Clearing Members from lending any Eligible Stock issued by
such Clearing Member or any affiliate of such Clearing Member. The
proposed restriction would apply to both SWWR Equity positions and SWWR
ETN positions. OCC does not believe that the proposed restriction on
lending SWWR Equity positions would have a material impact on Clearing
Members in the Stock Loan Programs as Clearing Members do not typically
engage in lending of their own equity securities and borrowers
typically do not accept equity securities issued by their lending
counterparty.\14\ The proposed restrictions on lending SWWR ETN
positions would, however, impact a very small segment of Clearing
Members that lend SWWR ETNs.\15\ OCC believes that the impact of the
proposed changes would be limited by the fact that, unlike listed
options, Clearing Members are able to lend SWWR positions on an
uncleared basis outside of OCC. The proposed restrictions on lending
activity in the Stock Loan Programs would not prevent Clearing Members
from lending equities or ETNs issued by the Clearing Member or any
affiliate of such Clearing Member on a bilateral basis if members wish
to do so.
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\14\ As of the start of September 2019, OCC had 107 Clearing
Members, of which 64 have member or affiliate-issued securities
eligible for lending in the Stock Loan Programs. OCC analyzed SWWR
Equity lending activity for its Clearing Members from January 2018
through the beginning of September 2019. During this period, less
than 10 Clearing Members had stock lending activity in SWWR Equity
positions, and loans of SWWR Equity positions constituted less than
three percent of each of those Clearing Members' average notional
stock lending activity for the period.
\15\ OCC analyzed SWWR ETN lending activity for its Clearing
Members from January 2018 through the beginning of September 2019.
Only 11 of OCC's 107 Clearing Members have member or affiliate
issued ETNs. During this period, less than 10 Clearing Members had
stock lending activity for SWWR ETN positions. For the majority of
these Clearing Members, lending in SWWR ETN positions constituted
approximately 13 percent or less of each of those Clearing Members'
average notional stock lending activity for the period. For Clearing
Members that averaged higher notational lending activity, OCC has
observed significant reductions in this activity over recent months.
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The proposed prohibition on lending Clearing Member or Member
Affiliate-issued Eligible Stock would be included in new OCC Rules
2202(f) and 2202A(f) for the Stock Loan/Hedge Program and Market Loan
Program, respectively. OCC would also make conforming changes to its
Margin Policy and Margins Methodology to reflect the newly proposed
restrictions in stock lending activity.
The proposed change would only apply to stock lending activity as
of the time of implementation of the proposed change. The proposed
change would not be applied retroactively to existing open positions,
and Clearing Members with open stock loans involving Clearing Member or
Member Affiliate-issued Eligible Stock would not be forced to terminate
those existing positions. Any SWWR stock lending positions in existence
as of the implementation of the proposed change would be subject to the
SWWR charges described below until such positions are closed out
through the normal course stock loan termination process.
2. SWWR Add-on
OCC proposes to adopt a new margin add-on (i.e., the SWWR Add-on)
to address SWWR from cleared positions involving Clearing Member and
affiliate issued equities and ETNs. The SWWR Add-on would be calculated
for each margin tier account of a Clearing Member Group having
positions related to either publicly traded equities or ETNs issued by
the Clearing Member Group and would cover all types of positions
(equity used as collateral, equity and ETN options, single-stock
futures). The proposed SWWR Add-on is comprised of three main
components: (1) ``SWWR Equity Charge,'' (2) ``SWWR ETN Charge,'' and
(3) ``SWWR Residual.'' Each of these components is discussed below.
a. SWWR Equity Charge
Under the proposal, when a Clearing Member defaults, it is assumed
that the price of any equity security issued by the Clearing Member
Group would fall to zero. As a result, OCC would calculate the SWWR
Equity Charge by assuming that a Clearing Member's and its affiliates'
equity securities would be priced at zero and value all cleared
positions accordingly (i.e., all stocks, single stock futures, call
options, and put options would be valued at zero) to provide full
protection for the risk of potential market exposure to products on a
Clearing Member Group's own equity in a default or bankruptcy scenario.
