Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed Income Clearing Corporation; Notice of Filing of Advance Notice To Add the Sponsored GC Service and Make Other Changes, 29834-29845 [2021-11605]
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29834
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 105 / Thursday, June 3, 2021 / Notices
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underwriting compensation permitted
by section 17(e) or 57(k)) received in
connection with any Co-Investment
Transaction will be distributed to the
participants on a pro rata basis based on
the amounts they invested or
committed, as the case may be, in such
Co-Investment Transaction. If any
transaction fee is to be held by an
Adviser pending consummation of the
transaction, the fee will be deposited
into an account maintained by the
Adviser at a bank or banks having the
qualifications prescribed in section
26(a)(1), and the account will earn a
competitive rate of interest that will also
be divided pro rata among the
participants. None of the Advisers, the
Affiliated Funds, the other Regulated
Funds or any affiliated person of the
Affiliated Funds or the Regulated Funds
will receive any additional
compensation or remuneration of any
kind as a result of or in connection with
a Co-Investment Transaction other than
(i) in the case of the Regulated Funds
and the Affiliated Funds, the pro rata
transaction fees described above and
fees or other compensation described in
Condition 2(c)(iii)(B)(z), (ii) brokerage or
underwriting compensation permitted
by section 17(e) or 57(k) or (iii) in the
case of the Advisers, investment
advisory compensation paid in
accordance with investment advisory
agreements between the applicable
Regulated Fund(s) or Affiliated Fund(s)
and its Adviser.
15. Independence. If the Holders own
in the aggregate more than 25 percent of
the Shares of a Regulated Fund, then the
Holders will vote such Shares in the
same percentages as the Regulated
Fund’s other shareholders (not
including the Holders) when voting on
(1) the election of directors; (2) the
removal of one or more directors; or (3)
any other matter under either the Act or
applicable State law affecting the
Board’s composition, size or manner of
election; provided however, that this
Condition 15 will not apply to a
Regulated Fund during any time which
the Holders in the aggregate own 100%
of the Shares of such Regulated Fund.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Investment Management, under delegated
authority.
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–11614 Filed 6–2–21; 8:45 am]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–92019; File No. SR–FICC–
2021–801]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed
Income Clearing Corporation; Notice of
Filing of Advance Notice To Add the
Sponsored GC Service and Make Other
Changes
May 27, 2021.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title
VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
entitled the Payment, Clearing, and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) 1 and Rule
19b–4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Act’’),2 notice is
hereby given that on May 12, 2021,
Fixed Income Clearing Corporation
(‘‘FICC’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the advance notice as described in Items
I, II and III below, which Items have
been prepared by the clearing agency.3
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 consists of
modifications to the FICC Government
Securities Division (‘‘GSD’’) Rulebook
(‘‘Rules’’) 4 in order to (i) add a new
service offering, which would allow a
Sponsoring Member to submit for
clearing Repo Transactions with its
Sponsored Members on securities that
are represented by Generic CUSIP
Numbers and held under a triparty
custodial arrangement (the ‘‘Sponsored
GC Service’’), (ii) add language to Rule
3A to allow FICC to recognize, for
Capped Contingency Liquidity Facility®
(‘‘CCLF’’) calculation purposes, any
offsetting settlement obligations as
between a Sponsoring Member’s netting
account and its Sponsoring Member
Omnibus Account to ensure that a
Sponsoring Member’s CCLF obligation
is calculated in a manner that more
closely aligns with the liquidity risk
associated with Sponsored Member
Trades, (iii) remove the requirement
1 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i).
3 On May 12, 2021, FICC filed this advance notice
as a proposed rule change (SR–FICC–2021–003)
with the Commission pursuant to Section 19(b)(1)
of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule 19b–4
thereunder, 17 CFR 240.19b–4. A copy of the
proposed rule change is available at https://
www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx.
4 Capitalized terms not defined herein are defined
in the Rules, available at https://www.dtcc.com/
legal/rules-and-procedures.
2 17
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from Section 2 of Rule 3A that a
Sponsoring Member provide a quarterly
representation to FICC that each of its
Sponsored Members is a ‘‘qualified
institutional buyer’’ as defined in Rule
144A of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended (‘‘Rule 144A’’), or is a legal
entity that, although not organized as an
entity specifically listed in paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A, satisfies the
financial requirements necessary to be a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
specified in that paragraph, and (iv)
make a clarification, certain corrections,
and certain technical changes, as
described in greater detail below.
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the
clearing agency 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. The clearing agency has
prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants,
or Others
FICC reviewed the proposed rule
change with Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members in order to benefit
from their expertise. Written comments
relating to this proposed rule change
have not been received from the
Sponsoring Members, Sponsored
Members or any other person. FICC will
notify the Commission of any written
comments received by FICC.
(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to
Section 806(e) of the Clearing
Supervision Act
Nature of the Proposed Change
The purpose of the proposed rule
change is to amend the Rules to (i) add
a new service offering, the Sponsored
GC Service, (ii) add language to Rule 3A
to allow FICC to recognize, for CCLF
calculation purposes, any offsetting
settlement obligations as between a
Sponsoring Member’s netting account
and its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account to ensure that a Sponsoring
Member’s CCLF obligation is calculated
in a manner that more closely aligns
with the liquidity risk associated with
Sponsored Member Trades, (iii) remove
the requirement from Section 2 of Rule
3A that a Sponsoring Member provide a
quarterly representation to FICC that
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each of its Sponsored Members is a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
defined in Rule 144A, or is a legal entity
that, although not organized as an entity
specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of Rule 144A, satisfies the financial
requirements necessary to be a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
specified in that paragraph, and (iv)
make a clarification, certain corrections,
and certain technical changes, as
described in greater detail below.
(i) Background
Under Rule 3A (Sponsoring Members
and Sponsored Members), certain
Netting Members are permitted to
sponsor, as Sponsoring Members,
‘‘qualified institutional buyers’’ as
defined by Rule 144A, and certain legal
entities that, although not organized as
entities specifically listed in paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A, satisfy the
financial requirements necessary to be
‘‘qualified institutional buyers’’ as
specified in that paragraph into FICC/
GSD membership.5 Under Rule 3A, a
Sponsoring Member is permitted to
submit to FICC for comparison,
Novation, and netting certain types of
eligible delivery versus payment
(‘‘DVP’’) securities transactions
(‘‘Sponsored Member Trades’’).6 A
Sponsoring Member is required to
establish an omnibus account at FICC
for its Sponsored Members’ positions
arising from such Sponsored Member
Trades (‘‘Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account’’), which is separate from the
Sponsoring Member’s regular netting
accounts.7 For operational and
administrative purposes, FICC interacts
solely with the relevant Sponsoring
Member as processing agent for
purposes of the day-to-day satisfaction
of its Sponsored Members’ obligations
to or from FICC, including their
5 Rule
3A, Section 3(a), supra note 4.
3A, Section 5, supra note 4. The term
‘‘Sponsored Member Trade’’ means a transaction
that satisfies the requirements of Section 5 of Rule
3A and that is (a) between a Sponsored Member and
its Sponsoring Member or (b) between a Sponsored
Member and a Netting Member. Rule 1, supra note
4.
7 The term ‘‘Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account’’ means an Account maintained by a
Sponsoring Member that contains the activity of its
Sponsored Members that is submitted to FICC. A
Sponsoring Member may elect to establish one or
more Sponsoring Member Omnibus Accounts. Each
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account may contain
activity within the meaning of clause (a) of the
Sponsored Member Trade definition or activity
within the meaning of clause (b) of such definition.
The Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account shall be
separate from the Accounts associated with the
Sponsoring Member’s activity as a Netting Member
except as contemplated by Sections 10, 11 and 12
of Rule 3A and under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty. Rule 1, supra note 4.
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6 Rule
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securities and funds-only settlement
obligations.8
The current Sponsoring Member/
Sponsored Member Service (the
‘‘Service’’), which has been in existence
since 2005, has seen a steady increase
in the number of Sponsoring Members,
in the number of Sponsored Members
and in the volume of Sponsored
Member Trades over the past three
years.9 One of the main benefits of the
Service is that it provides Sponsoring
Members with the ability to offset on
their balance sheets their obligations to
FICC on Sponsored Member Trades
with their Sponsored Members against
their obligations to FICC on other
eligible FICC-cleared activity, including
trades with other Netting Members.
In addition, the Service allows
Sponsoring Members to take lesser
capital charges for Repo Transactions
with Sponsored Members than would be
required were such transactions
uncleared.
By alleviating balance sheet and
capital constraints on Sponsoring
Members, the Service allows eligible
institutional firms to engage in greater
activity than may otherwise be feasible,
which in turn increases the liquidity
available in the repo market. Such
greater liquidity provides stability in the
market and additionally increases
potential returns for investors in both
cash provider institutions and collateral
provider institutions. For example, the
increased liquidity the Service provides
allows investors in institutional firms
that act as cash provider Sponsored
Members to invest more of their cash
than may otherwise be possible outside
of clearing, which in turn allows such
investors the ability to earn a greater
return as a result of their institutional
firms’ participation in the Service.
Likewise, for investors in institutional
firms that act as collateral provider
Sponsored Members, the increased
liquidity ensures more consistent
financing opportunities than may
otherwise be available outside of
clearing. Such consistent access to
financing may increase the amount of
cash the collateral provider institutional
8 Rule 3A, Sections 5, 6(b), 7(a), 8(a), 8(c), 9(a),
and 9(c), supra note 4.
9 In March 2017, there was one Sponsoring
Member and 1,422 Sponsored Members. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80236 (March
14, 2017), 82 FR 14265 (March 17, 2017) (SR–FICC–
2017–003). The Service currently has
approximately 27 Sponsoring Members and
approximately 1,894 Sponsored Members. As of
March 31, 2017, the aggregate Purchase Price of
outstanding Sponsored Member Trades was
approximately $32.2 billion. As of March 31, 2021,
the aggregate Purchase Price of outstanding
Sponsored Member Trades was approximately $286
billion.
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firms have to deploy into other
investment strategies, which in turn
allows their investors the opportunity to
earn a greater return as a result of the
institutional firms’ participation in the
Service.
FICC believes that enabling more repo
transactions to clear through FICC
mitigates the risk of a large-scale exit by
institutional firms from the U.S.
financial market in a stress scenario.10
To that point, during the recent market
volatility in the first quarter of 2020, the
Service in fact saw its peak volume of
approximately $564 billion, rather than
a decline, and no discernable impact to
volumes notwithstanding the default of
a Netting Member. In addition, no
Sponsored Members defaulted during
that volatile period.
In recent years, FICC has taken steps
to enable Sponsoring Members to
submit term (rather than overnight) repo
transactions for clearing. Specifically, in
2019, the Commission approved rule
changes that added a new close-out
mechanism and adjusted the calculation
of certain funds-only settlement
amounts for Sponsored Member Trades
that include haircuts.11 FICC believes
that having more centrally cleared term
repo transactions would promote the
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions
because more securities transactions
would benefit from FICC’s risk
management and guaranty of settlement.
FICC also believes that enabling more
term (rather than overnight) repo
activity in the Service can serve to help
reduce repo rate volatility in the market
and, in turn, help to avoid events like
those that occurred in September 2019,
when a temporary reduction in
overnight reverse repo activity by
money market funds, including through
the Service, contributed in part to the
repo rate volatility on those days.12
Although the aforementioned rule
changes have resulted in some
Sponsoring Members transacting term
Repo Transactions with certain of their
10 The U.S. financial market experienced such a
liquidity drain from the repo market in the 2007–
2008 financial crisis when the bankruptcy of
Lehman Brothers gave rise to concerns among cash
provider institutional firms about the
creditworthiness of their borrower counterparties.
See Ben S. Bernanke, The Courage to Act: A Memoir
of a Crisis and its Aftermath 397 (2017) (discussing
‘‘the paralyzing uncertainty [on the part of repo
lenders] about banks’ financial health’’ in 2007 and
2008).
11 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88262
(February 21, 2020), 85 FR 11401 (February 27,
2020) (SR–FICC–2019–007).
12 Gara Afonso et al., Federal Reserve Bank of
New York, Staff Report No. 918: The Market Events
of Mid-September 2019 (March 2020), available at
https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/
research/staff_reports/sr918.pdf.
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Sponsored Member clients, FICC has
received additional feedback from
several market participants that the
Service’s current requirement that all
Sponsored Member Trades be margined
exclusively in cash through FICC’s
funds-only settlement process is not
conducive to certain cash provider
Sponsored Member clients, particularly
money market funds and other mutual
funds, being able to transact term Repo
Transactions with their Sponsoring
Members in central clearing.
Specifically, money market funds and
other mutual funds are not generally
operationally equipped to provide or
receive cash margin in connection with
their term repo activity (either
bilaterally or in central clearing). These
funds depend on transfers of securities
to maintain required margin, and
typically rely on a tri-party repo clearing
bank to administer the collateral
management on such trades. In
particular, the tri-party repo clearing
bank calculates the mark-to-market
change in value of the securities
underlying each repo transaction and
facilitates the transfer of securities
necessary to ensure the value of the
securities equals a specified percentage
of the outstanding principal amount of
the repo transaction.
In light of this feedback and in order
to support more repo activity
(particularly term repo activity) to be
able to be transacted in central clearing,
FICC is proposing to add the Sponsored
GC Service, which would allow
Sponsoring Members and their
Sponsored Member clients to execute
Repo Transactions with each other on a
general collateral basis in the same asset
classes as are currently eligible for
Netting Members to transact in through
FICC/GSD’s existing GCF Repo®
Service. Such Repo Transactions would
be allowed to settle on the tri-party repo
platform of a Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank (as defined below) in a
similar manner to the way Sponsoring
Members and Sponsored Members settle
tri-party repo transactions with each
other outside of central clearing, thereby
making it more operationally efficient
for them to transact Repo Transactions
(particularly term Repo Transactions)
with each other through FICC.
(ii) Add a New Service Offering, the
Sponsored GC Service
(A) Key Parameters of the Proposed
Sponsored GC Service
As described above, a Sponsoring
Member would be permitted to submit
to FICC for Novation the End Leg of
Repo Transactions with its Sponsored
Member client that would be executed
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in one of a series of new Generic CUSIP
Numbers that would be registered with
CUSIP Global Services by FICC in
connection with the proposed
Sponsored GC Service (each a
‘‘Sponsored GC Trade’’). The proposed
schedule of securities that would be
eligible under each of the new Generic
CUSIP Numbers that would be
established for the proposed Sponsored
GC Service would be identical to the
current schedule of securities that are
eligible under each of the existing
Generic CUSIP Numbers that is
currently established for the GCF Repo
Service, including (i) U.S. Treasury
Securities maturing in ten (10) years or
less, (ii) U.S. Treasury Securities
maturing in thirty (30) years or less, (iii)
Non-Mortgage-Backed U.S. Agency
Securities, (iv) Federal National
Mortgage Association (‘‘Fannie Mae’’)
and Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (‘‘Freddie Mac’’) Fixed Rate
Mortgage-Backed Securities, (v) Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac Adjustable Rate
Mortgage-Backed Securities, (vi)
Government National Mortgage
Association (‘‘Ginnie Mae’’) Fixed Rate
Mortgage-Backed Securities, (vii) Ginnie
Mae Adjustable Rate Mortgage-Backed
Securities, (viii) U.S. Treasury InflationProtected Securities (‘‘TIPS’’) and (ix)
U.S. Treasury Separate Trading of
Registered Interest and Principal of
Securities (‘‘STRIPS’’).13
Consistent with FICC’s processing of
Repo Transactions in its existing GCF
Repo Service, each Sponsored GC Trade
would be required to be fully
collateralized with securities eligible
under the applicable Generic CUSIP
Number and/or cash. However,
consistent with the existing Service,
Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members would be permitted to transfer
a haircut on a Sponsored GC Trade so
that the value of the securities at the
Start Leg (the ‘‘GC Start Leg Market
Value’’) exceeds 100% of the initial
principal balance of the Sponsored GC
Trade.
Consistent with the manner in which
tri-party repo transactions are settled
13 FICC has decided to use a new series of Generic
CUSIP Numbers in connection with the proposed
Sponsored GC Service rather than utilizing the
existing Generic CUSIP Numbers employed for GCF
Repo Transactions in order to avoid any operational
processing errors that could otherwise result if a
trade intended for the proposed Sponsored GC
Service was inadvertently processed as a GCF Repo
Transaction or vice versa. To that end, a trade
submitted for the proposed Sponsored GC Service
would be automatically rejected by FICC if not
submitted in one of the nine new Generic CUSIP
Numbers earmarked for the proposed Sponsored GC
Service, and a GCF Repo Transaction would be
rejected by FICC if not submitted in one of the nine
Generic CUSIP Numbers dedicated to the GCF Repo
Service.
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today outside of central clearing, the
Start Leg of a Sponsored GC Trade
would settle on a trade for trade basis
on a Sponsored GC Clearing Agent
Bank’s tri-party repo platform between
the Sponsoring Member and the
Sponsored Member. Novation to FICC of
the End Leg of a Sponsored GC Trade
would occur at the time when all of the
following requirements have been
satisfied on a given Business Day: (i)
The trade data on the Sponsored GC
Trade has been submitted to FICC by the
Sponsoring Member pursuant to Rule
6A by the deadline set forth in the
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored
GC Trade Timeframes, (ii) the data on
the Sponsored GC Trade has been
compared in the Comparison System
pursuant to Rule 6A, (iii) the Start Leg
of the Sponsored GC Trade has fully
settled at the Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank by the deadline set forth in
the proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes, (iv)
the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank
has, pursuant to communication links,
formats, timeframes, and deadlines
established by FICC for such purpose,
provided to FICC a report containing
such data as FICC may require from
time to time, including information
regarding the specific Eligible Securities
that were delivered in the settlement of
the Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade
(the ‘‘Purchased GC Repo Securities’’),
and (v) FICC determines that the data
contained in such report matches the
data on the Sponsored GC Trade
submitted by the Sponsoring Member to
the Comparison System.
