Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE Clear Europe Limited; Notice of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1, Relating to the Amendments the Futures and Options Risk Procedures, 65210-65218 [2023-20424]
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proposal. In particular, the Commission
invites the written views of interested
persons concerning whether the
proposed rule change, is consistent with
sections 6(b)(5) or any other provision of
the Act, or the rules and regulations
thereunder. Although there do not
appear to be any issues relevant to
approval or disapproval that would be
facilitated by an oral presentation of
data, views, and arguments, the
Commission will consider, pursuant to
Rule 19b–4 under the Act,25 any request
for an opportunity to make an oral
presentation.26
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments regarding whether the
proposed rule change should be
approved or disapproved by October 12,
2023. Any person who wishes to file a
rebuttal to any other person’s
submission must file that rebuttal by
October 26, 2023. The Commission asks
that commenters address the sufficiency
of the Exchange’s statements in support
of the proposal, in addition to any other
comments they may wish to submit
about the proposed rule change.
Comments may be submitted by any
of the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include file number SR–
ISE–2023–11 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–ISE–2023–11. 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 proposed rule
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
25 17
CFR 240.19b–4.
19(b)(2) of the Act, as amended by the
Securities Acts Amendments of 1975, Public Law
94–29 (Jun. 4, 1975), grants to the Commission
flexibility to determine what type of proceeding—
either oral or notice and opportunity for written
comments—is appropriate for consideration of a
particular proposal by a self-regulatory
organization. See Securities Acts Amendments of
1975, Senate Comm. on Banking, Housing & Urban
Affairs, S. Rep. No. 75, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 30
(1975).
26 section
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change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for 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
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of the filing also
will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of the
Exchange. Do not include personal
identifiable information in submissions;
you should submit only information
that you wish to make available
publicly. We may redact in part or
withhold entirely from publication
submitted material that is obscene or
subject to copyright protection. All
submissions should refer to file number
SR–ISE–2023–11 and should be
submitted by October 12, 2023. Rebuttal
comments should be submitted by
October 26, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.27
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–20425 Filed 9–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98410; File No. SR–MIAX–
2023–22]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Miami
International Securities Exchange,
LLC; Notice of Withdrawal of a
Proposed Rule Change To Amend
Exchange Rule 404, Series of Option
Contracts Open for Trading, To
Implement a Low Priced Stock Strike
Price Interval Program
September 15, 2023.
On June 5, 2023, Miami International
Securities Exchange, LLC (‘‘MIAX’’ or
‘‘Exchange’’) filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’), pursuant to section
19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4
thereunder,2 a proposed rule change to
amend Exchange Rule 404, Series of
Option Contracts Open for Trading.
Specifically, the Exchange proposed to
adopt Interpretations and Policies .12 to
27 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(57).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
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Rule 404 to implement a new strike
interval program for stocks that are
priced less than $2.50 and have open
interest equal to or greater than 1,000
contracts. The proposed rule change
was published for comment in the
Federal Register on June 22, 2023.3 On
August 4, 2023, pursuant to section
19(b)(2) of the Act,4 the Commission
designated a longer period within which
to approve the proposed rule change,
disapprove the proposed rule change, or
institute proceedings to determine
whether to disapprove the proposed
rule change.5 On September 14, 2023,
the Exchange withdrew the proposed
rule change (MIAX–2023–22).
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.6
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–20428 Filed 9–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–98407; File No. SR–ICEEU–
2023–023]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE
Clear Europe Limited; Notice of Filing
and Immediate Effectiveness of
Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1, Relating to the
Amendments the Futures and Options
Risk Procedures
September 15, 2023.
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on August
31, 2023, ICE Clear Europe Limited
(‘‘ICE Clear Europe’’ or the ‘‘Clearing
House’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule changes described in
Items I, II and III below, which Items
have been primarily prepared by ICE
Clear Europe. ICE Clear Europe filed the
proposed rule change pursuant to
section 19(b)(3)(A) 3 of the Act and Rule
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 97733
(June 15, 2023), 88 FR 40887. Comments on the
proposed rule change are available at: https://
www.sec.gov/comments/sr-miax-2023-22/
srmiax202322.htm.
4 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
5 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 98058,
88 FR 54361 (August 10, 2023). The Commission
designated September 20, 2023 as the date by which
the Commission shall approve or disapprove, or
institute proceedings to determine whether to
disapprove, the proposed rule change.
6 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
3 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
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19b–4(f)(4)(ii) thereunder,4 such that the
proposed rule change was immediately
effective upon filing with the
Commission. On September 14, 2023,
ICE Clear Europe filed Amendment No.
1 which amends and restates in its
entirety the Form 19b–4 Information
and Exhibit 1A.5 The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change,
as modified by Amendment No. 1
(hereafter ‘‘the proposed rule change’’)
from interested persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Proposed
Rule Change
ICE Clear Europe Limited (‘‘ICE Clear
Europe’’ or the ‘‘Clearing House’’)
proposes to amend the Futures and
Options Risk Procedures (the ‘‘F&O Risk
Procedures’’ or ‘‘Procedures’’) 6 to make
certain updates and clarifications
relating to risk management for the F&O
product category, including to reference
the Clearing House’s Model Risk Policy
and update the Document Governance
and Exception Handling provisions.
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, ICE
Clear Europe included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. ICE
Clear Europe has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections (A), (B), and (C)
below, of the most significant aspects of
such statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule Change
(a) Purpose
ICE Clear Europe is proposing to
amend its Futures and Options Risk
Procedures to make various updates and
clarifications, including to add a section
describing the existing F&O Guaranty
Fund, make reference to the recently
revised Model Risk Policy,7 and update
4 17
CFR 240.19b–4(f)(4)(ii).
No. 1 updates the 19b–4
Information and the Exhibit 1A to more fully
describe changes outlined in the Exhibit 5. ICEEU
represents that it did not make any changes to its
Exhibit 5.
6 Capitalized terms used but not defined herein
have the meanings specified in the F&O Risk
Procedures or, if not defined therein, the ICE Clear
Europe Clearing Rules.
7 See, The Model Risk Policy as described in
Exchange Act Release No. 34–98138, SR ICEEU–
2023–019 (August 15, 2023), 88 Fed Reg. 56901
(Aug. 21, 2023).
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the Document Governance and
Exception Handling language. Various
non-substantive drafting changes and
improvements would also be made
throughout the document. The
amendments generally do not represent
a change in the Clearing House’s
practices, but rather are intended to
improve and clarify the documentation
of existing risk management practices.
In the purpose section of the
document, the amendments would
clarify that details of models described
in the Procedures (in addition to
processes) are included in the relevant
model methodology and procedure
documentation. The amendments would
further provide that any changes to the
risk parameters would be subject to the
governance set out in the Model Risk
Policy. The amendments would also
make non-substantive clarifications to
the description of the role of ICE Clear
Europe as a central counterparty.
The revised Procedures would
simplify the description of Clearing
Member groups and clarify that Clearing
Members in the same Member Group
may be based in various jurisdictions
rather than specifically referencing a
Clearing Member in Europe and another
part of the world. The amendments
would also make clear that in order to
perform exposure analysis at
appropriate levels of aggregation, the
Clearing House associates its Clearing
Members in Member Groups. Additional
language regarding how Member Groups
are identified and the internal groups
responsible for the membership
onboarding process would be removed
as unnecessary.
The amendments would also simplify
and clarify the discussion of the various
types of proprietary and client margin
accounts made available to its Clearing
Members (which are established
pursuant to the published Rules and
Clearing Procedures and are not being
changed by virtue of these
amendments). The amendments would
state more simply that the Core IM is
calculated on either a ‘‘Gross’’ or ‘‘Net’’
basis dependent upon the type of
margin account. (As an exception, the
chart detailing the margin accounts
would change the Core IM Method for
the Individual Client (ISOC) accounts (I)
and (J) from Net to N/A, as the net/gross
distinction is not applicable for such
accounts). Various conforming changes
would be made to the summary of the
accounts, including to reflect that the
house account (H) is margined on a net
basis, as was already reflected in the
chart. Additional clarifications would
be made that accounts are margined on
a net or gross basis (rather than a net
and gross basis). The amendments
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would also explain more concisely that
information as to Money Rules and
FCM/BD customer applicability is
included in the table to distinguish
account types. A footnote would also be
added to provide an ICEU EMIR
Disclosure Statement that supplies
further details on the margin account
types.
The amendments further clarify the
distinction between the net and gross
calculations of initial margin in light of
CFTC and Bank of England/EU
requirements. The amendments note
that EU rules treat the one-day MPOR
gross margin calculation under CFTC
rules as equivalent to the two-day
MPOR net margin calculation. The
amendments also make non-substantive
drafting clarifications to the discussion
of net and gross margin methods. The
amendments also add a statement that
house and proprietary affiliate positions
of a clearing member are calculated
using a minimum two-day MPOR. The
amendments reflect existing practice
and would not change the manner of
calculation of initial margin for any
accounts. The amendments would
remove as unnecessary language
referencing ICE Clear Europe setting up
multiple customer accounts to cater for
ESMA and CFTC requirements.
The amendments would clarify that
ICE Clear Europe performs position
keeping of all positions belonging to
each account of both clearing members
and non-clearing members (defined as
members of ICE exchanges that are not
clearing members). The changes would
also clarify that for gross margined
accounts, the Clearing House will rely
on a gross client margin file provided by
the clearing member for purposes of
position management and calculation of
gross initial margin. The changes also
address reconciliation of the gross client
margin file against actual positions in
the relevant account and margining of
any inconsistencies. These amendments
do not represent a change in current
practice by the Clearing House.
The amendments would specify that
the Clearing Risk Department is the
owner of the Procedures document and
remove references to the F&O Market
Risk team.
The discussion of initial margin
would be revised for greater simplicity
and clarity and are not intended to
change the substance of the calculation
of initial margin, which is set forth in
the existing applicable model
documentation for the ICE Risk Model.
The amendments would clarify that
initial margin consists of Core IM and
Additional IM to mitigate the risk it is
exposed to on all Futures and Options
positions. The amendments would also
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clarify that the Procedures provide
detail to each of the IM components
(removing unnecessary references to
frequency, limits and thresholds,
exceptions and escalation).
The amendments would clarify that
the ICE Risk Model uses margin rates in
computing Core IM and these margin
rates would be the responsibility of the
Clearing Risk Department. A reference
to a specific version of the IRM Margin
Rate Calibration Model Documentation
would be deleted as unnecessary and
computation of the model margin rates,
as opposed to calibrated margin rate,
would be inserted above the table
detailing the computation. The table of
standard settings for the computation of
model margin rates (referred to as the
‘‘Autopilot rates’’) would be simplified,
removing rows labeled ‘‘System/
Process’’, ‘‘Test/Frequency’’, and
‘‘Exceptions’’ as unnecessary, and
removing references to specific Energy
and Financial & Softs sectors. Likewise,
the Margin Period of Risk would be
summarized as 1 day or 2 days
depending on the product, consistent
with the discussion above. The
summary of the lookback period would
be revised from at least 100 days to VaR
that is at least as conservative as that
based on a 250-day lookback. The AntiProcyclicality would be amended to be
at least 25 percent stressed volatility
(rather than exactly 25%). The row on
Risk Parameters would be replaced with
a summary of the output of the risk
model, which is the ICE Risk Model
margin rates including those previously
specified.