In each margin account, the profit and loss (``P&L'') of SWWR Equity
positions would be calculated as the difference of the theoretical
value of such securities (i.e., zero) and the closing price of the
position multiplied by the net quantity.\16\ Moreover, any potential
gain from the SWWR positions would be excluded by flooring the SWWR
Equity Charge at zero.\17\ As a result, OCC believes that the proposed
SWWR Equity Charge would adequately cover the SWWR arising from a
Clearing Member's SWWR Equity positions.
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\16\ Because SWWR of equity-related positions would be fully
covered as part of margins, these positions would be removed from
Clearing Fund shortfall calculations under OCC's stress testing and
Clearing Fund methodology. Accordingly, OCC proposes to revise its
Methodology Description to reflect the exclusion of SWWR Equity
positions from the synthetic accounts used in OCC's stress testing.
\17\ For example, suppose the P&L from the SWWR equity price
going to 0 for all SWWR equity-related positions were a loss of $1
million. The SWWR Equity Charge in this case would be $1 million. If
the P&L were a gain of $1 million, the SWWR Equity Charge would be
$0.
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[[Page 61117]]
b. SWWR ETN Charge
In addition to SWWR that arises from equity securities issued by a
Clearing Member or its affiliates, OCC is also exposed to SWWR from
open positions related to the uncollateralized ETNs issued by a
Clearing Member/Group, which are adversely correlated with the credit
quality of that Clearing Member Group. These ETNs are generally
equivalent to unsecured senior debt issued by the Clearing Member/
Group. While a Clearing Member default can be triggered by its failure
to meet other obligations, the firm may or may not default on its ETNs.
Hence, the recovery rate for ETNs is uncertain and could be between 0%
and 100%.
To address SWWR presented by ETNs issued by a Clearing Member/
Group, OCC proposes to calculate an SWWR ETN Charge as part of the SWWR
Add-on. OCC notes that, unlike SWWR Equity positions, for which it is
assumed that the price of any equity security issued by the Clearing
Member Group would fall to zero, the recovery rate for ETNs would not
necessarily fall to zero. As a result, the proposed SWWR ETN Charge
would utilize an industry standard recovery rate assumption designed to
reflect the credit risk associated with such ETN positions.\18\ OCC
would also adopt additional stress test scenarios to monitor and
measure SWWR ETN position exposures and allow for OCC to call for
additional financial resources from its Clearing Members when certain
thresholds are breached. These SWWR stress test scenarios are discussed
in further detail below.
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\18\ ETNs issued by a Clearing Member Group would still be
stressed in OCC's Clearing Fund as only a part of the credit risk is
covered by the SWWR ETN Charge. Additionally, any credit from margin
assets would be adjusted by the direct charges related to the risk
of the equity and ETNs issued by each Clearing Member Group.
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c. SWWR Residual
To ensure that OCC appropriately calculates margins to capture SWWR
Equity and SWWR ETN position exposures, OCC proposes to include an SWWR
Residual component in SWWR Add-on. Under the proposal, OCC would
continue to calculate base STANS margin requirements for Clearing
Members with SWWR positions including SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
positions under its current methodology (i.e., without assuming that
all SWWR Equity positions fall to a value of zero and without assuming
all SWWR ETN positions are valued at the recovery rate times their
current price).\19\ OCC would then also calculate a residual STANS
margin with the SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN positions removed since for
SWWR their P&L would be captured through the SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
Charges. The SWWR Residual would then be the difference between the
residual margin and the base margin. If the sum of the SWWR Equity
Charge, SWWR ETN Charge and SWWR Residual would result in a net credit
to the Clearing Member,\20\ then the SWWR Residual would be adjusted to
ensure that OCC always uses a more conservative measure that captures
the greater of either the base STANS margin or the residual STANS
margin plus the SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN Charges.\21\
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\19\ STANS margin requirements are comprised of the sum of
several components, each reflecting a different aspect of risk. The
base component of the STANS margin requirement for each account is
obtained using a risk measure known as 99% Expected Shortfall. The
Expected Shortfall component is established as the estimated average
of potential losses higher than the 99% value at risk threshold. The
term ``value at risk'' or ``VaR'' refers to a statistical technique
that, generally speaking, is used in risk management to measure the
potential risk of loss for a given set of assets over a particular
time horizon. This base component is then adjusted by the addition
of a stress test component, which is obtained from consideration of
the increases in 99% Expected Shortfall that would arise from market
movements that are especially large and/or in which various kinds of
risk factors exhibit perfect or zero correlations in place of their
correlations estimated from historical data (``Dependence Add-on''),
or from extreme adverse idiosyncratic movements in individual risk
factors to which the account is particularly exposed
(``Concentration Add-on'').
