Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation; Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change by The Options Clearing Corporation Regarding Its Backtesting Framework and To Establish a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge, 61211-61222 [2024-16661]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 146 / Tuesday, July 30, 2024 / Notices
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[Release No. 34–100584; File No. SR–OCC–
2024–009]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Options Clearing Corporation; Notice
of Filing of Proposed Rule Change by
The Options Clearing Corporation
Regarding Its Backtesting Framework
and To Establish a Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge
July 24, 2024.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Exchange Act’’ or ‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule
19b–4 thereunder,2 notice is hereby
given that on July 11, 2024, The Options
Clearing Corporation (‘‘OCC’’) filed with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘SEC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule change as described
in Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared primarily by OCC.
The Commission is publishing this
notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested
persons.
I. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Terms of Substance of the Proposed
Rule Change
This proposed rule change would (i)
amend OCC’s Margin Policy to more
comprehensively describe OCC’s
approach to backtesting, including how
OCC establishes and reviews
assumptions underlying OCC’s
backtesting and criteria for escalating
backtesting results; (ii) provide for a
new category of backtesting designed to
evaluate whether OCC maintains
sufficient margin resources to cover its
credit exposure to the liquidation
portfolio of each Clearing Member from
the last margin collection until the end
of the liquidation horizon following the
default of that Clearing Member with a
high degree of confidence (as defined
below, ‘‘Resource Backtesting’’); (iii)
implement a Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge that OCC would collect
from Clearing Members who experience
Resource Backtesting deficiencies that
bring their margin coverage rates below
a 99% coverage target; and (iv) make
certain conforming changes to other
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1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
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61211
OCC rules to reflect these proposed
changes.
Proposed changes to OCC’s Rules are
contained in Exhibit 5A to File No. SR–
OCC–2024–009. Proposed changes to
OCC’s Margin Policy, Model Risk
Management Policy and STANS
Methodology Description are contained
in confidential Exhibits 5B, 5C, and 5D
to File No. SR–OCC–2024–009,
respectively. Material proposed to be
added is marked by underlining and
material proposed to be deleted is
marked with strikethrough text. All
terms with initial capitalization that are
not otherwise defined herein have the
same meaning as set forth in the OCC
By-Laws and Rules.3
II. Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission,
OCC 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. OCC has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections (A), (B),
and (C) below, of the most significant
aspects of these statements.
(A) Clearing Agency’s Statement of the
Purpose of, and Statutory Basis for, the
Proposed Rule Change
OCC is the sole clearing agency for
standardized equity options listed on
national securities exchanges registered
with the Commission. OCC also clears
certain stock loan and futures
transactions. In its role as a clearing
agency, OCC is the guarantor for all
contracts cleared through OCC; that is,
OCC becomes the buyer to every seller
or the seller to every buyer (or the
lender to every borrower and the
borrower to every lender, in the case of
stock loans). As a central counterparty,
OCC is exposed to credit risk in the
event of the failure of one its members
because OCC is obligated to perform on
the contracts it clears even when one of
its members defaults.
OCC manages this credit risk through
various safeguards to ensure that it has
sufficient financial resources in the
event of a Clearing Member failure. For
example, OCC periodically collects
margin collateral from its Clearing
Members, which is used to cover the
credit exposures they individually
present to OCC. OCC has established a
proprietary system, the System for
3 OCC’s By-Laws and Rules can be found on
OCC’s public website: https://www.theocc.com/
Company-Information/Documents-and-Archives/
By-Laws-and-Rules.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 146 / Tuesday, July 30, 2024 / Notices
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Theoretical Analysis and Numerical
Simulation (‘‘STANS’’), that runs
various models used to calculate margin
requirements, as described in the
STANS Methodology Description.
To monitor whether margin
requirements calculated by STANS are
adequate, OCC compares the margin
derived from its use of the STANS
margin models against the amount it
could have lost if a Clearing Member
had failed (‘‘backtesting’’). OCC relies
on backtesting to evaluate the accuracy
of its margin models by comparing the
calculated margin coverage for each
margin account against the actual profit
and loss on the margined portfolios.
OCC performs backtesting at least once
each day using standard predetermined
parameters and assumptions. While
backtesting does not directly establish
Clearing Members’ margin
requirements, OCC maintains broad
authority under its rules to collect
additional margin if OCC identifies
issues with its margin coverage.4 In
addition, backtesting may reveal
opportunities to enhance OCC’s credit
risk management and margin
methodology or to adjust model
parameters.
This proposed rule change would
make three enhancements to OCC’s
backtesting framework. First, OCC
proposes to amend its rule-filed Margin
Policy to comprehensively describe
material aspects of its backtesting
framework. As a self-regulatory
organization, OCC is subject to
requirements to submit filings with its
regulators in connection with changes to
its rules, which include material aspects
of the facilities of OCC. OCC has filed
as rules certain frameworks and policies
that describe OCC’s approach for credit
risk management, including OCC’s
Margin Policy. Specifically, the Margin
Policy establishes a process for ongoing
monitoring, review, testing and
verification of OCC’s risk-based margin
system, including by requiring OCC to
conduct daily backtesting, conduct
analysis of exceedances, and report
results at least monthly through OCC’s
4 See OCC Rule 601(c) (‘‘Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Rule 601, [OCC] may fix the
margin requirement for an account or any class of
cleared contracts at such amount as it deems
necessary or appropriate under the circumstances to
protect the respective interests of Clearing
Members, [OCC], and the public.’’); OCC Rule
609(a) (providing OCC’s authority to issue intra-day
margin calls to protect OCC, other Clearing
Members and the general public, among other
reasons); see also OCC Rule 307C (authorizing OCC
to impose protective measures, including to ‘‘adjust
the amount or composition of margin’’ when, under
Rule 307, a Clearing Member ‘‘presents increased
credit or liquidity risk to OCC,’’ among other
reasons).
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governance process,5 as required by SEC
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi).6 However, the
Margin Policy does not currently
provide detail concerning (i) how OCC
establishes and modifies its
assumptions for backtesting; or (ii) how
OCC establishes and reviews criteria
and thresholds for escalating backtesting
results and reviews of backtesting
assumptions to appropriate
decisionmakers. This proposal would
amend the Margin Policy to provide
further detail about those aspects of
OCC’s backtesting framework, as well as
a more comprehensive description of
the different types of backtesting OCC
performs and their respective purposes.
Second, OCC is proposing to add
another category of backtesting to its
backtesting framework. OCC’s current
backtesting assesses whether OCC’s
margin model achieves a 99% coverage
rate for each marginable account, which
is the level at which OCC’s models
calculate margin requirements.7
However, under OCC’s By-Laws and
Rules,8 each Clearing Member may have
multiple marginable accounts on which
OCC maintains different liens designed
to facilitate Clearing Members’
compliance with the SEC’s customer
protection regime.9 Accordingly, in
order to conduct backtesting at the level
of each Clearing Member Organization,
OCC proposes to amend the Margin
Policy to add Resource Backtesting, as
defined below, as a separate category of
backtesting within OCC’s backtesting
framework to assess the adequacy of
OCC’s margin resources to cover its
credit exposure at the Clearing Member
level. OCC has designed its Resource
Backtesting to assess whether OCC
maintains sufficient margin resources,
among other prefunded financial
resources,10 to cover its credit exposure
5 See Exchange Act Release No. 82658 (Feb. 7,
2018), 83 FR 6646, 6649 (Feb. 14, 2018) (SR–OCC–
2017–007) (Commission order approving OCC’s
Margin Policy, inclusive of its provision for
backtesting of each margin account).
6 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi).
7 See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra note
5, 83 FR at 6647.
8 See OCC By-Laws, Art. VI, Sec. 3 (providing for
the various accounts and their respective lien
structures).
9 See, e.g., 17 CFR 240.15c3–3(e) (providing for
the reserve formula used in calculating the amounts
of funds a clearing member is required to deposit
in a special reserve bank account for the exclusive
benefit of customers, including a debit for ‘‘[m]argin
required and on deposit with [OCC] for all option
contracts written or purchased in customer
accounts’’).
10 Such other prefunded financial resources
include, in order of contribution within OCC’s
default waterfall: (i) the Clearing Fund deposit of
the defaulting Clearing Member, which would be at
least $500,000; (ii) OCC’s skin-in-the-game in the
form of OCC’s Minimum Corporate Contribution
and its liquid net assets funded by equity in excess
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to each participant fully with a high
degree of confidence, consistent with
SEC Rule 17Ad–22(e)(4)(i).11
Specifically, Resource Backtesting
would test whether the liquidation
portfolio of each Clearing Member from
the last margin collection until the end
of the liquidation horizon following the
Clearing Member’s default achieves a
99% coverage rate, in line with the
coverage standard for the current
backtesting of OCC’s margin models.
Third, OCC proposes to amend its
rules to establish a margin add-on that
OCC would charge a Clearing Member if
Resource Backtesting coverage for that
Clearing Member falls below 99%
(‘‘Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge’’). Accordingly, OCC’s new
backtesting framework would impact
the total margin collected from certain
Clearing Members depending on the
performance of OCC’s margin models
and the activity those members clear
through OCC. As discussed further
below, OCC believes that the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge would help
OCC ensure it collects margin sufficient
to cover its potential future exposure to
participants in the interval between the
last margin collection and the close out
of positions following a participant
default, consistent with SEC Rule
17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).12
In connection with these three
backtesting enhancements, OCC would
also make certain conforming changes to
the Model Risk Management Policy and
STANS Methodology Description to
reflect changes in defined terms
associated with backtesting and changes
to the underlying procedures.
(1) Purpose
Background
Backtesting Procedures
STANS is OCC’s proprietary risk
management system for calculating
Clearing Member margin
requirements.13 The STANS
of 110% of its Target Capital Requirement (which,
as of December 31, 2023, was more than $130
million); and (iii) the Clearing Fund deposits of
non-defaulting Clearing Members (as of December
31, 2023, the Clearing Fund was more than $16.7
billion) and the EDCP Unvested Balance (i.e., the
unvested funds held in respect of OCC’s Executive
Deferred Compensation Plan Trust that OCC would
be charged on a proportionate basis with the
Clearing Fund deposits of non-defaulting Clearing
Members).
11 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(4)(i).
12 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).
13 See Exchange Act Release No. 91079 (Feb. 8,
2021), 86 FR 9410 (Feb. 12, 2021) (File No. SR–
OCC–2020–016). OCC makes its STANS
Methodology Description available to Clearing
Members. An overview of the STANS methodology
is on OCC’s public website: https://
www.theocc.com/Risk-Management/MarginMethodology.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 146 / Tuesday, July 30, 2024 / Notices
methodology utilizes large-scale Monte
Carlo simulations to forecast price and
volatility movements in determining a
Clearing Member’s margin
requirement.14 OCC has conducted
daily backtesting of margin accounts
subject to STANS margining since 2006.
In 2014, OCC filed proposed changes
to its backtesting procedures.15 Among
other things, the changes included: (1)
the addition of certain industrystandard statistical tests, including the
Kupiec Test 16 and Christoffersen
Independence Test; 17 (2) backtesting of
hypothetical portfolios (which OCC
currently refers to as ‘‘Model
Backtesting’’), in addition to actual
portfolios (which OCC currently refers
to as ‘‘Business Backtesting’’), to
provide more comprehensive insight
into the adequacy of the underlying
model assumptions under market
conditions prevailing in the backtesting
observation periods, as well as stressed
market conditions; (3) adjustments to
the forecasted horizon used for
backtesting to better reflect the two-day
liquidation period (OCC’s margin period
of risk or ‘‘MPOR’’) used in margin
calculations and to provide OCC with a
more accurate view of the sufficiency of
its margin methodology; and (4) system
changes to give OCC’s backtesting staff
additional tools to help identify the root
cause of backtesting exceedances. The
Commission issued a notice of no
objection with respect to those proposed
changes.18
OCC currently maintains its Model
Backtesting and Business Backtesting
procedures in internal OCC procedures
and technical documents. Among other
things, those procedures address data
acquisition, application of statistical
tests, analyses initiated to address root
causes of exceedances, reporting of
results, annual methodology reviews,
and issue escalation. The technical
documents are similar in nature to the
14 See
OCC Rule 601.
Exchange Act Release No. 73749 (Dec. 5,
2014), 79 FR 73673 (Dec. 11, 2014) (SR–OCC–2014–
810).
16 The Kupiec Test is a proportion of failures test
that compares the actual number of exceedances
with the number that would be expected in light of
the confidence level associated with the calculation
of margin. See Kupiec, P. ‘‘Techniques for Verifying
the Accuracy of Risk Management Models,’’ Journal
of Derivatives, v3, P73–84. (1995).
17 The Christoffersen Independence Test
measures the extent to which exceedances are
independent of each other. See Christoffersen, P.
‘‘Evaluating Interval Forecasts.’’ International
Economic Review, 39 (4), 841–862 (1998).
18 See Exchange Act Release No. 75290 (June 24,
2015), 80 FR 37323 (June 30, 2015) (SR–OCC–2014–
810).
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15 See
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margin model whitepapers that support
OCC’s STANS methodology.19
Backtesting Framework
In addition to the procedural
documents noted above, OCC considers
its backtesting framework to include its
Margin Policy, among other rule-filed
documents established after OCC last
filed changes to its backtesting
procedures.20 The Margin Policy
provides that OCC’s Financial Risk
Management Department (‘‘FRM’’)
continually evaluates the effectiveness
of its margin models through daily
backtesting of each margin account as
provided in the Business Backtesting
Procedure, analyzing in detail all
accounts exhibiting losses in excess of
calculated margin requirements.21 The
Margin Policy further directs OCC’s
Quantitative Risk Management business
unit (‘‘QRM’’) to design backtests to
focus on: (i) satisfying OCC’s regulatory
obligations; (ii) identifying potential
opportunities to improve the margin
methodology; and (iii) identifying
trends in exceedances that may be
indicative of behavioral changes by
market participants. In addition, the
Margin Policy directs QRM to design
backtests to find potential opportunities
to improve OCC’s risk-assessment
processes, noting that problems may
arise from both technical and modelrelated issues. With respect to the
former, the Margin Policy notes that
technical issues may arise from
corporate actions and special dividends,
for example. The Margin Policy
provides that FRM performs Business
Backtesting to measure whether the
losses observed for a constant set of
positions over OCC’s MPOR were in
19 As described in the rule filing establishing the
STANS Methodology Description, the whitepapers
describe how the various quantitative components
of STANS were developed and operate, including
the various parameters and assumptions contained
within those components and the mathematical
theories underlying the selection of those
quantitative methods. See Exchange Act Release
No. 91079, supra note 13, 80 FR at 9410 n.5 and
accompanying text. The model whitepapers are not
filed as rules of OCC.
20 For example, the rule-filed STANS
Methodology Description describes ongoing model
performance monitoring and backtesting in that
document’s executive summary, noting that further
detail on such model monitoring activity is found
in the Margin Policy and the Model Risk
Management Policy. See Exchange Act Release No.
90763 (Dec. 21, 2020), 85 FR 85788, 85790 n. 18
and accompanying text (Dec. 29, 2020) (SR–OCC–
2020–016). In addition, the Model Risk
Management Policy provides that margin models
will be monitored ‘‘according to the Model
Backtesting Procedure [and] Business Backtesting
Procedure,’’ among other procedures. See Exchange
Act Release No. 82473 (Jan. 9, 2018), 83 FR 2271,
2273 (Jan. 16, 2018) (SR–OCC–2017–011).
21 See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra
note 5, 83 FR at 6648.
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61213
excess of the total risk charges (i.e.,
aggregate of expected shortfall, stress
test charges and add-on charges)
required for the account. The Margin
Policy directs FRM to classify any
observation in which losses are in
excess as an exceedance.