The amendments would clarify the
process for review and promotion of
production margin rates. The
amendments are intended to correctly
reflect the existing practice that the
review of the production margin rate is
performed versus trigger criteria daily
(as opposed to quarterly). As a result of
the daily review, references to ad hoc
updates in addition to quarterly reviews
would be deleted as they are no longer
required. This would include the
deletion of the governance procedures
related to review of the exceptions
driving ad hoc review and related
effectiveness without notice. The
amendments would address that that
production margin rates are set to the
Autopilot model rates at a specific point
in time after each review through a
process called promotion. It would
further state that the production rates
are the margin rates used in the
calculation of Clearing Member’s Core
IM requirements. The steps to review
and the promotion of the proposed
production margin rates would include
mention of their promotion. The steps
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would also be simplified to state that
first the update to the production
margin rates would be proposed and
reviewed by the Clearing Risk
Department, then the Clearing Risk
Department would seek approval for the
margin update. Then once approved, the
Clearing Risk Department would
promote the margin rates into the Risk
System, followed by informing the
Clearing Members and wider market of
the new margin rates by means of the
Clearing House’s website. The
amendments would add that typically
one business day’s notice would be
given to the market from the date of the
circular, and the Clearing Risk
Department would then upload the
approved margin rates to the ICE Clear
Europe website upon publication of the
circular. A table summarizing the
review and promotion process would be
deleted as duplicative and unnecessary.
A cross-reference to documentation
relating to ICE Risk Model parameters
would be updated to include a general
reference to the ICE Risk Model
documentation instead of an outdated
version. Details on certain parameters
relating to EWMA volatility and APC
stress volatility would be removed as
they are addressed in the ICE Risk
Model documentation. The amendments
would add another new sub-section on
the ICE Risk Model Daily Requirements
that would outline the process for
computing Core IM as part of the End
of Day process. This would include
computation of the ICE Risk Model
daily margin requirements and EMIR
Add-on for each Clearing Member
margin account. The amendments
would also delete outdated references to
the IRM V1.0 Model Documentation,
related risk array files and inputs, and
the ECS system. The related table with
the summary of products eligible under
each margin account would change the
I and J Accounts to N/A as opposed to
Net margining type. The footnote would
explain that for these accounts the subclients within the client account are
individually (rather than net) margined.
Any material change in Core IM would
be escalated to Operations, instead of
the previous plus or minus 5 percent (or
more depending on known margin
change) escalation threshold. This
section would also reference a summary
of the IRM Margin Rate Promotion and
Core IM processes that would be added
in the Appendix to the Procedures.
These changes are consistent with
existing margin practice but are
intended to document the current
process more clearly.
In terms of additional IM, the
amendments would specify that such
amounts are to collateralize risks not
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captured by the Core IM amount.
Clarifications would be made to the
descriptions of various types of
additional IM, as discussed herein. For
example, amendments would clarify
that the additional risk from
concentrated positions would be
covered through a Concentration Charge
add-on, and that the additional margin
is called on a t+1 basis to be met the
following day. The requirement would
clarify the notice process for additional
IM through the MFT system, remove an
outdated reference to EoD reporting and
remove unnecessary distinctions
between concentration charges for
different product segments. The
summary table of the Concentration
Charge process would be deleted, and
relevant terms moved to the added
Appendix. In the Parameter Calibration
section, the amendments would remove
the existing discussion and add instead
that the details of the Concentration
Charge model or risk parameters would
be described in the relevant
Concentration Charge model
documentation.
In the Stress Margin section, the
amendments would add a general
description of the stress loss charge as
ensuring that sufficient pre-funded
resources to ensure regulatory
compliance are held at all times. The
amendments would also clarify that any
Stress Loss Charge top-up requirements
would be called via an intraday call on
a t+1 basis so that, for example,
positions as of the end of day on
Monday could incur additional margin
called on Tuesday for receipt on
Tuesday. The amendments would
clarify that the total Stress Loss Charge
would be posted in the end of day
additional margin requirement so that
any surplus or deficit is part of the end
of day margining. The summary of the
Stress Loss Charge process would be
deleted, and relevant terms moved to
the added Appendix. Additional details
of the Stress Loss Charge model and risk
parameters would be removed, and a
cross-reference added to the Futures and
Options Guaranty Fund model
documentation (which addresses such
parameters). An incorrect crossreference to the F&O Stress Testing
Policy would be removed.
In the Shortfall Margin section, the
amendments would specify that
Shortfall Margin would be called to
cover uncollateralized stress loss (as
calculated at the margin account level).
The amendments would also state that
Shortfall Margin would be called on a
t+1 basis to be met on the following day,
so that, for example, positions on
Monday EOD can incur additional
margin called on Tuesday for receipt on
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Wednesday morning. The amendments
would delete unnecessary provisions
relating to the posting of the
requirement against a specific ledger
type in daily reports and EOD reporting
through ECS. The summary of the
Shortfall Margin process would be
removed, and relevant details moved to
the Appendix.
In the Specific Wrong-Way Risk
section, the amendments would explain
that the Wrong Way Risk additional
margin requirements are called on a t+1
basis to be met the following day, so
that, for example, positions as of
Monday EOD can incur additional
margin called on Tuesday for receipt on
Wednesday morning. As with other
categories of additional IM, the
amendments would delete unnecessary
provisions relating to the posting of the
requirement against a specific ledger
type in daily reports and EOD reporting
of the additional amount through ECS.
A table summarizing the Wrong Way
Risk process would be removed and
relevant details moved to the Appendix.
In the EMIR Add-on section, the
amendments would clarify various
aspects of this add-on, which is
collected for house and affiliate
accounts for products for which Core IM
is otherwise calculated using a 1-day
MPOR. The add-on covers the amount,
if any, by which Core IM would exceed
that amount if calculated on a 2-day
MPOR basis, in order to ensure that
house and affiliate positions are
margined using a minimum 2-day
MPOR as required under EMIR. The
amendments would further clarify that
the EMIR Add-on is called at the same
time as Core IM requirements, so that,
for example, House and Affiliate
account positions as of Monday EOD
can incur EMIR add-on called on
Monday night for receipt on Tuesday
morning. A table summarizing the EMIR
add-on process would be removed and
relevant provisions moved to the
Appendix. The amendments would
delete language concerning the review
and subsequent parameter recalibration
as unnecessary as it is covered in the
relevant model documentation.
In the Delivery Margins section, the
amendments would revise the
Procedures to state explicitly that the
delivery margin is designed to cover
potential price moves at a 99th
percentile level for the product in
delivery. The amendments would
further state that the Delivery Margin is
typically set to the front month scanning
margin rate for the product and held by
the CCP until buyer security is paid by
the buyer. The description of the
calculation of Buyer Security would be
clarified to be the notional value of
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bought positions that are deliverable
within the following 2 business days.
Similarly, the description of the
calculation of Seller Security would be
modified to be an additional
requirement posted by the seller,
calculated to cover any applicable costs
and charges, should they be unable to
deliver the agreed product. The
definition of Contingent Variation
Margin would be clarified to be the
difference between the Exchange
Delivery Settlement Price and a
representative market price for the
remaining portion of the given
underlying that is yet to be delivered
(analogous to Variation Margin). Tables
summarizing the Delivery Margin,
Buyer/Seller Security and the
Contingent Variation Margin would be
removed with relevant details moved to
the Appendix.
In the Net Liquidating Value (‘‘NLV’’)
section, certain non-substantive drafting
improvements would be made. In
addition, the description of the top up
for NLV credit/debit would be revised to
state that it be called for at the end of
the day (call time t) and not the
following day. A table summarizing the
NLV would be removed with relevant
details moved to the Appendix.
In the Intraday and Overnight Buffer
section, the amendment would add a
statement of the use of mandatory
buffer, which is called when trading out
of intraday margining hours is observed
that increases Core IM requirements
above thresholds. For these positions
traded outside the hours covered by the
intraday margin process, the IM
requirements are calculated using IRM.
In cases where the resultant increase to
an account’s IM exceeds the limit set, an
overnight buffer equal to the largest
exceedance is requested and held for the
following 30 days. The amendments
would add that this process would be
introduced to achieve compliance with
relevant requirements of EMIR 8 and
would only be applicable to 1-day gross
client omnibus margined accounts. The
amendments would further clarify that
voluntary buffer could be posted to
reduce the Clearing Members’
operational burden of managing
intraday margin calls. A table
summarizing the intraday and overnight
buffer process would be removed and
relevant details moved to the Appendix.
In the Ad-Hoc Buffer section, the
amendments would clarify that Clearing
Members may be requested to post
additional buffers for any risks not
covered by the requirements detailed in
the Procedures. The amendments would
8 Article 26 of EMIR RTS Regulation (EU) No 153/
2013 (ESMA/2016/429).
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specify that the requirements would be
set by the Clearing Risk Department. A
table summarizing the ad hoc buffer
process would be removed and relevant
details moved to the Appendix.
In the discussion of intraday
margining, the amendments would
provide a clearer statement of the basis
for such margining: that although the
Clearing House collateralizes risk
through IM and Variation Margin as part
of the overnight process, the Clearing
House may be exposed to
uncollateralized exposures, or Intraday
Shortfalls, due to adverse market price
movements causing a change in the
value of members positions, new trading
activities resulting in an increased IM
requirement on Clearing Members’
accounts and the value of securities
held as collateral being reduced. The
amendments would clarify that the
Clearing Risk Department could
calculate any additional IM that it may
require on a near real-time basis
intraday.
In respect to Intraday Risk Monitoring
the amendments would specify that the
Clearing Risk Department monitors
changes in Core IM in addition to
Variation Margin on an ongoing basis.
The Intraday Margin requirement of an
account would be the sum of the
Intraday IM and Intraday Variation
Margin of the account.
The section on Core Intraday IM
Calculation would be updated and
moved to Section 4.2. The amendments
would accordingly delete previous
language under Section 4.3 that was
titled ‘‘Intraday Core IM Calculation’’.
The revised section would state that the
Core Intraday IM would be calculated
and, when above thresholds, called on
a near-real time basis intraday. For gross
margined accounts, the amendments
would reflect that because gross
positions are only received at end of
day, the Clearing House will not have
near-real-time data for purposes of
intraday margining. As a result, the
Clearing House uses the previous end of
day gross margin plus the change in net
2-day margin for the account between
the start of day and the current point in
time to determine intraday Gross IM.
The amendments would detail the step
by step process in the calculation and
the formula that would be employed
(these steps would replace an existing
summary of steps to update references
and terminology used in the amended
Procedures). The amendment would
note that ICE Clear Europe utilizes 2D
MPOR for calculating Intraday Net IM
and Start of Day Net IM, and that only
the Intraday Net IM changes throughout
the day (neither the End of Day Gross
IM nor Start of Day Net IM change
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throughout the day). The amendments
would specify that for net margined
accounts, the current real time net
position is used to calculate Core
Intraday IM in the same way as End of
Day IM for those accounts.