\20\ For example, where a customer of a Clearing Member has net
short positions referencing that Clearing Member's issued equities,
such positions may actually present so-called ``right-way risk''
whereby the position would result in a gain or margin credit for
that account as the credit quality of the Clearing Member
deteriorates.
\21\ For example, suppose that there are no SWWR ETN positions
and the Expected Shortfall of a portfolio including all positions
was a $10 million loss and the Expected Shortfall with the SWWR
Equity-related positions removed was a greater loss of $11 million.
In this case, the SWWR Residual would be -$1 million. If the
Expected Shortfall with the SWWR Equity-related positions removed
was reduced to a loss of $9 million then the SWWR Residual would
depend on the SWWR Equity Charge: If the SWWR Equity Charge was more
negative than -$1 million, then the SWWR Residual would be +$1
million; if the SWWR Equity Charge was $0, then SWWR Residual would
be $0; and if SWWR Equity Charge was between $0 and -$1 million
(e.g., -$0.4 million), then SWWR Residual would be positive and the
opposite value of SWWR Equity Charge (e.g., +$0.4 million). Thus,
the sum of the SWWR Equity Charge, SWWR ETN Charge, and SWWR
Residual cannot be positive.
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3. Enhancements to Sufficiency Stress Test Scenarios for ETNs
OCC proposes to revise its CFM Policy and Methodology Description
to introduce new stress test scenarios designed to capture SWWR
exposures for Clearing Member-issued ETNs that are not accounted for in
the SWWR ETN Charge and that exceed certain thresholds of OCC's
Clearing Fund (``SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios'').\22\ Under the proposal,
certain Sufficiency Scenarios \23\ would be evaluated with Clearing
Member-issued ETNs declining to zero within the respective Clearing
Member's accounts. Such scenarios would include, but would not be
limited to, the 1987 ``Black Monday'' market event on a Cover 1 basis
and the two most extreme moves from the 2008 historical market event on
a Cover 2 basis.
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\22\ OCC notes that it may also develop additional Informational
Scenarios to monitor SWWR; however, these Informational Scenarios
would not be used to call for additional financial resources from
Clearing Members.
\23\ See supra note 1111.
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SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios would value Clearing Member-issued ETNs
at a price of zero within their own accounts capturing impacts to any
cleared positions tied to those ETNs. Calls, equities, and single-stock
futures would all be valued at zero and puts would be valued at their
strike price. For these scenarios, margin assets for shortfall
calculations would not be adjusted by the SWWR ETN Charge. In addition,
other scenarios may be created that embed the SWWR Equity risk by not
excluding positions related to the Clearing Member Group's own equity
but using an equity price of zero to value all related products.