Accrued repo interest on Sponsored
GC Trades would be paid and collected
by FICC on a daily basis. If on any
Business Day, the market value of the
Purchased GC Repo Securities is less
than the GC Start Leg Market Value,
then the Sponsoring Member or
Sponsored Member that transferred the
securities in the Start Leg (the ‘‘GC
Funds Borrower’’) would be required
deliver to FICC (and FICC would be
required to deliver to the GC Funds
Borrower’s pre-Novation counterparty)
additional Eligible Securities that are
represented by the same Generic CUSIP
Number as the Purchased GC Repo
Securities (‘‘GC Comparable Securities’’)
and/or cash, such that the market value
of the Purchased GC Repo Securities
(inclusive of the newly transferred
securities and cash) is at least equal to
the GC Start Leg Market Value. If on any
Business Day, the market value of the
Purchased GC Repo Securities is greater
than the GC Start Leg Market Value, the
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member that received the securities in
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the start leg (the ‘‘GC Funds Lender’’)
would be required to return to FICC
(and FICC would be required to return
to the relevant GC Funds Borrower)
Purchased GC Repo Securities such that
the market value of the remaining
Purchased GC Repo Securities remains
at least equal to the GC Start Leg Market
Value.
Such additional securities and/or cash
must be delivered within the timeframe
set forth in the proposed new Schedule
of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes.
Any securities or cash transferred by the
GC Funds Borrower pursuant to these
requirements would constitute
Purchased GC Repo Securities, and any
Purchased GC Repo Securities
transferred by the GC Funds Lender
pursuant to these requirements would,
following such transfer, no longer
constitute Purchased GC Repo
Securities.
In addition, consistent with the
processing of Repo Transactions in
FICC’s existing GCF Repo Service, a GC
Funds Borrower would be permitted to
substitute for Purchased GC Repo
Securities, GC Comparable Securities
and/or cash within the timeframe set
forth in the proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes.
In order to facilitate settlement, FICC
would direct each GC Funds Borrower
and GC Funds Lender to make any
payment or delivery due to FICC in
respect of a Sponsored GC Trade (except
for certain funds-only settlement
obligations, as discussed below) directly
to the relevant Member’s pre-Novation
counterparty. As a result, each transfer
of Purchased GC Repo Securities and
daily repo interest would be made
directly between the relevant GC Funds
Borrower and GC Funds Lender through
the tri-party repo platform of a
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank.14
To that end, each GC Funds Borrower
and GC Funds Lender would agree that
14 FICC does not believe it is appropriate to
require that each payment and delivery under a
Sponsored GC Trade be made from (or to) the
Sponsoring Member to (or from) FICC and
separately from (or to) FICC to (or from) the
Sponsored Member because inserting FICC in the
middle of the payments and deliveries in this
fashion would require substantial changes in
operational processes for both Sponsored Members
and Sponsoring Members. FICC does not believe
such operational changes to be necessary in light of
the fact that there can only be two pre-Novation
counterparties involved in the settlement of a
Sponsored GC Trade (i.e., the Sponsoring Member
and its Sponsored Member client), as opposed to
the multitude of Netting Members that may be
involved in the settlement of GCF Repo
Transactions the payment and delivery obligations
under which are aggregated and netted in FICC’s
Netting System. For such GCF Repo Transactions,
insertion of FICC in the middle of the payments and
deliveries can streamline the settlement process and
create significant operational efficiencies for
Netting Members.
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any such direct payment or delivery
discharges FICC’s obligation to make the
same payment or delivery. Otherwise,
all legal rights and obligations as
between FICC and Sponsoring Members,
and as between FICC and Sponsored
Members, would be the same with
respect to Sponsored GC Trades as with
respect to Sponsored Member Trades in
the existing Service, which is governed
by Rule 3A.15
(B) Risk Management of Sponsored GC
Trades
Sponsored GC Trades would be risk
managed in a similar fashion to
Sponsored Member Trades in the
existing Service.
To mitigate market risk, the VaR
Charge would be calculated for each
Sponsored Member client individually
based on such Sponsored Member
client’s activity in the existing Service,
as well as such Sponsored Member
client’s activity in the proposed
Sponsored GC Service. The VaR Charge
for the Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account would continue to be the sum
of the individual VaR Charges for each
Sponsored Member client, i.e., the
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
would continue to be gross margined.16
To facilitate FICC’s ability to surveil a
given Sponsored Member’s FICC-cleared
activity across its Sponsored GC Trades
as well as its other Sponsored Member
Trades within the existing Service, both
with the same Sponsoring Member and
across Sponsoring Members (if
applicable), the same symbol would be
used to identify the Sponsored Member
for purposes of trade submission and
risk management under the proposal.
In addition, FICC would risk manage
the mark-to-market risk associated with
unaccrued repo interest on a Sponsored
GC Trade in the same way it manages
such risk in the GCF Repo Service,
namely through a proposed new GC
Interest Rate Mark component of fundsonly settlement. This proposed new
mark would be calculated in the same
manner as the GCF Interest Rate Mark
is for GCF Repo Transactions.17 In light
15 Rule
3A, supra note 4.
Rule 3A, Section 10, supra note 4.
17 The term ‘‘GCF Interest Rate Mark’’ means, on
a particular Business Day as regards any GCF Repo
Transaction that is not scheduled to settle on that
day, the product of the principal value of the GCF
Repo Transaction on the Scheduled Settlement Date
for its End Leg multiplied by a factor equal to the
absolute difference between the Repo Rate
established by FICC for such Repo Transaction and
its Contract Repo Rate, and then multiplied by a
fraction, the numerator of which is the number of
calendar days from the current day until the
Scheduled Settlement Date for the End Leg of the
Repo Transaction and the denominator of which is
360. If the Repo Transaction’s Contract Repo Rate
is greater than its System Repo Rate, then the GCF
16 See
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29837
of the application of the proposed new
GC Interest Rate Mark to Sponsored GC
Trades, an Interest Adjustment Payment
would also be applied to account for
overnight use of funds by the
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, based on such
party’s receipt from FICC of a Forward
Mark Adjustment Payment (reflecting a
GC Interest Rate Mark) on the previous
Business Day.18
For liquidity risk management,
Sponsored Member Trades between a
Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored
Member in the existing Service do not
independently create liquidity risk for
FICC. This is because FICC is not
required to complete settlement of such
Sponsored Member Trades in the event
that either the Sponsoring Member or
Sponsored Member defaults. In the
event that the Sponsoring Member
defaults, Section 14(c) of Rule 3A
permits FICC to close out (rather than
settle) the Sponsored Member Trades of
the defaulter’s Sponsored Members.19
Likewise, if the Sponsored Member
defaults, FICC is also not required to
complete settlement. Rather, under
Section 11 of Rule 3A, FICC may offset
its settlement obligations to the
Sponsoring Member against the
Sponsoring Member’s obligations under
the Sponsoring Member Guaranty to
perform on behalf of its defaulted
Sponsored Member.20
As a result, to the extent a Sponsoring
Member either (1) runs a matched book
of Sponsored Members (i.e., enters into
offsetting Sponsored Member Trades
with its own Sponsored Members) or (2)
simply enters into Sponsored Member
Trades without entering into offsetting
transactions, it does not increase FICC’s
liquidity risk. By contrast, if a
Sponsoring Member enters into an
Interest Rate Mark shall be a positive value for the
Reverse Repo Party, and a negative value for the
Repo Party. If the Repo Transaction’s Contract Repo
Rate is less than its System Repo Rate, then the GCF
Interest Rate Mark shall be a positive value for the
Repo Party, and a negative value for the Reverse
Repo Party. The term ‘‘GCF Interest Rate Mark’’
means, as regards a GCF Net Settlement Position,
the sum of all the GCF Interest Rate Mark Payments
on each of the GCF Repo Transactions that compose
such position. Rule 1, supra note 4.
18 No other components of funds-only settlement
would be necessary to apply to Sponsored GC
Trades because, as described above, (i) all
Sponsored GC Trades would novate after the
settlement of the Start Legs of such trades (i.e., not
during the Forward-Starting Period), (ii) mark-tomarket changes in the value of the securities
transferred under Sponsored GC Trades would be
managed by the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank
on FICC’s behalf (consistent with the manner in
which GCF Repo Transactions are processed today),
and (iii) the accrued repo interest on Sponsored GC
Trades would be passed on a daily basis, as
described above.
19 Rule 3A, Section 14(c), supra note 4.
20 Rule 3A, Section 11, supra note 4.
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offsetting Repo Transaction with a thirdparty Netting Member that is novated to
FICC, then that will increase FICC’s
liquidity risk. This is because, unlike in
the context of Sponsored Member
Trades, in the event of the Sponsoring
Member’s default, FICC is required to
settle with such third-party Netting
Member.
Sponsored GC Trades would impact
FICC’s liquidity risk similarly to
Sponsored Member Trades in the
existing Service in this regard, in that
liquidity risk to FICC would only be
increased to the extent the Sponsoring
Member enters into a Repo Transaction
with a third-party Netting Member
(which it may choose to do in order to
offset the Sponsored GC Trade that it
executed with its Sponsored Member).
Accordingly, FICC proposes to manage
the liquidity risk associated with
Sponsored GC Trades in the same
manner that it manages such risk for
other Sponsored Member Trades. As
discussed below in Item II(B)(iii), FICC
is proposing to add language to Rule 3A
to revise the manner in which it
calculates a Sponsoring Member’s
Individual Total Amount for purposes
of its CCLF obligation, with respect to
all Sponsored Member Trades,
including Sponsored GC Trades, in
order to reflect the fact that Sponsored
Member Trades do not create liquidity
risk.
(C) Proposed Rule Changes
To effectuate the proposed changes
described above, FICC would revise
Rule 1 to add the following new defined
terms: (1) GC Collateral Return
Entitlement, (2) GC Collateral Return
Obligation, (3) GC Comparable
Securities, (4) GC Daily Repo Interest,
(5) GC Funds Borrower, (6) GC Funds
Lender, (7) GC Interest Rate Mark, (8)
GC Repo Security, (9) GC Start Leg
Market Value, (10) Purchased GC Repo
Securities, (11) Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank, and (12) Sponsored GC
Trade.
GC Collateral Return Entitlement
would mean the entitlement of a
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, to receive the
Purchased GC Repo Securities (as
defined below) in exchange for cash at
the End Leg of a Sponsored GC Trade.
GC Collateral Return Obligation
would mean the obligation of a
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, to deliver the
Purchased GC Repo Securities in
exchange for cash at the End Leg of a
Sponsored GC Trade.
GC Comparable Securities would
mean, in relation to a Sponsored GC
Trade, any GC Repo Securities that are
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represented by the same Generic CUSIP
Number as the GC Repo Securities that
were transferred in the Start Leg of the
Sponsored GC Trade, as set forth in the
proposed new Schedule of GC
Comparable Securities.
GC Daily Repo Interest would mean
the daily interest amount that is payable
under a Sponsored GC Trade.
GC Funds Borrower would mean a
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, that has a GC
Collateral Return Entitlement and
associated cash payment obligation.
GC Funds Lender would mean a
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, that has a GC
Collateral Return Obligation and
associated cash payment entitlement.
GC Interest Rate Mark would mean,
on a particular Business Day as regards
any Sponsored GC Trade where the End
Leg is not scheduled to settle on that
day, the product of the principal value
of the Sponsored GC Trade on the
Scheduled Settlement Date for its End
Leg multiplied by a factor equal to the
absolute difference between the System
Repo Rate established by FICC for such
Sponsored GC Trade and its Contract
Repo Rate, and then multiplied by a
fraction, the numerator of which is the
number of calendar days from the
current day until the Scheduled
Settlement Date for the End Leg of the
Sponsored GC Trade and the
denominator of which is 360. If the
Sponsored GC Trade’s Contract Repo
Rate is greater than its System Repo
Rate, then the GC Interest Rate Mark
would be a positive value for the GC
Funds Lender, and a negative value for
the GC Funds Borrower. If the
Sponsored GC Trade’s Contract Repo
Rate is less than its System Repo Rate,
then the GC Interest Rate Mark would be
a positive value for the GC Funds
Borrower, and a negative value for the
GC Funds Lender.
GC Repo Security would mean an
Eligible Security that is only eligible for
submission to FICC in connection with
the comparison and Novation of
Sponsored GC Trades.
GC Start Leg Market Value would
mean, in relation to a Sponsored GC
Trade, the market value of the GC Repo
Securities transferred in the Start Leg of
the Sponsored GC Trade, measured as of
the date of the settlement of the Start
Leg of such Sponsored GC Trade.
Purchased GC Repo Securities would
mean the GC Repo Securities transferred
by the Sponsoring Member or
Sponsored Member, as applicable, in
settlement of the Start Leg of a
Sponsored GC Trade, plus all cash and
other GC Repo Securities transferred by
such Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
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Member pursuant to proposed Sections
8(b)(ii) and 8(b)(v) of Rule 3A, less any
GC Repo Securities or cash received by
the Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member pursuant to proposed Sections
8(b)(iii) and 8(b)(v) of Rule 3A.
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank
would mean a Clearing Agent Bank that
has agreed to provide FICC, upon
request, under mutually agreeable
terms, with clearing services for
Sponsored GC Trades.
Sponsored GC Trade would mean, in
connection with the Sponsored GC
Service, a Sponsored Member Trade that
is a Repo Transaction between a
Sponsored Member and its Sponsoring
Member involving securities
represented by a Generic CUSIP Number
the data on which are submitted to FICC
by the Sponsoring Member pursuant to
the provisions of Rule 6A, for Novation
to FICC pursuant to proposed Section
7(b)(ii) of Rule 3A.
FICC also proposes to revise the
following defined terms in Rule 1: (1)
Eligible Security, (2) End Leg, (3)
General Collateral Repo Transaction, (4)
Generic CUSIP Number, (5) Initial
Haircut, (4) Interest Adjustment
Payment, (5) Sponsored Member Trade,
(6) Start Leg, (7) Forward Mark
Adjustment Payment, and (8)
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account,
each as described in greater detail
below.
FICC proposes to revise the definition
of Eligible Security to state that a GC
Repo Security would be deemed to be
an Eligible Security only in connection
with a Sponsored GC Trade.
FICC also proposes to revise the
definition of End Leg to include a
definition applicable to Sponsored GC
Trades. As regards a Sponsored GC
Trade, End Leg would mean the
concluding settlement aspects of the
transaction, involving the retransfer of
the Purchased GC Repo Securities by
the GC Funds Lender and the taking
back of such Purchased GC Repo
Securities by the GC Funds Borrower.
Because FICC is revising the definition
of End Leg to add a definition
applicable to Sponsored GC Trades,
FICC would also revise the first
sentence of the current definition to
state that it does not apply to Sponsored
GC Trades by adding the phrase ‘‘or a
Sponsored GC Trade’’ after ‘‘as regards
a Repo Transaction other than a GCF
Repo Transaction (or CCIT Transaction
as applicable).’’
FICC proposes to revise the definition
of General Collateral Repo Transaction
to state that General Collateral Repo
Transaction would mean a Repo
Transaction, other than a GCF Repo
Transaction or Sponsored GC Trade
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(unless the context indicates otherwise),
with a Generic CUSIP Number.
FICC also proposes to revise the
definition of Generic CUSIP Number to
state that FICC would use separate
Generic CUSIP Numbers for General
Collateral Repo Transactions, GCF Repo
Transactions and Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the
definition of Initial Haircut to include a
definition applicable to Sponsored GC
Trades. As regards any Sponsored GC
Trade, Initial Haircut would mean any
difference between (x) the Contract
Value of the Start Leg of the Sponsored
GC Trade and (y) the GC Start Leg
Market Value. Because FICC is revising
the definition of Initial Haircut to
include a definition applicable to
Sponsored GC Trades, FICC would
revise proposed section (i) in the
definition to state that proposed section
(i) would apply to any Sponsored
Member Trade that is not a Sponsored
GC Trade by adding the phrase ‘‘that is
not a Sponsored GC Trade’’ after ‘‘as
regards any Sponsored Member Trade.’’
FICC also proposes to revise the
definition Interest Adjustment Payment
to include a definition applicable to
Sponsored GC Trades. As regards a
Sponsored GC Trade, Interest
Adjustment Payment would mean the
product of the GC Interest Rate Mark
multiplied by the applicable Overnight
Investment Rate and then multiplied by
a fraction, the numerator of which is the
number of calendar days between the
previous Business Day and the current
Business Day and the denominator of
which is 360.
FICC proposes to revise the definition
of Sponsored Member Trade to include
Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the
definition of Start Leg to include a
definition applicable to Sponsored GC
Trades. As regards a Sponsored GC
Trade, Start Leg would mean the initial
settlement aspects of the Transaction,
involving the transfer of GC Repo
Securities by the Sponsoring Member or
Sponsored Member, as applicable, that
is the GC Funds Borrower and the
taking in of such GC Repo Securities by
the Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, that is the GC
Funds Lender. Because FICC is
proposing to revise the definition of
Start Leg to add a definition applicable
to Sponsored GC Trades, FICC would
revise that the first sentence of the
current definition to state that it does
not apply to Sponsored GC Trades by
adding the phrase ‘‘or a Sponsored GC
Trade’’ after ‘‘as regards a Repo
Transaction other than a GCF Repo
Transaction.’’
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FICC also proposes to revise the
definition of Forward Mark Adjustment
Payment in Rule 1 to state that it would
refer to the GC Interest Rate Mark with
respect to Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to make
conforming changes to the definition of
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
to state that it may contain all types of
Sponsored Member Trades. The current
definition of Sponsoring Member
Omnibus Account states that each
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
may contain activity within the meaning
of clause (a) of the Sponsored Member
Trade definition or activity within the
meaning of clause (b) of such definition.
In addition, FICC proposes to revise
the definition of Sponsored GC Service
in Rule 1 and to revise Section VII
(Sponsoring Members) of the Fee
Structure, as described below.
FICC proposes to revise the definition
of Sponsored GC Service in Rule 1 to
state that it would mean the service
offered by FICC to clear tri-party
repurchase agreement transactions
between Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members, as described in
Rule 3A. Currently, the definition of
Sponsored GC Service states that it
means a service to be offered by FICC,
which has not yet been proposed for
and would be subject to regulatory
approval, to clear tri-party repurchase
agreement transactions between the
Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members, as shall be described in Rule
3A. FICC also proposes to remove the
footnote in the definition of Sponsored
GC Service, which states that the
Sponsored GC Service shall be the
subject of a subsequent rule filing with
the Commission and that the definition
of Sponsored GC Service shall be
revised upon approval of the subsequent
rule filing, and at that time the footnote
shall sunset.