While the Margin Policy contemplates
that backtesting results and analyses of
backtesting assumptions may require
escalation, it does not provide for
established escalation criteria or
thresholds. The absence of specific
guidance, thresholds or criteria for
escalation could lead to inconsistencies
in the escalation of similar backtesting
exceedances. For example, the Margin
Policy currently directs QRM to report
identified problems and overall
performance to FRM and the Model Risk
Working Group (‘‘MRWG’’),22 and that
the MRWG determines ‘‘whether the
results require escalation’’ to the
Management Committee. The Margin
Policy further provides that QRM
presents MRWG monthly reporting, or
more frequently when determined by
MRWG, and quarterly reporting that
accumulate daily backtesting results and
detailed descriptions of the accounts
that have incurred exceedances, trends
and causes of the exceedances. As with
the escalation of identified problems
and overall performance, the Margin
Policy directs QRM to provide notable
results from these reviews to the Chief
Financial Risk Officer (i.e., the head of
FRM) and MRWG, and that MRWG
determines whether ‘‘escalation is
warranted’’ to the Management
Committee, which may determine what
remedial actions may be taken.23 In
addition, the Margin Policy provides for
a monthly review of the parameters and
assumptions for Business Backtesting,
the results of which are reported to the
MRWG to discuss and escalate issues
‘‘as necessary.’’ 24
22 The MRWG is a cross-functional group
responsible for assisting OCC’s management in
overseeing OCC’s model-related risk comprised of
representatives from relevant OCC business units
including Quantitative Risk Management, Model
Risk Management, and Corporate Risk Management.
23 Remedial actions could take various forms
including, but not limited to, margin add-on
charges to account for risk that may not be captured
appropriately by OCC’s margin models, adjustments
to model parameters, or other changes to OCC’s
margin models or margin methodology, subject to
any necessary approvals by OCC’s Risk Committee,
Board of Directors, and regulators.
24 See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra
note 5, 83 FR at 6647 (discussing how the
backtesting results are ‘‘reported to [the MRWG]
and may be escalated to OCC’s Management
Committee’’).
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Proposed Changes
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(i) Backtesting Framework
OCC is proposing amendments to its
Margin Policy to describe more
comprehensively its approach to
backtesting, including OCC’s:
• backtesting framework, which
includes (i) the purpose and scope of
the backtesting OCC performs and (ii)
the assumptions underlying OCC’s
backtesting and the process for
reviewing and modifying those
assumptions; and
• backtesting reporting, including
how OCC establishes and reviews
criteria for escalating exceedances.
Specifically, OCC would replace the
first two paragraphs of the section of the
Margin Policy that concerns margin
monitoring, which currently address
OCC’s Business Backtesting, and a
subsection that concerns backtesting
reporting, with two new subsections:
one that more comprehensively
describes OCC’s backtesting framework
and another that describes backtesting
reporting, as described below. The
current third paragraph of that section,
which concerns the monthly review of
margin model parameters and
sensitivity analyses of the margin
model, would be relocated to its own
subsection below the new subsection on
backtesting reporting with certain edits
discussed below related to the review of
backtesting assumptions and the
conditions for more frequent review.
Purpose and Scope of Model
Backtesting
With respect to OCC’s current
backtesting processes, the new
backtesting framework subsection in the
Margin Policy would provide that FRM
will continue to conduct daily
backtesting of actual and hypothetical
portfolios to evaluate the performance of
its margin methodology, as it does
today. OCC would refer to such
backtesting as ‘‘Model Backtesting,’’
which would distinguish such
backtesting from the proposed Resource
Backtesting discussed below. As such,
Model Backtesting under the proposed
amendments would encompass what
OCC currently refers to as ‘‘Business
Backtesting’’ (i.e., backtesting of its
margin model performance using actual
portfolios) and ‘‘Model Backtesting’’
(i.e., backtesting of its margin model
performance using hypothetical
portfolios). With respect to the latter,
the Margin Policy would explain that
FRM conducts Model Backtesting of
hypothetical portfolios to target specific
aspects of the models that may be
masked by the backtesting of actual
portfolios because margin accounts may
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have thousands of positions in many
diverse products. With respect to the
former, the Margin Policy would
explain that OCC conducts Model
Backtesting of actual portfolios to
determine whether the losses observed
for a constant set of positions over
OCC’s liquidation horizon were in
excess of margin requirements
forecasted by OCC’s margin
methodology for each margin account.
This description aligns with OCC’s
current Business Backtesting practices.
Accordingly, OCC would continue to
conduct Model Backtesting at the level
of each marginable account, which is
the level at which OCC calculates
margin requirements. As the Margin
Policy would explain, OCC conducts
Model Backtesting at this level because
Model Backtesting exceedances
potentially indicate issues that could be
actively impacting OCC’s margin
requirements for the margin accounts. In
addition, backtesting at this level is
consistent with OCC’s obligations in its
capacity as a derivatives clearing
organization (‘‘DCO’’) registered with
the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.25
The Margin Policy would further
provide that FRM conducts Model
Backtesting, as it does today, to evaluate
whether margin requirements forecasted
by OCC’s margin methodology are
sufficient to cover the realized loss of a
portfolio at the maximum exposure
estimated to occur at the end of the
liquidation period with an established
single-tailed confidence level of at least
99 percent with respect to the estimated
distribution of future exposure—the
coverage standard identified in SEC
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).26 This is the
regulatory standard that OCC’s current
Business Backtesting was designed to
evaluate. The Margin Policy would also
provide that FRM will classify as an
‘‘exceedance’’ a daily outcome in which
the loss in portfolio value over the
applicable time horizon is larger in
magnitude than what the STANS model
predicted. In addition, the Margin
Policy would explain that Model
Backtesting is limited to those
components of margin requirements that
capture changes in market risk factors
when assessing OCC’s compliance with
SEC Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).27
OCC would continue to exclude
collateral from Model Backtesting that is
not modeled by STANS (commonly
referred to as ‘‘non-Collateral in
25 See 17 CFR 39.13(g)(7)(i)(C) (requiring a DCO
to conduct daily backtests for ‘‘each account’’ held
by a clearing member at the DCO).
26 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).
27 Id.
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Margin’’ or ‘‘non-CiM’’ collateral),28 or
that does not capture changes in market
risk factors. OCC’s current backtesting
analyses are not designed to assess the
sufficiency of non-CiM collateral, which
OCC values instead using the more
traditional method of fixed collateral
haircuts.29 This limitation reflects that
backtesting’s purpose is to assess the
performance of OCC’s margin models in
calculating margin requirements,30 as
opposed to the performance of other
aspects of OCC’s credit risk
management. As such, Model
Backtesting would continue to exclude
collateral that is valued using collateral
haircuts outside of the STANS margin
methodology. In addition, the particular
Model Backtesting analysis used to
assess OCC’s compliance with SEC Rule
17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii) 31 would exclude
certain add-on charges that are not tied
to changes in market risk factors.32
However, as discussed below, Resource
Backtesting would take into account
non-CiM collateral and the margin
collected through add-on charges not
related to market risk when assessing
the sufficiency of the financial resources
OCC collects from each Clearing
Member. In addition, as discussed
below, OCC may maintain variations of
Model Backtesting for diagnostic or
informational purposes that include
such add-ons.
Backtesting Assumptions
The proposed backtesting framework
subsection to the Margin Policy would
28 Following the implementation of STANS in
2006, OCC filed and the Commission approved a
proposed rule change to include equity securities
deposited by Clearing Members to satisfy margin
requirements in STANS margin calculations,
referred to as ‘‘Collateral in Margin’’ or ‘‘CiM.’’ See
Exchange Act Release No. 58158 (July 15, 2008), 73
FR 42646, 42646–47 (SR–OCC–2007–020). OCC
implemented CiM, in part, to incentivize Clearing
Members to deposit risk reducing assets and to
better risk manage collateral deposits using the
more sophisticated STANS treatment versus a fixed
haircut rate.
29 See, e.g., Exchange Act Release No. 98101
(Aug. 10, 2023), 88 FR 55775 (Aug. 16, 2023) (SR–
OCC–2022–012) (approving OCC’s proceduresbased approach for setting and adjusting fixed
haircuts for Government securities and GSE debt
securities deposited by Clearing Members).
30 See Standards for Covered Clearing Agencies,
Exchange Act Release No. 78961 (Sept. 28, 2016),
81 FR 70786, 70819 (Oct. 13, 2016) (S7–03–14)
(‘‘[B]acktests are conducted with respect to the
margin model and not the margin resources
themselves.’’); 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(a)
‘‘Backtesting’’ (‘‘Backtesting means an ex-post
comparison of actual outcomes with expected
outcomes derived from the use of margin models.’’).
31 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).
32 For example, OCC may collect additional
margin from a Clearing Member as a protective
measure under Rule 307 when OCC determines that
the Clearing Member’s operational or financial
condition presents elevated risk to OCC, other
Clearing Members, and the public.
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also provide that FRM maintains
assumptions used in backtesting in its
internal procedures. The existence of
backtesting assumptions may be
inferred from OCC’s existing Margin
Policy, which provides for their review.
However, the Margin Policy does not
currently identify the categories of
relevant assumptions, provide for how
they are established or modified, or
explain how assumptions may differ
across different types of backtesting
depending on the purpose of those
backtesting variants. The amended
Margin Policy would provide that the
assumptions include, but are not limited
to, the timing of default, liquidation
horizon, available resources, lookback
period, backtesting portfolio, and the
confidence level of the tests used to
evaluate the statistical significance of an
exceedance rate.33
In addition, the Margin Policy would
explain that OCC may provide for
backtesting variations for reporting,
diagnostic and informational purposes,
each of which may have different
assumptions based on the purpose of
the backtesting variant. For example,
OCC plans to report Model Backtesting
results for actual portfolios in
connection with OCC’s quantitative
disclosures under the Principles for
Financial Market Infrastructures
(‘‘PFMI’’)—which OCC discloses in
compliance with SEC Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(23)—because such Model
Backtesting at the margin account level
aligns with the guidance for such
disclosures.34
The Margin Policy would further
provide that changes to these
backtesting assumptions would require
escalation by MRWG and OCC’s
Management Committee, with ultimate
approval by the Risk Committee. These
assumptions relate to foundational
aspects of OCC’s margin methodology
that may be tied to specific regulatory
requirements 35 or modification of
33 As addressed in OCC’s prior advance notice,
OCC employs the Kupiec Test and the
Christoffersen Independence Test to evaluate
whether the exceedance rate is larger than the
expected value. See supra notes 16–17 and
accompanying text.
34 See Committee on Payments and Market
Infrastructures & Board of the International
Organization of Securities Commissions (‘‘CPMI–
IOSCO’’), Public quantitative disclosure standards
for central counterparties, at 7 (Feb. 2015),
available at https://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/
d125.pdf (providing guidance on disclosure 6.5
with respect to initial margin backtesting results for
margin accounts).
35 For example, with respect to the confidence
interval, SEC Rules require that OCC’s risk-based
margin system must be designed to calculate margin
sufficient to cover the maximum exposure
estimated to occur in the internal between the last
margin collection and the close out of positions
following a participant default with an established
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which may require proposed rule
changes.36 Accordingly, Board-level
approval by the Risk Committee would
be required to approve any necessary
regulatory filing to modify OCC’s
margin methodology. The Margin Policy
would further require that FRM would
prepare and present to MRWG a review
of the backtesting assumptions more
frequently than monthly in the event of
triggers related to high market volatility,
low market liquidity, and significant
increases or decreases in position size or
concentration risk (as has been
proposed to be defined in the Margin
Policy, ‘‘CCA Monitoring
Thresholds’’),37 as contemplated by
regulation.38
The Margin Policy would further
provide that FRM’s written procedures
may include other triggers for
evaluation of backtesting assumptions.
OCC expects that one of the triggers it
would establish under this rule would
be the implementation of changes to
OCC’s margin methodology that may
affect backtesting assumptions. For
example, if MRWG were to approve a
change to OCC’s margin methodology in
the form of a new margin add-on charge
that was implemented following
approval by the Risk Committee and any
necessary regulatory filing, MRWG
would review the backtesting
assumptions and associated triggers to
determine whether that add-on charge
should be included in the portfolio
composition assumption across OCC’s
backtesting variants, depending on their
respective purposes.
The Margin Policy would further
provide that changes to the triggers for
backtesting assumption reviews must be
single-tailed confidence level of at least 99 percent
with respect to the estimated distribution of future
exposure. See 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(a) ‘‘Potential
future exposure’’, (e)(6)(iii).
36 For example, OCC’s rule-filed Margin Policy
codifies OCC’s two-day MPOR assumption. See
Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra note 5, 83
FR at 6647–6648 (describing the Margin Policy
discussion of OCC’s two-day risk horizon).
37 See Exchange Act Release No. 99393 (Jan. 19,
2024), 89 FR 5062, 5066 (Jan. 25, 2024) (SR–OCC–
2024–001). These thresholds are currently provided
in procedures under OCC’s Clearing Fund
Methodology Policy with respect to the stress
testing analyses that breaches of those thresholds
would trigger. See Exchange Act Release No. 83406
(June 11, 2018), 83 FR 28018, 28026 (June 15, 2018)
(SR–OCC–2018–008) (‘‘The [Clearing Fund
Methodology] Policy would require that OCC
maintain procedures for determining whether, and
in what circumstances, such intra-month reviews
shall be conducted, and would indicate the persons
responsible for making the determination.’’).
Pursuant to those procedures, OCC’s Stress Test and
Liquidity Risk Management (‘‘STLRM’’) business
unit currently monitors market activity against
these thresholds, which are approved by OCC’s
Stress Test Working Group (‘‘STWG’’) and the
MRWG.
38 See 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(C).
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approved by MRWG. This is already
true with respect to the CCA Monitoring
Thresholds that trigger backtesting
assumption reviews, changes to which
must be approved by the MRWG and the
STWG.39 In addition, MRWG approval
would be required to change any other
thresholds MRWG believes would be
appropriate for triggering a review of
backtesting assumptions. In the case of
other triggers for backtesting
assumptions, OCC believes that MRWG
is the appropriate governing body to
establish triggers that go beyond those
prescribed by regulation because as
between MRWG and STWG, MRWG is
the internal governing body tasked with
of its oversight of model risk related to
margin models.
Backtesting Reporting
As discussed above, the purpose of
the proposed Model Backtesting is to
provide OCC decisionmakers with
timely information about OCC’s margin
coverage and potential opportunities to
enhance OCC’s credit risk management
or margin methodology, or to adjust
model parameters. Currently, the
Margin Policy provides for monthly
reviews to MRWG. In addition, the
Margin Policy directs QRM to identify
and report problems and overall
performance to MRWG, which then in
turn determines whether to escalate the
issue to the Management Committee.
OCC proposes to replace the current
subsection that addresses reporting of
backtesting results with a new
subsection that more clearly provides
that OCC maintains criteria for
escalating backtesting results to relevant
decisionmakers.
Specifically, the new subsection
would provide that FRM will maintain
escalation criteria for backtesting
exceedances according to which FRM
will, if met, escalate exceedance
information to the MRWG, Management
Committee, or Risk Committee, as
applicable. Accordingly, the procedures
may provide for escalations to different
governing bodies depending on the
nature of the exceedances or issues such
exceedances may evidence.40 The
Margin Policy would provide that such
required escalation criteria would
include, but are not limited to: (i)
thresholds related to the size and
number of exceedances for Model
Backtesting of actual portfolios, (ii)
thresholds related to statistical tests
39 See
supra note 37.
the proposed change contemplates and
allows for a tiered escalation approach, OCC
anticipates that the escalation criteria it would
initially implement would require escalation to
each of the MRWG, Management Committee and
Risk Committee when the criteria are met.