In the event an SWWR Sufficiency Scenario identifies exposures that
exceed 75% of the current Clearing Fund requirement less deficits, OCC
may require additional margin deposits from the Clearing Member
Group(s) driving the breach. If an SWWR Sufficiency Stress Scenario
identifies exposures that exceed 90% of the current Clearing Fund, OCC
would perform an intra-month resizing of the Clearing Fund. The
proposed change would enable OCC to more accurately measure its credit
risks as they relate to SWWR and better test the sufficiency of its
overall financial resources and would allow OCC to call for additional
financial resources when SWWR ETN position exposures exceed certain
thresholds of OCC's Clearing Fund. As a result of these proposed
enhancements, OCC believes it would have sufficient financial resources
to cover the SWWR associated with SWWR ETN positions if such positions
were to be liquidated for less than the assumed recovery rate.
OCC notes that, under its current CFM Policy, in the event results
of a daily Sufficiency Stress Test over the final
[[Page 61118]]
five business days preceding the monthly Clearing Fund sizing exceed
90% of the projected Clearing Fund size for the upcoming month, the
Clearing Fund size is set such that the peak Sufficiency Stress Test
draw is no greater than 90% of the Clearing Fund size. OCC proposes to
revise the CFM Policy to provide that OCC generally does not intend to
mutualize exposures resulting from the proposed SWWR Sufficiency
Scenarios and therefore SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios would not be
included for purposes of this anti-procyclicality measure. The proposed
change is generally aligned with OCC's intention to appropriately
charge individual Clearing Members based on the SWWR they bring to OCC.
4. Other Clarifying and Conforming Changes to CFM Policy and
Methodology Description
In addition to the proposed changes described above, OCC would
revise the CFM Policy and Methodology Description to provide that, with
respect to stress test portfolio construction, SWWR single-name equity
positions would be removed from stress test portfolios as they are
fully collateralized in margins. Additionally, the Methodology
Description would be revised to provide that when adding STANS margin
asset amounts to scenario gains and losses, the SWWR Equity Charge,
SWWR ETN Charge, and certain other Add-ons from STANS margin asset
amounts are excluded.
Finally, OCC would revise its Methodology Description to clarify
that for Idiosyncratic Scenarios,\24\ the four riskiest names used to
calculate idiosyncratic stress test exposures would exclude any equity
issued by the Clearing Member's own firms and make other clarifying,
non-substantive changes to the Methodology Description concerning
stress testing price shocks for products with multiple risk factors and
Idiosyncratic Scenarios that are unrelated to the proposal described
herein.
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\24\ OCC has proposed in separate proposed rule change and
advance notice filings to adopt a new set of stress scenarios to be
used in the monthly sizing of OCC's Clearing Fund that are designed
to capture the risks of extreme moves in individual or small subsets
of securities (``Idiosyncratic Scenarios''). These Idiosyncratic
Scenarios would consider the four single-name securities with the
worst P&L in a Clearing Member's portfolio. See supra note 5.
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Clearing Member Outreach
To inform Clearing Members of the proposed changes, OCC has
provided an overview of the proposed changes to the Financial Risk
Advisory Council (``FRAC''), a working group comprised of exchanges,
Clearing Members and indirect participants of OCC. OCC has also
performed direct outreach to Clearing Members that would be most
impacted by the proposed changes. To-date, OCC has not received any
material objections or concerns in response to this outreach.
Implementation Timing
OCC expects to implement the proposed changes within sixty (60)
days after the date that OCC receives all necessary regulatory
approvals for the proposed changes. OCC will announce the
implementation date of the proposed change by an Information Memorandum
posted to its public website at least two (2) weeks prior to
implementation.
Expected Effect on and Management of Risk
The proposed changes are designed to enhance OCC's overall
framework for managing credit risk and reduce the overall level of risk
presented to and presented by OCC. OCC believes that prohibiting
Clearing Members from lending their own or Member Affiliate-issued
securities in the Stock Loan Programs and introducing the proposed SWWR
Add-on charge would improve OCC's ability to manage the credit risks
presented by its Clearing Members' SWWR positions and would reduce the
risk that OCC's financial resources would be insufficient in the event
of a Clearing Member default. As a result, the proposed change is
designed, in general, to enhance OCC's framework for measuring and
managing its credit risks so that it can continue to provide prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of securities and derivatives
transactions in the event of a Clearing Member default.