In reference to Intraday Shortfall, the
amendments would clarify that the
calculation for the current collateral on
account would include both collateral
used to meet end of the day IM
requirements and additional collateral
available to cover intraday calls. The
amendments would remove a statement
that at a minimum, prices are refreshed
hourly (as the Clearing House expects
prices to be refreshed more frequently)
but retain the general principle that the
Clearing Risk Department monitors the
prices utilized to value securities
deposited as collateral throughout the
day. The amendments would make
various non-substantive drafting
clarifications to the intraday limits. In
addition, for Clearing Member Limit 2,
the amendments would specify that the
total value of collateral on deposit
would be that of the loss-making
accounts and collateral in the House
account. The amendments would add
that for Clearing Limit 1 (in addition to
Clearing Limit 2), the Clearing House
would permit use of excess collateral
present on the House account to offset
Intraday Shortfalls arising on all other
accounts in deficit. The amendments
also make clear that the Clearing house
can at its discretion alter, rather than
only reduce, the limits applicable to
individual accounts as this more
accurately reflects the current practice
of the Clearing House.
For Intraday Margin Call Triggers, the
amendments would remove a
duplicative statement of the minimum
shortfall for an intraday call. The
amendments would also clarify that ICE
Clear Europe may call for additional
collateral at any time to mitigate any
(not just material) risk, consistent with
the existing Rules and current practice.
The Intraday Margin Call Procedure
would be revised to state that the 30minute warning of a trigger breach is at
the Clearing House’s discretion. The
amendments would also remove, as a
means of limiting intraday risk and
satisfying a margin call, improving the
profit and loss of the account (as that is
likely impractical in the relevant
timeframe). The amendments would
also remove a concept that the Clearing
Risk Department would make
recommendations to clearing members
to avoid receiving intraday calls; rather,
the goal would be to provide warnings
prior to 19:30 London time so that all
intraday calls are issued prior to 20:00
London time. The amendments would
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state that more than one intraday call
may be made during the same day as
required (without necessarily being
based on market conditions). Certain
references to the use of the APS system
in connection with providing cash or
collateral would be deleted in this
section and throughout the Procedures
as unnecessary (and would not reflect a
change in current practice). A diagram
presenting the procedure for an Intraday
Margin Call would be deleted as
unnecessary.
In the Overnight Window Monitoring
section, the amendments would clarify
the specific gross margined and ISOC
accounts to which overnight monitoring
applies. The amendments would also
state that the Clearing Risk Department
(rather than a senior Clearing Risk
Department person), would issue a
margin call or require the Clearing
Member to take other risk reducing
action, when appropriate. (ICE Clear
Europe believes it is appropriate for the
responsibility to be on the department
rather than a senior individual.) An
escalation process where a Member
cannot be contacted or does not reduce
positions would be deleted along with
notification of regulators, as this
information is contained in separate
Clearing House default management
procedures.
In the Intraday Buffer section, the
amendments would clarify that if a
Clearing Member wishes to reduce the
operational burden of frequent intraday
calls or Overnight Buffer, then the
Clearing Member may choose to lodge
excess collateral as Intraday Buffer. The
amendments would also clarify that
where a Clearing Member notifies ICE
Clear Europe that it no longer wants to
lodge Intraday Buffer, the buffer will be
available to be returned after the next
overnight margin run. The amendments
remove unnecessary specifications of
the means of providing such a notice.
The amendments would also delete as
unnecessary a statement that the
Clearing Member would be able to
choose to fund the requirement with the
type of collateral of their choosing.
In the Overnight Buffer section, the
amendments would specify the
particular gross margining and ISOC
accounts to which it applies. The
amendments would also correct that the
amount will be called as part of the End
of Day process (rather than intraday).
In the Returning of Margin Call
Collateral section, the amendments
would provide that margin posted
intraday in respect of an intraday
margin call may, in extraordinary
circumstances at the discretion of the
Treasury Department and Clearing Risk
Department, be returned in cases where
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the Clearing Member has unrealized
gains (i.e., positive intraday variation
margin). The amendments would also
correct a reference to the End of Day
process (as opposed to the End of Day
margining process).
The amendments would replace the
existing discussion of the F&O Guaranty
Fund with a new section describing
generally the sizing of the F&O Guaranty
Fund, as established pursuant to the
published Rules and Finance
Procedures and the existing F&O
Guaranty Fund model documentation.
The amendments would describe the
required size of the F&O Guaranty Fund,
as being adequate to cover the first and
second largest, non mutually exclusive,
uncollateralized losses from Member
Groups resulting from agreed stress
testing scenarios. The size also has to be
sufficient to enable the Clearing House
to withstand a Clearing Member default
to which the Clearing House has the
largest stress testing exposure, or the
second and third largest if the sum of
those are greater. The size has to be
sufficient to cover the larger of the sum
of the individually calculated segments
for Energy and Financials & Softs
(‘‘F&S’’) member portfolios or the largest
contemporaneous scenario. If the Energy
and F&S segment fund is smaller than
the largest contemporaneous losses
scenario, then an additional guaranty
fund apportionment amount would be
calculated and would be allocated to
both Energy and F&S Fund segments in
accordance with the Clearing Rules. In
establishing the size of the F&O
Guaranty Fund the ICE Initial
Contribution is not included and must
be met by Clearing Member
contributions only.
The amendments would add that
review of the size of the F&O Guaranty
Fund would occur at least every two
months and would be based on
historical stress testing results and other
factors ICE considers relevant. The
added section would describe the steps
taken in the periodic review process,
and the role of relevant ICE Clear
Europe committees. Ad hoc assessments
could be triggered by the Clearing House
in addition to the periodic review.
Extraordinary reviews may also be
necessary based on stress testing results.
The amendments would state that
Clearing Members will normally have
five UK business days (from the date of
the notice) to lodge sufficient funds
with the Clearing House if the overall
level of the F&O Guaranty Fund or a
specific Clearing Member’s allocation
must increase, consistent with the
requirements of the Rules and Finance
Procedures. Under extreme
circumstances, the Clearing House can
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accelerate the call of the F&O Guaranty
Fund requirements to a one day’s notice
or otherwise reasonably change the
notice period. A failure to meet these
payments would be considered a breach
of Clearing House Clearing Rules.
Clearing Members would also have the
ability to withdraw excess funds that
result from a decrease in their fund
contributions following a review of the
level of the F&O Guaranty Fund.
The amendments would add that ICE
Clear Europe’s recommendations on the
level of the F&O Guaranty Fund would
be based on several factors including the
level of the largest member’s
uncollateralized losses historically and
how it compares against the associated
segment fund level or the total F&O
Guaranty Fund, the level of the second
and third largest members
uncollateralized losses historically and
how it compares against the associated
segment fund level or the total F&O
Guaranty Fund, the amount and number
of stress loss charges called across
memberships and any other relevant
factors ICE Clear Europe deems
appropriate. The size of the F&O
Guaranty Fund would also be subject to
a floor in accordance with regulations,
as described in further detail in the
existing Futures and Options Guaranty
Fund model documentation.
The amendments would detail that a
particular Clearing Member’s
contribution to each of the Fund
segments should reflect its relative share
of clearing activity and relative share of
uncollateralized loss. The amendments
described the two factor model used in
allocating the F&O Guaranty Fund,
based on IM and Uncollateralized Stress
Loss, as provided in the existing Futures
and Options Guaranty Fund model
documentation. The amendments would
also state that additional rules that may
apply to the F&O Guaranty Fund are
specified in the Clearing Rules and a
summary of the F&O Guaranty Fund
sizing and contribution processes would
be found in the Appendix.
Various revisions would be made in
the section on Model Performance to
improve clarity. The amendments
would clarify the drafting of a general
statement regarding the calculation of
core initial margin to reflect that the
calculation is used to derive core initial
margin at the member account level.
The amendments are intended to clarify
the top day margin coverage calculation
performed by the Clearing House to
assess whether the Core IM covers
market price movements over the
relevant MPOR at the 99th percentile
level. The assessment is made at both
the margin account level (the ‘‘macro’’
or ‘‘portfolio’’ level) and product level
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(the ‘‘micro’’ level). An outdated
reference to the previous IRM v.1.0
model documentation would also be
deleted. In the revised discussion of
margin Coverage, scope and definitions,
references to certain EMIR requirements
would be removed (as the relevant
definitions incorporating regulatory
requirements are part of the
Procedures). At the macro level, the
amendments would clarify that the
margin coverage is calculated by
comparing Clearing Member account’s
Core IM requirement to the clean P&L.
(Provisions addressing frequency of
back-testing are removed in this section
as the topic is addressed elsewhere in
the Procedures.) Another reference to
the CRD database and the results being
stored in the database would be deleted
as unnecessary detail for the
Procedures. Non-substantive
clarifications would be made to the
calculation of Margin Coverage.
In the section for Back Test Statistics
the amendments would clarify that back
testing involves consideration of a
number of historical observations. The
amendments would delete language
stating that statistics based on less than
200 days cannot be considered
statistically significant and note that
statistical back-testing is usually
performed considering at least 250
business days. Although the Clearing
Risk Department would retain the
discretion to use other back-testing
statistics in addition to the Basel Traffic
Light System, the amendments would
remove unnecessary references to
specific examples of such statistics. A
detailed escalation process based on the
results of the statistics handled by the
Risk Manager would also be deleted. As
revised, the Clearing Risk Department
would determine the appropriate action
to address any breaches.
The amendments would specify that
for macro level margin coverage,
breaches would be monitored daily (but
an unclear reference to such breaches
being ‘‘controlled’’ daily would be
removed). A breach would be reported,
investigated and signed off by the
Clearing Risk Department, not a specific
risk manager as previously stated. The
examples of appropriate action would
be modified for concision to include
reviewing the margin model and/or
increasing the relevant production
margin rates based on the Autopilot
model.
The amendments would specify that
for the micro level, coverage of F&O
margins rates would be reported daily.
Any breaches driving a breach at margin
account level would be investigated and
reviewed by the Clearing Risk
Department, in efforts to provide
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65215
information on the drivers of the breach
and assess whether the breach was
driven by erroneous prices. The
amendments would clarify that actions
required as a result of a breach would
no longer be escalated to the risk
manager but would be at the discretion
of the Clearing Risk Department. Such
mitigation actions could include
reviewing and updating the relevant
margin rates. Prior language relating to
specific monitoring of outright and
spread F&O parameters has been
removed as unnecessary in light of the
more general provisions of the revised
draft.
The amendments would specify that
back testing results that fall in the red
or yellow zones under the Basel Traffic
Light system would be reviewed and
investigated by the Clearing Risk
Department. Specifically for the micro
level, the amendments would recognize
that the large amount of margin
parameters would make it difficult to
review and action all back test statistic
results. The amendments would make
clarifying adjustments to the list of
priorities when reviewing a statistical
back test. The products driving red or
yellow back test statistics would be
identified and their back test
performance would be reviewed. Micro
back test statistics in the standard Basel
redzone not driving macro back test
breach results would be reviewed and
the mitigation action would be
considered at the discretion of the
Clearing Risk Department. Micro back
test statistics in the standard Basel
yellow zone not driving macro back test
breach results would be considered part
of the regular margin update proposals.
The amendments would also make
changes in the Monitoring and
Reporting section. For Margin Coverage
at the macro level, the amendments
would state that the Clearing Risk
Department would report the top day
macro breaches daily (deleting the
lengthier manual process previously
included) and the breach statistics
would be presented monthly at the
Model Oversight Committee and bimonthly at the F&O Product Risk
Committee. Accordingly, changes such
as deleting references to manual reports
being generated would be deleted from
the macro back testing section. The
process would also be more streamlined
with the committee pack sent to the
F&O Product Risk Committee, that is
sent bi-monthly, including the macro
back-test statistics.
Similar amendments would be made
to the Margin Coverage section for the
micro level. The amendments would
broadly state that the Clearing Risk
Department would report the top day
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micro breaches daily (deleting the
lengthier process previously included).