40 While
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applicable to Model Backtesting of
hypothetical portfolios; and (iii)
thresholds related to the size of an
individual Clearing Member’s Resource
Backtesting deficiency and the coverage
rate across all Clearing Members in the
aggregate. For example, OCC anticipates
that such escalation criteria for Model
Backtesting of actual portfolios would
include an exceedance that is equal to
or larger than 50% of the applicable
Clearing Member’s Clearing Fund
contribution.41 With respect to Model
Backtesting of hypothetical portfolios,
escalation criteria would include
criteria for escalation of results based on
the Kupiec Test and Christoffersen Tests
(e.g., for the Kupiec Test, when the
coverage rate of instruments in a
category of instruments falls below 99%
with statistical significance of 90% 42).
Outside of the escalation of
backtesting exceedances that meet the
escalation criteria, the Margin Policy
would continue to provide for a review
of all backtesting exceedances or
deficiencies on an at-least monthly
basis. Specifically, the subsection on
backtesting reporting would provide
that at least monthly, FRM will provide
the MRWG a detailed analysis of any
Model Backtesting exceedances or
Resource Backtesting deficiencies, and a
review of the backtesting assumptions.
In addition, the Margin Policy would
provide that FRM will prepare a review
of assumptions for backtesting more
frequently than monthly when the CCA
Monitoring Thresholds, as discussed
above, are breached. In addition to the
CCA Monitoring Thresholds, the Margin
Policy would provide that the
Backtesting Procedure may identify
other triggers that, if met, would require
FRM to prepare and present to MRWG
a review of assumptions for backtesting,
including, but not limited to,
implementation of rule changes to
OCC’s margin methodology that may
affect backtesting assumptions. Changes
to the triggers for review of backtesting
assumptions must be approved by
MRWG.
The Margin Policy would also provide
that QRM conducts an annual review of
OCC’s backtesting framework, including
QRM’s recommendations regarding
whether OCC should change any of the
41 OCC does not intend this example to be a
statement that establishes or changes any standard,
limit or guideline with respect to the rights,
obligations, or privileges of specified persons or the
meaning, administration, or enforcement of an
existing rule.
42 OCC does not intend this example to be a
statement that establishes or changes any standard,
limit or guideline with respect to the rights,
obligations, or privileges of specified persons or the
meaning, administration, or enforcement of an
existing rule.
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backtesting assumptions and
exceedance escalation criteria. With
respect to the escalation criteria, the
Margin Policy would provide that
changes to the escalation criteria must
be approved by the governing body to
which the escalation must be made. For
example, changes to the criteria for
escalating exceedances to the Risk
Committee must be approved by the
Risk Committee.43 With respect to any
proposed changes to the backtesting
assumptions, the Margin Policy would
provide that the MRWG would evaluate
the results of the annual review and
escalate any recommended changes to
the backtesting framework, including
any recommended changes to the
backtesting assumptions, to the
Management Committee for
consideration. The Management
Committee, in turn, would report the
results of the annual review to the Risk
Committee, including any changes it
believes should be made to OCC’s
backtesting assumptions, which the Risk
Committee would be authorized to
approve for implementation. As part of
this annual review process, MRWG, the
Management Committee and the Risk
Committee would also be authorized to
approve changes to the escalation
criteria applicable to each governing
body, as discussed above. OCC believes
these changes would provide greater
clarity concerning the escalation of
backtesting exceedances to appropriate
OCC decisionmakers.
(ii) Resource Backtesting
In addition to formalizing its Model
Backtesting in the Margin Policy, OCC
proposes to enhance its backtesting
framework by establishing Resource
Backtesting designed to evaluate
whether OCC maintains sufficient
financial resources to cover its credit
exposure to the liquidation portfolio of
each Clearing Member following the
default of that Clearing Member until
the end of the liquidation horizon with
a high degree of confidence. OCC would
conduct Resource Backtesting using
actual portfolios at the Clearing Member
level. Accordingly, while Model
Backtesting is conducted at the account
43 Because OCC anticipates that the initial
escalation criteria it would adopt under this
proposal would require escalation to each of the
MRWG, Management Committee and Risk
Committee, all such escalation criteria will require
Risk Committee approval to change. See supra note
40. Should the MRWG or Management Committee
adopt more sensitive escalation criteria for
themselves, any change to the criteria for escalating
to the Risk Committee would continue to require
Risk Committee approval while the escalation
criteria for the MRWG and Management Committee
would be subject to approval by the MRWG or
Management Committee, respectively.
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level at which margin requirements are
calculated under the STANS
methodology, Resource Backtesting
would consider OCC’s credit exposure
to a Clearing Member across that
member’s marginable accounts.
Backtesting at the Clearing Member
level would not be as simple as
aggregating profit and loss (‘‘P&L’’) and
margin resources across each
marginable account maintained by a
Clearing Member because OCC’s ByLaws and Rules provide OCC with
different types of liens over different
types of accounts. For example, a
surplus in a securities customer
account, for which OCC maintains a
restricted lien, may not be used to offset
a loss in the member’s firm account.44
In contrast, a surplus in the member’s
firm account, for which OCC maintains
a general lien, could be used to offset
losses in any of the member’s other
accounts.45 OCC would consider the
liens on a particular account when
netting deficits and surpluses across
account types to ensure that surpluses
in an account over which OCC
maintains a restricted lien do not offset
losses in another account for purposes
of assessing the sufficiency of OCC’s
financial resources to cover the default
of a Clearing Member.
Resource Backtesting would also take
into account the value of other margin
resources collected from a Clearing
Member available to address default
losses, including non-CiM margin
collateral and certain margin add-ons.
Conversely, OCC would exclude the
Clearing Fund deposit of the applicable
Clearing Member as a prefunded
financial resource of that Clearing
Member under Resource Backtesting.46
44 See
By-Law Art. VI § 3(e).
e.g., OCC Rule 1104(e) (clarifying, for the
avoidance of doubt, that margin assets in a firm lien
account may be applied to cover losses in a
segregated futures account).
46 OCC considered including, but ultimately
determined not to include a Clearing Member’s
Clearing Fund deposit as a financial resource for
that Clearing Member in Resource Backtesting. The
Clearing Fund deposit of a defaulting Clearing
Member is a prefunded financial resource that OCC
would use to cover any loss prior to charging other
resources in the default waterfall, including OCC’s
skin-in-the-game or the mutualized Clearing Fund
deposits of non-defaulting Clearing Members. See
OCC Rule 1006(b). Each Clearing Member’s Clearing
Fund deposit is comprised of a $500,000 minimum
deposit and a variable component that is currently
allocated to each Clearing Member based
predominately on each Clearing Member’s margin
requirement. See OCC Rule 1003. Based on 2023
historic data, each Clearing Member would be
above the 99% coverage target if the Clearing Fund
deposit of that Clearing Member was included as a
resource for Resource Backtesting. However,
concerns were raised about including such
resources in Resource Backtesting because the
Clearing Fund, in the aggregate, is sized using
stressed exposures. Accordingly, OCC is proposing
to limit Resource Backtesting to margin resources.
45 See,
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In addition, such margin resources
would be limited to required resources,
and would therefore exclude any margin
collateral held by OCC in excess of a
Clearing Member’s required margin.47
As discussed above, these details about
the composition of the Resource
Backtesting portfolios would be
backtesting assumptions that the Margin
Policy would require FRM to document
in its procedures.
In addition, while Model Backtesting
assesses the performance of OCC’s
margin models in calculating margin
requirements by evaluating P&L for a
constant portfolio, Resource Backtesting
would be designed to determine
whether the liquidating value of a
Clearing Member’s portfolios was
positive or negative at the end of OCC’s
liquidation horizon. Accordingly,
Resource Backtesting would take into
account observed intraday position
changes from the time of the last good
margin collection until the assumed
point of default.
OCC would assess Resource
Backtesting with the expectation that
exceedances of financial resources
would be no more than one percent in
the lookback period for each Clearing
Member (i.e., 99% coverage). To
distinguish between Model Resource
exceedances, OCC would use the term
‘‘deficiency’’ with respect to Resource
Backtesting, which would result when
the prefunded financial resources
collected from the Clearing Member
Organization (‘‘CMO’’) would have been
insufficient to cover the potential loss if
the CMO had defaulted. That is, OCC
would classify a result as a Resource
Backtesting deficiency when the
liquidating value of the CMO’s
portfolios is negative.
OCC would integrate Resource
Backtesting into the Margin Policy’s
discussion of the backtesting framework
and backtesting reporting. The purpose
and scope of Resource Backtesting, as
described above, would be added to the
backtesting framework subsection. In
addition, the Margin Policy would
provide that FRM will maintain
requirements with respect to backtesting
assumptions, monthly backtesting
reviews, and escalation criteria for
Resource Backtesting deficiencies, and
the same governance relating to review
and changes to assumptions and
escalation criteria for Model Backtesting
would apply to Resource Backtesting.
With respect to escalation criteria for
Resource Backtesting deficiencies, the
47 Because a Clearing Member is entitled to
withdraw excess collateral, limiting Resource
Backtesting to required resources addresses
concerns that a Clearing Member may withdraw any
excess collateral just prior to its default.
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Margin Policy would provide that FRM
will maintain written procedures that
establish criteria including, but not
limited to, thresholds related to the size
of a Resource Backtesting deficiency
and the coverage rate across all Clearing
Members in the aggregate. For example,
OCC anticipates establishing criteria
under this rule to escalate when the
aggregate cover rate across all Clearing
Members (including any Resource
Backtesting Margin Charges then in
effect as a resource) falls below 99%.48
As another example, OCC anticipates
establishing a threshold for any verified
Resource Backtesting deficiency that
exceeds the lesser of (i) 50% of the
Clearing Member’s individual Clearing
Fund contribution, or, (ii) in the case of
Clearing Members whose Clearing Fund
contributions are in excess of $200
million, $100 million.49
(iii) Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
Based on OCC’s analysis of Resource
Backtesting results using the proposed
methodology described above, OCC has
observed that the Resource Backtesting
for some Clearing Members falls below
a 99% coverage threshold 50 (i.e., greater
than two Resource Backtesting
deficiency days in a rolling 12-month
period).51 Specifically, based on 2023
historical data, approximately 25% of
Clearing Members would have fallen
below the Resource Backtesting
coverage target.52 The size of the thirdlargest deficiencies ranged from a few
hundred dollars to an outlier of $35
million, with the majority below
$100,000 and all but a few below $1
million. Collectively, the amounts
represent less than 0.1% on average of
the aggregate margin OCC collects. In
order to ensure that OCC’s margin
resources, among other prefunded
financial resources,53 are sufficient to
cover the 99% coverage target, OCC
proposes to establish a Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge. OCC notes
that other covered clearing agencies
48 OCC does not intend this example to be a
statement that establishes or changes any standard,
limit or guideline with respect to the rights,
obligations, or privileges of specified persons or the
meaning, administration, or enforcement of an
existing rule.
49 OCC does not intend this example to be a
statement that establishes or changes any standard,
limit or guideline with respect to the rights,
obligations, or privileges of specified persons or the
meaning, administration, or enforcement of an
existing rule.
50 OCC has included 2023 results of the proposed
Resource Backtesting in confidential Exhibit 3A to
File No. SR–OCC–2024–009.
51 Based on 250 observation days per year, each
observed Resource Backtesting deficiency reduces
the coverage by 0.4%.
52 See supra note 50.
53 See supra note 46.
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under the SEC’s jurisdiction have, with
SEC approval, established similar
charges designed to collect additional
resources when a Clearing Member’s
margin coverage falls below the
agencies’ coverage target.54
The thresholds for applying a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge,
the method for calculating the charge,
and the proposed rule changes proposed
to reflect this new charge are discussed
below.
Thresholds for Applying the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge
The Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would only apply to those
Clearing Members whose 12-month
trailing Resource Backtesting falls below
99% coverage based on confirmed
Resource Backtesting deficiencies (i.e.,
three or more confirmed Resource
Backtesting deficiencies over the last 12
months). On an at-least monthly basis,
OCC would review and determine
which Clearing Members may be subject
to the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge, or whose Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge amount is subject to
change, based on each Clearing
Member’s trailing 12-month Resource
Backtesting coverage. Resource
Backtesting Margin Charges would be
applied on a daily basis for the
applicable accounts of the Clearing
Member that contributed to the
deficiencies. If in a subsequent month
an affected Clearing Member’s trailing
12-month backtesting coverage rises
above 99%, the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge would be removed.
In conducting this analysis for
purposes of identifying Clearing
Members who should be subject to the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
and for determining the amount of the
third-largest Resource Backtesting
deficiency for purposes of calculating
the charge, OCC would not take into
account Resource Backtesting Margin
Charges already in effect, but would
take into account the number and size
of deficiencies subsequent to the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
already applied. For example, if a
Clearing Member subject to a Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge experienced
subsequent Resource Backtesting
deficiencies that were smaller in size
than a Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge currently in effect, such
deficiencies would continue to count
towards the overall deficiency count,
even if they are covered by an existing
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge.
This approach ensures that Clearing
54 See Exchange Act Release No. 79167 (Oct. 26,
2016), 81 FR 75883, 75884 (Nov. 1, 2016) (SR–
FICC–2016–006; SR–NSCC–2016–004).
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Members will continue to be subject to
a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
while three or more deficiencies remain
in the look-back period. If, in that
example, the third-largest deficiency
driving the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge fell out of the 12-month lookback period, the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge would then be reduced
to the third largest of the remaining
deficiencies, subject to OCC authority to
adjust the amount as discussed further
below. In addition, if a Clearing Member
subject to the charge were to experience
additional Resource Backtesting
deficiencies that were greater in
magnitude than the deficiency that had
been driving the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge, OCC would increase the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge as
necessary to achieve a 99% coverage
target within the rolling 12-month
lookback based on the methodology for
sizing the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge discussed below.
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Calculating the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge
The Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would generally be equal to the
third-largest Resource Backtesting
deficiency in the rolling 12-month
lookback period rounded up to the
nearest $1,000, subject to adjustments as
further described below. Setting the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge to
cover the third-largest deficiency would
bring the Clearing Member’s margin
coverage back in line with OCC’s 99%
coverage target on a lookback basis. The
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
would generally be allocated
proportionally to the Clearing Member’s
accounts contributing to the thirdlargest Resource Backtesting deficiency.
For Clearing Members with more than
three deficiencies, however, such
additional financial resources as
allocated based on the accounts driving
the third-largest deficiency may not
necessarily cover Resource Backtesting
deficiencies that are lower in dollar
amount, but with a different allocation
of accounts contributing to the
remaining deficiencies. For example, if
a customer account contributed more to
the third-largest Resource Backtesting
deficiency and the Clearing Member’s
firm account (or another account)
contributed more to any lesser Resource
Backtesting deficiency, then a charge
allocated proportionally to accounts
based on the third-largest deficiency
may not cover the lesser Resource
Backtesting deficiencies on a look-back
basis because funds allocated to a
customer account cannot be used to
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offset losses in any other account.55 In
circumstances when applying and
allocating the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge based on the third-largest
deficiency would not bring the Clearing
Member above OCC’s coverage target on
a look-back basis, OCC would have
authority to increase the charge for a
particular account in an amount
necessary to meet the coverage target
pursuant to establish procedures, as
discussed below.
Consistent with Commissionapproved rules of other clearing
agencies,56 OCC would also retain
discretion to adjust the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge based on
other circumstances (i.e., in addition to
account for differences in the accounts
contributing to a Clearing Member’s
Resource Backtesting deficiencies) that
may impact the likelihood or estimated
size of potential future backtesting
deficiencies, consistent with achieving
OCC’s 99% Resource Backtesting
coverage target. Such other
circumstances may include, but are not
limited to, differences in magnitude of
the deficiencies observed over the last
12-month period, variability in the
Clearing Member’s activity since the
observed deficiencies, cyclicality of
observed deficiencies, and/or market
volatility. MRWG approval would be
required to approve such other
adjustments.