FICC also proposes to revise Section
VII (Sponsoring Members) of the Fee
Structure to remove language that states
that to the extent FICC, in consultation
with its Board of Directors, does not
implement the Sponsored GC Service,
all previously collected Sponsored GC
Pre-Payment Assessments shall be
returned to the contributing Sponsoring
Members in full. FICC also proposes to
remove the footnote in this section
which states that the Sponsored GC
Service shall be the subject of a
subsequent rule filing with the
Commission and that Section VII of the
Fee Structure shall be revised to remove
the referenced sentence upon approval
of the subsequent rule filing, and at that
time the footnote shall sunset.
In addition, FICC proposes to revise
Rule 3A, Section 5 (Sponsored Member
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29839
Trades) to state that this section does
not apply to Sponsored GC Trades.
Section 5 concerns the types of trades
that may be submitted as Sponsored
Member Trades and discusses the
application of Rule 14 (Forward Trades)
and Rule 18 (Special Provisions for
Repo Transactions) to Sponsored
Member Trades. The requirements that
Sponsored GC Trades must meet would
be separately enumerated in Section 7,
and the provisions of Rules 14 and 18,
which only apply to transactions
eligible for FICC’s general netting
system, would not apply to such
Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise Rule 3A,
Section 6 (Trade Submission and the
Comparison System) to state that the
current Schedule of Timeframes would
apply to Sponsored Member Trades
other than Sponsored GC Trades. The
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored
GC Trade Timeframes would apply to
Sponsored GC Trades.
Section 7 (The Netting System,
Novation and Guaranty of Settlement) of
Rule 3A would be revised to create a
proposed new paragraph (a). The
proposed new paragraph (a) would
provide that the current provisions of
Section 7, which would be reorganized
as proposed new subparagraphs (i)
through (iv) of proposed new paragraph
(a), apply to Sponsored Member Trades
other than Sponsored GC Trades. These
provisions concern the netting and
Novation of Sponsored Member Trades.
As discussed below, different provisions
would apply to Sponsored GC Trades.
Proposed new paragraph (b) of
Section 7 would only apply to
Sponsored GC Trades. Proposed new
subparagraph (i) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 7 would
provide that only the End Legs of a
Sponsored GC Trade may be novated to
FICC and that a Sponsored GC Trade is
permitted (but not required) to have an
Initial Haircut. Proposed new
subparagraph (ii) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 7 would
provide requirements that would have
to be satisfied in order for a Sponsored
GC Trade to be novated on a given
Business Day. The following
requirements would be included: (A)
The trade data on the Sponsored GC
Trade must have been submitted to
FICC by the Sponsoring Member
pursuant to Rule 6A by the deadline set
forth in FICC’s proposed new Schedule
of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes, (B)
the data on the Sponsored GC Trade
must have been compared in the
Comparison System pursuant to Rule
6A, (C) the Start Leg of the Sponsored
GC Trade must have fully settled at the
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank by
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the deadline set forth in FICC’s
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored
GC Trade Timeframes, (D) the
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank
must have, pursuant to communication
links, formats, timeframes, and
deadlines established by FICC for such
purpose, provided to FICC a report
containing such data as FICC may
require from time to time, including
information regarding the specific GC
Repo Securities that were delivered in
settlement of the Start Leg of the
Sponsored GC Trade, and (E) FICC must
determine that the data contained in
such report matches the data on the
Sponsored GC Trade submitted by the
Sponsoring Member pursuant to Rule
6A. Proposed new subparagraph (iii) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section
7 would state that, on each Business
Day, FICC would provide each
Sponsoring Member with one or more
Reports setting forth (A) each Sponsored
GC Trade, the data on which has been
compared in the Comparison System
and (B) each Sponsored GC Trade, the
End Leg of which has been novated to
FICC. Proposed new subparagraph (iv)
of proposed new paragraph (b) of
Section 7 would require that each
Sponsoring Member and Sponsored
Member acknowledges and agrees that it
has authorized each relevant Sponsored
GC Clearing Agent Bank to provide FICC
with all information and data as FICC
may require or request from time to time
in order to novate and process
Sponsored GC Trades.
Section 8 (Securities Settlement) of
Rule 3A would be revised to create a
new paragraph (a). The proposed new
paragraph (a) would provide that the
bulk of the current provisions of Section
8, which would be reorganized as
subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of
proposed new paragraph (a), apply to
Sponsored Member Trades other than
Sponsored GC Trades. Those provisions
concern the process for settling
Sponsored Member Trades. As
discussed below, different settlement
requirements would apply to Sponsored
GC Trades.
Proposed new paragraph (b) of
Section 8 would apply only to
Sponsored GC Trades. Proposed new
subparagraph (i) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state
that GC Collateral Return Obligations
and cash payment obligations associated
with GC Collateral Return Entitlements
must be satisfied by a GC Funds Lender
and GC Funds Borrower, respectively,
within the timeframes established for
such by FICC in the proposed new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes. In addition, any failure by
the GC Funds Borrower to satisfy its
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cash payment obligations associated
with GC Collateral Return Entitlements
within the timeframe established for
such by FICC in the proposed new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes would subject the GC
Funds Borrower to a late fee as if such
GC Funds Borrower were a Net Funds
Payor within the meaning of Section IX
of the Fee Structure (Late Fee Related to
GCF Repo Transactions). Proposed new
subparagraph (ii) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state
that if on any Business Day, the market
value of a GC Funds Borrower’s GC
Collateral Return Entitlement from the
previous Business Day (or the current
Business Day) is less than the GC Start
Leg Market Value, then such GC Funds
Borrower would deliver to FICC (and
FICC would deliver to the relevant GC
Funds Lender) additional GC
Comparable Securities and/or cash,
such that the market value of the GC
Funds Borrower’s GC Collateral Return
Entitlement (and the market value of the
relevant GC Funds Lender’s GC
Collateral Return Obligation) is at least
equal to the GC Start Leg Market Value.
Such additional securities and/or cash
must be delivered by the GC Funds
Borrower within the timeframe set forth
in the proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes.
Proposed new subparagraph (iii) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section
8 would state that if on any Business
Day, the market value of a GC Funds
Lender’s GC Collateral Return
Obligation from the previous Business
Day (or the current Business Day) is
greater than the GC Start Leg Market
Value, then such GC Funds Lender
would deliver to FICC (and FICC would
deliver to the relevant GC Funds
Borrower) some of the Purchased GC
Repo Securities, such that the market
value of the GC Funds Lender’s GC
Collateral Return Obligation (and the
market value of the relevant GC Funds
Borrower’s Collateral Return
Entitlement) is at least equal to the GC
Start Leg Market Value. Such Purchased
GC Repo Securities must be delivered
within the timeframe set forth in the
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored
GC Trade Timeframes. Proposed new
subparagraph (iv) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state
that each GC Funds Borrower (or if the
repo rate for the relevant Sponsored GC
Trade is negative, the GC Funds Lender)
would, within the timeframe set forth in
the proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes, pay
the daily accrued GC Daily Repo Interest
to FICC (and FICC would pay such GC
Daily Repo Interest to the GC Funds
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Lender or GC Funds Borrower, as
applicable). Proposed new subparagraph
(v) of proposed new paragraph (b) of
Section 8 would state that a GC Funds
Borrower may substitute cash and/or GC
Comparable Securities for any
Purchased GC Repo Securities in
accordance with the timeframe set forth
in the proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes.
Proposed new subparagraph (vi) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section
8 would state that FICC directs each
Sponsored Member and Sponsoring
Member to satisfy any payment or
delivery obligation due to FICC, except
for any obligation to pay a Funds-Only
Settlement Amount, by making the
relevant payment or delivery to an
account at the relevant Sponsored GC
Clearing Agent Bank specified by the
pre-Novation counterparty to the
Sponsored Member or Sponsoring
Member, as applicable, in accordance
with such procedures as the Sponsored
GC Clearing Agent Bank may specify
from time to time. Each Sponsored
Member and Sponsoring Member that is
owed any such payment or delivery
from FICC would acknowledge and
agree that, if the pre-Novation
counterparty to such Sponsored GC
Trade makes the relevant payment or
delivery as described in the prior
sentence, FICC’s obligation to make
such payment or delivery would be
discharged and satisfied in full.
Proposed new subparagraph (vii) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section
8 would state that the market value of
all GC Repo Securities would be
determined by the relevant Sponsored
GC Clearing Agent Bank each Business
Day.
In addition, FICC proposes to move
language from current Section 8(a) to
proposed new Section 8(c). Proposed
new Section 8(c) would state that
notwithstanding the foregoing and any
other activities the Sponsoring Member
may perform in its capacity as agent for
Sponsored Members, each Sponsored
Member would be principally obligated
to FICC with respect to all securities
settlement obligations under the Rules,
and the Sponsoring Member would not
be a principal under the Rules with
respect to the settlement obligations of
its Sponsored Members. This provision
would apply to both Sponsored GC
Trades as well as other kinds of
Sponsored Member Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise Section
9 of Rule 3A to state which provisions
would apply to Sponsored Member
Trades other than Sponsored GC Trades,
which provisions would apply only to
Sponsored GC Trades, and which
provisions would apply to all
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Sponsored Member Trades. Specifically,
FICC proposes to add language to state
that Section 9(a) applies to Sponsored
Member Trades other than Sponsored
GC Trades and current Sections 9(b), (c),
(d), and (e), which would be reorganized
as proposed new Sections 9(c)(i), (c)(ii),
(c)(iii), and (c)(iv), respectively, applies
to all Sponsored Member Trades. In
addition, FICC proposes to add a new
Section 9(b) to Rule 3A, which would
only apply to Sponsored GC Trades and
would state that each Sponsoring
Member and Sponsored Member would
be obligated to pay to FICC, and/or
would be entitled to receive from FICC,
the following amounts: Forward Mark
Adjustment Payment and Interest
Adjustment Payment. It would also state
that such amounts would be payable
and receivable as though they were
amounts described in Rule 13.
FICC proposes to add Section 10(i) to
Rule 3A that would state that for
purposes of applying Rule 4 to a
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account,
each Sponsored GC Trade would be
treated as a GCF Repo Transaction, each
GC Funds Lender and GC Funds
Borrower would be treated as a GCF
Counterparty, and each Sponsored GC
Clearing Agent Bank would be treated as
a GCF Clearing Agent Bank.
FICC would also revise Section 4 of
Rule 5 (Comparison System) to add
Sponsored GC Trades. Specifically,
Section 4 of Rule 5 would be revised to
state that GCF Repo Transactions and
Sponsored GC Trades must be
submitted exactly as executed.
FICC is also proposing to add a new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes that would only be
applicable to Sponsored GC Trades. The
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored
GC Trade Timeframes would state that
the time during which reports would be
made available with respect to end of
day Clearing Fund requirements and
funds-only settlement requirements
would be from 10:30 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.
In addition, it would state that 2:00 p.m.
would be the time during which reports
would be made available with respect to
intraday Clearing Fund requirements,
and intraday funds-only settlement
requirements. The proposed new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes would also state that at
10:00 a.m., funds-only settlement debits
and credits are executed via the Federal
Reserve’s National Settlement Service
and at 4:30 p.m., the intraday fundsonly settlement debits and credits are
executed via the Federal Reserve’s
National Settlement Service.
The proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would
also state that 9:00 a.m. would be the
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17:23 Jun 02, 2021
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deadline for the GC Funds Borrower to
satisfy the obligation described in
proposed Section 8(b)(ii) of Rule 3A in
accordance with the provisions of
proposed Section 8(b)(vi) of Rule 3A. It
would also state that FICC reserves the
right to also require a GC Funds
Borrower to satisfy the obligation
described in proposed Section 8(b)(ii)
on an intraday basis based on the
market value of the applicable GC Repo
Securities as determined by the GC
Clearing Agent Bank in accordance with
proposed Section 8(b)(vii) of Rule 3A. It
would also state that 12:00 p.m. would
be the deadline for the GC Funds
Borrower (or if the repo rate for the
relevant Sponsored GC Trade is
negative, the GC Funds Lender) to pay
to FICC the accrued GC Daily Repo
Interest as described in proposed
Section 8(b)(iv) in accordance with the
provisions of proposed Section 8(b)(vi)
of Rule 3A (unless the End Leg of the
related Sponsored GC Trade is due to
settle on the same day). The proposed
new Schedule of Sponsored GC
Timeframes would state that any
accrued GC Daily Repo Interest that is
due on the settlement day of the End
Leg of the related Sponsored GC Trade
would be paid in connection with the
settlement of the End Leg.
The proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would
also state that 5:00 p.m. would be the
deadline for final input by the
Sponsoring Members to FICC of
Sponsored GC Trade data. Furthermore,
5:30 p.m. would be the deadline for (i)
full settlement of the Start Leg of the
Sponsored GC Trade in accordance with
proposed Section 7(b)(ii)(C) of Rule 3A,
(ii) substitutions of Purchased GC Repo
Securities in accordance with proposed
Section 8(b)(v) of Rule 3A, and (iii)
satisfaction of GC Collateral Return
Obligations and cash payment
obligations associated with GC
Collateral Return Entitlements by GC
Funds Lenders and GC Funds
Borrowers, respectively, in accordance
with proposed Section 8(b)(i) of Rule
3A.
The proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would
also state that the time by which a GC
Funds Lender would be required to
deliver any securities to a GC Funds
Borrower in connection with proposed
Section 8(b)(iii) of Rule 3A would be
determined by the relevant Sponsored
GC Clearing Agent Bank. Furthermore, it
would state that all times may be
extended as needed by FICC to (i)
address operational or other delays that
would reasonably prevent members or
FICC from meeting the deadline or
timeframe, as applicable, or (ii) allow
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29841
the FICC time to operationally exercise
its existing rights under the Rules. In
addition, it would state that times
applicable to FICC are standards and not
deadlines and that actual processing
times may vary slightly, as necessary.
FICC also proposes to revise the
Schedule for the Deletion of Trade Data
to state which provisions would not
apply to Sponsored GC Trades. In
addition, FICC would also add language
to state that trade data on Sponsored GC
Trades that remain uncompared on a
given Business Day would pend in the
Comparison System until FICC’s
deadline for final input by Sponsoring
Members of Sponsored GC Trade data
(as provided in the Schedule of
Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes) on
such Business Day. FICC would also
add language to state that trade data on
Sponsored GC Trades, which have been
compared in the Comparison System
pursuant to Rule 6A but the Start Legs
of which have not fully settled at a
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank by
the deadline set forth in FICC’s
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored
GC Trade Timeframes, would be deleted
from the Comparison System during the
same processing cycle as the Repo Start
Date for such Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the
Schedule of Required Data Submission
Items to state that items (1) and (2) in
this schedule would not be required for
Sponsored Member Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the
following schedules to exclude
Sponsored GC Trades: (i) Schedule of
Required and Accepted Data
Submission Items for a Substitution and
(ii) Schedule of Required and Accepted
Data Submission Items for New
Securities Collateral.
In addition, as described above, FICC
would add a proposed new Schedule of
GC Comparable Securities.
(iii) Add Language to Rule 3A To Allow
FICC To Recognize, for CCLF
Calculation Purposes, Any Offsetting
Settlement Obligations as Between a
Sponsoring Member’s Netting Account
and Its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account To Ensure That a Sponsoring
Member’s CCLF Obligation is Calculated
in a Manner That More Closely Aligns
With the Liquidity Risk Associated With
Sponsored Member Trades
As described above, Sponsored
Member Trades between a Sponsoring
Member and its Sponsored Member in
the existing Service do not
independently create liquidity risk for
FICC. This is because FICC is not
required to complete settlement of such
Sponsored Member Trades in the event
that either the Sponsoring Member or
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Sponsored Member defaults. In the
event that the Sponsoring Member
defaults, Section 14(c) of Rule 3A
permits FICC to close out (rather than
settle) the Sponsored Member Trades of
the defaulter’s Sponsored Members.21
Likewise, if the Sponsored Member
defaults, FICC is also not required to
complete settlement. Rather, under
Section 11 of Rule 3A, FICC may offset
its settlement obligations to the
Sponsoring Member against the
Sponsoring Member’s obligations under
the Sponsoring Member Guaranty to
perform on behalf of its defaulted
Sponsored Member.22
Accordingly, liquidity risk to FICC is
only increased to the extent the
Sponsoring Member enters into a Repo
Transaction with a third-party Netting
Member that is novated to FICC. Such
a Repo Transaction creates liquidity risk
to FICC because, in the event of the
Sponsoring Member’s default, FICC is
required to settle with such third-party
Netting Member.23
In light of this, FICC believes that a
Sponsored Member Trade should only
increase the obligation of a Sponsoring
Member with respect to FICC’s CCLF to
the extent the Sponsoring Member
offsets that trade with a Repo
Transaction entered into with a thirdparty Netting Member that is novated to
FICC. To the extent a Sponsoring
Member either (1) enters into an
offsetting Sponsored Member Trade
with another Sponsored Member (i.e., it
runs a matched book of Sponsored
Member Trades) or (2) simply does not
enter into an offsetting transaction at all,
then the Sponsored Member Trade has
no effect on FICC’s liquidity risk, and so
should not affect the Sponsoring
Member’s CCLF obligation.
Currently, FICC does not impose a
CCLF obligation on a Sponsoring
Member to the extent the Sponsoring
Member runs a matched book of
Sponsored Member Trades. This is
because FICC calculates a Sponsoring
Member’s CCLF obligation based on the
net settlement obligations of its
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
and the net settlement obligations of the
Sponsoring Member’s netting account.24
In other words, FICC nets all of the
positions recorded in the Sponsoring
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21 Rule
3A, Section 14(c), supra note 4.
3A, Section 11, supra note 4.
23 As described above, a Sponsored GC Trade
would impact FICC’s liquidity risk similarly to a
Sponsored Member Trade in the existing Service in
this regard, in that liquidity risk to FICC would only
be increased to the extent the Sponsoring Member
enters into an offsetting Repo Transaction with a
third-party Netting Member that is novated to FICC.
24 See Rule 3A, Section 8(b) and Rule 22A,
Section 2a(b), supra note 4.