The Clearing Risk Department would on
a monthly basis generate reporting
displaying the statistics of a large
selection of products across all
parameter types. The detailed micro
back testing results would be reported
and reviewed monthly by the Clearing
Risk Department. The Clearing Risk
Department would produce a monthly
summary of micro back testing results
for material products and margin rates
for the Model Oversight Committee.
Micro back-testing results would be
reviewed on a bimonthly basis at the
F&O Product Risk Committee for
material products. Certain definitions of
materiality for these reviews in the
existing Procedures would be removed,
as ICE Clear Europe believes a more
flexible approach to materiality is
appropriate. The amendments would
state that any proposed model or
parameter remediation actions due to
product back testing results would be
governed by the Model Risk Policy
(specific language regarding the flagging
of these remediation actions to senior
management and various committees
would be deleted as relevant
notifications are addressed in the Model
Risk Policy). A section and table
summarizing the Margin Coverage and
Backtest Statistics would be deleted as
unnecessary.
The amendments would make
changes to the Sensitivity Testing
section to add that the daily tests would
undergo a monthly review at the
material product or account level. They
would also add that the Model
parameters are described in detail in the
relevant ICE Risk Model documentation.
A section on Stress Testing
Methodology would be shortened to
discuss Stress Testing more generally, in
light of the fact that stress testing is
addressed in detail in other Clearing
House policies and procedures. The
amendments would add that the
objective of stress testing is to ensure
that the F&O Guaranty Fund is adequate
to cover the uncollateralized losses
arising from the two largest Clearing
Member Groups. In addition, the results
are used in Stress Margin, Shortfall
Margin, and Guaranty Fund sizing and
allocation. The amendments would state
that the stress tests are performed under
extreme but plausible market price
moves. The amendments reference the
two types of stress scenarios applied by
the Clearing House—historical scenarios
and theoretical scenarios. The Clearing
House conducts daily stress testing on
the Clearing Member portfolios, and
results are reviewed by the Clearing
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Risk Department and escalated as
necessary.
The amendments would make
revisions to the section on data quality
checks and exclusions for dynamic data.
A sentence on revisions to EDSPs would
be moved to the new section on
Revisions and Remediations discussed
below. In the historical prices
discussion, a sentence stating that use of
external data would usually be based on
a materiality assessment where a
product’s IM reaches a significant
portion of the overall Clearing House IM
would be deleted. ICE Clear Europe
does not believe it is necessary to
specify this particular scenario given its
general authority to use external data to
run ad hoc analysis.
The amendments would add a new
section on Revisions and Remediations
in relation to Data Management.
The Remediations section would
address what was previously referred to
as exclusions and corrections and
would outline other factors that could
imply that remediation may be
necessary. These would include
corrections to market prices as a result
of corporate actions. Certain other
examples (including a footnote related
to large moves from M&A
announcements) would be removed as
unnecessary given the more general
authority to engage in remediation of
data. Data that is remediated would
have to be approved by the Clearing
Risk Department (rather than a senior
Clearing Risk Department person). In
addition, the remediations with related
justifications would be reviewed
monthly by the Model Monitoring
Group.
The amendments would make
changes to the Procedure’s document
governance, breach management and
exception handling, to make it generally
consistent with other ICE Clear Europe
policies. The document owner
identified by the Clearing House would
be responsible for ensuring that the
Procedures remains up-to-date and
reviewed in accordance with the
Clearing House’s governance processes.
The document owner would also be
responsible for reporting any material
breaches or deviations to the Head of
Department, Chief Risk Officer and
Head of Regulation and Compliance in
order to determine if further escalation
is required. Exceptions to the
Procedures would also be approved in
accordance with the governance
processes for approvals of changes to
the Procedures. The amendments would
state explicitly that changes to the
Procedures would also have to be
approved in accordance with the
Clearing House’s governance process
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and would take effect following
completion of required internal and
regulatory approvals.
The amendments would also add the
aforementioned Appendix summarizing
the processes detailed in other parts of
the Procedures.
A number of other drafting
clarifications and conforming changes
such as updating names of relevant
persons, committees and departments,
replacing and conforming defined
terms, and deleting outdated references
would also be made throughout the
document. Various provisions would
also be renumbered or relabeled
throughout the Procedures.
(b) Statutory Basis
ICE Clear Europe believes that the
proposed amendments to the F&O Risk
Procedures are consistent with the
requirements of section 17A of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’) 9 and the regulations thereunder
applicable to it. In particular, section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act 10 requires,
among other things, that the rules of a
clearing agency be designed to promote
the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions
and, to the extent applicable, derivative
agreements, contracts, and transactions,
the safeguarding of securities and funds
in the custody or control of the clearing
agency or for which it is responsible,
and the protection of investors and the
public interest.
The proposed changes are intended to
update the Procedures to make them
consistent with other Clearing House
policies and to describe current Clearing
House practices around margin and
guaranty fund determination more
accurately. The updates would reflect
recent amendments to the Clearing
House’s Model Risk Policy, which
governs key aspects of risk management
with respect to models, including
margin models. The amendments would
also clarify various aspects of the
calculation of Core IM and Additional
IM (and the components thereof), as
well as the process for monitoring
intraday changes in conditions and
making intraday margin calls when
additional margin is required. In
general, these amendments will not
result in a change of the margin
methodology but are intended to more
clearly describe and document the
methodology. Additionally, a new
section would be added to describe, for
completeness, key aspects of the sizing
of the F&O Guaranty Fund (which is
more fully defined in other Clearing
9 15
U.S.C. 78q–1.
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
10 15
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House documentation). The
clarifications to the Procedures will thus
further overall risk management at the
Clearing House with respect to the
Futures and Options product category,
which would in turn promote the
stability of the Clearing House and the
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of cleared contracts. The
enhanced Procedures are therefore also
generally consistent with the protection
of investors and the public interest in
the safe operation of the Clearing House.
(ICE Clear Europe would not expect the
amendments to affect the safeguarding
of securities and funds in ICE Clear
Europe’s custody or control or for which
it is responsible.) Accordingly, the
amendments satisfy the requirements of
section 17A(b)(3)(F).11
The amendments to the Procedures
are also consistent with relevant
provisions of Rule 17Ad–22.12
Specifically, Rule 17Ad–22(e)(4)(i)
provides that ‘‘[e]ach covered clearing
agency shall establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonable designed to,
as applicable [. . .] [e]ffectively
identify, measure, monitor, and manage
its credit exposures to participants and
those arising from its payment, clearing,
and settlement process, including by
[. . .] [m]aintaining sufficient financial
resources to cover its credit exposure to
each participant fully with a high degree
of confidence’’.13 As discussed, the
amendments would make certain
clarifications to the descriptions of the
Clearing House’s margin methodology
and Guaranty Fund sizing process
(including the process for reviewing and
adjusting the size of the F&O Guaranty
Fund from time to time and the basis for
allocating the F&O Guaranty Fund
across clearing members). The
amendments are not intended to result
in changes in those practices or in
margin or guaranty fund levels. As such,
the amendments are consistent with
maintaining sufficient financial
resources to cover the Clearing House’s
credit exposures, within the meaning of
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(4)(i).14
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(i) and (ii)
provides that ‘‘[e]ach covered clearing
agency shall establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonable designed to,
as applicable [. . .] [c]over, if the
covered clearing agency provides
central counterparty services, its credit
exposures to its participants by
establishing a risk-based margin system
that, at minimum [. . .] [c]onsiders, and
produces margin levels commensurate
with, the risks and particular attributes
of each relevant product, portfolio, and
market’’ 15 and ‘‘[m]arks participant
positions to market and collects margin,
including variation margin or equivalent
charges if relevant, at least daily and
includes the authority and operational
capacity to make intraday margin calls
in defined circumstances’’.16 As set
forth above, the amendments to the
Procedures would make clarifying
changes to the descriptions of practices
for collection of both Core IM and
Additional IM (and the relevant
components thereof). For instance, the
amendment clarifies the procedures for
determining and promoting production
margin rates based on the autopilot rates
resulting from standard application of
the ICE Risk Model. The amendments
would also clarify the process for
calculating Additional IM, as well as
monitoring intraday change and making
intraday margin calls as a result of those
calculations. In ICE Clear Europe’s view,
the amendments are therefore consistent
with the requirements of Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(i) and (ii).17
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(A) and (B)
requires that a clearing agency cover its
credit exposures to its participants by
establishing a risk-based margin system
that is monitored by management and
regularly reviewed by ‘‘(A) [c]onducting
backtests of its margin model at least
once each day using standard
predetermined parameters and
assumptions’’ 18 and ‘‘(B) [c]onducting a
sensitivity analysis of its margin model
and a review of its parameters and
assumptions for backtesting on at least
a monthly basis, and considering
modifications to ensure the backtesting
practices are appropriate for
determining the adequacy of the
covered clearing agency’s margin
resources’’.19 As previously stated, the
amendments would make various
clarifications and drafting
improvements to the description of the
review process for back testing at both
the micro and macro level for margin
coverage. The changes also clarify the
periodic review process by the Clearing
Risk Department, relevant committees
and other relevant personnel. In ICE
Clear Europe’s view, these amendments
are therefore consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(vi)(A) and (B).20
CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(6)(i).
CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(6)(ii).
17 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(6)(i) and (ii).
18 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(A).
19 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(B).
20 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(A) and (B).
11 15
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
12 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22.
13 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(4)(i).
14 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(4)(i).
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Rule 17Ad–22(e)(3)(i) provides that
‘‘[e]ach covered clearing agency shall
establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonable designed to, as applicable
[. . .] identify, measure, monitor, and
manage the range of risks that arise in
or are borne by the covered clearing
agency’’.21 The amendments to the
Procedures are intended to assist the
Clearing House in accurately monitoring
and evaluating its credit risk and
collecting appropriate margin from its
Clearing Members accordingly.
Moreover, the amendments would
specify the process in reviewing, testing
and resizing of the F&O Guaranty Fund.
As a result, the Clearing House would
be better able to manage the risk of
losses that may arise from default by
F&O Clearing Members. In ICE Clear
Europe’s view, the amendments are
therefore consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad–22(e)(3)(i).22
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(2) provides that
‘‘[e]ach covered clearing agency shall
establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to, as applicable
[. . .] [p]rovide for governance
arrangements that are [c]lear and
transparent’’ 23 and ‘‘[s]pecify clear and
direct lines of responsibility’’.24 As
discussed, the Procedures would clearly
state certain responsibilities of the
Clearing Risk Department and Model
Oversight Committee, among others, in
relation to oversight of the Clearing
House’s practices regarding margin for
F&O products and the F&O Guaranty
Fund. In line with the Clearing House’s
other policies and procedures, the
Procedures would also describe the
responsibilities of the document owner
and appropriate escalation and
notification requirements for responding
to exceptions and deviations from the
Procedures. In ICE Clear Europe’s view,
the amendments to the Procedures are
therefore consistent with the
requirements of Rule 17Ad–22(e)(2).25
(B) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Burden on Competition
ICE Clear Europe does not believe the
proposed amendments would have any
impact, or impose any burden, on
competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. The amendments
are being adopted to update and clarify
the F&O Risk Procedures and will apply
to all F&O Clearing Members. The
15 17
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CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(3)(i).
CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(3)(i).
23 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(2)(i).
24 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(2)(v).
25 17 CFR 240.17 Ad–22(e)(2).