Establishing the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge in OCC’s Rules
To implement the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge, OCC
proposes to add OCC Rule 601(h) and
amend the Margin Policy. Proposed
Rule 601(h)(1) would provide that OCC
may require a Clearing Member to
deposit additional margin assets to
mitigate exposures to OCC that may not
otherwise be covered by the margin
requirements calculated in accordance
with Rule 601 and OCC’s policies and
procedures. Rule 601(h)(1) would
further provide that OCC may assess the
charge as part of the Clearing Member’s
daily margin requirement, as needed, to
enable OCC to achieve its Resource
55 In contrast, if the firm account, over which
OCC maintains a general lien, was the driver of the
third-largest deficiency, the charge allocated to the
firm account can be used to cover a Resource
Backtesting deficiency with a proportionally greater
shortfall driven by any other account.
56 See Exchange Act Release No. 79167, supra
note 54, 81 FR at 75884 (‘‘Although the third largest
historical backtesting deficiency for a Member is
used as the Backtesting Charge in most cases,
[NSCC and FICC] retain[ ] discretion to adjust the
charge amount based on other circumstances that
may be relevant for assessing whether an impacted
Member is likely to experience future backtesting
deficiencies and the estimated size of such
deficiencies.’’).
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Backtesting coverage target. Specifically,
Rules 601(h)(1) would provide that the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
may apply when a Clearing Member has
a 12-month trailing Resource
Backtesting coverage below the 99
percent backtesting coverage target.
With respect to calculation of the
charge, Rule 601(h)(2) would provide
that the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge generally will be equal to the
third-largest Resource Backtesting
deficiency during the previous 12
months, rounded up to the nearest
$1,000. Like the Commission-approved
rules of other clearing agencies,57 Rule
601(h)(2) would also provide that OCC
may, in its discretion, adjust such
charge if OCC determines that
circumstances particular to a Clearing
Member’s clearance and settlement
activity and/or market volatility warrant
a different approach to determining or
applying such charge in a manner
consistent with achieving OCC’s
backtesting coverage target. As
discussed below, the governance
concerning exercise of such discretion
and the factors that may inform it would
be addressed in the Margin Policy.
Rule 601(h)(3) would provide that in
calculating a Clearing Member’s
Resource Backtesting coverage for
purposes of the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge and in calculating the
third-largest Resource Backtesting
deficiency, OCC would not include
amounts already collected as a Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge from that
Clearing Member. As discussed above,
OCC would continue to count future
Resource Backtesting deficiencies for
the purpose of determining whether a
Clearing Member should remain subject
to the charge by reviewing whether the
Clearing Member would have had
Resource Backtesting deficiencies had
no Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
been in effect. In addition, OCC would,
as part of the at-least monthly review,
determine the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency for purposes of
increasing or decreasing a charge
already in effect without including the
existing Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge as a resource. This provision
mirrors the rules of other clearing
agencies filed with the Commission.58
However, OCC would, in accordance
with established procedures, test the
sufficiency of the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge against a Resource
Backtesting variant that includes that
charge as a financial resource for
57 See
supra note 54 and accompanying text.
Exchange Act Release No. 93678 (Nov. 30,
2021), 86 FR 69109, 69110 (Dec. 6, 2021) (SR–
NSCC–2021–014).
58 See
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purposes of: (i) confirming that the
charge, as allocated proportionally to
the accounts contributing to the thirdlargest Resource Backtesting deficiency,
would be sufficient to achieve the 99%
coverage target, and (ii) increasing the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge for
a particular account that may be
contributing a proportionally greater
amount to other Resource Backtesting
deficiencies if the coverage target is not
met.
Rule 601(h)(4) would further provide
a definition of ‘‘Resource Backtesting,’’
which is not a term otherwise found in
the By-Laws and Rules. Specifically,
Rule 601(h)(4) would provide that for
purposes of that Rule, ‘‘Resource
Backtesting’’ means backtesting
pursuant to OCC’s policies and
procedures designed to evaluate
whether OCC maintains sufficient
financial resources to cover its credit
exposure to the liquidation portfolio of
each Clearing Member from the last
margin collection until the end of the
liquidation horizon following the
Clearing Member’s default with a high
degree of confidence.
OCC would also amend the section of
the Margin Policy that addresses margin
add-ons to reflect and reference the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
provisions of proposed OCC Rule
601(h). The Margin Policy would
identify the governance processes
related to the at-least monthly review of
Resource Backtesting deficiencies for
purposes of imposing or adjusting a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge.
Specifically, the Margin Policy would
provide that FRM would review
Resource Backtesting results for the
purposes of determining whether a
Clearing Member should be assessed a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
and, if so, the amount to be charged.
While the review and determination
would be conducted at-least monthly, a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
could be applied on an intramonth basis
based on the daily backtesting results
reviewed by FRM.
The Margin Policy would further
provide for the governance with respect
to applying a Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge. Specifically, based on
the at-least monthly review of the
Resource Backtesting deficiencies, an
FRM Officer 59 would be authorized to
59 Officers are identified in OCC’s By-Laws. See
OCC By-Law Art. IV. In this context, an FRM
Officer would include any member of FRM
appointed by the Chief Executive Officer or Chief
Operating Officer, including a Managing Director,
Executive Director or Executive Principal. Id. § 9.
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approve 60 a Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge equal to the third-largest
Resource Backtesting deficiency
rounded up to the nearest $1,000,
excluding any Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge currently in effect. The
Margin Policy would further provide
that the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge generally would be allocated
proportionally to the Clearing Member’s
accounts contribution to the thirdlargest Resource Backtesting deficiency.
To account for the circumstances
when a charge allocated based on the
third-largest Resource Backtesting
deficiency may be insufficient to
increase a Clearing Member’s Resource
Backtesting to OCC’s 99% coverage
target due to differences in the accounts
contributing to Resource Backtesting
deficiencies, the Margin Policy would
identify such circumstances as one in
which OCC may adjust the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge, consistent
with proposed Rule 601(h)(2). In
addition, the Margin Policy would
provide that an FRM Officer would be
authorized, in accordance with
established procedures, to approve an
additional amount for a particular
account necessary to achieve OCC’s
99% coverage target at the Clearing
Member level. These established
procedures would utilize a Resource
Backtesting variant that includes the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge as
a financial resource to test whether,
after applying the charge, the coverage
for that Clearing Member would be
above OCC’s 99% coverage target on a
look-back basis. If not, FRM would
increase the charge for the accounts
contributing to the third largest of the
remaining Resource Backtesting
deficiencies until the 99% coverage
target has been achieved. The FRM
Officer’s authority to approve an
adjustment to the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge would be limited to such
increases. Any other adjustments,
including any reduction other than a
reduction due to a change in the thirdlargest Resource Backtesting deficiency
in the rolling 12-month lookback period,
would require MRWG approval.
The Margin Policy would further
provide that other adjustments to the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
may be made with approval of the
MRWG. As provided in proposed Rule
601(h)(2), such adjustments must be
consistent with achieving OCC’s
Resource Backtesting coverage target.
The Margin Policy would provide that
circumstances in which MRWG may
60 This type of FRM Officer approval is designed
as a control to avoid imposing a charge based on
erroneous information.
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61219
approve such other adjustments
include, but are not limited to,
differences in magnitude of the
deficiencies observed over the last 12month period, variability in the Clearing
Member’s activity since the observed
deficiencies, cyclicality of observed
deficiencies and/or market volatility.61
The Margin Policy would further
provide that to the extent OCC
implements changes to its margin
methodology that affect Clearing
Members’ margin requirements, OCC
would reevaluate Resource Backtesting
coverage within the 12-month lookback
period based on the margin resources it
would have collected under the revised
methodology to determine whether a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge for
a particular Clearing Member is
warranted and, if so, in what amount.
For example, if OCC were to begin
requiring the collection of additional
margin resources through another addon charge designed to capture some
aspect of market risk not adequately
captured under OCC’s current models
(other than the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge itself), the additional
resources that OCC would have
collected through that add-on may, if
charged at the time, have covered
observed Resource Backtesting
deficiencies within the look-back
period, either in whole or in part. In
such circumstances, OCC would recalculate the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge based on the deficiencies
that would have remained had the
additional resources been collected at
the time of the deficiencies. As such,
OCC believes the Margin Policy would
be designed to avoid double-margining
Clearing Members when OCC begins
collecting additional margin resources
following changes to its margin
methodology implemented within the
12-month lookback period.
(iv) Conforming Changes
In connection with the consolidation
of OCC’s current Business Backtesting
and Model Backtesting, as well as the
addition of Resource Backtesting, OCC
proposes to consolidate its internal
procedures for all backtesting into a
61 These circumstances are consistent with those
identified by the Commission in approving
authority of other clearing agencies to adjust similar
backtesting margin charges. See Exchange Act
Release No. 79167, supra note 54, 81 FR at 75884
(‘‘Examples of relevant circumstances that would be
considered in calculating the final, applicable
Backtesting charge amount include material
differences in the three largest backtesting
deficiencies observed over the prior 12-month
period, variability in the net settlement activity
after the collection of the Member’s Required
Deposit, seasonality in observed backtesting
deficiencies and observed market price volatility in
excess of the member’s historical VaR charge.’’).
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Backtesting Procedure and associated
technical document.62 Accordingly,
OCC would amend its Margin Policy
and Model Risk Management Policy to
refer to the new Backtesting Procedure,
rather than the current Business
Backtesting Procedure and Model
Backtesting Procedure. In addition, OCC
would update the description of
ongoing model performance monitoring
in the STANS Methodology Description
to reflect OCC’s Model Backtesting as
provided in the Margin Policy and
supporting procedure and technical
document. OCC would also insert
headings into the section of the Margin
Policy that addresses add-on charges,
including the proposed Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge, to separate
the discussion of add-on charges for
which the Margin Policy already
provides specific treatment, such as the
add-on to address specific wrong-way
risk (‘‘SWWR’’), (i.e., the risk that the
value of a Clearing Member’s positions
is positively correlated with the
creditworthiness of the Clearing
Member).63
Implementation Timeframe
OCC will implement the proposed
changes within sixty (60) days after the
date that OCC receives all necessary
regulatory approvals for the proposed
changes. OCC will announce the
implementation date of the proposed
change by an Information Memorandum
posted to its public website at least two
(2 weeks prior to implementing the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge.
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(2) Statutory Basis
OCC believes the proposed changes
are consistent with Section 17A of the
Exchange Act 64 and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to
OCC. Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act 65
requires, in part, that the rules of a
clearing agency be designed to promote
the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions,
and in general, to protect investors and
the public interest. If a Clearing Member
defaults on its obligations to OCC, OCC
would use the margin collateral
deposited by that Clearing Member,
among other prefunded financial
62 OCC has included anticipated drafts of these
document in confidential Exhibit 3B and 3C to File
No. SR–OCC–2024–009, respectively. OCC has also
included in confidential Exhibit 3D to File No. SR–
OCC–2024–009 a numerical example of how
Resource Backtesting results are calculated using
data for certain Clearing Members from an actual
activity date.
63 See Exchange Act Release No. 87718 (Dec. 11,
2019), 84 FR 68992 (Dec. 17, 2019) (SR–OCC–2019–
010) (approving OCC’s SWWR Add-On).
64 See 15 U.S.C. 78q–1.
65 15 U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
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resources from that Clearing Member, to
mitigate OCC’s credit exposure. If OCC’s
margin models calculated margin
requirements insufficient to address
default losses, then OCC may need to
utilize the mutualized funds deposited
in OCC’s Clearing Fund.66 The proposed
changes are intended to enhance OCC’s
process for monitoring its margin
coverage and the performance of its
margin models, which would help OCC
maintain sufficient financial resources
to mitigate its credit exposure. To the
extent that OCC identifies Resource
Backtesting deficiencies that bring a
Clearing Member’s margin coverage
below the target coverage level, the
proposed Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would require the impacted
Clearing Member to deposit additional
margin resources to absorb a potential
loss that OCC’s margin system may not
otherwise capture. Collecting sufficient
margin resources to cover potential
losses would help to ensure that OCC
may manage the default of a Clearing
Member without disruption to its
clearance and settlement services and
avoid loss mutualization that could
impose unanticipated costs on other
Clearing Members and their customers.
Accordingly, OCC believes the proposed
changes are reasonably designed to
promote the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities
transactions, and in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, in
accordance with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of
the Act.67
OCC also believes the proposed
changes described above are consistent
with SEC Rules under the Act for the
following reasons.
(i) Backtesting Framework
Paragraph (vi) of Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6) 68 requires OCC to establish,
implement, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to cover its credit
exposures to its participants by
establishing a risk-based margin system
that, at a minimum, is monitored by
OCC’s management on an ongoing basis
and is regularly reviewed, tested, and
verified by, in relevant part: (A)
conducting backtests of its margin
model at least once each day using
standard predetermined parameters and
66 Prior to charging the Clearing Fund deposits of
non-defaulting Clearing Members, OCC would first
contribute OCC’s Minimum Corporate Contribution
and its liquid net assets funded by equity in excess
of 110% of OCC’s Target Capital Requirement. See
Exchange Act Release No. 92038 (May 27, 2021), 86
FR 29861 (June 3, 2021), 29862 n.15 and
accompanying text (SR–OCC–2021–003).
67 15 U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
68 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi).
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assumptions; (B) conducting a review of
its assumptions for backtesting on at
least a monthly basis, and considering
modifications to ensure the backtesting
practices are appropriate for
determining the adequacy of OCC’s
margin resources; (C) conducting a
review of its assumptions for
backtesting more frequently than
monthly during periods of time when
the products cleared or markets served
display high volatility or become less
liquid, or when the size or
concentration of positions held by
OCC’s participants increases or
decreases significantly; and (D)
reporting the results of these analyses to
appropriate OCC decisionmakers,
including but not limited to, its Risk
Committee or Board of Directors, and
using these results to evaluate the
adequacy of its margin methodology,
model parameters, and any other
relevant aspect of its credit risk
management framework. As explained
by the Commission, such backtesting ‘‘is
a technique used to compare the
potential losses forecasted by a model
with the actual losses that participants
incurred’’ that is ‘‘intended to reveal the
accuracy of models.’’ 69 Accordingly, the
Commission promulgated Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6) 70 to require covered clearing
agencies to establish and maintain
‘‘policies and procedures that provide
for backtesting the margin models . . .
to help uncover and address possible
errors in model design, misapplication
of models, or errors in the inputs to, and
assumptions underlying, margin
models.’’ 71
The proposed Margin Policy would
describe how OCC conducts backtesting
of its margin models at least once each
day, as required by Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(vi)(A).72 OCC believes that the
proposed Model Backtesting is
reasonably designed to assess the
performance of OCC’s margin models in
order to provide decisionmakers with
information about potential issues with
or enhancements to those models. The
proposed enhancements would provide
greater clarity and transparency about
how OCC establishes, reviews and
adjusts the assumptions for backtesting,
including the role of the MRWG,
Management Committee and Risk
Committee in approving changes
thereto, as contemplated by paragraphs
(B) and (C) of Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi).73
69 Exchange Act Release No. 71699 (Mar. 12,
2014), 79 FR 29508, 29530 (May 22, 2014) (File No.
S7–03–14).
70 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6).
71 Exchange Act Release No. 71699, supra note
69, 79 FR at 29530.
72 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(A).
73 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(B), (C).