22 Rule
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Member’s Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account, regardless of whether they
relate to the same Sponsored Member,
and separately nets all of the positions
in Sponsoring Member’s netting
account. As a result, to the extent a
Sponsoring Member enters into
perfectly offsetting Sponsored Member
Trades, the settlement obligations of
those trades will net out in the
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
and in the netting account and thereby
create no CCLF obligation for the
Sponsoring Member.
However, currently, if a Sponsoring
Member enters into a Sponsored
Member Trade without entering into an
offsetting transaction, it is subject to
CCLF obligations for the position of its
Sponsored Member recorded in its
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
as well as its own position arising from
the Sponsored Member Trade recorded
in its netting account. This is because,
although the positions in the
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account
and netting account arising from such
Sponsored Member Trade are perfectly
offsetting, FICC does not currently net
them against each other for CCLF
purposes due to the current CCLF
allocation being calculated at the
participant account level.25
In order to ensure that a Sponsoring
Member’s CCLF obligation is calculated
in a manner that more closely aligns
with the liquidity risk associated with
Sponsored Member Trades, FICC
proposes to add language to Rule 3A to
allow it to recognize, for CCLF
calculation purposes, any offsetting
settlement obligations as between a
25 Consider the following example: A Sponsoring
Member sells 100 shares of CUSIP 123 to a
Sponsored Member in a Repo Transaction. That
transaction will result in the Sponsoring Member’s
netting account being long 100 shares of CUSIP 123
and the Sponsoring Member’s Sponsoring Member
Omnibus Account being short 100 shares of CUSIP
123. Under the existing Rules, the Sponsoring
Member will have a CCLF obligation for both the
long position in the netting account as well as the
short position in the Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account even though, as described above, the
Sponsored Member Trade does not independently
create liquidity risk for FICC.
Although this limitation on offset is consistent
with FICC’s approach of not offsetting the positions
of two accounts of the same Member for CCLF
purposes, there is an important difference between
Sponsored Member Trades and other FICC repo
activity. As discussed above, the Service requires
that a Sponsoring Member have a Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account that is separate from its
netting account. For all other repo activity, the
Member has the option to collapse all of its activity
into a single participant account in order to achieve
a similar netting benefit. Sponsoring Members do
not have that option with respect to their Sponsored
Member Trades, so FICC believes this proposed
change is necessary to ensure that a Sponsoring
Member’s CCLF obligations are calculated in a
manner that more closely aligns with the liquidity
risk associated with Sponsored Member Trades.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Sponsoring Member’s netting account
and its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account. This proposed change would
ensure that all Sponsored Member
Trades, whether perfectly offset by other
Sponsored Member Trades or not,
would be recognized for CCLF purposes
as not affecting FICC’s liquidity risk.
With respect to Sponsored GC Trades in
particular, this proposed change would
ensure that FICC applies an appropriate
CCLF obligation to a Sponsoring
Member in the event a Sponsored GC
Clearing Agent Bank allocates to a
Sponsored GC Trade a different security
than the security that underlies an
offsetting Sponsored Member Trade.26
Specifically, FICC proposes to add
new Section 8(d) to Rule 3A, which
would state that FICC, when calculating
Individual Total Amounts 27 for a
Sponsoring Member, may net any
offsetting settlement obligations across
the Sponsoring Member’s proprietary
positions and the positions of its
Sponsored Members in its Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account(s).
Expected Member Impact
FICC has conducted a study for the
period from January 1, 2021 to March
30, 2021 as to the impact on FICC/GSD
Netting Members’ CCLF allocations as a
result of recognizing offset between
positions in a Sponsoring Member’s
netting account and its Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account. The impact
of recognition of the offsetting positions
as between a Sponsoring Member’s
netting account and its Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account relates
strictly to the allocation of the total
CCLF facility amongst the FICC/GSD
netting membership, with certain
Sponsoring Members receiving less
allocation of CCLF once the offsets
between the Sponsoring Member’s
26 For example, a Sponsoring Member may enter
into a Sponsored GC Trade on a Generic CUSIP
Number and an offsetting Sponsored Member Trade
in a specific CUSIP Number (e.g., CUSIP 123).
Although CUSIP 123 may be an eligible security
under the Generic CUSIP Number underlying the
Sponsored GC Trade, the Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank may allocate to the Sponsored GC
Trade a different eligible CUSIP Number (e.g.,
CUSIP 456) from the securities eligibility schedule.
In that situation, the CUSIP 123 and CUSIP 456
positions in the Sponsoring Member’s netting
account and the Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account would not offset within the respective
account, but the proposed change to Section 8(d) of
Rule 3A would allow FICC to offset the CUSIP 123
and CUSIP 456 positions across the Sponsoring
Member’s netting account and Sponsoring Member
Omnibus Account to ensure that the CCLF
obligation applicable to the Sponsoring Member
accurately reflects the liquidity risk that its
positions create.
27 The Individual Total Amount dictates the
maximum amount of liquidity a Member must
provide under FICC’s CCLF. See Rule 22A, Section
2a(b), supra note 4.
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netting account and the Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account are
recognized.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
(iv) Remove the Requirement From
Section 2 of Rule 3A That a Sponsoring
Member Provide a Quarterly
Representation to FICC That Each of Its
Sponsored Members is a ‘‘Qualified
Institutional Buyer’’ as Defined in Rule
144A, or is a Legal Entity That,
Although Not Organized as an Entity
Specifically Listed in Paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of Rule 144A, Satisfies the Finanial
Requirements Necessary To Be a
‘‘Qualified Institutional Buyer’’ as
Specified in That Paragraph
FICC also proposes to remove the
requirement from Section 2 of Rule 3A
that a Sponsoring Member provide to
FICC a quarterly representation that
each of its Sponsored Members is a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
defined in Rule 144A, or is a legal entity
that, although not organized as an entity
specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of Rule 144A, satisfies the financial
requirements necessary to be a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
specified in that paragraph.28 FICC
proposes to remove this requirement
because Section 3(d) of Rule 3A
separately requires a Sponsoring
Member to notify FICC if its Sponsored
Member is no longer either a ‘‘qualified
institutional buyer’’ as defined in Rule
144A, or a legal entity that, although not
organized as an entity specifically listed
in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A,
satisfies the financial requirements
necessary to be a ‘‘qualified institutional
buyer’’ as specified in that paragraph.29
As such, FICC views the quarterly
representation requirement in Section 2
of Rule 3A to be an overlapping and
redundant requirement that creates
administrative burdens for FICC and for
its Sponsoring Members that are, in
FICC’s view, unnecessary.
To effectuate the proposed changes
described above, FICC would revise
Rule 3A to remove Section 2(d).
(v) A Clarification, Certain Corrections,
and Certain Technical Changes
FICC proposes to make a clarification
to the Rules. Specifically, in the
definition of Initial Haircut, FICC
proposes to add the phrase ‘‘, if any,’’
after ‘‘absolute value of the dollar
difference.’’
FICC also proposes to make certain
corrections to the Rules.
First, FICC proposes to correct the
definition of Initial Haircut in Rule 1 so
that it would be defined, with respect to
28 Rule
29 Rule
3A, Section 2(d), supra note 4.
3A, Section 3(d), supra note 4.
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Sponsored Member Trades that are not
Sponsored GC Trades, as the absolute
dollar difference between the Market
Value of the Sponsored Member Trade,
as of the settlement date of the Start Leg,
and the Contract Value of the Start Leg
of the Sponsored Member Trade, instead
of the Contract Value of the Close Leg
(as is currently provided).
Second, FICC proposes to correct the
reference in Rule 3A, Section 3(a)(ii)(B)
to paragraph (a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A
instead of paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule
144A (as is currently provided).
Third, FICC also proposes to correct a
typographical error in Section VII (Fee
Structure) by revising from the reference
to Additional Sponsored GC Credit
instead of Additional Sponsored GC
Assessment (as is currently provided).
FICC also proposes to make certain
technical changes, such as numbering
and renumbering sections and making
conforming grammatical changes.
For example, because FICC is
removing Section 2(d) of Rule 3A, FICC
proposes to renumber the subsequent
subsections in Rule 3A, Section 2.
Specifically, FICC proposes to renumber
current Sections 2(e), 2(f), 2(g), 2(h), 2(i),
and 2(j) as Sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), 2(g),
2(h), and 2(i), respectively.
In addition, Section 7 of Rule 3A, in
connection with FICC’s creation of a
proposed new paragraph (a) as
described above, FICC proposes to
renumber current Sections 7(a), 7(b),
7(c) and 7(d) as new Sections 7(a)(i),
7(a)(ii), 7(a)(iii) and 7(a)(iv),
respectively. In addition, in current
Sections 8(b) and 8(c), FICC proposes to
revise the references from Section 7 to
Section 7(a) to reflect the proposed
renumbering of Section 7 described
above.
Likewise, in Section 8 of Rule 3A, in
connection with FICC’s creation of a
proposed new paragraph (a) as
described above, FICC proposes to
renumber current Sections 8(a), 8(b),
8(c), 8(d), 8(e), 8(f) and 8(g) as new
Sections 8(a)(i), 8(a)(ii), 8(a)(iii), 8(a)(iv),
8(a)(v), 8(a)(vi), and 8(a)(vii),
respectively. In addition, in current
Section 8(a), FICC proposes to revise the
reference from Section 8(c) to Section
8(a)(iii) to reflect the proposed
renumbering of Section 8 described
above. In current Section 8(f), FICC also
proposes to revise the reference from
subsection (b) to subsection (a)(ii) to
reflect the proposed renumbering of
Section 8 described above.
In addition, in current Section 9 of
Rule 3A, in connection with FICC’s
addition of proposed new paragraph (b)
as described above, FICC proposes to
renumber current Sections 9(b), 9(c),
9(d) and 9(e) as new Sections 9(c)(i),
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29843
9(c)(ii), 9(c)(iii) and 9(c)(iv),
respectively.
Because FICC is adding Sponsored GC
Trades to the definition of Sponsored
Member Trade as described above, FICC
would create new sections (a) and (b)
and renumber current sections (a) and
(b) as subsections (i) and (ii) of new
section (a). FICC would also revise the
definition of Same-Day Settling Trade
and current Section 8(c) and Section
18(a) of Rule 3A to reflect the proposed
changes to the Sponsored Member
Trade definition.
In addition, in the definition of Initial
Haircut, FICC is proposing to add
section numbers (i) and (ii) to make it
clear that proposed section (i) of the
definition would apply to any
Sponsored Member Trade that is not a
Sponsored GC Trade and proposed
section (ii) would apply to any
Sponsored Member Trade.
In addition, FICC would also make
certain conforming grammatical
changes. For example, FICC would add
a comma and move the word ‘‘and’’ in
the definition of Generic CUSIP Number
to reflect the addition of Sponsored GC
Trades. Similarly, in each of the (i)
Schedule of Required and Accepted
Data Submission Items for a
Substitution and (ii) Schedule of
Required and Accepted Data
Submission Items for New Securities
Collateral, FICC would also add a
comma and move the word ‘‘and’’ as
conforming grammatical changes. As
another example, FICC would also add
the word ‘‘or’’ in the definition of
Sponsored Member Trade to reflect the
addition of Sponsored GC Trades. In the
definition of Initial Haircut, FICC would
also add the word ‘‘and’’ to reflect the
addition of proposed section (ii). As
another example, in Section 18(a) of
Rule 3A, FICC would revise the
reference from subsection to subsections
to reflect the proposed changes to the
definition of Sponsored Member Trades
described above.
Expected Effect on Risks to the Clearing
Agency, Its Participants and the Market
FICC believes that the proposed
changes in Item II(B)(ii) above,
specifically adding a new way to settle
in the Service for Sponsored GC Trades,
could affect the performance of essential
clearing and settlement functions.30 As
described above, consistent with the
manner in which tri-party repo
transactions are settled today outside of
central clearing, as opposed to settling
through FICC’s tri-party account in the
manner that GCF Repo activity settles,
Sponsored GC Trades would settle on a
30 17
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trade for trade basis between the
Sponsoring Member and Sponsored
Member on a Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank’s tri-party repo platform.
FICC would direct each GC Funds
Borrower and GC Funds Lender to make
any payment or delivery due to FICC in
respect of a Sponsored GC Trade (except
for certain funds-only settlement
obligations, as discussed above) directly
to the relevant Member’s pre-Novation
counterparty. As a result, each transfer
of Purchased GC Repo Securities and
daily repo interest would be made
directly between the relevant GC Funds
Borrower and GC Funds Lender through
the tri-party repo platform of a
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank. To
that end, each GC Funds Borrower and
GC Funds Lender would agree that any
such direct payment or delivery
discharges FICC’s obligation to make the
same payment or delivery.
Otherwise, all legal rights and
obligations as between FICC and
Sponsoring Members, and as between
FICC and Sponsored Members, would
be the same with respect to Sponsored
GC Trades as with respect to Sponsored
Member Trades in the existing Service,
which is governed by Rule 3A.
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Management of Identified Risks
While Sponsored GC Trades would
settle between the Sponsoring Member
and Sponsored Member on a trade for
trade basis on a Sponsored Member’s
tri-party repo platform (consistent with
the manner those firms settle repo with
each other outside of central clearing),
as opposed to settling through FICC’s
tri-party account in the manner that
GCF Repo activity settles, FICC would
nonetheless monitor the settlement
status of Sponsored GC Trades through
hourly (or more frequent) reporting to be
provided by the Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank to FICC as the Sponsored
GC Clearing Agent Bank, and the
administration of collateralization to
address mark-to-market changes in the
value of the securities collateral
associated with Sponsored GC activity
would be monitored by FICC in a
manner consistent with the way that it
monitors GCF Repo activity.
Consistency With the Clearing
Supervision Act
FICC believes that the proposed rule
change would be consistent with
Section 805(b) of the Clearing
Supervision Act.31 The objectives and
principles of Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act are to promote
robust risk management, promote safety
and soundness, reduce systemic risks,
and support the stability of the broader
financial system.32
FICC believes that the proposed
changes described in Items II(B)(ii) and
II(B)(iii) above are consistent with the
objectives of and principles of Section
805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act
cited above because FICC believes that
these proposed changes would enable
and may encourage Sponsoring
Members to submit a greater number of
securities transactions to be cleared and
settled by FICC. FICC believes that
having more securities transactions
clear and settle through FICC would
also help to promote safety and
soundness, reduce systemic risks, and
support the stability of the broader
financial system by mitigating the risk
of a large-scale exit by institutional
firms from the U.S. financial market in
a stress scenario through FICC’s
guaranty of completion of settlement for
a greater number of eligible securities
transactions. By mitigating the risk of a
large-scale exit by institutional firms
from the U.S. financial market in a
stress scenario and having more
securities transactions that clear and
settle through FICC in the context of its
risk management processes, FICC
believes the proposed rule changes
described in Items II(B)(ii) and II(B)(iii)
above would promote robust risk
management, promote safety and
soundness, reduce systemic risks, and
support the stability of the broader
financial system. Therefore, FICC
believes that the proposed rule changes
described in Items II(B)(ii) and II(B)(iii)
above are consistent with the objectives
and principles of Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act cited above.
FICC also believes that the proposed
changes described in Items II(B)(iv) and
II(B)(v) above are designed to provide
clear and coherent Rules regarding
Sponsoring Members. FICC believes that
clear and coherent Rules should
enhance the ability of FICC and
Sponsoring Members to more effectively
plan for, manage, and address the risks
and financial requirements related to
Sponsoring Members. As such, FICC
believes that the proposed changes
described in Items II(B)(iv) and II(B)(v)
above are designed to promote robust
risk management, consistent with the
objectives and principles of Section
805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act
cited above.
FICC also believes that the proposed
changes are consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(7),33 Rule 17Ad–22(e)(18),34 and
35 17
32 Id.
33 17
31 12
U.S.C. 5464(b).
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34 17
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Rule 17Ad–22(e)(21)(i),35 as
promulgated under the Act, for the
reasons stated below.
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(7) under the Act
requires FICC to establish, implement,
maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
effectively measure, monitor, and
manage the liquidity risk that arises in
or is borne by the covered clearing
agency, including measuring,
monitoring, and managing its settlement
and funding flows on an ongoing and
timely basis, and its use of intraday
liquidity.36 FICC believes that the
proposed changes described in Item
II(B)(iii) above are consistent with Rule
17Ad–22(e)(7) because, as described
above, all Sponsored Member Trades
(including Sponsored Member Trades in
the existing Service and Sponsored GC
Trades in the proposed Sponsored GC
Service) do not independently create a
liquidity risk. FICC believes the
proposed changes described in Item
II(B)(iii) above would allow FICC to
calculate a Sponsoring Member’s CCLF
obligation in a manner that more closely
aligns with the liquidity risk associated
with Sponsored Member Trades. As
such, FICC believes that the proposed
changes described in Item II(B)(iii)
above are reasonably designed to
effectively measure, monitor, and
manage the liquidity risk that arises in
or is borne by the covered clearing
agency, including measuring,
monitoring, and managing its settlement
and funding flows on an ongoing and
timely basis, and its use of intraday
liquidity, consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(7).37
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(18) under the Act
requires FICC to establish, implement,
maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
establish objective, risk-based, and
publicly disclosed criteria for
participation, which permit fair and
open access by direct, and where
relevant, indirect participants and other
financial market utilities, require
participants to have sufficient financial
resources and robust operational
capacity to meet obligations arising from
participation in the clearing agency, and
monitor compliance with such
participation requirements on an
ongoing basis.38 FICC believes that the
proposed changes described in Item
II(B)(iv) above would enhance clarity
and therefore, may enhance compliance
by the Sponsoring Members with the
requirement to notify FICC if a
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CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7).
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(18).
Frm 00108
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CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(7).