22 17
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 182 / Thursday, September 21, 2023 / Notices
proposed amendments are not expected
to materially change the margin
methodology or the resulting margin
levels or requirements for F&O Clearing
Members. Similarly, the amendments
are not expected to materially change
the F&O Guaranty Fund requirements.
Accordingly, ICE Clear Europe does not
believe the amendments would affect
the costs of clearing, the ability to
market participants to access clearing,
or the market for clearing services
generally. Therefore, ICE Clear Europe
does not believe the proposed rule
change imposes any burden on
competition that is inappropriate in
furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
(C) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Proposed Rule
Change Received From Members,
Participants or Others
Written comments relating to the
proposed amendments have not been
solicited or received by ICE Clear
Europe. ICE Clear Europe will notify the
Commission of any written comments
received with respect to the proposed
rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to section 19(b)(3)(A)
of the Act 26 and paragraph (f) of Rule
19b–4 27 thereunder. At any time within
60 days of the filing of the proposed rule
change, the Commission summarily may
temporarily suspend such rule change if
it appears to the Commission that such
action is necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of
investors, or otherwise in furtherance of
the purposes of the Act.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
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–
ICEEU–2023–023 on the subject line.
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–ICEEU–2023–023. 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 proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change 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
a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filings
will also be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of ICE
Clear Europe and on ICE Clear Europe’s
website at https://www.theice.com/
clear-europe/regulation.
Do not include personal identifiable
information in submissions; you should
submit only information that you wish
to make available publicly. We may
redact in part or withhold entirely from
publication submitted material that is
obscene or subject to copyright
protection. All submissions should refer
to File Number SR–ICEEU–2023–023
and should be submitted on or before
October 12, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.28
J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–20424 Filed 9–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Secretary, Securities and Exchange
26 15
27 17
17:11 Sep 20, 2023
[Release No. 34–98406; File No. SR–CBOE–
2023–047]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; Cboe
Exchange, Inc.; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of a Proposed
Rule Change To Amend Its Fees
Schedule
September 15, 2023.
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the
‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on
September 14, 2023, Cboe Exchange,
Inc. (the ‘‘Exchange’’ or ‘‘Cboe
Options’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (the
‘‘Commission’’) the proposed rule
change as described in Items I, II, and
III below, which Items have been
prepared by the Exchange. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
Cboe Exchange, Inc. (the ‘‘Exchange’’
or ‘‘Cboe Options’’) proposes to amend
its Fees Schedule. The text of the
proposed rule change is provided in
Exhibit 5.
The text of the proposed rule change
is also available on the Exchange’s
website (https://www.cboe.com/
AboutCBOE/
CBOELegalRegulatoryHome.aspx), at
the Exchange’s Office of the Secretary,
and at the Commission’s Public
Reference Room.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission, the
Exchange included statements
concerning the purpose of and basis for
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item IV below. The
Exchange has prepared summaries, set
forth in sections A, B, and C below, of
the most significant aspects of such
statements.
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
CFR 240.19b–4(f).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
28 17
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U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
21SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 182 (Thursday, September 21, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 65210-65218]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-20424]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-98407; File No. SR-ICEEU-2023-023]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; ICE Clear Europe Limited; Notice
of Filing and Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed Rule Change, as
Modified by Amendment No. 1, Relating to the Amendments the Futures and
Options Risk Procedures
September 15, 2023.
Pursuant to section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice is hereby given that
on August 31, 2023, ICE Clear Europe Limited (``ICE Clear Europe'' or
the ``Clearing House'') filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (``Commission'') the proposed rule changes described in
Items I, II and III below, which Items have been primarily prepared by
ICE Clear Europe. ICE Clear Europe filed the proposed rule change
pursuant to section 19(b)(3)(A) \3\ of the Act and Rule
[[Page 65211]]
19b-4(f)(4)(ii) thereunder,\4\ such that the proposed rule change was
immediately effective upon filing with the Commission. On September 14,
2023, ICE Clear Europe filed Amendment No. 1 which amends and restates
in its entirety the Form 19b-4 Information and Exhibit 1A.\5\ The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1 (hereafter ``the
proposed rule change'') from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\4\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f)(4)(ii).
\5\ Amendment No. 1 updates the 19b-4 Information and the
Exhibit 1A to more fully describe changes outlined in the Exhibit 5.
ICEEU represents that it did not make any changes to its Exhibit 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the
Proposed Rule Change
ICE Clear Europe Limited (``ICE Clear Europe'' or the ``Clearing
House'') proposes to amend the Futures and Options Risk Procedures (the
``F&O Risk Procedures'' or ``Procedures'') \6\ to make certain updates
and clarifications relating to risk management for the F&O product
category, including to reference the Clearing House's Model Risk Policy
and update the Document Governance and Exception Handling provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Capitalized terms used but not defined herein have the
meanings specified in the F&O Risk Procedures or, if not defined
therein, the ICE Clear Europe Clearing Rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, ICE Clear Europe included
statements concerning the purpose of and basis for the proposed rule
change and discussed any comments it received on the proposed rule
change. The text of these statements may be examined at the places
specified in Item IV below. ICE Clear Europe has prepared summaries,
set forth in sections (A), (B), and (C) below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Proposed Rule Change
(a) Purpose
ICE Clear Europe is proposing to amend its Futures and Options Risk
Procedures to make various updates and clarifications, including to add
a section describing the existing F&O Guaranty Fund, make reference to
the recently revised Model Risk Policy,\7\ and update the Document
Governance and Exception Handling language. Various non-substantive
drafting changes and improvements would also be made throughout the
document. The amendments generally do not represent a change in the
Clearing House's practices, but rather are intended to improve and
clarify the documentation of existing risk management practices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See, The Model Risk Policy as described in Exchange Act
Release No. 34-98138, SR ICEEU-2023-019 (August 15, 2023), 88 Fed
Reg. 56901 (Aug. 21, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the purpose section of the document, the amendments would
clarify that details of models described in the Procedures (in addition
to processes) are included in the relevant model methodology and
procedure documentation. The amendments would further provide that any
changes to the risk parameters would be subject to the governance set
out in the Model Risk Policy. The amendments would also make non-
substantive clarifications to the description of the role of ICE Clear
Europe as a central counterparty.
The revised Procedures would simplify the description of Clearing
Member groups and clarify that Clearing Members in the same Member
Group may be based in various jurisdictions rather than specifically
referencing a Clearing Member in Europe and another part of the world.
The amendments would also make clear that in order to perform exposure
analysis at appropriate levels of aggregation, the Clearing House
associates its Clearing Members in Member Groups. Additional language
regarding how Member Groups are identified and the internal groups
responsible for the membership onboarding process would be removed as
unnecessary.
The amendments would also simplify and clarify the discussion of
the various types of proprietary and client margin accounts made
available to its Clearing Members (which are established pursuant to
the published Rules and Clearing Procedures and are not being changed
by virtue of these amendments). The amendments would state more simply
that the Core IM is calculated on either a ``Gross'' or ``Net'' basis
dependent upon the type of margin account. (As an exception, the chart
detailing the margin accounts would change the Core IM Method for the
Individual Client (ISOC) accounts (I) and (J) from Net to N/A, as the
net/gross distinction is not applicable for such accounts). Various
conforming changes would be made to the summary of the accounts,
including to reflect that the house account (H) is margined on a net
basis, as was already reflected in the chart. Additional clarifications
would be made that accounts are margined on a net or gross basis
(rather than a net and gross basis). The amendments would also explain
more concisely that information as to Money Rules and FCM/BD customer
applicability is included in the table to distinguish account types. A
footnote would also be added to provide an ICEU EMIR Disclosure
Statement that supplies further details on the margin account types.
The amendments further clarify the distinction between the net and
gross calculations of initial margin in light of CFTC and Bank of
England/EU requirements. The amendments note that EU rules treat the
one-day MPOR gross margin calculation under CFTC rules as equivalent to
the two-day MPOR net margin calculation. The amendments also make non-
substantive drafting clarifications to the discussion of net and gross
margin methods. The amendments also add a statement that house and
proprietary affiliate positions of a clearing member are calculated
using a minimum two-day MPOR. The amendments reflect existing practice
and would not change the manner of calculation of initial margin for
any accounts. The amendments would remove as unnecessary language
referencing ICE Clear Europe setting up multiple customer accounts to
cater for ESMA and CFTC requirements.
The amendments would clarify that ICE Clear Europe performs
position keeping of all positions belonging to each account of both
clearing members and non-clearing members (defined as members of ICE
exchanges that are not clearing members). The changes would also
clarify that for gross margined accounts, the Clearing House will rely
on a gross client margin file provided by the clearing member for
purposes of position management and calculation of gross initial
margin. The changes also address reconciliation of the gross client
margin file against actual positions in the relevant account and
margining of any inconsistencies. These amendments do not represent a
change in current practice by the Clearing House.
The amendments would specify that the Clearing Risk Department is
the owner of the Procedures document and remove references to the F&O
Market Risk team.
The discussion of initial margin would be revised for greater
simplicity and clarity and are not intended to change the substance of
the calculation of initial margin, which is set forth in the existing
applicable model documentation for the ICE Risk Model. The amendments
would clarify that initial margin consists of Core IM and Additional IM
to mitigate the risk it is exposed to on all Futures and Options
positions. The amendments would also
[[Page 65212]]
clarify that the Procedures provide detail to each of the IM components
(removing unnecessary references to frequency, limits and thresholds,
exceptions and escalation).
The amendments would clarify that the ICE Risk Model uses margin
rates in computing Core IM and these margin rates would be the
responsibility of the Clearing Risk Department. A reference to a
specific version of the IRM Margin Rate Calibration Model Documentation
would be deleted as unnecessary and computation of the model margin
rates, as opposed to calibrated margin rate, would be inserted above
the table detailing the computation. The table of standard settings for
the computation of model margin rates (referred to as the ``Autopilot
rates'') would be simplified, removing rows labeled ``System/Process'',
``Test/Frequency'', and ``Exceptions'' as unnecessary, and removing
references to specific Energy and Financial & Softs sectors. Likewise,
the Margin Period of Risk would be summarized as 1 day or 2 days
depending on the product, consistent with the discussion above. The
summary of the lookback period would be revised from at least 100 days
to VaR that is at least as conservative as that based on a 250-day
lookback. The Anti-Procyclicality would be amended to be at least 25
percent stressed volatility (rather than exactly 25%). The row on Risk
Parameters would be replaced with a summary of the output of the risk
model, which is the ICE Risk Model margin rates including those
previously specified.
The amendments would clarify the process for review and promotion
of production margin rates. The amendments are intended to correctly
reflect the existing practice that the review of the production margin
rate is performed versus trigger criteria daily (as opposed to
quarterly). As a result of the daily review, references to ad hoc
updates in addition to quarterly reviews would be deleted as they are
no longer required. This would include the deletion of the governance
procedures related to review of the exceptions driving ad hoc review
and related effectiveness without notice. The amendments would address
that that production margin rates are set to the Autopilot model rates
at a specific point in time after each review through a process called
promotion. It would further state that the production rates are the
margin rates used in the calculation of Clearing Member's Core IM
requirements. The steps to review and the promotion of the proposed
production margin rates would include mention of their promotion. The
steps would also be simplified to state that first the update to the
production margin rates would be proposed and reviewed by the Clearing
Risk Department, then the Clearing Risk Department would seek approval
for the margin update. Then once approved, the Clearing Risk Department
would promote the margin rates into the Risk System, followed by
informing the Clearing Members and wider market of the new margin rates
by means of the Clearing House's website. The amendments would add that
typically one business day's notice would be given to the market from
the date of the circular, and the Clearing Risk Department would then
upload the approved margin rates to the ICE Clear Europe website upon
publication of the circular. A table summarizing the review and
promotion process would be deleted as duplicative and unnecessary.