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Such reviews would occur on at least a
monthly basis, but would occur more
frequently when the CCA Monitoring
Thresholds are breached, consistent
with paragraph (C) of Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(vi).74 In addition, the
enhancements would also provide
greater clarity about the escalation of
backtesting exceedances to appropriate
OCC decisionmakers, including that
OCC maintains thresholds for such
escalations that are periodically
reviewed and approved by the
governing body to which the escalation
must be made, including to OCC’s Risk
Committee, consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(vi)(D).75 Accordingly, OCC
believes its proposed backtesting
framework is reasonably designed in a
manner consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(vi).76
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(ii) Resource Backtesting
OCC believes that the proposed
expansion of backtesting to include
Resource Backtesting is consistent with
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(4)(i),77 which requires
OCC to maintain sufficient financial
resources to cover its credit exposure to
each participant fully with a high degree
of confidence. OCC proposes to expand
its backtesting analyses to include
Resource Backtesting in order to ensure
that OCC maintains sufficient margin
resources collected from a Clearing
Member, among other prefunded
financial resources, to cover its credit
exposures to that Clearing Member fully
with a high degree of confidence. Such
Resource Backtesting would take into
account other resources collected from a
Clearing Member, including non-CiM
resources that are subject to fixed
collateral haircuts rather than valued
through OCC’s margin models. In
addition, Resource Backtesting would
be done at the Clearing Member level,
taking into consideration netting rules
based on the types of liens OCC has on
specific margin accounts. Accordingly,
OCC believes that such Resource
Backtesting is designed to assess the
sufficiency of the margin resources
collected from each Clearing Member,
among other prefunded resources,
available to cover the default of that
Clearing Member at the Clearing
Member level, consistent with Rule
17Ad–22(e)(4)(i).78
(iii) Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
OCC believes the proposed Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge and the
changes to OCC’s Rules and Margin
Policy to effect it would be consistent
with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii), which
requires OCC to establish, implement,
maintain and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
cover its credit exposures to its
participants by, at a minimum,
establishing a risk-based margin system
that calculates margin sufficient to cover
its potential future exposure to
participants in the interval between the
last margin collection and the close out
of positions following a participant
default.79 Rule 17Ad–22(a)(13), in turn,
defines ‘‘potential future exposure’’ to
mean the maximum exposure estimated
to occur at a future point in time with
an established single-tailed confidence
level of at least 99% with respect to the
estimated distribution of future
exposures.80 The Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge is designed to require
additional margin resources when OCC
identifies Resource Backtesting
deficiencies that bring a Clearing
Member’s margin coverage below 99%.
The Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge applied generally would be
equal to the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency during the
lookback period in order to achieve
OCC’s Resource Backtesting coverage
target, rounded up to the nearest $1,000.
OCC would also retain discretion to
adjust the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge based on facts and
circumstances that would lead it to
conclude that a different amount was
appropriate and consistent with
achieving its 99% coverage target.
Accordingly, OCC believes that the
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge is
consistent with Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(6)(iii).81
(iv) Conforming Changes
OCC also believes that the proposed
changes are consistent with SEC Rule
17Ad–22(e)(2),82 which provides in
relevant part that OCC must establish,
implement, maintain and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to provide for
governance arrangements that are clear
and transparent and specify clear and
direct lines of responsibility.83 OCC
would make conforming changes to the
Margin Policy and Model Risk
Management Policy that would reflect
the consolidated backtesting procedures
governed by those policies, thereby
79 17
74 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(C).
75 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi)(D).
76 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(vi).
77 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(4)(i).
78 Id.
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CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).
CFR 240.17ad–22(a) ‘‘Potential future
exposure’’.
81 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(6)(iii).
82 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2).
83 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2)(i), (v).
80 17
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61221
ensuring that cross-references in those
rule-filed policies remain accurate. In
addition, OCC believes the proposed
rule change would provide greater
clarity about OCC’s backtesting
framework, including OCC’s governance
arrangements for reviewing backtesting
assumptions and escalating backtesting
exceedances to appropriate
decisionmakers within OCC. While
OCC’s current rule-filed policies
provide for escalation of exceedances
‘‘as necessary,’’ for example, the
proposed changes would provide greater
clarity about governance processes
currently maintained in OCC’s internal
procedures by providing that OCC will
maintain thresholds for escalation that
FRM will adhere to if the criteria are
met. As discussed above, the Margin
Policy would provide that such
escalation criteria would include, but
not be limited to: (i) thresholds related
to the size and number of exceedances
for Model Backtesting of actual
portfolios, (ii) thresholds related to
statistical tests applicable to Model
Backtesting of hypothetical portfolios,
and (iii) thresholds related to the size of
Resource Backtesting deficiency and the
coverage rate across all Clearing
Members in the aggregate. The changes
would also provide greater clarity about
the lines of responsibility with respect
to the MRWG’s, Management
Committee’s and Risk Committee’s roles
in approving changes to the backtesting
assumptions and escalation criteria.
Accordingly, OCC believes the proposed
changes are consistent with SEC Rule
17Ad–22(e)(2).84
For the above reasons, OCC believes
that this proposed rule change is
consistent with Section 17A of the
Exchange Act 85 and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to
OCC.
(B) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Burden on Competition
Section 17A(b)(3)(I) of the Exchange
Act 86 requires that the rules of a
clearing agency not impose any burden
on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Act. With respect to the
proposed changes to OCC’s backtesting
framework and the addition of Resource
Backtesting, OCC does not believe that
the proposed rule change would impact
or impose any burden on competition.
The proposed changes would provide
greater clarity concerning OCC’s
backtesting framework, including how
OCC monitors the performance of
84 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2).
U.S.C. 78q–1.
86 15 U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(I).
85 15
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margin models used to calculate margin
requirements for each Clearing Member
account and how OCC monitors the
sufficiency of the margin collateral it
collects to cover losses that may arise
from the default of a Clearing Member.
OCC does not believe that these changes
would unfairly inhibit access to OCC’s
services or disadvantage or favor any
particular user in relationship to
another user.
With respect to the proposed
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge,
whether a particular Clearing Member
would be charged and the amount it
would be charged would depend on the
Clearing Member’s activity and the
performance of OCC’s margin models.
OCC has designed the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge to ensure its
compliance with regulations that
require OCC to calculate margin
resources sufficient to cover each
Clearing Member’s maximum exposure
estimated to occur at a future point in
time with an established single-tailed
confidence level of at least 99 percent
with respect to the estimated
distribution of future exposure in the
interval between the last margin
collection and the close out of positions
following a participant default.87 To the
extent a Clearing Member’s margin
coverage falls below OCC’s coverage
target, a Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would be applied. Accordingly,
OCC believes that the proposed rule
change would not impose any burden
on competition not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the Act.
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(C) Clearing Agency’s Statement on
Comments on the Proposed Rule
Change Received From Members,
Participants or Others
Written comments were not and are
not intended to be solicited with respect
to the proposed change and none have
been received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of
publication of this notice in the Federal
Register or within such longer period
up to 90 days (i) as the Commission may
designate if it finds such longer period
to be appropriate and publishes its
reasons for so finding or (ii) as to which
the self-regulatory organization
consents, the Commission will:
(A) by order approve or disapprove
such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine
whether the proposed rule change
should be disapproved.
87 See
supra notes 79–81 and accompanying text.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:51 Jul 29, 2024
Jkt 262001
The proposal shall not take effect
until all regulatory actions required
with respect to the proposal are
completed.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the 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-regulations/self-regulatoryorganization-rulemaking); or
• Send an email to rule-comments@
sec.gov. Please include file number SR–
OCC–2024–009 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Vanessa Countryman, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–OCC–2024–009. 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-regulations/self-regulatoryorganization-rulemaking). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for 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 filing
also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of OCC
and on OCC’s website at https://
www.theocc.com/CompanyInformation/Documents-and-Archives/
By-Laws-and-Rules.
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
PO 00000
Frm 00165
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
obscene or subject to copyright
protection.
All submissions should refer to file
number SR–OCC–2024–009 and should
be submitted on or before August 20,
2024.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.88
Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024–16661 Filed 7–29–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[SEC File No. 270–560, OMB Control No.
3235–0622]
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request; Extension:
Interagency Statement on Sound
Practices
Upon Written Request, Copies Available
From: Securities and Exchange
Commission, Office of FOIA Services,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–2736.
Notice is hereby given that pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘Commission’’) has submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) a request for approval of
extension of the previously approved
collection of information provided for in
the Interagency Statement on Sound
Practices Concerning Elevated Risk
Complex Structured Finance Activities
(‘‘Statement’’) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et
seq.) and the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b et seq.).
The Statement was issued by the
Commission, together with the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, the
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, and the Office of
Thrift Supervision (together, the
‘‘Agencies’’), in May 2006. The
Statement describes the types of internal
controls and risk management
procedures that the Agencies believe are
particularly effective in assisting
financial institutions to identify and
address the reputational, legal, and
other risks associated with elevated risk
complex structured finance
transactions.
The primary purpose of the Statement
is to ensure that these transactions
receive enhanced scrutiny by the
88 17
E:\FR\FM\30JYN1.SGM
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
30JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 146 (Tuesday, July 30, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 61211-61222]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-16661]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-100584; File No. SR-OCC-2024-009]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Options Clearing Corporation;
Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change by The Options Clearing
Corporation Regarding Its Backtesting Framework and To Establish a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
July 24, 2024.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(``Exchange Act'' or ``Act''),\1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ notice
is hereby given that on July 11, 2024, The Options Clearing Corporation
(``OCC'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``SEC'' or
``Commission'') the proposed rule change as described in Items I, II,
and III below, which Items have been prepared primarily by OCC. The
Commission is publishing this notice to solicit comments on the
proposed rule change from interested persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Terms of Substance of the
Proposed Rule Change
This proposed rule change would (i) amend OCC's Margin Policy to
more comprehensively describe OCC's approach to backtesting, including
how OCC establishes and reviews assumptions underlying OCC's
backtesting and criteria for escalating backtesting results; (ii)
provide for a new category of backtesting designed to evaluate whether
OCC maintains sufficient margin resources to cover its credit exposure
to the liquidation portfolio of each Clearing Member from the last
margin collection until the end of the liquidation horizon following
the default of that Clearing Member with a high degree of confidence
(as defined below, ``Resource Backtesting''); (iii) implement a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge that OCC would collect from Clearing
Members who experience Resource Backtesting deficiencies that bring
their margin coverage rates below a 99% coverage target; and (iv) make
certain conforming changes to other OCC rules to reflect these proposed
changes.
Proposed changes to OCC's Rules are contained in Exhibit 5A to File
No. SR-OCC-2024-009. Proposed changes to OCC's Margin Policy, Model
Risk Management Policy and STANS Methodology Description are contained
in confidential Exhibits 5B, 5C, and 5D to File No. SR-OCC-2024-009,
respectively. Material proposed to be added is marked by underlining
and material proposed to be deleted is marked with strikethrough text.
All terms with initial capitalization that are not otherwise defined
herein have the same meaning as set forth in the OCC By-Laws and
Rules.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ OCC's By-Laws and Rules can be found on OCC's public
website: https://www.theocc.com/Company-Information/Documents-and-Archives/By-Laws-and-Rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Proposed Rule Change
In its filing with the Commission, OCC 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. OCC has prepared summaries, set forth in sections (A),
(B), and (C) below, of the most significant aspects of these
statements.
(A) Clearing Agency's Statement of the Purpose of, and Statutory Basis
for, the Proposed Rule Change
OCC is the sole clearing agency for standardized equity options
listed on national securities exchanges registered with the Commission.
OCC also clears certain stock loan and futures transactions. In its
role as a clearing agency, OCC is the guarantor for all contracts
cleared through OCC; that is, OCC becomes the buyer to every seller or
the seller to every buyer (or the lender to every borrower and the
borrower to every lender, in the case of stock loans). As a central
counterparty, OCC is exposed to credit risk in the event of the failure
of one its members because OCC is obligated to perform on the contracts
it clears even when one of its members defaults.
OCC manages this credit risk through various safeguards to ensure
that it has sufficient financial resources in the event of a Clearing
Member failure. For example, OCC periodically collects margin
collateral from its Clearing Members, which is used to cover the credit
exposures they individually present to OCC. OCC has established a
proprietary system, the System for
[[Page 61212]]
Theoretical Analysis and Numerical Simulation (``STANS''), that runs
various models used to calculate margin requirements, as described in
the STANS Methodology Description.
To monitor whether margin requirements calculated by STANS are
adequate, OCC compares the margin derived from its use of the STANS
margin models against the amount it could have lost if a Clearing
Member had failed (``backtesting''). OCC relies on backtesting to
evaluate the accuracy of its margin models by comparing the calculated
margin coverage for each margin account against the actual profit and
loss on the margined portfolios. OCC performs backtesting at least once
each day using standard predetermined parameters and assumptions. While
backtesting does not directly establish Clearing Members' margin
requirements, OCC maintains broad authority under its rules to collect
additional margin if OCC identifies issues with its margin coverage.\4\
In addition, backtesting may reveal opportunities to enhance OCC's
credit risk management and margin methodology or to adjust model
parameters.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See OCC Rule 601(c) (``Notwithstanding any other provision
of this Rule 601, [OCC] may fix the margin requirement for an
account or any class of cleared contracts at such amount as it deems
necessary or appropriate under the circumstances to protect the
respective interests of Clearing Members, [OCC], and the public.'');
OCC Rule 609(a) (providing OCC's authority to issue intra-day margin
calls to protect OCC, other Clearing Members and the general public,
among other reasons); see also OCC Rule 307C (authorizing OCC to
impose protective measures, including to ``adjust the amount or
composition of margin'' when, under Rule 307, a Clearing Member
``presents increased credit or liquidity risk to OCC,'' among other
reasons).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed rule change would make three enhancements to OCC's
backtesting framework. First, OCC proposes to amend its rule-filed
Margin Policy to comprehensively describe material aspects of its
backtesting framework. As a self-regulatory organization, OCC is
subject to requirements to submit filings with its regulators in
connection with changes to its rules, which include material aspects of
the facilities of OCC. OCC has filed as rules certain frameworks and
policies that describe OCC's approach for credit risk management,
including OCC's Margin Policy. Specifically, the Margin Policy
establishes a process for ongoing monitoring, review, testing and
verification of OCC's risk-based margin system, including by requiring
OCC to conduct daily backtesting, conduct analysis of exceedances, and
report results at least monthly through OCC's governance process,\5\ as
required by SEC Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi).\6\ However, the Margin Policy
does not currently provide detail concerning (i) how OCC establishes
and modifies its assumptions for backtesting; or (ii) how OCC
establishes and reviews criteria and thresholds for escalating
backtesting results and reviews of backtesting assumptions to
appropriate decisionmakers. This proposal would amend the Margin Policy
to provide further detail about those aspects of OCC's backtesting
framework, as well as a more comprehensive description of the different
types of backtesting OCC performs and their respective purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See Exchange Act Release No. 82658 (Feb. 7, 2018), 83 FR
6646, 6649 (Feb. 14, 2018) (SR-OCC-2017-007) (Commission order
approving OCC's Margin Policy, inclusive of its provision for
backtesting of each margin account).
\6\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, OCC is proposing to add another category of backtesting to
its backtesting framework. OCC's current backtesting assesses whether
OCC's margin model achieves a 99% coverage rate for each marginable
account, which is the level at which OCC's models calculate margin
requirements.\7\ However, under OCC's By-Laws and Rules,\8\ each
Clearing Member may have multiple marginable accounts on which OCC
maintains different liens designed to facilitate Clearing Members'
compliance with the SEC's customer protection regime.\9\ Accordingly,
in order to conduct backtesting at the level of each Clearing Member
Organization, OCC proposes to amend the Margin Policy to add Resource
Backtesting, as defined below, as a separate category of backtesting
within OCC's backtesting framework to assess the adequacy of OCC's
margin resources to cover its credit exposure at the Clearing Member
level. OCC has designed its Resource Backtesting to assess whether OCC
maintains sufficient margin resources, among other prefunded financial
resources,\10\ to cover its credit exposure to each participant fully
with a high degree of confidence, consistent with SEC Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(4)(i).\11\ Specifically, Resource Backtesting would test whether
the liquidation portfolio of each Clearing Member from the last margin
collection until the end of the liquidation horizon following the
Clearing Member's default achieves a 99% coverage rate, in line with
the coverage standard for the current backtesting of OCC's margin
models.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra note 5, 83 FR at
6647.