37 Id.
38 17
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03JNN1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 105 / Thursday, June 3, 2021 / Notices
Sponsored Member is no longer either a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
defined in Rule 144A, or a legal entity
that, although not organized as an entity
specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of Rule 144A, satisfies the financial
requirements necessary to be a
‘‘qualified institutional buyer’’ as
specified in that paragraph. As
described above, this requirement is set
forth in Section 3(d) of Rule 3A.39 With
these proposed changes, there would be
a clear and singular mechanism for
Sponsoring Members to notify FICC of
a Sponsored Member’s failure to satisfy
the above-described requirement (as
opposed to having overlapping and
redundant requirements that could
cause confusion). Therefore, FICC
believes the proposed changes described
in Item II(B)(iv) above are consistent
with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(18).40
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(21)(i) under the Act
requires FICC to establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
be efficient and effective in meeting the
requirements of its participants and the
markets it serves, and have the covered
clearing agency’s management regularly
review the efficiency and effectiveness
of its clearing and settlement
arrangements.41 FICC believes that the
proposed changes described in Item
II(B)(ii) above would improve the
efficiency and effectiveness of FICC’s
clearing and settlement arrangements by
making it more operationally efficient
for Sponsoring Members and their
Sponsored Members that are money
market funds and other mutual funds to
transact Repo Transactions (particularly
term Repo Transactions) through FICC
by allowing them to settle such Repo
Transactions on the tri-party repo
platform of a Sponsored GC Clearing
Agent Bank in a similar manner to the
way such Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members settle tri-party repo
transactions with each other outside of
central clearing. FICC also believes that
the proposed rule changes described in
Item II(B)(iv) above would improve the
efficiency and effectiveness of FICC’s
clearing and settlement arrangements by
removing the quarterly representation
requirement of Sponsoring Members
under Section 2 of Rule 3A, which, as
described above, overlaps and is
redundant with the separate
requirement under Section 3(d) of Rule
3A, Section 3(d), supra note 4.
40 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(18).
41 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(21)(i).
3A that requires a Sponsoring Member
to notify FICC if its Sponsored Member
is no longer either a ‘‘qualified
institutional buyer’’ as defined in Rule
144A, or a legal entity that, although not
organized as an entity specifically listed
in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A.42
Therefore, FICC believes that the
proposed changes described in Items
II(B)(ii) and II(B)(iv) above are
consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(21)(i).43
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
that the proposed change was filed with
the Commission or (ii) the date that any
additional information requested by the
Commission is received. The clearing
agency 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.
The clearing agency 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:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:23 Jun 02, 2021
Jkt 253001
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include File Number SR–
FICC–2021–801 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–FICC–2021–801. 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 FICC and on DTCC’s website
(https://dtcc.com/legal/sec-rulefilings.aspx). 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–FICC–
2021–801 and should be submitted on
or before June 18, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.44
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–11605 Filed 6–2–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
39 Rule
3A, Section 3(d), supra note 4.
43 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(21)(i).
42 Rule
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29845
44 17
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CFR 200.30–3(a)(91).
03JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 105 (Thursday, June 3, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29834-29845]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-11605]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-92019; File No. SR-FICC-2021-801]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Fixed Income Clearing Corporation;
Notice of Filing of Advance Notice To Add the Sponsored GC Service and
Make Other Changes
May 27, 2021.
Pursuant to Section 806(e)(1) of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act entitled the Payment,
Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010 (``Clearing
Supervision Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4(n)(1)(i) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act''),\2\ notice is hereby given that on May
12, 2021, Fixed Income Clearing Corporation (``FICC'') filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') the advance notice
as described in Items I, II and III below, which Items have been
prepared by the clearing agency.\3\ The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the advance notice from interested
persons.
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\1\ 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(1)(i).
\3\ On May 12, 2021, FICC filed this advance notice as a
proposed rule change (SR-FICC-2021-003) with the Commission pursuant
to Section 19(b)(1) of the Act, 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1), and Rule 19b-4
thereunder, 17 CFR 240.19b-4. A copy of the proposed rule change is
available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the Advance
Notice
This advance notice consists of modifications to the FICC
Government Securities Division (``GSD'') Rulebook (``Rules'') \4\ in
order to (i) add a new service offering, which would allow a Sponsoring
Member to submit for clearing Repo Transactions with its Sponsored
Members on securities that are represented by Generic CUSIP Numbers and
held under a triparty custodial arrangement (the ``Sponsored GC
Service''), (ii) add language to Rule 3A to allow FICC to recognize,
for Capped Contingency Liquidity Facility[supreg] (``CCLF'')
calculation purposes, any offsetting settlement obligations as between
a Sponsoring Member's netting account and its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account to ensure that a Sponsoring Member's CCLF obligation is
calculated in a manner that more closely aligns with the liquidity risk
associated with Sponsored Member Trades, (iii) remove the requirement
from Section 2 of Rule 3A that a Sponsoring Member provide a quarterly
representation to FICC that each of its Sponsored Members is a
``qualified institutional buyer'' as defined in Rule 144A of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (``Rule 144A''), or is a legal
entity that, although not organized as an entity specifically listed in
paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A, satisfies the financial requirements
necessary to be a ``qualified institutional buyer'' as specified in
that paragraph, and (iv) make a clarification, certain corrections, and
certain technical changes, as described in greater detail below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Capitalized terms not defined herein are defined in the
Rules, available at https://www.dtcc.com/legal/rules-and-procedures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Advance Notice
In its filing with the Commission, the clearing agency 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. The clearing agency has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A and B below, of the most significant aspects of such
statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Advance Notice
Received From Members, Participants, or Others
FICC reviewed the proposed rule change with Sponsoring Members and
Sponsored Members in order to benefit from their expertise. Written
comments relating to this proposed rule change have not been received
from the Sponsoring Members, Sponsored Members or any other person.
FICC will notify the Commission of any written comments received by
FICC.
(B) Advance Notice Filed Pursuant to Section 806(e) of the Clearing
Supervision Act
Nature of the Proposed Change
The purpose of the proposed rule change is to amend the Rules to
(i) add a new service offering, the Sponsored GC Service, (ii) add
language to Rule 3A to allow FICC to recognize, for CCLF calculation
purposes, any offsetting settlement obligations as between a Sponsoring
Member's netting account and its Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account to
ensure that a Sponsoring Member's CCLF obligation is calculated in a
manner that more closely aligns with the liquidity risk associated with
Sponsored Member Trades, (iii) remove the requirement from Section 2 of
Rule 3A that a Sponsoring Member provide a quarterly representation to
FICC that
[[Page 29835]]
each of its Sponsored Members is a ``qualified institutional buyer'' as
defined in Rule 144A, or is a legal entity that, although not organized
as an entity specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A,
satisfies the financial requirements necessary to be a ``qualified
institutional buyer'' as specified in that paragraph, and (iv) make a
clarification, certain corrections, and certain technical changes, as
described in greater detail below.
(i) Background
Under Rule 3A (Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members), certain
Netting Members are permitted to sponsor, as Sponsoring Members,
``qualified institutional buyers'' as defined by Rule 144A, and certain
legal entities that, although not organized as entities specifically
listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A, satisfy the financial
requirements necessary to be ``qualified institutional buyers'' as
specified in that paragraph into FICC/GSD membership.\5\ Under Rule 3A,
a Sponsoring Member is permitted to submit to FICC for comparison,
Novation, and netting certain types of eligible delivery versus payment
(``DVP'') securities transactions (``Sponsored Member Trades'').\6\ A
Sponsoring Member is required to establish an omnibus account at FICC
for its Sponsored Members' positions arising from such Sponsored Member
Trades (``Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account''), which is separate from
the Sponsoring Member's regular netting accounts.\7\ For operational
and administrative purposes, FICC interacts solely with the relevant
Sponsoring Member as processing agent for purposes of the day-to-day
satisfaction of its Sponsored Members' obligations to or from FICC,
including their securities and funds-only settlement obligations.\8\
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\5\ Rule 3A, Section 3(a), supra note 4.
\6\ Rule 3A, Section 5, supra note 4. The term ``Sponsored
Member Trade'' means a transaction that satisfies the requirements
of Section 5 of Rule 3A and that is (a) between a Sponsored Member
and its Sponsoring Member or (b) between a Sponsored Member and a
Netting Member. Rule 1, supra note 4.
\7\ The term ``Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account'' means an
Account maintained by a Sponsoring Member that contains the activity
of its Sponsored Members that is submitted to FICC. A Sponsoring
Member may elect to establish one or more Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Accounts. Each Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account may contain
activity within the meaning of clause (a) of the Sponsored Member
Trade definition or activity within the meaning of clause (b) of
such definition. The Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account shall be
separate from the Accounts associated with the Sponsoring Member's
activity as a Netting Member except as contemplated by Sections 10,
11 and 12 of Rule 3A and under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty. Rule
1, supra note 4.
\8\ Rule 3A, Sections 5, 6(b), 7(a), 8(a), 8(c), 9(a), and 9(c),
supra note 4.
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The current Sponsoring Member/Sponsored Member Service (the
``Service''), which has been in existence since 2005, has seen a steady
increase in the number of Sponsoring Members, in the number of
Sponsored Members and in the volume of Sponsored Member Trades over the
past three years.\9\ One of the main benefits of the Service is that it
provides Sponsoring Members with the ability to offset on their balance
sheets their obligations to FICC on Sponsored Member Trades with their
Sponsored Members against their obligations to FICC on other eligible
FICC-cleared activity, including trades with other Netting Members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ In March 2017, there was one Sponsoring Member and 1,422
Sponsored Members. See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 80236
(March 14, 2017), 82 FR 14265 (March 17, 2017) (SR-FICC-2017-003).
The Service currently has approximately 27 Sponsoring Members and
approximately 1,894 Sponsored Members. As of March 31, 2017, the
aggregate Purchase Price of outstanding Sponsored Member Trades was
approximately $32.2 billion. As of March 31, 2021, the aggregate
Purchase Price of outstanding Sponsored Member Trades was
approximately $286 billion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the Service allows Sponsoring Members to take lesser
capital charges for Repo Transactions with Sponsored Members than would
be required were such transactions uncleared.
By alleviating balance sheet and capital constraints on Sponsoring
Members, the Service allows eligible institutional firms to engage in
greater activity than may otherwise be feasible, which in turn
increases the liquidity available in the repo market. Such greater
liquidity provides stability in the market and additionally increases
potential returns for investors in both cash provider institutions and
collateral provider institutions. For example, the increased liquidity
the Service provides allows investors in institutional firms that act
as cash provider Sponsored Members to invest more of their cash than
may otherwise be possible outside of clearing, which in turn allows
such investors the ability to earn a greater return as a result of
their institutional firms' participation in the Service. Likewise, for
investors in institutional firms that act as collateral provider
Sponsored Members, the increased liquidity ensures more consistent
financing opportunities than may otherwise be available outside of
clearing. Such consistent access to financing may increase the amount
of cash the collateral provider institutional firms have to deploy into
other investment strategies, which in turn allows their investors the
opportunity to earn a greater return as a result of the institutional
firms' participation in the Service.
FICC believes that enabling more repo transactions to clear through
FICC mitigates the risk of a large-scale exit by institutional firms
from the U.S. financial market in a stress scenario.\10\ To that point,
during the recent market volatility in the first quarter of 2020, the
Service in fact saw its peak volume of approximately $564 billion,
rather than a decline, and no discernable impact to volumes
notwithstanding the default of a Netting Member. In addition, no
Sponsored Members defaulted during that volatile period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The U.S. financial market experienced such a liquidity
drain from the repo market in the 2007-2008 financial crisis when
the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers gave rise to concerns among cash
provider institutional firms about the creditworthiness of their
borrower counterparties. See Ben S. Bernanke, The Courage to Act: A
Memoir of a Crisis and its Aftermath 397 (2017) (discussing ``the
paralyzing uncertainty [on the part of repo lenders] about banks'
financial health'' in 2007 and 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In recent years, FICC has taken steps to enable Sponsoring Members
to submit term (rather than overnight) repo transactions for clearing.
Specifically, in 2019, the Commission approved rule changes that added
a new close-out mechanism and adjusted the calculation of certain
funds-only settlement amounts for Sponsored Member Trades that include
haircuts.\11\ FICC believes that having more centrally cleared term
repo transactions would promote the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions because more securities
transactions would benefit from FICC's risk management and guaranty of
settlement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 88262 (February 21,
2020), 85 FR 11401 (February 27, 2020) (SR-FICC-2019-007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FICC also believes that enabling more term (rather than overnight)
repo activity in the Service can serve to help reduce repo rate
volatility in the market and, in turn, help to avoid events like those
that occurred in September 2019, when a temporary reduction in
overnight reverse repo activity by money market funds, including
through the Service, contributed in part to the repo rate volatility on
those days.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Gara Afonso et al., Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Staff
Report No. 918: The Market Events of Mid-September 2019 (March
2020), available at https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff_reports/sr918.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although the aforementioned rule changes have resulted in some
Sponsoring Members transacting term Repo Transactions with certain of
their
[[Page 29836]]
Sponsored Member clients, FICC has received additional feedback from
several market participants that the Service's current requirement that
all Sponsored Member Trades be margined exclusively in cash through
FICC's funds-only settlement process is not conducive to certain cash
provider Sponsored Member clients, particularly money market funds and
other mutual funds, being able to transact term Repo Transactions with
their Sponsoring Members in central clearing. Specifically, money
market funds and other mutual funds are not generally operationally
equipped to provide or receive cash margin in connection with their
term repo activity (either bilaterally or in central clearing). These
funds depend on transfers of securities to maintain required margin,
and typically rely on a tri-party repo clearing bank to administer the
collateral management on such trades. In particular, the tri-party repo
clearing bank calculates the mark-to-market change in value of the
securities underlying each repo transaction and facilitates the
transfer of securities necessary to ensure the value of the securities
equals a specified percentage of the outstanding principal amount of
the repo transaction.
In light of this feedback and in order to support more repo
activity (particularly term repo activity) to be able to be transacted
in central clearing, FICC is proposing to add the Sponsored GC Service,
which would allow Sponsoring Members and their Sponsored Member clients
to execute Repo Transactions with each other on a general collateral
basis in the same asset classes as are currently eligible for Netting
Members to transact in through FICC/GSD's existing GCF Repo[supreg]
Service. Such Repo Transactions would be allowed to settle on the tri-
party repo platform of a Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank (as defined
below) in a similar manner to the way Sponsoring Members and Sponsored
Members settle tri-party repo transactions with each other outside of
central clearing, thereby making it more operationally efficient for
them to transact Repo Transactions (particularly term Repo
Transactions) with each other through FICC.
(ii) Add a New Service Offering, the Sponsored GC Service
(A) Key Parameters of the Proposed Sponsored GC Service
As described above, a Sponsoring Member would be permitted to
submit to FICC for Novation the End Leg of Repo Transactions with its
Sponsored Member client that would be executed in one of a series of
new Generic CUSIP Numbers that would be registered with CUSIP Global
Services by FICC in connection with the proposed Sponsored GC Service
(each a ``Sponsored GC Trade''). The proposed schedule of securities
that would be eligible under each of the new Generic CUSIP Numbers that
would be established for the proposed Sponsored GC Service would be
identical to the current schedule of securities that are eligible under
each of the existing Generic CUSIP Numbers that is currently
established for the GCF Repo Service, including (i) U.S. Treasury
Securities maturing in ten (10) years or less, (ii) U.S. Treasury
Securities maturing in thirty (30) years or less, (iii) Non-Mortgage-
Backed U.S. Agency Securities, (iv) Federal National Mortgage
Association (``Fannie Mae'') and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
(``Freddie Mac'') Fixed Rate Mortgage-Backed Securities, (v) Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac Adjustable Rate Mortgage-Backed Securities, (vi)
Government National Mortgage Association (``Ginnie Mae'') Fixed Rate
Mortgage-Backed Securities, (vii) Ginnie Mae Adjustable Rate Mortgage-
Backed Securities, (viii) U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities
(``TIPS'') and (ix) U.S. Treasury Separate Trading of Registered
Interest and Principal of Securities (``STRIPS'').\13\
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\13\ FICC has decided to use a new series of Generic CUSIP
Numbers in connection with the proposed Sponsored GC Service rather
than utilizing the existing Generic CUSIP Numbers employed for GCF
Repo Transactions in order to avoid any operational processing
errors that could otherwise result if a trade intended for the
proposed Sponsored GC Service was inadvertently processed as a GCF
Repo Transaction or vice versa. To that end, a trade submitted for
the proposed Sponsored GC Service would be automatically rejected by
FICC if not submitted in one of the nine new Generic CUSIP Numbers
earmarked for the proposed Sponsored GC Service, and a GCF Repo
Transaction would be rejected by FICC if not submitted in one of the
nine Generic CUSIP Numbers dedicated to the GCF Repo Service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with FICC's processing of Repo Transactions in its
existing GCF Repo Service, each Sponsored GC Trade would be required to
be fully collateralized with securities eligible under the applicable
Generic CUSIP Number and/or cash. However, consistent with the existing
Service, Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members would be permitted to
transfer a haircut on a Sponsored GC Trade so that the value of the
securities at the Start Leg (the ``GC Start Leg Market Value'') exceeds
100% of the initial principal balance of the Sponsored GC Trade.
Consistent with the manner in which tri-party repo transactions are
settled today outside of central clearing, the Start Leg of a Sponsored
GC Trade would settle on a trade for trade basis on a Sponsored GC
Clearing Agent Bank's tri-party repo platform between the Sponsoring
Member and the Sponsored Member. Novation to FICC of the End Leg of a
Sponsored GC Trade would occur at the time when all of the following
requirements have been satisfied on a given Business Day: (i) The trade
data on the Sponsored GC Trade has been submitted to FICC by the
Sponsoring Member pursuant to Rule 6A by the deadline set forth in the
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes, (ii) the data
on the Sponsored GC Trade has been compared in the Comparison System
pursuant to Rule 6A, (iii) the Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade has
fully settled at the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank by the deadline
set forth in the proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes, (iv) the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank has, pursuant to
communication links, formats, timeframes, and deadlines established by
FICC for such purpose, provided to FICC a report containing such data
as FICC may require from time to time, including information regarding
the specific Eligible Securities that were delivered in the settlement
of the Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade (the ``Purchased GC Repo
Securities''), and (v) FICC determines that the data contained in such
report matches the data on the Sponsored GC Trade submitted by the
Sponsoring Member to the Comparison System.