A cross-reference to documentation relating to ICE Risk Model
parameters would be updated to include a general reference to the ICE
Risk Model documentation instead of an outdated version. Details on
certain parameters relating to EWMA volatility and APC stress
volatility would be removed as they are addressed in the ICE Risk Model
documentation. The amendments would add another new sub-section on the
ICE Risk Model Daily Requirements that would outline the process for
computing Core IM as part of the End of Day process. This would include
computation of the ICE Risk Model daily margin requirements and EMIR
Add-on for each Clearing Member margin account. The amendments would
also delete outdated references to the IRM V1.0 Model Documentation,
related risk array files and inputs, and the ECS system. The related
table with the summary of products eligible under each margin account
would change the I and J Accounts to N/A as opposed to Net margining
type. The footnote would explain that for these accounts the sub-
clients within the client account are individually (rather than net)
margined. Any material change in Core IM would be escalated to
Operations, instead of the previous plus or minus 5 percent (or more
depending on known margin change) escalation threshold. This section
would also reference a summary of the IRM Margin Rate Promotion and
Core IM processes that would be added in the Appendix to the
Procedures. These changes are consistent with existing margin practice
but are intended to document the current process more clearly.
In terms of additional IM, the amendments would specify that such
amounts are to collateralize risks not captured by the Core IM amount.
Clarifications would be made to the descriptions of various types of
additional IM, as discussed herein. For example, amendments would
clarify that the additional risk from concentrated positions would be
covered through a Concentration Charge add-on, and that the additional
margin is called on a t+1 basis to be met the following day. The
requirement would clarify the notice process for additional IM through
the MFT system, remove an outdated reference to EoD reporting and
remove unnecessary distinctions between concentration charges for
different product segments. The summary table of the Concentration
Charge process would be deleted, and relevant terms moved to the added
Appendix. In the Parameter Calibration section, the amendments would
remove the existing discussion and add instead that the details of the
Concentration Charge model or risk parameters would be described in the
relevant Concentration Charge model documentation.
In the Stress Margin section, the amendments would add a general
description of the stress loss charge as ensuring that sufficient pre-
funded resources to ensure regulatory compliance are held at all times.
The amendments would also clarify that any Stress Loss Charge top-up
requirements would be called via an intraday call on a t+1 basis so
that, for example, positions as of the end of day on Monday could incur
additional margin called on Tuesday for receipt on Tuesday. The
amendments would clarify that the total Stress Loss Charge would be
posted in the end of day additional margin requirement so that any
surplus or deficit is part of the end of day margining. The summary of
the Stress Loss Charge process would be deleted, and relevant terms
moved to the added Appendix. Additional details of the Stress Loss
Charge model and risk parameters would be removed, and a cross-
reference added to the Futures and Options Guaranty Fund model
documentation (which addresses such parameters). An incorrect cross-
reference to the F&O Stress Testing Policy would be removed.
In the Shortfall Margin section, the amendments would specify that
Shortfall Margin would be called to cover uncollateralized stress loss
(as calculated at the margin account level). The amendments would also
state that Shortfall Margin would be called on a t+1 basis to be met on
the following day, so that, for example, positions on Monday EOD can
incur additional margin called on Tuesday for receipt on
[[Page 65213]]
Wednesday morning. The amendments would delete unnecessary provisions
relating to the posting of the requirement against a specific ledger
type in daily reports and EOD reporting through ECS. The summary of the
Shortfall Margin process would be removed, and relevant details moved
to the Appendix.
In the Specific Wrong-Way Risk section, the amendments would
explain that the Wrong Way Risk additional margin requirements are
called on a t+1 basis to be met the following day, so that, for
example, positions as of Monday EOD can incur additional margin called
on Tuesday for receipt on Wednesday morning. As with other categories
of additional IM, the amendments would delete unnecessary provisions
relating to the posting of the requirement against a specific ledger
type in daily reports and EOD reporting of the additional amount
through ECS. A table summarizing the Wrong Way Risk process would be
removed and relevant details moved to the Appendix.
In the EMIR Add-on section, the amendments would clarify various
aspects of this add-on, which is collected for house and affiliate
accounts for products for which Core IM is otherwise calculated using a
1-day MPOR. The add-on covers the amount, if any, by which Core IM
would exceed that amount if calculated on a 2-day MPOR basis, in order
to ensure that house and affiliate positions are margined using a
minimum 2-day MPOR as required under EMIR. The amendments would further
clarify that the EMIR Add-on is called at the same time as Core IM
requirements, so that, for example, House and Affiliate account
positions as of Monday EOD can incur EMIR add-on called on Monday night
for receipt on Tuesday morning. A table summarizing the EMIR add-on
process would be removed and relevant provisions moved to the Appendix.
The amendments would delete language concerning the review and
subsequent parameter recalibration as unnecessary as it is covered in
the relevant model documentation.
In the Delivery Margins section, the amendments would revise the
Procedures to state explicitly that the delivery margin is designed to
cover potential price moves at a 99th percentile level for the product
in delivery. The amendments would further state that the Delivery
Margin is typically set to the front month scanning margin rate for the
product and held by the CCP until buyer security is paid by the buyer.
The description of the calculation of Buyer Security would be clarified
to be the notional value of bought positions that are deliverable
within the following 2 business days. Similarly, the description of the
calculation of Seller Security would be modified to be an additional
requirement posted by the seller, calculated to cover any applicable
costs and charges, should they be unable to deliver the agreed product.
The definition of Contingent Variation Margin would be clarified to be
the difference between the Exchange Delivery Settlement Price and a
representative market price for the remaining portion of the given
underlying that is yet to be delivered (analogous to Variation Margin).
Tables summarizing the Delivery Margin, Buyer/Seller Security and the
Contingent Variation Margin would be removed with relevant details
moved to the Appendix.
In the Net Liquidating Value (``NLV'') section, certain non-
substantive drafting improvements would be made. In addition, the
description of the top up for NLV credit/debit would be revised to
state that it be called for at the end of the day (call time t) and not
the following day. A table summarizing the NLV would be removed with
relevant details moved to the Appendix.
In the Intraday and Overnight Buffer section, the amendment would
add a statement of the use of mandatory buffer, which is called when
trading out of intraday margining hours is observed that increases Core
IM requirements above thresholds. For these positions traded outside
the hours covered by the intraday margin process, the IM requirements
are calculated using IRM. In cases where the resultant increase to an
account's IM exceeds the limit set, an overnight buffer equal to the
largest exceedance is requested and held for the following 30 days. The
amendments would add that this process would be introduced to achieve
compliance with relevant requirements of EMIR \8\ and would only be
applicable to 1-day gross client omnibus margined accounts. The
amendments would further clarify that voluntary buffer could be posted
to reduce the Clearing Members' operational burden of managing intraday
margin calls. A table summarizing the intraday and overnight buffer
process would be removed and relevant details moved to the Appendix.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Article 26 of EMIR RTS Regulation (EU) No 153/2013 (ESMA/
2016/429).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the Ad-Hoc Buffer section, the amendments would clarify that
Clearing Members may be requested to post additional buffers for any
risks not covered by the requirements detailed in the Procedures. The
amendments would specify that the requirements would be set by the
Clearing Risk Department. A table summarizing the ad hoc buffer process
would be removed and relevant details moved to the Appendix.
In the discussion of intraday margining, the amendments would
provide a clearer statement of the basis for such margining: that
although the Clearing House collateralizes risk through IM and
Variation Margin as part of the overnight process, the Clearing House
may be exposed to uncollateralized exposures, or Intraday Shortfalls,
due to adverse market price movements causing a change in the value of
members positions, new trading activities resulting in an increased IM
requirement on Clearing Members' accounts and the value of securities
held as collateral being reduced. The amendments would clarify that the
Clearing Risk Department could calculate any additional IM that it may
require on a near real-time basis intraday.
In respect to Intraday Risk Monitoring the amendments would specify
that the Clearing Risk Department monitors changes in Core IM in
addition to Variation Margin on an ongoing basis. The Intraday Margin
requirement of an account would be the sum of the Intraday IM and
Intraday Variation Margin of the account.
The section on Core Intraday IM Calculation would be updated and
moved to Section 4.2. The amendments would accordingly delete previous
language under Section 4.3 that was titled ``Intraday Core IM
Calculation''. The revised section would state that the Core Intraday
IM would be calculated and, when above thresholds, called on a near-
real time basis intraday. For gross margined accounts, the amendments
would reflect that because gross positions are only received at end of
day, the Clearing House will not have near-real-time data for purposes
of intraday margining. As a result, the Clearing House uses the
previous end of day gross margin plus the change in net 2-day margin
for the account between the start of day and the current point in time
to determine intraday Gross IM. The amendments would detail the step by
step process in the calculation and the formula that would be employed
(these steps would replace an existing summary of steps to update
references and terminology used in the amended Procedures). The
amendment would note that ICE Clear Europe utilizes 2D MPOR for
calculating Intraday Net IM and Start of Day Net IM, and that only the
Intraday Net IM changes throughout the day (neither the End of Day
Gross IM nor Start of Day Net IM change
[[Page 65214]]
throughout the day). The amendments would specify that for net margined
accounts, the current real time net position is used to calculate Core
Intraday IM in the same way as End of Day IM for those accounts.
In reference to Intraday Shortfall, the amendments would clarify
that the calculation for the current collateral on account would
include both collateral used to meet end of the day IM requirements and
additional collateral available to cover intraday calls. The amendments
would remove a statement that at a minimum, prices are refreshed hourly
(as the Clearing House expects prices to be refreshed more frequently)
but retain the general principle that the Clearing Risk Department
monitors the prices utilized to value securities deposited as
collateral throughout the day. The amendments would make various non-
substantive drafting clarifications to the intraday limits. In
addition, for Clearing Member Limit 2, the amendments would specify
that the total value of collateral on deposit would be that of the
loss-making accounts and collateral in the House account. The
amendments would add that for Clearing Limit 1 (in addition to Clearing
Limit 2), the Clearing House would permit use of excess collateral
present on the House account to offset Intraday Shortfalls arising on
all other accounts in deficit. The amendments also make clear that the
Clearing house can at its discretion alter, rather than only reduce,
the limits applicable to individual accounts as this more accurately
reflects the current practice of the Clearing House.
For Intraday Margin Call Triggers, the amendments would remove a
duplicative statement of the minimum shortfall for an intraday call.
The amendments would also clarify that ICE Clear Europe may call for
additional collateral at any time to mitigate any (not just material)
risk, consistent with the existing Rules and current practice.
The Intraday Margin Call Procedure would be revised to state that
the 30-minute warning of a trigger breach is at the Clearing House's
discretion. The amendments would also remove, as a means of limiting
intraday risk and satisfying a margin call, improving the profit and
loss of the account (as that is likely impractical in the relevant
timeframe). The amendments would also remove a concept that the
Clearing Risk Department would make recommendations to clearing members
to avoid receiving intraday calls; rather, the goal would be to provide
warnings prior to 19:30 London time so that all intraday calls are
issued prior to 20:00 London time. The amendments would state that more
than one intraday call may be made during the same day as required
(without necessarily being based on market conditions). Certain
references to the use of the APS system in connection with providing
cash or collateral would be deleted in this section and throughout the
Procedures as unnecessary (and would not reflect a change in current
practice). A diagram presenting the procedure for an Intraday Margin
Call would be deleted as unnecessary.