\8\ See OCC By-Laws, Art. VI, Sec. 3 (providing for the various
accounts and their respective lien structures).
\9\ See, e.g., 17 CFR 240.15c3-3(e) (providing for the reserve
formula used in calculating the amounts of funds a clearing member
is required to deposit in a special reserve bank account for the
exclusive benefit of customers, including a debit for ``[m]argin
required and on deposit with [OCC] for all option contracts written
or purchased in customer accounts'').
\10\ Such other prefunded financial resources include, in order
of contribution within OCC's default waterfall: (i) the Clearing
Fund deposit of the defaulting Clearing Member, which would be at
least $500,000; (ii) OCC's skin-in-the-game in the form of OCC's
Minimum Corporate Contribution and its liquid net assets funded by
equity in excess of 110% of its Target Capital Requirement (which,
as of December 31, 2023, was more than $130 million); and (iii) the
Clearing Fund deposits of non-defaulting Clearing Members (as of
December 31, 2023, the Clearing Fund was more than $16.7 billion)
and the EDCP Unvested Balance (i.e., the unvested funds held in
respect of OCC's Executive Deferred Compensation Plan Trust that OCC
would be charged on a proportionate basis with the Clearing Fund
deposits of non-defaulting Clearing Members).
\11\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(4)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third, OCC proposes to amend its rules to establish a margin add-on
that OCC would charge a Clearing Member if Resource Backtesting
coverage for that Clearing Member falls below 99% (``Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge''). Accordingly, OCC's new backtesting
framework would impact the total margin collected from certain Clearing
Members depending on the performance of OCC's margin models and the
activity those members clear through OCC. As discussed further below,
OCC believes that the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge would help OCC
ensure it collects margin sufficient to cover its potential future
exposure to participants in the interval between the last margin
collection and the close out of positions following a participant
default, consistent with SEC Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In connection with these three backtesting enhancements, OCC would
also make certain conforming changes to the Model Risk Management
Policy and STANS Methodology Description to reflect changes in defined
terms associated with backtesting and changes to the underlying
procedures.
(1) Purpose
Background
Backtesting Procedures
STANS is OCC's proprietary risk management system for calculating
Clearing Member margin requirements.\13\ The STANS
[[Page 61213]]
methodology utilizes large-scale Monte Carlo simulations to forecast
price and volatility movements in determining a Clearing Member's
margin requirement.\14\ OCC has conducted daily backtesting of margin
accounts subject to STANS margining since 2006.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See Exchange Act Release No. 91079 (Feb. 8, 2021), 86 FR
9410 (Feb. 12, 2021) (File No. SR-OCC-2020-016). OCC makes its STANS
Methodology Description available to Clearing Members. An overview
of the STANS methodology is on OCC's public website: https://www.theocc.com/Risk-Management/Margin-Methodology.
\14\ See OCC Rule 601.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2014, OCC filed proposed changes to its backtesting
procedures.\15\ Among other things, the changes included: (1) the
addition of certain industry-standard statistical tests, including the
Kupiec Test \16\ and Christoffersen Independence Test; \17\ (2)
backtesting of hypothetical portfolios (which OCC currently refers to
as ``Model Backtesting''), in addition to actual portfolios (which OCC
currently refers to as ``Business Backtesting''), to provide more
comprehensive insight into the adequacy of the underlying model
assumptions under market conditions prevailing in the backtesting
observation periods, as well as stressed market conditions; (3)
adjustments to the forecasted horizon used for backtesting to better
reflect the two-day liquidation period (OCC's margin period of risk or
``MPOR'') used in margin calculations and to provide OCC with a more
accurate view of the sufficiency of its margin methodology; and (4)
system changes to give OCC's backtesting staff additional tools to help
identify the root cause of backtesting exceedances. The Commission
issued a notice of no objection with respect to those proposed
changes.\18\
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\15\ See Exchange Act Release No. 73749 (Dec. 5, 2014), 79 FR
73673 (Dec. 11, 2014) (SR-OCC-2014-810).
\16\ The Kupiec Test is a proportion of failures test that
compares the actual number of exceedances with the number that would
be expected in light of the confidence level associated with the
calculation of margin. See Kupiec, P. ``Techniques for Verifying the
Accuracy of Risk Management Models,'' Journal of Derivatives, v3,
P73-84. (1995).
\17\ The Christoffersen Independence Test measures the extent to
which exceedances are independent of each other. See Christoffersen,
P. ``Evaluating Interval Forecasts.'' International Economic Review,
39 (4), 841-862 (1998).
\18\ See Exchange Act Release No. 75290 (June 24, 2015), 80 FR
37323 (June 30, 2015) (SR-OCC-2014-810).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OCC currently maintains its Model Backtesting and Business
Backtesting procedures in internal OCC procedures and technical
documents. Among other things, those procedures address data
acquisition, application of statistical tests, analyses initiated to
address root causes of exceedances, reporting of results, annual
methodology reviews, and issue escalation. The technical documents are
similar in nature to the margin model whitepapers that support OCC's
STANS methodology.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ As described in the rule filing establishing the STANS
Methodology Description, the whitepapers describe how the various
quantitative components of STANS were developed and operate,
including the various parameters and assumptions contained within
those components and the mathematical theories underlying the
selection of those quantitative methods. See Exchange Act Release
No. 91079, supra note 13, 80 FR at 9410 n.5 and accompanying text.
The model whitepapers are not filed as rules of OCC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Backtesting Framework
In addition to the procedural documents noted above, OCC considers
its backtesting framework to include its Margin Policy, among other
rule-filed documents established after OCC last filed changes to its
backtesting procedures.\20\ The Margin Policy provides that OCC's
Financial Risk Management Department (``FRM'') continually evaluates
the effectiveness of its margin models through daily backtesting of
each margin account as provided in the Business Backtesting Procedure,
analyzing in detail all accounts exhibiting losses in excess of
calculated margin requirements.\21\ The Margin Policy further directs
OCC's Quantitative Risk Management business unit (``QRM'') to design
backtests to focus on: (i) satisfying OCC's regulatory obligations;
(ii) identifying potential opportunities to improve the margin
methodology; and (iii) identifying trends in exceedances that may be
indicative of behavioral changes by market participants. In addition,
the Margin Policy directs QRM to design backtests to find potential
opportunities to improve OCC's risk-assessment processes, noting that
problems may arise from both technical and model-related issues. With
respect to the former, the Margin Policy notes that technical issues
may arise from corporate actions and special dividends, for example.
The Margin Policy provides that FRM performs Business Backtesting to
measure whether the losses observed for a constant set of positions
over OCC's MPOR were in excess of the total risk charges (i.e.,
aggregate of expected shortfall, stress test charges and add-on
charges) required for the account. The Margin Policy directs FRM to
classify any observation in which losses are in excess as an
exceedance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ For example, the rule-filed STANS Methodology Description
describes ongoing model performance monitoring and backtesting in
that document's executive summary, noting that further detail on
such model monitoring activity is found in the Margin Policy and the
Model Risk Management Policy. See Exchange Act Release No. 90763
(Dec. 21, 2020), 85 FR 85788, 85790 n. 18 and accompanying text
(Dec. 29, 2020) (SR-OCC-2020-016). In addition, the Model Risk
Management Policy provides that margin models will be monitored
``according to the Model Backtesting Procedure [and] Business
Backtesting Procedure,'' among other procedures. See Exchange Act
Release No. 82473 (Jan. 9, 2018), 83 FR 2271, 2273 (Jan. 16, 2018)
(SR-OCC-2017-011).
\21\ See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra note 5, 83 FR at
6648.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the Margin Policy contemplates that backtesting results and
analyses of backtesting assumptions may require escalation, it does not
provide for established escalation criteria or thresholds. The absence
of specific guidance, thresholds or criteria for escalation could lead
to inconsistencies in the escalation of similar backtesting
exceedances. For example, the Margin Policy currently directs QRM to
report identified problems and overall performance to FRM and the Model
Risk Working Group (``MRWG''),\22\ and that the MRWG determines
``whether the results require escalation'' to the Management Committee.
The Margin Policy further provides that QRM presents MRWG monthly
reporting, or more frequently when determined by MRWG, and quarterly
reporting that accumulate daily backtesting results and detailed
descriptions of the accounts that have incurred exceedances, trends and
causes of the exceedances. As with the escalation of identified
problems and overall performance, the Margin Policy directs QRM to
provide notable results from these reviews to the Chief Financial Risk
Officer (i.e., the head of FRM) and MRWG, and that MRWG determines
whether ``escalation is warranted'' to the Management Committee, which
may determine what remedial actions may be taken.\23\ In addition, the
Margin Policy provides for a monthly review of the parameters and
assumptions for Business Backtesting, the results of which are reported
to the MRWG to discuss and escalate issues ``as necessary.'' \24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ The MRWG is a cross-functional group responsible for
assisting OCC's management in overseeing OCC's model-related risk
comprised of representatives from relevant OCC business units
including Quantitative Risk Management, Model Risk Management, and
Corporate Risk Management.
\23\ Remedial actions could take various forms including, but
not limited to, margin add-on charges to account for risk that may
not be captured appropriately by OCC's margin models, adjustments to
model parameters, or other changes to OCC's margin models or margin
methodology, subject to any necessary approvals by OCC's Risk
Committee, Board of Directors, and regulators.
\24\ See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra note 5, 83 FR at
6647 (discussing how the backtesting results are ``reported to [the
MRWG] and may be escalated to OCC's Management Committee'').
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[[Page 61214]]
Proposed Changes
(i) Backtesting Framework
OCC is proposing amendments to its Margin Policy to describe more
comprehensively its approach to backtesting, including OCC's:
backtesting framework, which includes (i) the purpose and
scope of the backtesting OCC performs and (ii) the assumptions
underlying OCC's backtesting and the process for reviewing and
modifying those assumptions; and
backtesting reporting, including how OCC establishes and
reviews criteria for escalating exceedances.
Specifically, OCC would replace the first two paragraphs of the
section of the Margin Policy that concerns margin monitoring, which
currently address OCC's Business Backtesting, and a subsection that
concerns backtesting reporting, with two new subsections: one that more
comprehensively describes OCC's backtesting framework and another that
describes backtesting reporting, as described below. The current third
paragraph of that section, which concerns the monthly review of margin
model parameters and sensitivity analyses of the margin model, would be
relocated to its own subsection below the new subsection on backtesting
reporting with certain edits discussed below related to the review of
backtesting assumptions and the conditions for more frequent review.
Purpose and Scope of Model Backtesting
With respect to OCC's current backtesting processes, the new
backtesting framework subsection in the Margin Policy would provide
that FRM will continue to conduct daily backtesting of actual and
hypothetical portfolios to evaluate the performance of its margin
methodology, as it does today. OCC would refer to such backtesting as
``Model Backtesting,'' which would distinguish such backtesting from
the proposed Resource Backtesting discussed below. As such, Model
Backtesting under the proposed amendments would encompass what OCC
currently refers to as ``Business Backtesting'' (i.e., backtesting of
its margin model performance using actual portfolios) and ``Model
Backtesting'' (i.e., backtesting of its margin model performance using
hypothetical portfolios). With respect to the latter, the Margin Policy
would explain that FRM conducts Model Backtesting of hypothetical
portfolios to target specific aspects of the models that may be masked
by the backtesting of actual portfolios because margin accounts may
have thousands of positions in many diverse products. With respect to
the former, the Margin Policy would explain that OCC conducts Model
Backtesting of actual portfolios to determine whether the losses
observed for a constant set of positions over OCC's liquidation horizon
were in excess of margin requirements forecasted by OCC's margin
methodology for each margin account. This description aligns with OCC's
current Business Backtesting practices. Accordingly, OCC would continue
to conduct Model Backtesting at the level of each marginable account,
which is the level at which OCC calculates margin requirements. As the
Margin Policy would explain, OCC conducts Model Backtesting at this
level because Model Backtesting exceedances potentially indicate issues
that could be actively impacting OCC's margin requirements for the
margin accounts. In addition, backtesting at this level is consistent
with OCC's obligations in its capacity as a derivatives clearing
organization (``DCO'') registered with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See 17 CFR 39.13(g)(7)(i)(C) (requiring a DCO to conduct
daily backtests for ``each account'' held by a clearing member at
the DCO).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Margin Policy would further provide that FRM conducts Model
Backtesting, as it does today, to evaluate whether margin requirements
forecasted by OCC's margin methodology are sufficient to cover the
realized loss of a portfolio at the maximum exposure estimated to occur
at the end of the liquidation period with an established single-tailed
confidence level of at least 99 percent with respect to the estimated
distribution of future exposure--the coverage standard identified in
SEC Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).\26\ This is the regulatory standard that
OCC's current Business Backtesting was designed to evaluate. The Margin
Policy would also provide that FRM will classify as an ``exceedance'' a
daily outcome in which the loss in portfolio value over the applicable
time horizon is larger in magnitude than what the STANS model
predicted. In addition, the Margin Policy would explain that Model
Backtesting is limited to those components of margin requirements that
capture changes in market risk factors when assessing OCC's compliance
with SEC Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).
\27\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OCC would continue to exclude collateral from Model Backtesting
that is not modeled by STANS (commonly referred to as ``non-Collateral
in Margin'' or ``non-CiM'' collateral),\28\ or that does not capture
changes in market risk factors. OCC's current backtesting analyses are
not designed to assess the sufficiency of non-CiM collateral, which OCC
values instead using the more traditional method of fixed collateral
haircuts.\29\ This limitation reflects that backtesting's purpose is to
assess the performance of OCC's margin models in calculating margin
requirements,\30\ as opposed to the performance of other aspects of
OCC's credit risk management. As such, Model Backtesting would continue
to exclude collateral that is valued using collateral haircuts outside
of the STANS margin methodology. In addition, the particular Model
Backtesting analysis used to assess OCC's compliance with SEC Rule
17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii) \31\ would exclude certain add-on charges that are
not tied to changes in market risk factors.\32\ However, as discussed
below, Resource Backtesting would take into account non-CiM collateral
and the margin collected through add-on charges not related to market
risk when assessing the sufficiency of the financial resources OCC
collects from each Clearing Member. In addition, as discussed below,
OCC may maintain variations of Model Backtesting for diagnostic or
informational purposes that include such add-ons.
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\28\ Following the implementation of STANS in 2006, OCC filed
and the Commission approved a proposed rule change to include equity
securities deposited by Clearing Members to satisfy margin
requirements in STANS margin calculations, referred to as
``Collateral in Margin'' or ``CiM.'' See Exchange Act Release No.
58158 (July 15, 2008), 73 FR 42646, 42646-47 (SR-OCC-2007-020). OCC
implemented CiM, in part, to incentivize Clearing Members to deposit
risk reducing assets and to better risk manage collateral deposits
using the more sophisticated STANS treatment versus a fixed haircut
rate.
\29\ See, e.g., Exchange Act Release No. 98101 (Aug. 10, 2023),
88 FR 55775 (Aug. 16, 2023) (SR-OCC-2022-012) (approving OCC's
procedures-based approach for setting and adjusting fixed haircuts
for Government securities and GSE debt securities deposited by
Clearing Members).
\30\ See Standards for Covered Clearing Agencies, Exchange Act
Release No. 78961 (Sept. 28, 2016), 81 FR 70786, 70819 (Oct. 13,
2016) (S7-03-14) (``[B]acktests are conducted with respect to the
margin model and not the margin resources themselves.''); 17 CFR
240.17Ad-22(a) ``Backtesting'' (``Backtesting means an ex-post
comparison of actual outcomes with expected outcomes derived from
the use of margin models.'').
\31\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).
\32\ For example, OCC may collect additional margin from a
Clearing Member as a protective measure under Rule 307 when OCC
determines that the Clearing Member's operational or financial
condition presents elevated risk to OCC, other Clearing Members, and
the public.