Accrued repo interest on Sponsored GC Trades would be paid and
collected by FICC on a daily basis. If on any Business Day, the market
value of the Purchased GC Repo Securities is less than the GC Start Leg
Market Value, then the Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member that
transferred the securities in the Start Leg (the ``GC Funds Borrower'')
would be required deliver to FICC (and FICC would be required to
deliver to the GC Funds Borrower's pre-Novation counterparty)
additional Eligible Securities that are represented by the same Generic
CUSIP Number as the Purchased GC Repo Securities (``GC Comparable
Securities'') and/or cash, such that the market value of the Purchased
GC Repo Securities (inclusive of the newly transferred securities and
cash) is at least equal to the GC Start Leg Market Value. If on any
Business Day, the market value of the Purchased GC Repo Securities is
greater than the GC Start Leg Market Value, the Sponsoring Member or
Sponsored Member that received the securities in
[[Page 29837]]
the start leg (the ``GC Funds Lender'') would be required to return to
FICC (and FICC would be required to return to the relevant GC Funds
Borrower) Purchased GC Repo Securities such that the market value of
the remaining Purchased GC Repo Securities remains at least equal to
the GC Start Leg Market Value.
Such additional securities and/or cash must be delivered within the
timeframe set forth in the proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes. Any securities or cash transferred by the GC Funds Borrower
pursuant to these requirements would constitute Purchased GC Repo
Securities, and any Purchased GC Repo Securities transferred by the GC
Funds Lender pursuant to these requirements would, following such
transfer, no longer constitute Purchased GC Repo Securities.
In addition, consistent with the processing of Repo Transactions in
FICC's existing GCF Repo Service, a GC Funds Borrower would be
permitted to substitute for Purchased GC Repo Securities, GC Comparable
Securities and/or cash within the timeframe set forth in the proposed
new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes.
In order to facilitate settlement, FICC would direct each GC Funds
Borrower and GC Funds Lender to make any payment or delivery due to
FICC in respect of a Sponsored GC Trade (except for certain funds-only
settlement obligations, as discussed below) directly to the relevant
Member's pre-Novation counterparty. As a result, each transfer of
Purchased GC Repo Securities and daily repo interest would be made
directly between the relevant GC Funds Borrower and GC Funds Lender
through the tri-party repo platform of a Sponsored GC Clearing Agent
Bank.\14\
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\14\ FICC does not believe it is appropriate to require that
each payment and delivery under a Sponsored GC Trade be made from
(or to) the Sponsoring Member to (or from) FICC and separately from
(or to) FICC to (or from) the Sponsored Member because inserting
FICC in the middle of the payments and deliveries in this fashion
would require substantial changes in operational processes for both
Sponsored Members and Sponsoring Members. FICC does not believe such
operational changes to be necessary in light of the fact that there
can only be two pre-Novation counterparties involved in the
settlement of a Sponsored GC Trade (i.e., the Sponsoring Member and
its Sponsored Member client), as opposed to the multitude of Netting
Members that may be involved in the settlement of GCF Repo
Transactions the payment and delivery obligations under which are
aggregated and netted in FICC's Netting System. For such GCF Repo
Transactions, insertion of FICC in the middle of the payments and
deliveries can streamline the settlement process and create
significant operational efficiencies for Netting Members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To that end, each GC Funds Borrower and GC Funds Lender would agree
that any such direct payment or delivery discharges FICC's obligation
to make the same payment or delivery. Otherwise, all legal rights and
obligations as between FICC and Sponsoring Members, and as between FICC
and Sponsored Members, would be the same with respect to Sponsored GC
Trades as with respect to Sponsored Member Trades in the existing
Service, which is governed by Rule 3A.\15\
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\15\ Rule 3A, supra note 4.
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(B) Risk Management of Sponsored GC Trades
Sponsored GC Trades would be risk managed in a similar fashion to
Sponsored Member Trades in the existing Service.
To mitigate market risk, the VaR Charge would be calculated for
each Sponsored Member client individually based on such Sponsored
Member client's activity in the existing Service, as well as such
Sponsored Member client's activity in the proposed Sponsored GC
Service. The VaR Charge for the Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account would
continue to be the sum of the individual VaR Charges for each Sponsored
Member client, i.e., the Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account would
continue to be gross margined.\16\ To facilitate FICC's ability to
surveil a given Sponsored Member's FICC-cleared activity across its
Sponsored GC Trades as well as its other Sponsored Member Trades within
the existing Service, both with the same Sponsoring Member and across
Sponsoring Members (if applicable), the same symbol would be used to
identify the Sponsored Member for purposes of trade submission and risk
management under the proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See Rule 3A, Section 10, supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, FICC would risk manage the mark-to-market risk
associated with unaccrued repo interest on a Sponsored GC Trade in the
same way it manages such risk in the GCF Repo Service, namely through a
proposed new GC Interest Rate Mark component of funds-only settlement.
This proposed new mark would be calculated in the same manner as the
GCF Interest Rate Mark is for GCF Repo Transactions.\17\ In light of
the application of the proposed new GC Interest Rate Mark to Sponsored
GC Trades, an Interest Adjustment Payment would also be applied to
account for overnight use of funds by the Sponsoring Member or
Sponsored Member, as applicable, based on such party's receipt from
FICC of a Forward Mark Adjustment Payment (reflecting a GC Interest
Rate Mark) on the previous Business Day.\18\
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\17\ The term ``GCF Interest Rate Mark'' means, on a particular
Business Day as regards any GCF Repo Transaction that is not
scheduled to settle on that day, the product of the principal value
of the GCF Repo Transaction on the Scheduled Settlement Date for its
End Leg multiplied by a factor equal to the absolute difference
between the Repo Rate established by FICC for such Repo Transaction
and its Contract Repo Rate, and then multiplied by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the number of calendar days from the current
day until the Scheduled Settlement Date for the End Leg of the Repo
Transaction and the denominator of which is 360. If the Repo
Transaction's Contract Repo Rate is greater than its System Repo
Rate, then the GCF Interest Rate Mark shall be a positive value for
the Reverse Repo Party, and a negative value for the Repo Party. If
the Repo Transaction's Contract Repo Rate is less than its System
Repo Rate, then the GCF Interest Rate Mark shall be a positive value
for the Repo Party, and a negative value for the Reverse Repo Party.
The term ``GCF Interest Rate Mark'' means, as regards a GCF Net
Settlement Position, the sum of all the GCF Interest Rate Mark
Payments on each of the GCF Repo Transactions that compose such
position. Rule 1, supra note 4.
\18\ No other components of funds-only settlement would be
necessary to apply to Sponsored GC Trades because, as described
above, (i) all Sponsored GC Trades would novate after the settlement
of the Start Legs of such trades (i.e., not during the Forward-
Starting Period), (ii) mark-to-market changes in the value of the
securities transferred under Sponsored GC Trades would be managed by
the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank on FICC's behalf (consistent
with the manner in which GCF Repo Transactions are processed today),
and (iii) the accrued repo interest on Sponsored GC Trades would be
passed on a daily basis, as described above.
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For liquidity risk management, Sponsored Member Trades between a
Sponsoring Member and its Sponsored Member in the existing Service do
not independently create liquidity risk for FICC. This is because FICC
is not required to complete settlement of such Sponsored Member Trades
in the event that either the Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member
defaults. In the event that the Sponsoring Member defaults, Section
14(c) of Rule 3A permits FICC to close out (rather than settle) the
Sponsored Member Trades of the defaulter's Sponsored Members.\19\
Likewise, if the Sponsored Member defaults, FICC is also not required
to complete settlement. Rather, under Section 11 of Rule 3A, FICC may
offset its settlement obligations to the Sponsoring Member against the
Sponsoring Member's obligations under the Sponsoring Member Guaranty to
perform on behalf of its defaulted Sponsored Member.\20\
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\19\ Rule 3A, Section 14(c), supra note 4.
\20\ Rule 3A, Section 11, supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result, to the extent a Sponsoring Member either (1) runs a
matched book of Sponsored Members (i.e., enters into offsetting
Sponsored Member Trades with its own Sponsored Members) or (2) simply
enters into Sponsored Member Trades without entering into offsetting
transactions, it does not increase FICC's liquidity risk. By contrast,
if a Sponsoring Member enters into an
[[Page 29838]]
offsetting Repo Transaction with a third-party Netting Member that is
novated to FICC, then that will increase FICC's liquidity risk. This is
because, unlike in the context of Sponsored Member Trades, in the event
of the Sponsoring Member's default, FICC is required to settle with
such third-party Netting Member.
Sponsored GC Trades would impact FICC's liquidity risk similarly to
Sponsored Member Trades in the existing Service in this regard, in that
liquidity risk to FICC would only be increased to the extent the
Sponsoring Member enters into a Repo Transaction with a third-party
Netting Member (which it may choose to do in order to offset the
Sponsored GC Trade that it executed with its Sponsored Member).
Accordingly, FICC proposes to manage the liquidity risk associated with
Sponsored GC Trades in the same manner that it manages such risk for
other Sponsored Member Trades. As discussed below in Item II(B)(iii),
FICC is proposing to add language to Rule 3A to revise the manner in
which it calculates a Sponsoring Member's Individual Total Amount for
purposes of its CCLF obligation, with respect to all Sponsored Member
Trades, including Sponsored GC Trades, in order to reflect the fact
that Sponsored Member Trades do not create liquidity risk.
(C) Proposed Rule Changes
To effectuate the proposed changes described above, FICC would
revise Rule 1 to add the following new defined terms: (1) GC Collateral
Return Entitlement, (2) GC Collateral Return Obligation, (3) GC
Comparable Securities, (4) GC Daily Repo Interest, (5) GC Funds
Borrower, (6) GC Funds Lender, (7) GC Interest Rate Mark, (8) GC Repo
Security, (9) GC Start Leg Market Value, (10) Purchased GC Repo
Securities, (11) Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank, and (12) Sponsored
GC Trade.
GC Collateral Return Entitlement would mean the entitlement of a
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member, as applicable, to receive the
Purchased GC Repo Securities (as defined below) in exchange for cash at
the End Leg of a Sponsored GC Trade.
GC Collateral Return Obligation would mean the obligation of a
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member, as applicable, to deliver the
Purchased GC Repo Securities in exchange for cash at the End Leg of a
Sponsored GC Trade.
GC Comparable Securities would mean, in relation to a Sponsored GC
Trade, any GC Repo Securities that are represented by the same Generic
CUSIP Number as the GC Repo Securities that were transferred in the
Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade, as set forth in the proposed new
Schedule of GC Comparable Securities.
GC Daily Repo Interest would mean the daily interest amount that is
payable under a Sponsored GC Trade.
GC Funds Borrower would mean a Sponsoring Member or Sponsored
Member, as applicable, that has a GC Collateral Return Entitlement and
associated cash payment obligation.
GC Funds Lender would mean a Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member,
as applicable, that has a GC Collateral Return Obligation and
associated cash payment entitlement.
GC Interest Rate Mark would mean, on a particular Business Day as
regards any Sponsored GC Trade where the End Leg is not scheduled to
settle on that day, the product of the principal value of the Sponsored
GC Trade on the Scheduled Settlement Date for its End Leg multiplied by
a factor equal to the absolute difference between the System Repo Rate
established by FICC for such Sponsored GC Trade and its Contract Repo
Rate, and then multiplied by a fraction, the numerator of which is the
number of calendar days from the current day until the Scheduled
Settlement Date for the End Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade and the
denominator of which is 360. If the Sponsored GC Trade's Contract Repo
Rate is greater than its System Repo Rate, then the GC Interest Rate
Mark would be a positive value for the GC Funds Lender, and a negative
value for the GC Funds Borrower. If the Sponsored GC Trade's Contract
Repo Rate is less than its System Repo Rate, then the GC Interest Rate
Mark would be a positive value for the GC Funds Borrower, and a
negative value for the GC Funds Lender.
GC Repo Security would mean an Eligible Security that is only
eligible for submission to FICC in connection with the comparison and
Novation of Sponsored GC Trades.
GC Start Leg Market Value would mean, in relation to a Sponsored GC
Trade, the market value of the GC Repo Securities transferred in the
Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade, measured as of the date of the
settlement of the Start Leg of such Sponsored GC Trade.
Purchased GC Repo Securities would mean the GC Repo Securities
transferred by the Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member, as
applicable, in settlement of the Start Leg of a Sponsored GC Trade,
plus all cash and other GC Repo Securities transferred by such
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member pursuant to proposed Sections
8(b)(ii) and 8(b)(v) of Rule 3A, less any GC Repo Securities or cash
received by the Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member pursuant to
proposed Sections 8(b)(iii) and 8(b)(v) of Rule 3A.
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank would mean a Clearing Agent Bank
that has agreed to provide FICC, upon request, under mutually agreeable
terms, with clearing services for Sponsored GC Trades.
Sponsored GC Trade would mean, in connection with the Sponsored GC
Service, a Sponsored Member Trade that is a Repo Transaction between a
Sponsored Member and its Sponsoring Member involving securities
represented by a Generic CUSIP Number the data on which are submitted
to FICC by the Sponsoring Member pursuant to the provisions of Rule 6A,
for Novation to FICC pursuant to proposed Section 7(b)(ii) of Rule 3A.
FICC also proposes to revise the following defined terms in Rule 1:
(1) Eligible Security, (2) End Leg, (3) General Collateral Repo
Transaction, (4) Generic CUSIP Number, (5) Initial Haircut, (4)
Interest Adjustment Payment, (5) Sponsored Member Trade, (6) Start Leg,
(7) Forward Mark Adjustment Payment, and (8) Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account, each as described in greater detail below.
FICC proposes to revise the definition of Eligible Security to
state that a GC Repo Security would be deemed to be an Eligible
Security only in connection with a Sponsored GC Trade.
FICC also proposes to revise the definition of End Leg to include a
definition applicable to Sponsored GC Trades. As regards a Sponsored GC
Trade, End Leg would mean the concluding settlement aspects of the
transaction, involving the retransfer of the Purchased GC Repo
Securities by the GC Funds Lender and the taking back of such Purchased
GC Repo Securities by the GC Funds Borrower. Because FICC is revising
the definition of End Leg to add a definition applicable to Sponsored
GC Trades, FICC would also revise the first sentence of the current
definition to state that it does not apply to Sponsored GC Trades by
adding the phrase ``or a Sponsored GC Trade'' after ``as regards a Repo
Transaction other than a GCF Repo Transaction (or CCIT Transaction as
applicable).''
FICC proposes to revise the definition of General Collateral Repo
Transaction to state that General Collateral Repo Transaction would
mean a Repo Transaction, other than a GCF Repo Transaction or Sponsored
GC Trade
[[Page 29839]]
(unless the context indicates otherwise), with a Generic CUSIP Number.
FICC also proposes to revise the definition of Generic CUSIP Number
to state that FICC would use separate Generic CUSIP Numbers for General
Collateral Repo Transactions, GCF Repo Transactions and Sponsored GC
Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the definition of Initial Haircut to
include a definition applicable to Sponsored GC Trades. As regards any
Sponsored GC Trade, Initial Haircut would mean any difference between
(x) the Contract Value of the Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade and
(y) the GC Start Leg Market Value. Because FICC is revising the
definition of Initial Haircut to include a definition applicable to
Sponsored GC Trades, FICC would revise proposed section (i) in the
definition to state that proposed section (i) would apply to any
Sponsored Member Trade that is not a Sponsored GC Trade by adding the
phrase ``that is not a Sponsored GC Trade'' after ``as regards any
Sponsored Member Trade.''
FICC also proposes to revise the definition Interest Adjustment
Payment to include a definition applicable to Sponsored GC Trades. As
regards a Sponsored GC Trade, Interest Adjustment Payment would mean
the product of the GC Interest Rate Mark multiplied by the applicable
Overnight Investment Rate and then multiplied by a fraction, the
numerator of which is the number of calendar days between the previous
Business Day and the current Business Day and the denominator of which
is 360.
FICC proposes to revise the definition of Sponsored Member Trade to
include Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the definition of Start Leg to include
a definition applicable to Sponsored GC Trades. As regards a Sponsored
GC Trade, Start Leg would mean the initial settlement aspects of the
Transaction, involving the transfer of GC Repo Securities by the
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member, as applicable, that is the GC
Funds Borrower and the taking in of such GC Repo Securities by the
Sponsoring Member or Sponsored Member, as applicable, that is the GC
Funds Lender. Because FICC is proposing to revise the definition of
Start Leg to add a definition applicable to Sponsored GC Trades, FICC
would revise that the first sentence of the current definition to state
that it does not apply to Sponsored GC Trades by adding the phrase ``or
a Sponsored GC Trade'' after ``as regards a Repo Transaction other than
a GCF Repo Transaction.''
FICC also proposes to revise the definition of Forward Mark
Adjustment Payment in Rule 1 to state that it would refer to the GC
Interest Rate Mark with respect to Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to make conforming changes to the definition of
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account to state that it may contain all
types of Sponsored Member Trades. The current definition of Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account states that each Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account may contain activity within the meaning of clause (a) of the
Sponsored Member Trade definition or activity within the meaning of
clause (b) of such definition.
In addition, FICC proposes to revise the definition of Sponsored GC
Service in Rule 1 and to revise Section VII (Sponsoring Members) of the
Fee Structure, as described below.
FICC proposes to revise the definition of Sponsored GC Service in
Rule 1 to state that it would mean the service offered by FICC to clear
tri-party repurchase agreement transactions between Sponsoring Members
and Sponsored Members, as described in Rule 3A. Currently, the
definition of Sponsored GC Service states that it means a service to be
offered by FICC, which has not yet been proposed for and would be
subject to regulatory approval, to clear tri-party repurchase agreement
transactions between the Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members, as
shall be described in Rule 3A. FICC also proposes to remove the
footnote in the definition of Sponsored GC Service, which states that
the Sponsored GC Service shall be the subject of a subsequent rule
filing with the Commission and that the definition of Sponsored GC
Service shall be revised upon approval of the subsequent rule filing,
and at that time the footnote shall sunset.
FICC also proposes to revise Section VII (Sponsoring Members) of
the Fee Structure to remove language that states that to the extent
FICC, in consultation with its Board of Directors, does not implement
the Sponsored GC Service, all previously collected Sponsored GC Pre-
Payment Assessments shall be returned to the contributing Sponsoring
Members in full. FICC also proposes to remove the footnote in this
section which states that the Sponsored GC Service shall be the subject
of a subsequent rule filing with the Commission and that Section VII of
the Fee Structure shall be revised to remove the referenced sentence
upon approval of the subsequent rule filing, and at that time the
footnote shall sunset.