In addition, OCC believes that introducing new SWWR Sufficiency
Scenarios designed to capture SWWR exposures for Clearing Member-issued
ETNs that are not accounted for in the SWWR ETN Charge would provide
OCC with a more comprehensive approach to managing OCC's credit risks
as they relate to SWWR ETN positions. The proposed change would enable
OCC to more accurately measure its credit risks and better test the
sufficiency of its overall financial resources and would allow OCC to
call for additional financial resources when those exposures exceed
certain thresholds of OCC's Clearing Fund.
OCC also proposes a number of other clarifying and conforming
changes to its CFM Policy and Methodology Description required to
implement the proposed SWWR Add-on and SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios
described herein and to more clearly describe OCC's stress testing
practices. OCC believes that these changes would enhance OCC's overall
framework for measuring and managing its credit risks so that it can
continue to provide prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of
securities in the event of a Clearing Member default.
Consistency With the Payment, Clearing and Settlement Supervision Act
The stated purpose of the Clearing Supervision Act is to mitigate
systemic risk in the financial system and promote financial stability
by, among other things, promoting uniform risk management standards for
systemically important financial market utilities and strengthening the
liquidity of systemically important financial market utilities.\25\
Section 805(a)(2) of the Clearing Supervision Act \26\ also authorizes
the Commission to prescribe risk management standards for the payment,
clearing and settlement activities of designated clearing entities,
like OCC, for which the Commission is the supervisory agency. Section
805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act \27\ states that the objectives
and principles for risk management standards prescribed under Section
805(a) shall be to:
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\25\ 12 U.S.C. 5461(b).
\26\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(a)(2).
\27\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
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promote robust risk management;
promote safety and soundness;
reduce systemic risks; and
support the stability of the broader financial system.
OCC believes that the proposed changes described herein are
consistent with the objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act \28\ and the risk management standards adopted
by the Commission in Rule 17Ad-22 under the Act for the reasons set
forth below.\29\
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\28\ Id.
\29\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22. See Securities Exchange Act Release
Nos. 68080 (October 22, 2012), 77 FR 66220 (November 2, 2012) (S7-
08-11) (``Clearing Agency Standards''); 78961 (September 28, 2016),
81 FR 70786 (October 13, 2016) (S7-03-14) (``Standards for Covered
Clearing Agencies''). OCC is a ``covered clearing agency'' as
defined in Rule 17Ad-22(a)(5) and therefore must comply with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(e).
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OCC believes the proposed changes are consistent with the
objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision
Act.\30\ The proposed changes are designed to improve OCC's overall
framework for managing SWWR brought by its Clearing Members. OCC
believes that prohibiting Clearing Members from
[[Page 61119]]
lending their own or Member Affiliate-issued securities in the Stock
Loan Programs and introducing the proposed SWWR Add-on charge would
enhance OCC's ability to manage the credit risks presented by its
Clearing Members' SWWR positions and would reduce the risk that OCC's
financial resources would be insufficient in the event of a Clearing
Member default. In addition, OCC believes that introducing new SWWR
Sufficiency Scenarios designed to capture SWWR exposures for Clearing
Member-issued ETNs that are not accounted for in the SWWR ETN Charge
would provide OCC with a comprehensive approach to managing OCC's
credit risks as they relate to SWWR ETN positions. The proposed change
would enable OCC to more accurately measure its credit risks and better
test the sufficiency of its overall financial resources and would allow
OCC to call for additional financial resources when those exposures
exceed certain thresholds of OCC's Clearing Fund. OCC also proposes a
number of other clarifying and conforming changes to its CFM Policy and
Methodology Description required to implement the proposed SWWR Add-on
and SWWR Sufficiency Scenarios described herein and to more clearly
describe OCC's stress testing practices. Accordingly, OCC believes the
proposed changes are designed to promote robust risk management,
promote safety and soundness, reduce systemic risks, and support the
stability of the broader financial system.