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Backtesting Assumptions
The proposed backtesting framework subsection to the Margin Policy
would
[[Page 61215]]
also provide that FRM maintains assumptions used in backtesting in its
internal procedures. The existence of backtesting assumptions may be
inferred from OCC's existing Margin Policy, which provides for their
review. However, the Margin Policy does not currently identify the
categories of relevant assumptions, provide for how they are
established or modified, or explain how assumptions may differ across
different types of backtesting depending on the purpose of those
backtesting variants. The amended Margin Policy would provide that the
assumptions include, but are not limited to, the timing of default,
liquidation horizon, available resources, lookback period, backtesting
portfolio, and the confidence level of the tests used to evaluate the
statistical significance of an exceedance rate.\33\
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\33\ As addressed in OCC's prior advance notice, OCC employs the
Kupiec Test and the Christoffersen Independence Test to evaluate
whether the exceedance rate is larger than the expected value. See
supra notes 16-17 and accompanying text.
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In addition, the Margin Policy would explain that OCC may provide
for backtesting variations for reporting, diagnostic and informational
purposes, each of which may have different assumptions based on the
purpose of the backtesting variant. For example, OCC plans to report
Model Backtesting results for actual portfolios in connection with
OCC's quantitative disclosures under the Principles for Financial
Market Infrastructures (``PFMI'')--which OCC discloses in compliance
with SEC Rule 17Ad-22(e)(23)--because such Model Backtesting at the
margin account level aligns with the guidance for such disclosures.\34\
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\34\ See Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures &
Board of the International Organization of Securities Commissions
(``CPMI-IOSCO''), Public quantitative disclosure standards for
central counterparties, at 7 (Feb. 2015), available at https://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d125.pdf (providing guidance on disclosure 6.5
with respect to initial margin backtesting results for margin
accounts).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Margin Policy would further provide that changes to these
backtesting assumptions would require escalation by MRWG and OCC's
Management Committee, with ultimate approval by the Risk Committee.
These assumptions relate to foundational aspects of OCC's margin
methodology that may be tied to specific regulatory requirements \35\
or modification of which may require proposed rule changes.\36\
Accordingly, Board-level approval by the Risk Committee would be
required to approve any necessary regulatory filing to modify OCC's
margin methodology. The Margin Policy would further require that FRM
would prepare and present to MRWG a review of the backtesting
assumptions more frequently than monthly in the event of triggers
related to high market volatility, low market liquidity, and
significant increases or decreases in position size or concentration
risk (as has been proposed to be defined in the Margin Policy, ``CCA
Monitoring Thresholds''),\37\ as contemplated by regulation.\38\
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\35\ For example, with respect to the confidence interval, SEC
Rules require that OCC's risk-based margin system must be designed
to calculate margin sufficient to cover the maximum exposure
estimated to occur in the internal between the last margin
collection and the close out of positions following a participant
default with an established single-tailed confidence level of at
least 99 percent with respect to the estimated distribution of
future exposure. See 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(a) ``Potential future
exposure'', (e)(6)(iii).
\36\ For example, OCC's rule-filed Margin Policy codifies OCC's
two-day MPOR assumption. See Exchange Act Release No. 82658, supra
note 5, 83 FR at 6647-6648 (describing the Margin Policy discussion
of OCC's two-day risk horizon).
\37\ See Exchange Act Release No. 99393 (Jan. 19, 2024), 89 FR
5062, 5066 (Jan. 25, 2024) (SR-OCC-2024-001). These thresholds are
currently provided in procedures under OCC's Clearing Fund
Methodology Policy with respect to the stress testing analyses that
breaches of those thresholds would trigger. See Exchange Act Release
No. 83406 (June 11, 2018), 83 FR 28018, 28026 (June 15, 2018) (SR-
OCC-2018-008) (``The [Clearing Fund Methodology] Policy would
require that OCC maintain procedures for determining whether, and in
what circumstances, such intra-month reviews shall be conducted, and
would indicate the persons responsible for making the
determination.''). Pursuant to those procedures, OCC's Stress Test
and Liquidity Risk Management (``STLRM'') business unit currently
monitors market activity against these thresholds, which are
approved by OCC's Stress Test Working Group (``STWG'') and the MRWG.
\38\ See 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(C).
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The Margin Policy would further provide that FRM's written
procedures may include other triggers for evaluation of backtesting
assumptions. OCC expects that one of the triggers it would establish
under this rule would be the implementation of changes to OCC's margin
methodology that may affect backtesting assumptions. For example, if
MRWG were to approve a change to OCC's margin methodology in the form
of a new margin add-on charge that was implemented following approval
by the Risk Committee and any necessary regulatory filing, MRWG would
review the backtesting assumptions and associated triggers to determine
whether that add-on charge should be included in the portfolio
composition assumption across OCC's backtesting variants, depending on
their respective purposes.
The Margin Policy would further provide that changes to the
triggers for backtesting assumption reviews must be approved by MRWG.
This is already true with respect to the CCA Monitoring Thresholds that
trigger backtesting assumption reviews, changes to which must be
approved by the MRWG and the STWG.\39\ In addition, MRWG approval would
be required to change any other thresholds MRWG believes would be
appropriate for triggering a review of backtesting assumptions. In the
case of other triggers for backtesting assumptions, OCC believes that
MRWG is the appropriate governing body to establish triggers that go
beyond those prescribed by regulation because as between MRWG and STWG,
MRWG is the internal governing body tasked with of its oversight of
model risk related to margin models.
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\39\ See supra note 37.
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Backtesting Reporting
As discussed above, the purpose of the proposed Model Backtesting
is to provide OCC decisionmakers with timely information about OCC's
margin coverage and potential opportunities to enhance OCC's credit
risk management or margin methodology, or to adjust model parameters.
Currently, the Margin Policy provides for monthly reviews to MRWG. In
addition, the Margin Policy directs QRM to identify and report problems
and overall performance to MRWG, which then in turn determines whether
to escalate the issue to the Management Committee. OCC proposes to
replace the current subsection that addresses reporting of backtesting
results with a new subsection that more clearly provides that OCC
maintains criteria for escalating backtesting results to relevant
decisionmakers.
Specifically, the new subsection would provide that FRM will
maintain escalation criteria for backtesting exceedances according to
which FRM will, if met, escalate exceedance information to the MRWG,
Management Committee, or Risk Committee, as applicable. Accordingly,
the procedures may provide for escalations to different governing
bodies depending on the nature of the exceedances or issues such
exceedances may evidence.\40\ The Margin Policy would provide that such
required escalation criteria would include, but are not limited to: (i)
thresholds related to the size and number of exceedances for Model
Backtesting of actual portfolios, (ii) thresholds related to
statistical tests
[[Page 61216]]
applicable to Model Backtesting of hypothetical portfolios; and (iii)
thresholds related to the size of an individual Clearing Member's
Resource Backtesting deficiency and the coverage rate across all
Clearing Members in the aggregate. For example, OCC anticipates that
such escalation criteria for Model Backtesting of actual portfolios
would include an exceedance that is equal to or larger than 50% of the
applicable Clearing Member's Clearing Fund contribution.\41\ With
respect to Model Backtesting of hypothetical portfolios, escalation
criteria would include criteria for escalation of results based on the
Kupiec Test and Christoffersen Tests (e.g., for the Kupiec Test, when
the coverage rate of instruments in a category of instruments falls
below 99% with statistical significance of 90% \42\).
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\40\ While the proposed change contemplates and allows for a
tiered escalation approach, OCC anticipates that the escalation
criteria it would initially implement would require escalation to
each of the MRWG, Management Committee and Risk Committee when the
criteria are met.
\41\ OCC does not intend this example to be a statement that
establishes or changes any standard, limit or guideline with respect
to the rights, obligations, or privileges of specified persons or
the meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing rule.
\42\ OCC does not intend this example to be a statement that
establishes or changes any standard, limit or guideline with respect
to the rights, obligations, or privileges of specified persons or
the meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outside of the escalation of backtesting exceedances that meet the
escalation criteria, the Margin Policy would continue to provide for a
review of all backtesting exceedances or deficiencies on an at-least
monthly basis. Specifically, the subsection on backtesting reporting
would provide that at least monthly, FRM will provide the MRWG a
detailed analysis of any Model Backtesting exceedances or Resource
Backtesting deficiencies, and a review of the backtesting assumptions.
In addition, the Margin Policy would provide that FRM will prepare a
review of assumptions for backtesting more frequently than monthly when
the CCA Monitoring Thresholds, as discussed above, are breached. In
addition to the CCA Monitoring Thresholds, the Margin Policy would
provide that the Backtesting Procedure may identify other triggers
that, if met, would require FRM to prepare and present to MRWG a review
of assumptions for backtesting, including, but not limited to,
implementation of rule changes to OCC's margin methodology that may
affect backtesting assumptions. Changes to the triggers for review of
backtesting assumptions must be approved by MRWG.
The Margin Policy would also provide that QRM conducts an annual
review of OCC's backtesting framework, including QRM's recommendations
regarding whether OCC should change any of the backtesting assumptions
and exceedance escalation criteria. With respect to the escalation
criteria, the Margin Policy would provide that changes to the
escalation criteria must be approved by the governing body to which the
escalation must be made. For example, changes to the criteria for
escalating exceedances to the Risk Committee must be approved by the
Risk Committee.\43\ With respect to any proposed changes to the
backtesting assumptions, the Margin Policy would provide that the MRWG
would evaluate the results of the annual review and escalate any
recommended changes to the backtesting framework, including any
recommended changes to the backtesting assumptions, to the Management
Committee for consideration. The Management Committee, in turn, would
report the results of the annual review to the Risk Committee,
including any changes it believes should be made to OCC's backtesting
assumptions, which the Risk Committee would be authorized to approve
for implementation. As part of this annual review process, MRWG, the
Management Committee and the Risk Committee would also be authorized to
approve changes to the escalation criteria applicable to each governing
body, as discussed above. OCC believes these changes would provide
greater clarity concerning the escalation of backtesting exceedances to
appropriate OCC decisionmakers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Because OCC anticipates that the initial escalation
criteria it would adopt under this proposal would require escalation
to each of the MRWG, Management Committee and Risk Committee, all
such escalation criteria will require Risk Committee approval to
change. See supra note 40. Should the MRWG or Management Committee
adopt more sensitive escalation criteria for themselves, any change
to the criteria for escalating to the Risk Committee would continue
to require Risk Committee approval while the escalation criteria for
the MRWG and Management Committee would be subject to approval by
the MRWG or Management Committee, respectively.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) Resource Backtesting
In addition to formalizing its Model Backtesting in the Margin
Policy, OCC proposes to enhance its backtesting framework by
establishing Resource Backtesting designed to evaluate whether OCC
maintains sufficient financial resources to cover its credit exposure
to the liquidation portfolio of each Clearing Member following the
default of that Clearing Member until the end of the liquidation
horizon with a high degree of confidence. OCC would conduct Resource
Backtesting using actual portfolios at the Clearing Member level.
Accordingly, while Model Backtesting is conducted at the account level
at which margin requirements are calculated under the STANS
methodology, Resource Backtesting would consider OCC's credit exposure
to a Clearing Member across that member's marginable accounts.
Backtesting at the Clearing Member level would not be as simple as
aggregating profit and loss (``P&L'') and margin resources across each
marginable account maintained by a Clearing Member because OCC's By-
Laws and Rules provide OCC with different types of liens over different
types of accounts. For example, a surplus in a securities customer
account, for which OCC maintains a restricted lien, may not be used to
offset a loss in the member's firm account.\44\ In contrast, a surplus
in the member's firm account, for which OCC maintains a general lien,
could be used to offset losses in any of the member's other
accounts.\45\ OCC would consider the liens on a particular account when
netting deficits and surpluses across account types to ensure that
surpluses in an account over which OCC maintains a restricted lien do
not offset losses in another account for purposes of assessing the
sufficiency of OCC's financial resources to cover the default of a
Clearing Member.
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\44\ See By-Law Art. VI Sec. 3(e).
\45\ See, e.g., OCC Rule 1104(e) (clarifying, for the avoidance
of doubt, that margin assets in a firm lien account may be applied
to cover losses in a segregated futures account).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Resource Backtesting would also take into account the value of
other margin resources collected from a Clearing Member available to
address default losses, including non-CiM margin collateral and certain
margin add-ons. Conversely, OCC would exclude the Clearing Fund deposit
of the applicable Clearing Member as a prefunded financial resource of
that Clearing Member under Resource Backtesting.\46\
[[Page 61217]]
In addition, such margin resources would be limited to required
resources, and would therefore exclude any margin collateral held by
OCC in excess of a Clearing Member's required margin.\47\ As discussed
above, these details about the composition of the Resource Backtesting
portfolios would be backtesting assumptions that the Margin Policy
would require FRM to document in its procedures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ OCC considered including, but ultimately determined not to
include a Clearing Member's Clearing Fund deposit as a financial
resource for that Clearing Member in Resource Backtesting. The
Clearing Fund deposit of a defaulting Clearing Member is a prefunded
financial resource that OCC would use to cover any loss prior to
charging other resources in the default waterfall, including OCC's
skin-in-the-game or the mutualized Clearing Fund deposits of non-
defaulting Clearing Members. See OCC Rule 1006(b). Each Clearing
Member's Clearing Fund deposit is comprised of a $500,000 minimum
deposit and a variable component that is currently allocated to each
Clearing Member based predominately on each Clearing Member's margin
requirement. See OCC Rule 1003. Based on 2023 historic data, each
Clearing Member would be above the 99% coverage target if the
Clearing Fund deposit of that Clearing Member was included as a
resource for Resource Backtesting. However, concerns were raised
about including such resources in Resource Backtesting because the
Clearing Fund, in the aggregate, is sized using stressed exposures.
Accordingly, OCC is proposing to limit Resource Backtesting to
margin resources.
\47\ Because a Clearing Member is entitled to withdraw excess
collateral, limiting Resource Backtesting to required resources
addresses concerns that a Clearing Member may withdraw any excess
collateral just prior to its default.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, while Model Backtesting assesses the performance of
OCC's margin models in calculating margin requirements by evaluating
P&L for a constant portfolio, Resource Backtesting would be designed to
determine whether the liquidating value of a Clearing Member's
portfolios was positive or negative at the end of OCC's liquidation
horizon. Accordingly, Resource Backtesting would take into account
observed intraday position changes from the time of the last good
margin collection until the assumed point of default.
OCC would assess Resource Backtesting with the expectation that
exceedances of financial resources would be no more than one percent in
the lookback period for each Clearing Member (i.e., 99% coverage). To
distinguish between Model Resource exceedances, OCC would use the term
``deficiency'' with respect to Resource Backtesting, which would result
when the prefunded financial resources collected from the Clearing
Member Organization (``CMO'') would have been insufficient to cover the
potential loss if the CMO had defaulted. That is, OCC would classify a
result as a Resource Backtesting deficiency when the liquidating value
of the CMO's portfolios is negative.
OCC would integrate Resource Backtesting into the Margin Policy's
discussion of the backtesting framework and backtesting reporting. The
purpose and scope of Resource Backtesting, as described above, would be
added to the backtesting framework subsection. In addition, the Margin
Policy would provide that FRM will maintain requirements with respect
to backtesting assumptions, monthly backtesting reviews, and escalation
criteria for Resource Backtesting deficiencies, and the same governance
relating to review and changes to assumptions and escalation criteria
for Model Backtesting would apply to Resource Backtesting. With respect
to escalation criteria for Resource Backtesting deficiencies, the
Margin Policy would provide that FRM will maintain written procedures
that establish criteria including, but not limited to, thresholds
related to the size of a Resource Backtesting deficiency and the
coverage rate across all Clearing Members in the aggregate. For
example, OCC anticipates establishing criteria under this rule to
escalate when the aggregate cover rate across all Clearing Members
(including any Resource Backtesting Margin Charges then in effect as a
resource) falls below 99%.\48\ As another example, OCC anticipates
establishing a threshold for any verified Resource Backtesting
deficiency that exceeds the lesser of (i) 50% of the Clearing Member's
individual Clearing Fund contribution, or, (ii) in the case of Clearing
Members whose Clearing Fund contributions are in excess of $200
million, $100 million.\49\
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\48\ OCC does not intend this example to be a statement that
establishes or changes any standard, limit or guideline with respect
to the rights, obligations, or privileges of specified persons or
the meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing rule.