In addition, FICC proposes to revise Rule 3A, Section 5 (Sponsored
Member Trades) to state that this section does not apply to Sponsored
GC Trades. Section 5 concerns the types of trades that may be submitted
as Sponsored Member Trades and discusses the application of Rule 14
(Forward Trades) and Rule 18 (Special Provisions for Repo Transactions)
to Sponsored Member Trades. The requirements that Sponsored GC Trades
must meet would be separately enumerated in Section 7, and the
provisions of Rules 14 and 18, which only apply to transactions
eligible for FICC's general netting system, would not apply to such
Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise Rule 3A, Section 6 (Trade Submission
and the Comparison System) to state that the current Schedule of
Timeframes would apply to Sponsored Member Trades other than Sponsored
GC Trades. The proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes
would apply to Sponsored GC Trades.
Section 7 (The Netting System, Novation and Guaranty of Settlement)
of Rule 3A would be revised to create a proposed new paragraph (a). The
proposed new paragraph (a) would provide that the current provisions of
Section 7, which would be reorganized as proposed new subparagraphs (i)
through (iv) of proposed new paragraph (a), apply to Sponsored Member
Trades other than Sponsored GC Trades. These provisions concern the
netting and Novation of Sponsored Member Trades. As discussed below,
different provisions would apply to Sponsored GC Trades.
Proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 7 would only apply to
Sponsored GC Trades. Proposed new subparagraph (i) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 7 would provide that only the End Legs of a
Sponsored GC Trade may be novated to FICC and that a Sponsored GC Trade
is permitted (but not required) to have an Initial Haircut. Proposed
new subparagraph (ii) of proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 7 would
provide requirements that would have to be satisfied in order for a
Sponsored GC Trade to be novated on a given Business Day. The following
requirements would be included: (A) The trade data on the Sponsored GC
Trade must have been submitted to FICC by the Sponsoring Member
pursuant to Rule 6A by the deadline set forth in FICC's proposed new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes, (B) the data on the
Sponsored GC Trade must have been compared in the Comparison System
pursuant to Rule 6A, (C) the Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade must
have fully settled at the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank by
[[Page 29840]]
the deadline set forth in FICC's proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC
Trade Timeframes, (D) the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank must have,
pursuant to communication links, formats, timeframes, and deadlines
established by FICC for such purpose, provided to FICC a report
containing such data as FICC may require from time to time, including
information regarding the specific GC Repo Securities that were
delivered in settlement of the Start Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade, and
(E) FICC must determine that the data contained in such report matches
the data on the Sponsored GC Trade submitted by the Sponsoring Member
pursuant to Rule 6A. Proposed new subparagraph (iii) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 7 would state that, on each Business Day, FICC
would provide each Sponsoring Member with one or more Reports setting
forth (A) each Sponsored GC Trade, the data on which has been compared
in the Comparison System and (B) each Sponsored GC Trade, the End Leg
of which has been novated to FICC. Proposed new subparagraph (iv) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 7 would require that each
Sponsoring Member and Sponsored Member acknowledges and agrees that it
has authorized each relevant Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank to
provide FICC with all information and data as FICC may require or
request from time to time in order to novate and process Sponsored GC
Trades.
Section 8 (Securities Settlement) of Rule 3A would be revised to
create a new paragraph (a). The proposed new paragraph (a) would
provide that the bulk of the current provisions of Section 8, which
would be reorganized as subparagraphs (i) through (vii) of proposed new
paragraph (a), apply to Sponsored Member Trades other than Sponsored GC
Trades. Those provisions concern the process for settling Sponsored
Member Trades. As discussed below, different settlement requirements
would apply to Sponsored GC Trades.
Proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 8 would apply only to
Sponsored GC Trades. Proposed new subparagraph (i) of proposed new
paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state that GC Collateral Return
Obligations and cash payment obligations associated with GC Collateral
Return Entitlements must be satisfied by a GC Funds Lender and GC Funds
Borrower, respectively, within the timeframes established for such by
FICC in the proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes. In
addition, any failure by the GC Funds Borrower to satisfy its cash
payment obligations associated with GC Collateral Return Entitlements
within the timeframe established for such by FICC in the proposed new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would subject the GC Funds
Borrower to a late fee as if such GC Funds Borrower were a Net Funds
Payor within the meaning of Section IX of the Fee Structure (Late Fee
Related to GCF Repo Transactions). Proposed new subparagraph (ii) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state that if on any
Business Day, the market value of a GC Funds Borrower's GC Collateral
Return Entitlement from the previous Business Day (or the current
Business Day) is less than the GC Start Leg Market Value, then such GC
Funds Borrower would deliver to FICC (and FICC would deliver to the
relevant GC Funds Lender) additional GC Comparable Securities and/or
cash, such that the market value of the GC Funds Borrower's GC
Collateral Return Entitlement (and the market value of the relevant GC
Funds Lender's GC Collateral Return Obligation) is at least equal to
the GC Start Leg Market Value. Such additional securities and/or cash
must be delivered by the GC Funds Borrower within the timeframe set
forth in the proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes.
Proposed new subparagraph (iii) of proposed new paragraph (b) of
Section 8 would state that if on any Business Day, the market value of
a GC Funds Lender's GC Collateral Return Obligation from the previous
Business Day (or the current Business Day) is greater than the GC Start
Leg Market Value, then such GC Funds Lender would deliver to FICC (and
FICC would deliver to the relevant GC Funds Borrower) some of the
Purchased GC Repo Securities, such that the market value of the GC
Funds Lender's GC Collateral Return Obligation (and the market value of
the relevant GC Funds Borrower's Collateral Return Entitlement) is at
least equal to the GC Start Leg Market Value. Such Purchased GC Repo
Securities must be delivered within the timeframe set forth in the
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes. Proposed new
subparagraph (iv) of proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 8 would
state that each GC Funds Borrower (or if the repo rate for the relevant
Sponsored GC Trade is negative, the GC Funds Lender) would, within the
timeframe set forth in the proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes, pay the daily accrued GC Daily Repo Interest to FICC (and
FICC would pay such GC Daily Repo Interest to the GC Funds Lender or GC
Funds Borrower, as applicable). Proposed new subparagraph (v) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state that a GC Funds
Borrower may substitute cash and/or GC Comparable Securities for any
Purchased GC Repo Securities in accordance with the timeframe set forth
in the proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes. Proposed
new subparagraph (vi) of proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 8 would
state that FICC directs each Sponsored Member and Sponsoring Member to
satisfy any payment or delivery obligation due to FICC, except for any
obligation to pay a Funds-Only Settlement Amount, by making the
relevant payment or delivery to an account at the relevant Sponsored GC
Clearing Agent Bank specified by the pre-Novation counterparty to the
Sponsored Member or Sponsoring Member, as applicable, in accordance
with such procedures as the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank may
specify from time to time. Each Sponsored Member and Sponsoring Member
that is owed any such payment or delivery from FICC would acknowledge
and agree that, if the pre-Novation counterparty to such Sponsored GC
Trade makes the relevant payment or delivery as described in the prior
sentence, FICC's obligation to make such payment or delivery would be
discharged and satisfied in full. Proposed new subparagraph (vii) of
proposed new paragraph (b) of Section 8 would state that the market
value of all GC Repo Securities would be determined by the relevant
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank each Business Day.
In addition, FICC proposes to move language from current Section
8(a) to proposed new Section 8(c). Proposed new Section 8(c) would
state that notwithstanding the foregoing and any other activities the
Sponsoring Member may perform in its capacity as agent for Sponsored
Members, each Sponsored Member would be principally obligated to FICC
with respect to all securities settlement obligations under the Rules,
and the Sponsoring Member would not be a principal under the Rules with
respect to the settlement obligations of its Sponsored Members. This
provision would apply to both Sponsored GC Trades as well as other
kinds of Sponsored Member Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise Section 9 of Rule 3A to state which
provisions would apply to Sponsored Member Trades other than Sponsored
GC Trades, which provisions would apply only to Sponsored GC Trades,
and which provisions would apply to all
[[Page 29841]]
Sponsored Member Trades. Specifically, FICC proposes to add language to
state that Section 9(a) applies to Sponsored Member Trades other than
Sponsored GC Trades and current Sections 9(b), (c), (d), and (e), which
would be reorganized as proposed new Sections 9(c)(i), (c)(ii),
(c)(iii), and (c)(iv), respectively, applies to all Sponsored Member
Trades. In addition, FICC proposes to add a new Section 9(b) to Rule
3A, which would only apply to Sponsored GC Trades and would state that
each Sponsoring Member and Sponsored Member would be obligated to pay
to FICC, and/or would be entitled to receive from FICC, the following
amounts: Forward Mark Adjustment Payment and Interest Adjustment
Payment. It would also state that such amounts would be payable and
receivable as though they were amounts described in Rule 13.
FICC proposes to add Section 10(i) to Rule 3A that would state that
for purposes of applying Rule 4 to a Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account,
each Sponsored GC Trade would be treated as a GCF Repo Transaction,
each GC Funds Lender and GC Funds Borrower would be treated as a GCF
Counterparty, and each Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank would be
treated as a GCF Clearing Agent Bank.
FICC would also revise Section 4 of Rule 5 (Comparison System) to
add Sponsored GC Trades. Specifically, Section 4 of Rule 5 would be
revised to state that GCF Repo Transactions and Sponsored GC Trades
must be submitted exactly as executed.
FICC is also proposing to add a new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade
Timeframes that would only be applicable to Sponsored GC Trades. The
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would state that
the time during which reports would be made available with respect to
end of day Clearing Fund requirements and funds-only settlement
requirements would be from 10:30 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. In addition, it
would state that 2:00 p.m. would be the time during which reports would
be made available with respect to intraday Clearing Fund requirements,
and intraday funds-only settlement requirements. The proposed new
Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would also state that at
10:00 a.m., funds-only settlement debits and credits are executed via
the Federal Reserve's National Settlement Service and at 4:30 p.m., the
intraday funds-only settlement debits and credits are executed via the
Federal Reserve's National Settlement Service.
The proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would
also state that 9:00 a.m. would be the deadline for the GC Funds
Borrower to satisfy the obligation described in proposed Section
8(b)(ii) of Rule 3A in accordance with the provisions of proposed
Section 8(b)(vi) of Rule 3A. It would also state that FICC reserves the
right to also require a GC Funds Borrower to satisfy the obligation
described in proposed Section 8(b)(ii) on an intraday basis based on
the market value of the applicable GC Repo Securities as determined by
the GC Clearing Agent Bank in accordance with proposed Section
8(b)(vii) of Rule 3A. It would also state that 12:00 p.m. would be the
deadline for the GC Funds Borrower (or if the repo rate for the
relevant Sponsored GC Trade is negative, the GC Funds Lender) to pay to
FICC the accrued GC Daily Repo Interest as described in proposed
Section 8(b)(iv) in accordance with the provisions of proposed Section
8(b)(vi) of Rule 3A (unless the End Leg of the related Sponsored GC
Trade is due to settle on the same day). The proposed new Schedule of
Sponsored GC Timeframes would state that any accrued GC Daily Repo
Interest that is due on the settlement day of the End Leg of the
related Sponsored GC Trade would be paid in connection with the
settlement of the End Leg.
The proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would
also state that 5:00 p.m. would be the deadline for final input by the
Sponsoring Members to FICC of Sponsored GC Trade data. Furthermore,
5:30 p.m. would be the deadline for (i) full settlement of the Start
Leg of the Sponsored GC Trade in accordance with proposed Section
7(b)(ii)(C) of Rule 3A, (ii) substitutions of Purchased GC Repo
Securities in accordance with proposed Section 8(b)(v) of Rule 3A, and
(iii) satisfaction of GC Collateral Return Obligations and cash payment
obligations associated with GC Collateral Return Entitlements by GC
Funds Lenders and GC Funds Borrowers, respectively, in accordance with
proposed Section 8(b)(i) of Rule 3A.
The proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes would
also state that the time by which a GC Funds Lender would be required
to deliver any securities to a GC Funds Borrower in connection with
proposed Section 8(b)(iii) of Rule 3A would be determined by the
relevant Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank. Furthermore, it would state
that all times may be extended as needed by FICC to (i) address
operational or other delays that would reasonably prevent members or
FICC from meeting the deadline or timeframe, as applicable, or (ii)
allow the FICC time to operationally exercise its existing rights under
the Rules. In addition, it would state that times applicable to FICC
are standards and not deadlines and that actual processing times may
vary slightly, as necessary.
FICC also proposes to revise the Schedule for the Deletion of Trade
Data to state which provisions would not apply to Sponsored GC Trades.
In addition, FICC would also add language to state that trade data on
Sponsored GC Trades that remain uncompared on a given Business Day
would pend in the Comparison System until FICC's deadline for final
input by Sponsoring Members of Sponsored GC Trade data (as provided in
the Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes) on such Business Day.
FICC would also add language to state that trade data on Sponsored GC
Trades, which have been compared in the Comparison System pursuant to
Rule 6A but the Start Legs of which have not fully settled at a
Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank by the deadline set forth in FICC's
proposed new Schedule of Sponsored GC Trade Timeframes, would be
deleted from the Comparison System during the same processing cycle as
the Repo Start Date for such Sponsored GC Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the Schedule of Required Data
Submission Items to state that items (1) and (2) in this schedule would
not be required for Sponsored Member Trades.
FICC also proposes to revise the following schedules to exclude
Sponsored GC Trades: (i) Schedule of Required and Accepted Data
Submission Items for a Substitution and (ii) Schedule of Required and
Accepted Data Submission Items for New Securities Collateral.
In addition, as described above, FICC would add a proposed new
Schedule of GC Comparable Securities.
(iii) Add Language to Rule 3A To Allow FICC To Recognize, for CCLF
Calculation Purposes, Any Offsetting Settlement Obligations as Between
a Sponsoring Member's Netting Account and Its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account To Ensure That a Sponsoring Member's CCLF Obligation is
Calculated in a Manner That More Closely Aligns With the Liquidity Risk
Associated With Sponsored Member Trades
As described above, Sponsored Member Trades between a Sponsoring
Member and its Sponsored Member in the existing Service do not
independently create liquidity risk for FICC. This is because FICC is
not required to complete settlement of such Sponsored Member Trades in
the event that either the Sponsoring Member or
[[Page 29842]]
Sponsored Member defaults. In the event that the Sponsoring Member
defaults, Section 14(c) of Rule 3A permits FICC to close out (rather
than settle) the Sponsored Member Trades of the defaulter's Sponsored
Members.\21\ Likewise, if the Sponsored Member defaults, FICC is also
not required to complete settlement. Rather, under Section 11 of Rule
3A, FICC may offset its settlement obligations to the Sponsoring Member
against the Sponsoring Member's obligations under the Sponsoring Member
Guaranty to perform on behalf of its defaulted Sponsored Member.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Rule 3A, Section 14(c), supra note 4.
\22\ Rule 3A, Section 11, supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, liquidity risk to FICC is only increased to the extent
the Sponsoring Member enters into a Repo Transaction with a third-party
Netting Member that is novated to FICC. Such a Repo Transaction creates
liquidity risk to FICC because, in the event of the Sponsoring Member's
default, FICC is required to settle with such third-party Netting
Member.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ As described above, a Sponsored GC Trade would impact
FICC's liquidity risk similarly to a Sponsored Member Trade in the
existing Service in this regard, in that liquidity risk to FICC
would only be increased to the extent the Sponsoring Member enters
into an offsetting Repo Transaction with a third-party Netting
Member that is novated to FICC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In light of this, FICC believes that a Sponsored Member Trade
should only increase the obligation of a Sponsoring Member with respect
to FICC's CCLF to the extent the Sponsoring Member offsets that trade
with a Repo Transaction entered into with a third-party Netting Member
that is novated to FICC. To the extent a Sponsoring Member either (1)
enters into an offsetting Sponsored Member Trade with another Sponsored
Member (i.e., it runs a matched book of Sponsored Member Trades) or (2)
simply does not enter into an offsetting transaction at all, then the
Sponsored Member Trade has no effect on FICC's liquidity risk, and so
should not affect the Sponsoring Member's CCLF obligation.
Currently, FICC does not impose a CCLF obligation on a Sponsoring
Member to the extent the Sponsoring Member runs a matched book of
Sponsored Member Trades. This is because FICC calculates a Sponsoring
Member's CCLF obligation based on the net settlement obligations of its
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account and the net settlement obligations of
the Sponsoring Member's netting account.\24\ In other words, FICC nets
all of the positions recorded in the Sponsoring Member's Sponsoring
Member Omnibus Account, regardless of whether they relate to the same
Sponsored Member, and separately nets all of the positions in
Sponsoring Member's netting account. As a result, to the extent a
Sponsoring Member enters into perfectly offsetting Sponsored Member
Trades, the settlement obligations of those trades will net out in the
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account and in the netting account and
thereby create no CCLF obligation for the Sponsoring Member.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See Rule 3A, Section 8(b) and Rule 22A, Section 2a(b),
supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, currently, if a Sponsoring Member enters into a Sponsored
Member Trade without entering into an offsetting transaction, it is
subject to CCLF obligations for the position of its Sponsored Member
recorded in its Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account as well as its own
position arising from the Sponsored Member Trade recorded in its
netting account. This is because, although the positions in the
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account and netting account arising from such
Sponsored Member Trade are perfectly offsetting, FICC does not
currently net them against each other for CCLF purposes due to the
current CCLF allocation being calculated at the participant account
level.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Consider the following example: A Sponsoring Member sells
100 shares of CUSIP 123 to a Sponsored Member in a Repo Transaction.
That transaction will result in the Sponsoring Member's netting
account being long 100 shares of CUSIP 123 and the Sponsoring
Member's Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account being short 100 shares of
CUSIP 123. Under the existing Rules, the Sponsoring Member will have
a CCLF obligation for both the long position in the netting account
as well as the short position in the Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account even though, as described above, the Sponsored Member Trade
does not independently create liquidity risk for FICC.