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\30\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
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OCC also believes the proposed changes are consistent with the risk
management standards adopted by the Commission in Rule 17Ad-22 under
the Act. Rule 17Ad-22(b)(2) \31\ requires a registered clearing agency
that performs CCP services to establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures reasonably designed to, in
part, use margin requirements to limit its credit exposures to
participants under normal market conditions and use risk-based models
and parameters to set such margin requirements. In addition, Rules
17Ad-22(e)(6)(i) and (v) \32\ require a covered clearing agency that
provides CCP services to establish, implement, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures reasonably designed to cover its credit
exposures to its participants by establishing a risk-based margin
system that, at a minimum: (1) Considers and produces margin levels
commensurate with the risks and particular attributes of each relevant
product, portfolio, and market, and (2) uses an appropriate method for
measuring credit exposure that accounts for relevant product risk
factors and portfolio effects across products.
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\31\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(b)(2).
\32\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(i) and (v).
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The proposed changes to OCC's margin and Clearing Fund policies and
methodologies to adopt the SWWR Add-on would utilize a risk-based model
designed to limit OCC's credit exposures to Clearing Members that
present SWWR exposure to OCC through the clearing of Clearing Member-
issued equity and ETN positions. OCC believes the proposed SWWR Add-on
is reasonably designed to produce margin levels commensurate with the
risks and particular attributes SWWR Equity and ETN positions and would
use an appropriate method for measuring credit exposure that accounts
for relevant product risk factors such as SWWR.
The proposed SWWR Add-on would include both an SWWR Equity Charge
and SWWR ETN Charge to address the SWWR attributes and exposures
presented to OCC by each type of product. For example, the SWWR Equity
Charge assumes that when a Clearing Member defaults the price of any
equity security issued by the Clearing Member Group would fall to zero.
As a result, OCC would calculate the SWWR Equity Charge by assuming
that a Clearing Member's and its affiliates' equity securities would be
priced at zero and value all cleared positions accordingly to provide
full protection for the risk of potential market exposure to products
on a Clearing Member Group's own equity in a default or bankruptcy
scenario. Moreover, the SWWR Add-on charge would include an SWWR
Residual component to ensure that OCC takes the more conservative of
the base STANS margin requirement or margin requirements including the
SWWR Equity Charge (particularly in circumstances where using the SWWR
Equity Charge would result in a net credit to the Clearing Member).
In addition, OCC would adopt an SWWR ETN Charge to address the SWWR
presented by Clearing Member-issued ETNs. ETNs have different
characteristics than equity securities and more closely reflect those
characteristics of other unsecured debt obligations. For example, if a
Clearing Member defaults that does not necessarily imply that it will
automatically default on its ETNs. Therefore, ETNs are not necessarily
valued at 0 and in fact may retain 100% of their value and be exposed
to normal market risk. OCC proposes to measure the risk of these
positions using an industry standard recovery rate assumption designed
to calculate a margin charge that reflects the expected credit risk
associated with such ETN positions. The potential market risk of the
ETNs would still be covered by including ETNs in regular margin
calculations, whereas the SWWR Equity positions are assumed to be
heading towards bankruptcy and necessarily valued near 0 in a default
situation.
For these reasons, OCC believes the proposed SWWR Add-on would
enhance OCC's margin system by providing for a risk-based model that:
(1) Sets margin requirements designed to limit OCC's SWWR exposures to
its participant; (2) considers and produces margin levels commensurate
with the risks and particular attributes SWWR positions cleared by OCC;
and (3) uses an appropriate method for measuring such SWWR exposures
consistent with the requirements of Rules 17Ad-22(b)(2), (e)(6)(i) and
(e)(6)(v).\33\
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\33\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(b)(2), (e)(6)(i), and (e)(6)(v).