In the Overnight Window Monitoring section, the amendments would
clarify the specific gross margined and ISOC accounts to which
overnight monitoring applies. The amendments would also state that the
Clearing Risk Department (rather than a senior Clearing Risk Department
person), would issue a margin call or require the Clearing Member to
take other risk reducing action, when appropriate. (ICE Clear Europe
believes it is appropriate for the responsibility to be on the
department rather than a senior individual.) An escalation process
where a Member cannot be contacted or does not reduce positions would
be deleted along with notification of regulators, as this information
is contained in separate Clearing House default management procedures.
In the Intraday Buffer section, the amendments would clarify that
if a Clearing Member wishes to reduce the operational burden of
frequent intraday calls or Overnight Buffer, then the Clearing Member
may choose to lodge excess collateral as Intraday Buffer. The
amendments would also clarify that where a Clearing Member notifies ICE
Clear Europe that it no longer wants to lodge Intraday Buffer, the
buffer will be available to be returned after the next overnight margin
run. The amendments remove unnecessary specifications of the means of
providing such a notice. The amendments would also delete as
unnecessary a statement that the Clearing Member would be able to
choose to fund the requirement with the type of collateral of their
choosing.
In the Overnight Buffer section, the amendments would specify the
particular gross margining and ISOC accounts to which it applies. The
amendments would also correct that the amount will be called as part of
the End of Day process (rather than intraday).
In the Returning of Margin Call Collateral section, the amendments
would provide that margin posted intraday in respect of an intraday
margin call may, in extraordinary circumstances at the discretion of
the Treasury Department and Clearing Risk Department, be returned in
cases where the Clearing Member has unrealized gains (i.e., positive
intraday variation margin). The amendments would also correct a
reference to the End of Day process (as opposed to the End of Day
margining process).
The amendments would replace the existing discussion of the F&O
Guaranty Fund with a new section describing generally the sizing of the
F&O Guaranty Fund, as established pursuant to the published Rules and
Finance Procedures and the existing F&O Guaranty Fund model
documentation. The amendments would describe the required size of the
F&O Guaranty Fund, as being adequate to cover the first and second
largest, non mutually exclusive, uncollateralized losses from Member
Groups resulting from agreed stress testing scenarios. The size also
has to be sufficient to enable the Clearing House to withstand a
Clearing Member default to which the Clearing House has the largest
stress testing exposure, or the second and third largest if the sum of
those are greater. The size has to be sufficient to cover the larger of
the sum of the individually calculated segments for Energy and
Financials & Softs (``F&S'') member portfolios or the largest
contemporaneous scenario. If the Energy and F&S segment fund is smaller
than the largest contemporaneous losses scenario, then an additional
guaranty fund apportionment amount would be calculated and would be
allocated to both Energy and F&S Fund segments in accordance with the
Clearing Rules. In establishing the size of the F&O Guaranty Fund the
ICE Initial Contribution is not included and must be met by Clearing
Member contributions only.
The amendments would add that review of the size of the F&O
Guaranty Fund would occur at least every two months and would be based
on historical stress testing results and other factors ICE considers
relevant. The added section would describe the steps taken in the
periodic review process, and the role of relevant ICE Clear Europe
committees. Ad hoc assessments could be triggered by the Clearing House
in addition to the periodic review. Extraordinary reviews may also be
necessary based on stress testing results.
The amendments would state that Clearing Members will normally have
five UK business days (from the date of the notice) to lodge sufficient
funds with the Clearing House if the overall level of the F&O Guaranty
Fund or a specific Clearing Member's allocation must increase,
consistent with the requirements of the Rules and Finance Procedures.
Under extreme circumstances, the Clearing House can
[[Page 65215]]
accelerate the call of the F&O Guaranty Fund requirements to a one
day's notice or otherwise reasonably change the notice period. A
failure to meet these payments would be considered a breach of Clearing
House Clearing Rules. Clearing Members would also have the ability to
withdraw excess funds that result from a decrease in their fund
contributions following a review of the level of the F&O Guaranty Fund.
The amendments would add that ICE Clear Europe's recommendations on
the level of the F&O Guaranty Fund would be based on several factors
including the level of the largest member's uncollateralized losses
historically and how it compares against the associated segment fund
level or the total F&O Guaranty Fund, the level of the second and third
largest members uncollateralized losses historically and how it
compares against the associated segment fund level or the total F&O
Guaranty Fund, the amount and number of stress loss charges called
across memberships and any other relevant factors ICE Clear Europe
deems appropriate. The size of the F&O Guaranty Fund would also be
subject to a floor in accordance with regulations, as described in
further detail in the existing Futures and Options Guaranty Fund model
documentation.
The amendments would detail that a particular Clearing Member's
contribution to each of the Fund segments should reflect its relative
share of clearing activity and relative share of uncollateralized loss.
The amendments described the two factor model used in allocating the
F&O Guaranty Fund, based on IM and Uncollateralized Stress Loss, as
provided in the existing Futures and Options Guaranty Fund model
documentation. The amendments would also state that additional rules
that may apply to the F&O Guaranty Fund are specified in the Clearing
Rules and a summary of the F&O Guaranty Fund sizing and contribution
processes would be found in the Appendix.
Various revisions would be made in the section on Model Performance
to improve clarity. The amendments would clarify the drafting of a
general statement regarding the calculation of core initial margin to
reflect that the calculation is used to derive core initial margin at
the member account level. The amendments are intended to clarify the
top day margin coverage calculation performed by the Clearing House to
assess whether the Core IM covers market price movements over the
relevant MPOR at the 99th percentile level. The assessment is made at
both the margin account level (the ``macro'' or ``portfolio'' level)
and product level (the ``micro'' level). An outdated reference to the
previous IRM v.1.0 model documentation would also be deleted. In the
revised discussion of margin Coverage, scope and definitions,
references to certain EMIR requirements would be removed (as the
relevant definitions incorporating regulatory requirements are part of
the Procedures). At the macro level, the amendments would clarify that
the margin coverage is calculated by comparing Clearing Member
account's Core IM requirement to the clean P&L. (Provisions addressing
frequency of back-testing are removed in this section as the topic is
addressed elsewhere in the Procedures.) Another reference to the CRD
database and the results being stored in the database would be deleted
as unnecessary detail for the Procedures. Non-substantive
clarifications would be made to the calculation of Margin Coverage.
In the section for Back Test Statistics the amendments would
clarify that back testing involves consideration of a number of
historical observations. The amendments would delete language stating
that statistics based on less than 200 days cannot be considered
statistically significant and note that statistical back-testing is
usually performed considering at least 250 business days. Although the
Clearing Risk Department would retain the discretion to use other back-
testing statistics in addition to the Basel Traffic Light System, the
amendments would remove unnecessary references to specific examples of
such statistics. A detailed escalation process based on the results of
the statistics handled by the Risk Manager would also be deleted. As
revised, the Clearing Risk Department would determine the appropriate
action to address any breaches.
The amendments would specify that for macro level margin coverage,
breaches would be monitored daily (but an unclear reference to such
breaches being ``controlled'' daily would be removed). A breach would
be reported, investigated and signed off by the Clearing Risk
Department, not a specific risk manager as previously stated. The
examples of appropriate action would be modified for concision to
include reviewing the margin model and/or increasing the relevant
production margin rates based on the Autopilot model.
The amendments would specify that for the micro level, coverage of
F&O margins rates would be reported daily. Any breaches driving a
breach at margin account level would be investigated and reviewed by
the Clearing Risk Department, in efforts to provide information on the
drivers of the breach and assess whether the breach was driven by
erroneous prices. The amendments would clarify that actions required as
a result of a breach would no longer be escalated to the risk manager
but would be at the discretion of the Clearing Risk Department. Such
mitigation actions could include reviewing and updating the relevant
margin rates. Prior language relating to specific monitoring of
outright and spread F&O parameters has been removed as unnecessary in
light of the more general provisions of the revised draft.
The amendments would specify that back testing results that fall in
the red or yellow zones under the Basel Traffic Light system would be
reviewed and investigated by the Clearing Risk Department. Specifically
for the micro level, the amendments would recognize that the large
amount of margin parameters would make it difficult to review and
action all back test statistic results. The amendments would make
clarifying adjustments to the list of priorities when reviewing a
statistical back test. The products driving red or yellow back test
statistics would be identified and their back test performance would be
reviewed. Micro back test statistics in the standard Basel redzone not
driving macro back test breach results would be reviewed and the
mitigation action would be considered at the discretion of the Clearing
Risk Department. Micro back test statistics in the standard Basel
yellow zone not driving macro back test breach results would be
considered part of the regular margin update proposals.
The amendments would also make changes in the Monitoring and
Reporting section. For Margin Coverage at the macro level, the
amendments would state that the Clearing Risk Department would report
the top day macro breaches daily (deleting the lengthier manual process
previously included) and the breach statistics would be presented
monthly at the Model Oversight Committee and bi-monthly at the F&O
Product Risk Committee. Accordingly, changes such as deleting
references to manual reports being generated would be deleted from the
macro back testing section. The process would also be more streamlined
with the committee pack sent to the F&O Product Risk Committee, that is
sent bi-monthly, including the macro back-test statistics.
Similar amendments would be made to the Margin Coverage section for
the micro level. The amendments would broadly state that the Clearing
Risk Department would report the top day
[[Page 65216]]
micro breaches daily (deleting the lengthier process previously
included). The Clearing Risk Department would on a monthly basis
generate reporting displaying the statistics of a large selection of
products across all parameter types. The detailed micro back testing
results would be reported and reviewed monthly by the Clearing Risk
Department. The Clearing Risk Department would produce a monthly
summary of micro back testing results for material products and margin
rates for the Model Oversight Committee. Micro back-testing results
would be reviewed on a bimonthly basis at the F&O Product Risk
Committee for material products. Certain definitions of materiality for
these reviews in the existing Procedures would be removed, as ICE Clear
Europe believes a more flexible approach to materiality is appropriate.
The amendments would state that any proposed model or parameter
remediation actions due to product back testing results would be
governed by the Model Risk Policy (specific language regarding the
flagging of these remediation actions to senior management and various
committees would be deleted as relevant notifications are addressed in
the Model Risk Policy). A section and table summarizing the Margin
Coverage and Backtest Statistics would be deleted as unnecessary.
The amendments would make changes to the Sensitivity Testing
section to add that the daily tests would undergo a monthly review at
the material product or account level. They would also add that the
Model parameters are described in detail in the relevant ICE Risk Model
documentation.
A section on Stress Testing Methodology would be shortened to
discuss Stress Testing more generally, in light of the fact that stress
testing is addressed in detail in other Clearing House policies and
procedures. The amendments would add that the objective of stress
testing is to ensure that the F&O Guaranty Fund is adequate to cover
the uncollateralized losses arising from the two largest Clearing
Member Groups. In addition, the results are used in Stress Margin,
Shortfall Margin, and Guaranty Fund sizing and allocation. The
amendments would state that the stress tests are performed under
extreme but plausible market price moves. The amendments reference the
two types of stress scenarios applied by the Clearing House--historical
scenarios and theoretical scenarios. The Clearing House conducts daily
stress testing on the Clearing Member portfolios, and results are
reviewed by the Clearing Risk Department and escalated as necessary.