Although this limitation on offset is consistent with FICC's
approach of not offsetting the positions of two accounts of the same
Member for CCLF purposes, there is an important difference between
Sponsored Member Trades and other FICC repo activity. As discussed
above, the Service requires that a Sponsoring Member have a
Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account that is separate from its netting
account. For all other repo activity, the Member has the option to
collapse all of its activity into a single participant account in
order to achieve a similar netting benefit. Sponsoring Members do
not have that option with respect to their Sponsored Member Trades,
so FICC believes this proposed change is necessary to ensure that a
Sponsoring Member's CCLF obligations are calculated in a manner that
more closely aligns with the liquidity risk associated with
Sponsored Member Trades.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In order to ensure that a Sponsoring Member's CCLF obligation is
calculated in a manner that more closely aligns with the liquidity risk
associated with Sponsored Member Trades, FICC proposes to add language
to Rule 3A to allow it to recognize, for CCLF calculation purposes, any
offsetting settlement obligations as between a Sponsoring Member's
netting account and its Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account. This
proposed change would ensure that all Sponsored Member Trades, whether
perfectly offset by other Sponsored Member Trades or not, would be
recognized for CCLF purposes as not affecting FICC's liquidity risk.
With respect to Sponsored GC Trades in particular, this proposed change
would ensure that FICC applies an appropriate CCLF obligation to a
Sponsoring Member in the event a Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank
allocates to a Sponsored GC Trade a different security than the
security that underlies an offsetting Sponsored Member Trade.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ For example, a Sponsoring Member may enter into a Sponsored
GC Trade on a Generic CUSIP Number and an offsetting Sponsored
Member Trade in a specific CUSIP Number (e.g., CUSIP 123). Although
CUSIP 123 may be an eligible security under the Generic CUSIP Number
underlying the Sponsored GC Trade, the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent
Bank may allocate to the Sponsored GC Trade a different eligible
CUSIP Number (e.g., CUSIP 456) from the securities eligibility
schedule. In that situation, the CUSIP 123 and CUSIP 456 positions
in the Sponsoring Member's netting account and the Sponsoring Member
Omnibus Account would not offset within the respective account, but
the proposed change to Section 8(d) of Rule 3A would allow FICC to
offset the CUSIP 123 and CUSIP 456 positions across the Sponsoring
Member's netting account and Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account to
ensure that the CCLF obligation applicable to the Sponsoring Member
accurately reflects the liquidity risk that its positions create.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, FICC proposes to add new Section 8(d) to Rule 3A,
which would state that FICC, when calculating Individual Total Amounts
\27\ for a Sponsoring Member, may net any offsetting settlement
obligations across the Sponsoring Member's proprietary positions and
the positions of its Sponsored Members in its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account(s).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ The Individual Total Amount dictates the maximum amount of
liquidity a Member must provide under FICC's CCLF. See Rule 22A,
Section 2a(b), supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expected Member Impact
FICC has conducted a study for the period from January 1, 2021 to
March 30, 2021 as to the impact on FICC/GSD Netting Members' CCLF
allocations as a result of recognizing offset between positions in a
Sponsoring Member's netting account and its Sponsoring Member Omnibus
Account. The impact of recognition of the offsetting positions as
between a Sponsoring Member's netting account and its Sponsoring Member
Omnibus Account relates strictly to the allocation of the total CCLF
facility amongst the FICC/GSD netting membership, with certain
Sponsoring Members receiving less allocation of CCLF once the offsets
between the Sponsoring Member's
[[Page 29843]]
netting account and the Sponsoring Member Omnibus Account are
recognized.
(iv) Remove the Requirement From Section 2 of Rule 3A That a Sponsoring
Member Provide a Quarterly Representation to FICC That Each of Its
Sponsored Members is a ``Qualified Institutional Buyer'' as Defined in
Rule 144A, or is a Legal Entity That, Although Not Organized as an
Entity Specifically Listed in Paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A,
Satisfies the Finanial Requirements Necessary To Be a ``Qualified
Institutional Buyer'' as Specified in That Paragraph
FICC also proposes to remove the requirement from Section 2 of Rule
3A that a Sponsoring Member provide to FICC a quarterly representation
that each of its Sponsored Members is a ``qualified institutional
buyer'' as defined in Rule 144A, or is a legal entity that, although
not organized as an entity specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i)
of Rule 144A, satisfies the financial requirements necessary to be a
``qualified institutional buyer'' as specified in that paragraph.\28\
FICC proposes to remove this requirement because Section 3(d) of Rule
3A separately requires a Sponsoring Member to notify FICC if its
Sponsored Member is no longer either a ``qualified institutional
buyer'' as defined in Rule 144A, or a legal entity that, although not
organized as an entity specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of
Rule 144A, satisfies the financial requirements necessary to be a
``qualified institutional buyer'' as specified in that paragraph.\29\
As such, FICC views the quarterly representation requirement in Section
2 of Rule 3A to be an overlapping and redundant requirement that
creates administrative burdens for FICC and for its Sponsoring Members
that are, in FICC's view, unnecessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Rule 3A, Section 2(d), supra note 4.
\29\ Rule 3A, Section 3(d), supra note 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To effectuate the proposed changes described above, FICC would
revise Rule 3A to remove Section 2(d).
(v) A Clarification, Certain Corrections, and Certain Technical Changes
FICC proposes to make a clarification to the Rules. Specifically,
in the definition of Initial Haircut, FICC proposes to add the phrase
``, if any,'' after ``absolute value of the dollar difference.''
FICC also proposes to make certain corrections to the Rules.
First, FICC proposes to correct the definition of Initial Haircut
in Rule 1 so that it would be defined, with respect to Sponsored Member
Trades that are not Sponsored GC Trades, as the absolute dollar
difference between the Market Value of the Sponsored Member Trade, as
of the settlement date of the Start Leg, and the Contract Value of the
Start Leg of the Sponsored Member Trade, instead of the Contract Value
of the Close Leg (as is currently provided).
Second, FICC proposes to correct the reference in Rule 3A, Section
3(a)(ii)(B) to paragraph (a)(1)(i)(H) of Rule 144A instead of paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A (as is currently provided).
Third, FICC also proposes to correct a typographical error in
Section VII (Fee Structure) by revising from the reference to
Additional Sponsored GC Credit instead of Additional Sponsored GC
Assessment (as is currently provided).
FICC also proposes to make certain technical changes, such as
numbering and renumbering sections and making conforming grammatical
changes.
For example, because FICC is removing Section 2(d) of Rule 3A, FICC
proposes to renumber the subsequent subsections in Rule 3A, Section 2.
Specifically, FICC proposes to renumber current Sections 2(e), 2(f),
2(g), 2(h), 2(i), and 2(j) as Sections 2(d), 2(e), 2(f), 2(g), 2(h),
and 2(i), respectively.
In addition, Section 7 of Rule 3A, in connection with FICC's
creation of a proposed new paragraph (a) as described above, FICC
proposes to renumber current Sections 7(a), 7(b), 7(c) and 7(d) as new
Sections 7(a)(i), 7(a)(ii), 7(a)(iii) and 7(a)(iv), respectively. In
addition, in current Sections 8(b) and 8(c), FICC proposes to revise
the references from Section 7 to Section 7(a) to reflect the proposed
renumbering of Section 7 described above.
Likewise, in Section 8 of Rule 3A, in connection with FICC's
creation of a proposed new paragraph (a) as described above, FICC
proposes to renumber current Sections 8(a), 8(b), 8(c), 8(d), 8(e),
8(f) and 8(g) as new Sections 8(a)(i), 8(a)(ii), 8(a)(iii), 8(a)(iv),
8(a)(v), 8(a)(vi), and 8(a)(vii), respectively. In addition, in current
Section 8(a), FICC proposes to revise the reference from Section 8(c)
to Section 8(a)(iii) to reflect the proposed renumbering of Section 8
described above. In current Section 8(f), FICC also proposes to revise
the reference from subsection (b) to subsection (a)(ii) to reflect the
proposed renumbering of Section 8 described above.
In addition, in current Section 9 of Rule 3A, in connection with
FICC's addition of proposed new paragraph (b) as described above, FICC
proposes to renumber current Sections 9(b), 9(c), 9(d) and 9(e) as new
Sections 9(c)(i), 9(c)(ii), 9(c)(iii) and 9(c)(iv), respectively.
Because FICC is adding Sponsored GC Trades to the definition of
Sponsored Member Trade as described above, FICC would create new
sections (a) and (b) and renumber current sections (a) and (b) as
subsections (i) and (ii) of new section (a). FICC would also revise the
definition of Same-Day Settling Trade and current Section 8(c) and
Section 18(a) of Rule 3A to reflect the proposed changes to the
Sponsored Member Trade definition.
In addition, in the definition of Initial Haircut, FICC is
proposing to add section numbers (i) and (ii) to make it clear that
proposed section (i) of the definition would apply to any Sponsored
Member Trade that is not a Sponsored GC Trade and proposed section (ii)
would apply to any Sponsored Member Trade.
In addition, FICC would also make certain conforming grammatical
changes. For example, FICC would add a comma and move the word ``and''
in the definition of Generic CUSIP Number to reflect the addition of
Sponsored GC Trades. Similarly, in each of the (i) Schedule of Required
and Accepted Data Submission Items for a Substitution and (ii) Schedule
of Required and Accepted Data Submission Items for New Securities
Collateral, FICC would also add a comma and move the word ``and'' as
conforming grammatical changes. As another example, FICC would also add
the word ``or'' in the definition of Sponsored Member Trade to reflect
the addition of Sponsored GC Trades. In the definition of Initial
Haircut, FICC would also add the word ``and'' to reflect the addition
of proposed section (ii). As another example, in Section 18(a) of Rule
3A, FICC would revise the reference from subsection to subsections to
reflect the proposed changes to the definition of Sponsored Member
Trades described above.
Expected Effect on Risks to the Clearing Agency, Its Participants and
the Market
FICC believes that the proposed changes in Item II(B)(ii) above,
specifically adding a new way to settle in the Service for Sponsored GC
Trades, could affect the performance of essential clearing and
settlement functions.\30\ As described above, consistent with the
manner in which tri-party repo transactions are settled today outside
of central clearing, as opposed to settling through FICC's tri-party
account in the manner that GCF Repo activity settles, Sponsored GC
Trades would settle on a
[[Page 29844]]
trade for trade basis between the Sponsoring Member and Sponsored
Member on a Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank's tri-party repo platform.
FICC would direct each GC Funds Borrower and GC Funds Lender to make
any payment or delivery due to FICC in respect of a Sponsored GC Trade
(except for certain funds-only settlement obligations, as discussed
above) directly to the relevant Member's pre-Novation counterparty. As
a result, each transfer of Purchased GC Repo Securities and daily repo
interest would be made directly between the relevant GC Funds Borrower
and GC Funds Lender through the tri-party repo platform of a Sponsored
GC Clearing Agent Bank. To that end, each GC Funds Borrower and GC
Funds Lender would agree that any such direct payment or delivery
discharges FICC's obligation to make the same payment or delivery.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(2)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Otherwise, all legal rights and obligations as between FICC and
Sponsoring Members, and as between FICC and Sponsored Members, would be
the same with respect to Sponsored GC Trades as with respect to
Sponsored Member Trades in the existing Service, which is governed by
Rule 3A.
Management of Identified Risks
While Sponsored GC Trades would settle between the Sponsoring
Member and Sponsored Member on a trade for trade basis on a Sponsored
Member's tri-party repo platform (consistent with the manner those
firms settle repo with each other outside of central clearing), as
opposed to settling through FICC's tri-party account in the manner that
GCF Repo activity settles, FICC would nonetheless monitor the
settlement status of Sponsored GC Trades through hourly (or more
frequent) reporting to be provided by the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent
Bank to FICC as the Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank, and the
administration of collateralization to address mark-to-market changes
in the value of the securities collateral associated with Sponsored GC
activity would be monitored by FICC in a manner consistent with the way
that it monitors GCF Repo activity.
Consistency With the Clearing Supervision Act
FICC believes that the proposed rule change would be consistent
with Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act.\31\ The objectives
and principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act are to
promote robust risk management, promote safety and soundness, reduce
systemic risks, and support the stability of the broader financial
system.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ 12 U.S.C. 5464(b).
\32\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FICC believes that the proposed changes described in Items
II(B)(ii) and II(B)(iii) above are consistent with the objectives of
and principles of Section 805(b) of the Clearing Supervision Act cited
above because FICC believes that these proposed changes would enable
and may encourage Sponsoring Members to submit a greater number of
securities transactions to be cleared and settled by FICC. FICC
believes that having more securities transactions clear and settle
through FICC would also help to promote safety and soundness, reduce
systemic risks, and support the stability of the broader financial
system by mitigating the risk of a large-scale exit by institutional
firms from the U.S. financial market in a stress scenario through
FICC's guaranty of completion of settlement for a greater number of
eligible securities transactions. By mitigating the risk of a large-
scale exit by institutional firms from the U.S. financial market in a
stress scenario and having more securities transactions that clear and
settle through FICC in the context of its risk management processes,
FICC believes the proposed rule changes described in Items II(B)(ii)
and II(B)(iii) above would promote robust risk management, promote
safety and soundness, reduce systemic risks, and support the stability
of the broader financial system. Therefore, FICC believes that the
proposed rule changes described in Items II(B)(ii) and II(B)(iii) above
are consistent with the objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of
the Clearing Supervision Act cited above.
FICC also believes that the proposed changes described in Items
II(B)(iv) and II(B)(v) above are designed to provide clear and coherent
Rules regarding Sponsoring Members. FICC believes that clear and
coherent Rules should enhance the ability of FICC and Sponsoring
Members to more effectively plan for, manage, and address the risks and
financial requirements related to Sponsoring Members. As such, FICC
believes that the proposed changes described in Items II(B)(iv) and
II(B)(v) above are designed to promote robust risk management,
consistent with the objectives and principles of Section 805(b) of the
Clearing Supervision Act cited above.
FICC also believes that the proposed changes are consistent with
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(7),\33\ Rule 17Ad-22(e)(18),\34\ and Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(21)(i),\35\ as promulgated under the Act, for the reasons stated
below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7).
\34\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(18).
\35\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(21)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(7) under the Act requires FICC to establish,
implement, maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to effectively measure, monitor, and manage the
liquidity risk that arises in or is borne by the covered clearing
agency, including measuring, monitoring, and managing its settlement
and funding flows on an ongoing and timely basis, and its use of
intraday liquidity.\36\ FICC believes that the proposed changes
described in Item II(B)(iii) above are consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(7) because, as described above, all Sponsored Member Trades
(including Sponsored Member Trades in the existing Service and
Sponsored GC Trades in the proposed Sponsored GC Service) do not
independently create a liquidity risk. FICC believes the proposed
changes described in Item II(B)(iii) above would allow FICC to
calculate a Sponsoring Member's CCLF obligation in a manner that more
closely aligns with the liquidity risk associated with Sponsored Member
Trades. As such, FICC believes that the proposed changes described in
Item II(B)(iii) above are reasonably designed to effectively measure,
monitor, and manage the liquidity risk that arises in or is borne by
the covered clearing agency, including measuring, monitoring, and
managing its settlement and funding flows on an ongoing and timely
basis, and its use of intraday liquidity, consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(7).\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(7).
\37\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(18) under the Act requires FICC to establish,
implement, maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to establish objective, risk-based, and publicly
disclosed criteria for participation, which permit fair and open access
by direct, and where relevant, indirect participants and other
financial market utilities, require participants to have sufficient
financial resources and robust operational capacity to meet obligations
arising from participation in the clearing agency, and monitor
compliance with such participation requirements on an ongoing
basis.\38\ FICC believes that the proposed changes described in Item
II(B)(iv) above would enhance clarity and therefore, may enhance
compliance by the Sponsoring Members with the requirement to notify
FICC if a
[[Page 29845]]
Sponsored Member is no longer either a ``qualified institutional
buyer'' as defined in Rule 144A, or a legal entity that, although not
organized as an entity specifically listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of
Rule 144A, satisfies the financial requirements necessary to be a
``qualified institutional buyer'' as specified in that paragraph. As
described above, this requirement is set forth in Section 3(d) of Rule
3A.\39\ With these proposed changes, there would be a clear and
singular mechanism for Sponsoring Members to notify FICC of a Sponsored
Member's failure to satisfy the above-described requirement (as opposed
to having overlapping and redundant requirements that could cause
confusion). Therefore, FICC believes the proposed changes described in
Item II(B)(iv) above are consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(18).\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(18).
\39\ Rule 3A, Section 3(d), supra note 4.
\40\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(18).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(21)(i) under the Act requires FICC to establish,
implement, maintain and enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to be efficient and effective in meeting the
requirements of its participants and the markets it serves, and have
the covered clearing agency's management regularly review the
efficiency and effectiveness of its clearing and settlement
arrangements.\41\ FICC believes that the proposed changes described in
Item II(B)(ii) above would improve the efficiency and effectiveness of
FICC's clearing and settlement arrangements by making it more
operationally efficient for Sponsoring Members and their Sponsored
Members that are money market funds and other mutual funds to transact
Repo Transactions (particularly term Repo Transactions) through FICC by
allowing them to settle such Repo Transactions on the tri-party repo
platform of a Sponsored GC Clearing Agent Bank in a similar manner to
the way such Sponsoring Members and Sponsored Members settle tri-party
repo transactions with each other outside of central clearing. FICC
also believes that the proposed rule changes described in Item
II(B)(iv) above would improve the efficiency and effectiveness of
FICC's clearing and settlement arrangements by removing the quarterly
representation requirement of Sponsoring Members under Section 2 of
Rule 3A, which, as described above, overlaps and is redundant with the
separate requirement under Section 3(d) of Rule 3A that requires a
Sponsoring Member to notify FICC if its Sponsored Member is no longer
either a ``qualified institutional buyer'' as defined in Rule 144A, or
a legal entity that, although not organized as an entity specifically
listed in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of Rule 144A.\42\ Therefore, FICC
believes that the proposed changes described in Items II(B)(ii) and
II(B)(iv) above are consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(21)(i).\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(21)(i).
\42\ Rule 3A, Section 3(d), supra note 4.
\43\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(21)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 that the proposed change was filed with the Commission or (ii) the
date that any additional information requested by the Commission is
received. The clearing agency 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.
The clearing agency 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-FICC-2021-801 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-FICC-2021-801. 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 FICC and on DTCC's website
(https://dtcc.com/legal/sec-rule-filings.aspx). 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-FICC-2021-801 and should be submitted on
or before June 18, 2021.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\44\
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\44\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(91).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021-11605 Filed 6-2-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P