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Rules 17Ad-22(e)(4)(iii) and (vi) \34\ require that a covered
clearing agency establish, implement, maintain and enforce written
policies and procedures reasonably designed to effectively identify,
measure, monitor, and manage its credit exposures to participants and
those arising from its payment, clearing, and settlement processes,
including by: (1) Maintaining additional financial resources at the
minimum to enable it to cover a wide range of foreseeable stress
scenarios that include, but are not limited to, the default of the
participant family that would potentially cause the largest aggregate
credit exposure for the covered clearing agency in extreme but
plausible market conditions and (2) testing the sufficiency of its
total financial resources available to meet these minimum financial
resource requirements. OCC believes that introducing new SWWR
Sufficiency Scenarios designed to capture SWWR exposures for Clearing
Member-issued ETNs that are not accounted for in the SWWR ETN Charge
would enable OCC to more accurately measure its credit risks and better
test the sufficiency of its overall financial resources, particularly
in stressed marked conditions. The proposed change would also allow OCC
to call for additional financial resources when those exposures exceed
certain thresholds of OCC's Clearing Fund. The proposed change is
therefore designed to enhance OCC's overall framework for measuring and
managing its credit risks and would reduce the risk that OCC's
financial resources would be
[[Page 61120]]
insufficient in the event of a Clearing Member default consistent with
Rules 17Ad-22(e)(4)(iii) and (vi).\35\
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\34\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(4)(iii) and (vi).
\35\ Id.
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Rule 17Ad-22(e)(4) \36\ generally requires that a covered clearing
agency establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to effectively identify, measure,
monitor, and manage its credit exposures to participants and those
arising from its payment, clearing, and settlement processes. By
prohibiting Clearing Members from lending Eligible Stock issued by the
Clearing Member or any affiliate of such Clearing Member, OCC would
mitigate the SWWR that currently exists in its Stock Loan Programs and
thereby reduce the risk that OCC's financial resources would be
insufficient in the event such a Clearing Member would default. OCC
believes the proposed change is therefore reasonably designed to help
OCC manage the credit risks associated with SWWR Equity and SWWR ETN
positions in the Stock Loan Programs and is therefore consistent with
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(4).\37\
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\36\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(4).
\37\ Id.
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III. Date of Effectiveness of the Advance Notice and Timing for
Commission Action
The proposed change may be implemented if the Commission does not
object to the proposed change within 60 days of the later of (i) the
date the proposed change was filed with the Commission or (ii) the date
any additional information requested by the Commission is received. OCC
shall not implement the proposed change if the Commission has any
objection to the proposed change.
The Commission may extend the period for review by an additional 60
days if the proposed change raises novel or complex issues, subject to
the Commission providing the clearing agency with prompt written notice
of the extension. A proposed change may be implemented in less than 60
days from the date the advance notice is filed, or the date further
information requested by the Commission is received, if the Commission
notifies the clearing agency in writing that it does not object to the
proposed change and authorizes the clearing agency to implement the
proposed change on an earlier date, subject to any conditions imposed
by the Commission.
OCC shall post notice on its website of proposed changes that are
implemented. The proposal shall not take effect until all regulatory
actions required with respect to the proposal are completed.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the advance
notice is consistent with the Clearing Supervision 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 [email protected]. Please include
File Number SR-OCC-2019-807 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-OCC-2019-807. 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 website (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml).
Copies of the submission, all subsequent amendments, all written
statements with respect to the advance notice that are filed with the
Commission, and all written communications relating to the advance
notice 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 website 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. Copies of the filing also will be available for inspection
and copying at the principal office of the self-regulatory
organization.
All comments received will be posted without change. Persons
submitting comments are cautioned that we do not redact or edit
personal identifying information from comment submissions. You should
submit only information that you wish to make available publicly.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-OCC-2019-807 and
should be submitted on or before November 27, 2019.
By the Commission.
Jill M. Peterson,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-24549 Filed 11-8-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P