The amendments would make revisions to the section on data quality
checks and exclusions for dynamic data. A sentence on revisions to
EDSPs would be moved to the new section on Revisions and Remediations
discussed below. In the historical prices discussion, a sentence
stating that use of external data would usually be based on a
materiality assessment where a product's IM reaches a significant
portion of the overall Clearing House IM would be deleted. ICE Clear
Europe does not believe it is necessary to specify this particular
scenario given its general authority to use external data to run ad hoc
analysis.
The amendments would add a new section on Revisions and
Remediations in relation to Data Management.
The Remediations section would address what was previously referred
to as exclusions and corrections and would outline other factors that
could imply that remediation may be necessary. These would include
corrections to market prices as a result of corporate actions. Certain
other examples (including a footnote related to large moves from M&A
announcements) would be removed as unnecessary given the more general
authority to engage in remediation of data. Data that is remediated
would have to be approved by the Clearing Risk Department (rather than
a senior Clearing Risk Department person). In addition, the
remediations with related justifications would be reviewed monthly by
the Model Monitoring Group.
The amendments would make changes to the Procedure's document
governance, breach management and exception handling, to make it
generally consistent with other ICE Clear Europe policies. The document
owner identified by the Clearing House would be responsible for
ensuring that the Procedures remains up-to-date and reviewed in
accordance with the Clearing House's governance processes. The document
owner would also be responsible for reporting any material breaches or
deviations to the Head of Department, Chief Risk Officer and Head of
Regulation and Compliance in order to determine if further escalation
is required. Exceptions to the Procedures would also be approved in
accordance with the governance processes for approvals of changes to
the Procedures. The amendments would state explicitly that changes to
the Procedures would also have to be approved in accordance with the
Clearing House's governance process and would take effect following
completion of required internal and regulatory approvals.
The amendments would also add the aforementioned Appendix
summarizing the processes detailed in other parts of the Procedures.
A number of other drafting clarifications and conforming changes
such as updating names of relevant persons, committees and departments,
replacing and conforming defined terms, and deleting outdated
references would also be made throughout the document. Various
provisions would also be renumbered or relabeled throughout the
Procedures.
(b) Statutory Basis
ICE Clear Europe believes that the proposed amendments to the F&O
Risk Procedures are consistent with the requirements of section 17A of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the ``Act'') \9\ and the
regulations thereunder applicable to it. In particular, section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act \10\ requires, among other things, that the
rules of a clearing agency be designed to promote the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of securities transactions and, to
the extent applicable, derivative agreements, contracts, and
transactions, the safeguarding of securities and funds in the custody
or control of the clearing agency or for which it is responsible, and
the protection of investors and the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\10\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed changes are intended to update the Procedures to make
them consistent with other Clearing House policies and to describe
current Clearing House practices around margin and guaranty fund
determination more accurately. The updates would reflect recent
amendments to the Clearing House's Model Risk Policy, which governs key
aspects of risk management with respect to models, including margin
models. The amendments would also clarify various aspects of the
calculation of Core IM and Additional IM (and the components thereof),
as well as the process for monitoring intraday changes in conditions
and making intraday margin calls when additional margin is required. In
general, these amendments will not result in a change of the margin
methodology but are intended to more clearly describe and document the
methodology. Additionally, a new section would be added to describe,
for completeness, key aspects of the sizing of the F&O Guaranty Fund
(which is more fully defined in other Clearing
[[Page 65217]]
House documentation). The clarifications to the Procedures will thus
further overall risk management at the Clearing House with respect to
the Futures and Options product category, which would in turn promote
the stability of the Clearing House and the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of cleared contracts. The enhanced Procedures
are therefore also generally consistent with the protection of
investors and the public interest in the safe operation of the Clearing
House. (ICE Clear Europe would not expect the amendments to affect the
safeguarding of securities and funds in ICE Clear Europe's custody or
control or for which it is responsible.) Accordingly, the amendments
satisfy the requirements of section 17A(b)(3)(F).\11\
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\11\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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The amendments to the Procedures are also consistent with relevant
provisions of Rule 17Ad-22.\12\ Specifically, Rule 17Ad-22(e)(4)(i)
provides that ``[e]ach covered clearing agency shall establish,
implement, maintain and enforce written policies and procedures
reasonable designed to, as applicable [. . .] [e]ffectively identify,
measure, monitor, and manage its credit exposures to participants and
those arising from its payment, clearing, and settlement process,
including by [. . .] [m]aintaining sufficient financial resources to
cover its credit exposure to each participant fully with a high degree
of confidence''.\13\ As discussed, the amendments would make certain
clarifications to the descriptions of the Clearing House's margin
methodology and Guaranty Fund sizing process (including the process for
reviewing and adjusting the size of the F&O Guaranty Fund from time to
time and the basis for allocating the F&O Guaranty Fund across clearing
members). The amendments are not intended to result in changes in those
practices or in margin or guaranty fund levels. As such, the amendments
are consistent with maintaining sufficient financial resources to cover
the Clearing House's credit exposures, within the meaning of Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(4)(i).\14\
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\12\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22.
\13\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(4)(i).
\14\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(4)(i).
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Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(i) and (ii) provides that ``[e]ach covered
clearing agency shall establish, implement, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures reasonable designed to, as applicable
[. . .] [c]over, if the covered clearing agency provides central
counterparty services, its credit exposures to its participants by
establishing a risk-based margin system that, at minimum [. . .]
[c]onsiders, and produces margin levels commensurate with, the risks
and particular attributes of each relevant product, portfolio, and
market'' \15\ and ``[m]arks participant positions to market and
collects margin, including variation margin or equivalent charges if
relevant, at least daily and includes the authority and operational
capacity to make intraday margin calls in defined circumstances''.\16\
As set forth above, the amendments to the Procedures would make
clarifying changes to the descriptions of practices for collection of
both Core IM and Additional IM (and the relevant components thereof).
For instance, the amendment clarifies the procedures for determining
and promoting production margin rates based on the autopilot rates
resulting from standard application of the ICE Risk Model. The
amendments would also clarify the process for calculating Additional
IM, as well as monitoring intraday change and making intraday margin
calls as a result of those calculations. In ICE Clear Europe's view,
the amendments are therefore consistent with the requirements of Rule
17Ad-22(e)(6)(i) and (ii).\17\
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\15\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(6)(i).
\16\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(6)(ii).
\17\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(6)(i) and (ii).
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Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(A) and (B) requires that a clearing agency
cover its credit exposures to its participants by establishing a risk-
based margin system that is monitored by management and regularly
reviewed by ``(A) [c]onducting backtests of its margin model at least
once each day using standard predetermined parameters and assumptions''
\18\ and ``(B) [c]onducting a sensitivity analysis of its margin model
and a review of its parameters and assumptions for backtesting on at
least a monthly basis, and considering modifications to ensure the
backtesting practices are appropriate for determining the adequacy of
the covered clearing agency's margin resources''.\19\ As previously
stated, the amendments would make various clarifications and drafting
improvements to the description of the review process for back testing
at both the micro and macro level for margin coverage. The changes also
clarify the periodic review process by the Clearing Risk Department,
relevant committees and other relevant personnel. In ICE Clear Europe's
view, these amendments are therefore consistent with the requirements
of Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(A) and (B).\20\
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\18\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(A).
\19\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(B).
\20\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(A) and (B).
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Rule 17Ad-22(e)(3)(i) provides that ``[e]ach covered clearing
agency shall establish, implement, maintain and enforce written
policies and procedures reasonable designed to, as applicable [. . .]
identify, measure, monitor, and manage the range of risks that arise in
or are borne by the covered clearing agency''.\21\ The amendments to
the Procedures are intended to assist the Clearing House in accurately
monitoring and evaluating its credit risk and collecting appropriate
margin from its Clearing Members accordingly. Moreover, the amendments
would specify the process in reviewing, testing and resizing of the F&O
Guaranty Fund. As a result, the Clearing House would be better able to
manage the risk of losses that may arise from default by F&O Clearing
Members. In ICE Clear Europe's view, the amendments are therefore
consistent with the requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(e)(3)(i).\22\
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\21\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(3)(i).
\22\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(3)(i).
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Rule 17Ad-22(e)(2) provides that ``[e]ach covered clearing agency
shall establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to, as applicable [. . .] [p]rovide for
governance arrangements that are [c]lear and transparent'' \23\ and
``[s]pecify clear and direct lines of responsibility''.\24\ As
discussed, the Procedures would clearly state certain responsibilities
of the Clearing Risk Department and Model Oversight Committee, among
others, in relation to oversight of the Clearing House's practices
regarding margin for F&O products and the F&O Guaranty Fund. In line
with the Clearing House's other policies and procedures, the Procedures
would also describe the responsibilities of the document owner and
appropriate escalation and notification requirements for responding to
exceptions and deviations from the Procedures. In ICE Clear Europe's
view, the amendments to the Procedures are therefore consistent with
the requirements of Rule 17Ad-22(e)(2).\25\
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\23\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(2)(i).
\24\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(2)(v).
\25\ 17 CFR 240.17 Ad-22(e)(2).
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(B) Clearing Agency's Statement on Burden on Competition
ICE Clear Europe does not believe the proposed amendments would
have any impact, or impose any burden, on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act. The amendments
are being adopted to update and clarify the F&O Risk Procedures and
will apply to all F&O Clearing Members. The
[[Page 65218]]
proposed amendments are not expected to materially change the margin
methodology or the resulting margin levels or requirements for F&O
Clearing Members. Similarly, the amendments are not expected to
materially change the F&O Guaranty Fund requirements. Accordingly, ICE
Clear Europe does not believe the amendments would affect the costs of
clearing, the ability to market participants to access clearing, or the
market for clearing services generally. Therefore, ICE Clear Europe
does not believe the proposed rule change imposes any burden on
competition that is inappropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the
Act.
(C) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Proposed Rule Change
Received From Members, Participants or Others
Written comments relating to the proposed amendments have not been
solicited or received by ICE Clear Europe. ICE Clear Europe will notify
the Commission of any written comments received with respect to the
proposed rule change.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become effective pursuant to section
19(b)(3)(A) of the Act \26\ and paragraph (f) of Rule 19b-4 \27\
thereunder. At any time within 60 days of the filing of the proposed
rule change, the Commission summarily may temporarily suspend such rule
change if it appears to the Commission that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors, or
otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
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\26\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A).
\27\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4(f).
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IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act. Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro.shtml) or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
file number SR-ICEEU-2023-023 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Secretary, Securities
and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to file number SR-ICEEU-2023-023. 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 proposed rule change that are
filed with the Commission, and all written communications relating to
the proposed rule change 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 a.m. and 3 p.m. Copies of such filings will also be
available for inspection and copying at the principal office of ICE
Clear Europe and on ICE Clear Europe's website at https://www.theice.com/clear-europe/regulation.
Do not include personal identifiable information in submissions;
you should submit only information that you wish to make available
publicly. We may redact in part or withhold entirely from publication
submitted material that is obscene or subject to copyright protection.
All submissions should refer to File Number SR-ICEEU-2023-023 and
should be submitted on or before October 12, 2023.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\28\
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\28\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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J. Matthew DeLesDernier,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023-20424 Filed 9-20-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P