\49\ OCC does not intend this example to be a statement that
establishes or changes any standard, limit or guideline with respect
to the rights, obligations, or privileges of specified persons or
the meaning, administration, or enforcement of an existing rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(iii) Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
Based on OCC's analysis of Resource Backtesting results using the
proposed methodology described above, OCC has observed that the
Resource Backtesting for some Clearing Members falls below a 99%
coverage threshold \50\ (i.e., greater than two Resource Backtesting
deficiency days in a rolling 12-month period).\51\ Specifically, based
on 2023 historical data, approximately 25% of Clearing Members would
have fallen below the Resource Backtesting coverage target.\52\ The
size of the third-largest deficiencies ranged from a few hundred
dollars to an outlier of $35 million, with the majority below $100,000
and all but a few below $1 million. Collectively, the amounts represent
less than 0.1% on average of the aggregate margin OCC collects. In
order to ensure that OCC's margin resources, among other prefunded
financial resources,\53\ are sufficient to cover the 99% coverage
target, OCC proposes to establish a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge.
OCC notes that other covered clearing agencies under the SEC's
jurisdiction have, with SEC approval, established similar charges
designed to collect additional resources when a Clearing Member's
margin coverage falls below the agencies' coverage target.\54\
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\50\ OCC has included 2023 results of the proposed Resource
Backtesting in confidential Exhibit 3A to File No. SR-OCC-2024-009.
\51\ Based on 250 observation days per year, each observed
Resource Backtesting deficiency reduces the coverage by 0.4%.
\52\ See supra note 50.
\53\ See supra note 46.
\54\ See Exchange Act Release No. 79167 (Oct. 26, 2016), 81 FR
75883, 75884 (Nov. 1, 2016) (SR-FICC-2016-006; SR-NSCC-2016-004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The thresholds for applying a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge,
the method for calculating the charge, and the proposed rule changes
proposed to reflect this new charge are discussed below.
Thresholds for Applying the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
The Resource Backtesting Margin Charge would only apply to those
Clearing Members whose 12-month trailing Resource Backtesting falls
below 99% coverage based on confirmed Resource Backtesting deficiencies
(i.e., three or more confirmed Resource Backtesting deficiencies over
the last 12 months). On an at-least monthly basis, OCC would review and
determine which Clearing Members may be subject to the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge, or whose Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
amount is subject to change, based on each Clearing Member's trailing
12-month Resource Backtesting coverage. Resource Backtesting Margin
Charges would be applied on a daily basis for the applicable accounts
of the Clearing Member that contributed to the deficiencies. If in a
subsequent month an affected Clearing Member's trailing 12-month
backtesting coverage rises above 99%, the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would be removed.
In conducting this analysis for purposes of identifying Clearing
Members who should be subject to the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
and for determining the amount of the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency for purposes of calculating the charge, OCC
would not take into account Resource Backtesting Margin Charges already
in effect, but would take into account the number and size of
deficiencies subsequent to the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
already applied. For example, if a Clearing Member subject to a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge experienced subsequent Resource
Backtesting deficiencies that were smaller in size than a Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge currently in effect, such deficiencies would
continue to count towards the overall deficiency count, even if they
are covered by an existing Resource Backtesting Margin Charge. This
approach ensures that Clearing
[[Page 61218]]
Members will continue to be subject to a Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge while three or more deficiencies remain in the look-back period.
If, in that example, the third-largest deficiency driving the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge fell out of the 12-month look-back period,
the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge would then be reduced to the
third largest of the remaining deficiencies, subject to OCC authority
to adjust the amount as discussed further below. In addition, if a
Clearing Member subject to the charge were to experience additional
Resource Backtesting deficiencies that were greater in magnitude than
the deficiency that had been driving the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge, OCC would increase the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge as
necessary to achieve a 99% coverage target within the rolling 12-month
lookback based on the methodology for sizing the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge discussed below.
Calculating the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
The Resource Backtesting Margin Charge would generally be equal to
the third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency in the rolling 12-
month lookback period rounded up to the nearest $1,000, subject to
adjustments as further described below. Setting the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge to cover the third-largest deficiency would
bring the Clearing Member's margin coverage back in line with OCC's 99%
coverage target on a lookback basis. The Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would generally be allocated proportionally to the Clearing
Member's accounts contributing to the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency.
For Clearing Members with more than three deficiencies, however,
such additional financial resources as allocated based on the accounts
driving the third-largest deficiency may not necessarily cover Resource
Backtesting deficiencies that are lower in dollar amount, but with a
different allocation of accounts contributing to the remaining
deficiencies. For example, if a customer account contributed more to
the third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency and the Clearing
Member's firm account (or another account) contributed more to any
lesser Resource Backtesting deficiency, then a charge allocated
proportionally to accounts based on the third-largest deficiency may
not cover the lesser Resource Backtesting deficiencies on a look-back
basis because funds allocated to a customer account cannot be used to
offset losses in any other account.\55\ In circumstances when applying
and allocating the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge based on the
third-largest deficiency would not bring the Clearing Member above
OCC's coverage target on a look-back basis, OCC would have authority to
increase the charge for a particular account in an amount necessary to
meet the coverage target pursuant to establish procedures, as discussed
below.
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\55\ In contrast, if the firm account, over which OCC maintains
a general lien, was the driver of the third-largest deficiency, the
charge allocated to the firm account can be used to cover a Resource
Backtesting deficiency with a proportionally greater shortfall
driven by any other account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with Commission-approved rules of other clearing
agencies,\56\ OCC would also retain discretion to adjust the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge based on other circumstances (i.e., in
addition to account for differences in the accounts contributing to a
Clearing Member's Resource Backtesting deficiencies) that may impact
the likelihood or estimated size of potential future backtesting
deficiencies, consistent with achieving OCC's 99% Resource Backtesting
coverage target. Such other circumstances may include, but are not
limited to, differences in magnitude of the deficiencies observed over
the last 12-month period, variability in the Clearing Member's activity
since the observed deficiencies, cyclicality of observed deficiencies,
and/or market volatility. MRWG approval would be required to approve
such other adjustments.
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\56\ See Exchange Act Release No. 79167, supra note 54, 81 FR at
75884 (``Although the third largest historical backtesting
deficiency for a Member is used as the Backtesting Charge in most
cases, [NSCC and FICC] retain[ ] discretion to adjust the charge
amount based on other circumstances that may be relevant for
assessing whether an impacted Member is likely to experience future
backtesting deficiencies and the estimated size of such
deficiencies.'').
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Establishing the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge in OCC's Rules
To implement the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge, OCC proposes
to add OCC Rule 601(h) and amend the Margin Policy. Proposed Rule
601(h)(1) would provide that OCC may require a Clearing Member to
deposit additional margin assets to mitigate exposures to OCC that may
not otherwise be covered by the margin requirements calculated in
accordance with Rule 601 and OCC's policies and procedures. Rule
601(h)(1) would further provide that OCC may assess the charge as part
of the Clearing Member's daily margin requirement, as needed, to enable
OCC to achieve its Resource Backtesting coverage target. Specifically,
Rules 601(h)(1) would provide that the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge may apply when a Clearing Member has a 12-month trailing
Resource Backtesting coverage below the 99 percent backtesting coverage
target.
With respect to calculation of the charge, Rule 601(h)(2) would
provide that the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge generally will be
equal to the third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency during the
previous 12 months, rounded up to the nearest $1,000. Like the
Commission-approved rules of other clearing agencies,\57\ Rule
601(h)(2) would also provide that OCC may, in its discretion, adjust
such charge if OCC determines that circumstances particular to a
Clearing Member's clearance and settlement activity and/or market
volatility warrant a different approach to determining or applying such
charge in a manner consistent with achieving OCC's backtesting coverage
target. As discussed below, the governance concerning exercise of such
discretion and the factors that may inform it would be addressed in the
Margin Policy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ See supra note 54 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule 601(h)(3) would provide that in calculating a Clearing
Member's Resource Backtesting coverage for purposes of the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge and in calculating the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency, OCC would not include amounts already collected
as a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge from that Clearing Member. As
discussed above, OCC would continue to count future Resource
Backtesting deficiencies for the purpose of determining whether a
Clearing Member should remain subject to the charge by reviewing
whether the Clearing Member would have had Resource Backtesting
deficiencies had no Resource Backtesting Margin Charge been in effect.
In addition, OCC would, as part of the at-least monthly review,
determine the third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency for
purposes of increasing or decreasing a charge already in effect without
including the existing Resource Backtesting Margin Charge as a
resource. This provision mirrors the rules of other clearing agencies
filed with the Commission.\58\ However, OCC would, in accordance with
established procedures, test the sufficiency of the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge against a Resource Backtesting variant that
includes that charge as a financial resource for
[[Page 61219]]
purposes of: (i) confirming that the charge, as allocated
proportionally to the accounts contributing to the third-largest
Resource Backtesting deficiency, would be sufficient to achieve the 99%
coverage target, and (ii) increasing the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge for a particular account that may be contributing a
proportionally greater amount to other Resource Backtesting
deficiencies if the coverage target is not met.
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\58\ See Exchange Act Release No. 93678 (Nov. 30, 2021), 86 FR
69109, 69110 (Dec. 6, 2021) (SR-NSCC-2021-014).
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Rule 601(h)(4) would further provide a definition of ``Resource
Backtesting,'' which is not a term otherwise found in the By-Laws and
Rules. Specifically, Rule 601(h)(4) would provide that for purposes of
that Rule, ``Resource Backtesting'' means backtesting pursuant to OCC's
policies and procedures designed to evaluate whether OCC maintains
sufficient financial resources to cover its credit exposure to the
liquidation portfolio of each Clearing Member from the last margin
collection until the end of the liquidation horizon following the
Clearing Member's default with a high degree of confidence.
OCC would also amend the section of the Margin Policy that
addresses margin add-ons to reflect and reference the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge provisions of proposed OCC Rule 601(h). The
Margin Policy would identify the governance processes related to the
at-least monthly review of Resource Backtesting deficiencies for
purposes of imposing or adjusting a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge.
Specifically, the Margin Policy would provide that FRM would review
Resource Backtesting results for the purposes of determining whether a
Clearing Member should be assessed a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
and, if so, the amount to be charged. While the review and
determination would be conducted at-least monthly, a Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge could be applied on an intramonth basis based
on the daily backtesting results reviewed by FRM.
The Margin Policy would further provide for the governance with
respect to applying a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge. Specifically,
based on the at-least monthly review of the Resource Backtesting
deficiencies, an FRM Officer \59\ would be authorized to approve \60\ a
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge equal to the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency rounded up to the nearest $1,000, excluding any
Resource Backtesting Margin Charge currently in effect. The Margin
Policy would further provide that the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge generally would be allocated proportionally to the Clearing
Member's accounts contribution to the third-largest Resource
Backtesting deficiency.
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\59\ Officers are identified in OCC's By-Laws. See OCC By-Law
Art. IV. In this context, an FRM Officer would include any member of
FRM appointed by the Chief Executive Officer or Chief Operating
Officer, including a Managing Director, Executive Director or
Executive Principal. Id. Sec. 9.
\60\ This type of FRM Officer approval is designed as a control
to avoid imposing a charge based on erroneous information.
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To account for the circumstances when a charge allocated based on
the third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency may be insufficient
to increase a Clearing Member's Resource Backtesting to OCC's 99%
coverage target due to differences in the accounts contributing to
Resource Backtesting deficiencies, the Margin Policy would identify
such circumstances as one in which OCC may adjust the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge, consistent with proposed Rule 601(h)(2). In
addition, the Margin Policy would provide that an FRM Officer would be
authorized, in accordance with established procedures, to approve an
additional amount for a particular account necessary to achieve OCC's
99% coverage target at the Clearing Member level. These established
procedures would utilize a Resource Backtesting variant that includes
the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge as a financial resource to test
whether, after applying the charge, the coverage for that Clearing
Member would be above OCC's 99% coverage target on a look-back basis.
If not, FRM would increase the charge for the accounts contributing to
the third largest of the remaining Resource Backtesting deficiencies
until the 99% coverage target has been achieved. The FRM Officer's
authority to approve an adjustment to the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge would be limited to such increases. Any other adjustments,
including any reduction other than a reduction due to a change in the
third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency in the rolling 12-month
lookback period, would require MRWG approval.
The Margin Policy would further provide that other adjustments to
the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge may be made with approval of the
MRWG. As provided in proposed Rule 601(h)(2), such adjustments must be
consistent with achieving OCC's Resource Backtesting coverage target.
The Margin Policy would provide that circumstances in which MRWG may
approve such other adjustments include, but are not limited to,
differences in magnitude of the deficiencies observed over the last 12-
month period, variability in the Clearing Member's activity since the
observed deficiencies, cyclicality of observed deficiencies and/or
market volatility.\61\
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\61\ These circumstances are consistent with those identified by
the Commission in approving authority of other clearing agencies to
adjust similar backtesting margin charges. See Exchange Act Release
No. 79167, supra note 54, 81 FR at 75884 (``Examples of relevant
circumstances that would be considered in calculating the final,
applicable Backtesting charge amount include material differences in
the three largest backtesting deficiencies observed over the prior
12-month period, variability in the net settlement activity after
the collection of the Member's Required Deposit, seasonality in
observed backtesting deficiencies and observed market price
volatility in excess of the member's historical VaR charge.'').
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The Margin Policy would further provide that to the extent OCC
implements changes to its margin methodology that affect Clearing
Members' margin requirements, OCC would reevaluate Resource Backtesting
coverage within the 12-month lookback period based on the margin
resources it would have collected under the revised methodology to
determine whether a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge for a particular
Clearing Member is warranted and, if so, in what amount. For example,
if OCC were to begin requiring the collection of additional margin
resources through another add-on charge designed to capture some aspect
of market risk not adequately captured under OCC's current models
(other than the Resource Backtesting Margin Charge itself), the
additional resources that OCC would have collected through that add-on
may, if charged at the time, have covered observed Resource Backtesting
deficiencies within the look-back period, either in whole or in part.
In such circumstances, OCC would re-calculate the Resource Backtesting
Margin Charge based on the deficiencies that would have remained had
the additional resources been collected at the time of the
deficiencies. As such, OCC believes the Margin Policy would be designed
to avoid double-margining Clearing Members when OCC begins collecting
additional margin resources following changes to its margin methodology
implemented within the 12-month lookback period.
(iv) Conforming Changes
In connection with the consolidation of OCC's current Business
Backtesting and Model Backtesting, as well as the addition of Resource
Backtesting, OCC proposes to consolidate its internal procedures for
all backtesting into a
[[Page 61220]]
Backtesting Procedure and associated technical document.\62\
Accordingly, OCC would amend its Margin Policy and Model Risk
Management Policy to refer to the new Backtesting Procedure, rather
than the current Business Backtesting Procedure and Model Backtesting
Procedure. In addition, OCC would update the description of ongoing
model performance monitoring in the STANS Methodology Description to
reflect OCC's Model Backtesting as provided in the Margin Policy and
supporting procedure and technical document. OCC would also insert
headings into the section of the Margin Policy that addresses add-on
charges, including the proposed Resource Backtesting Margin Charge, to
separate the discussion of add-on charges for which the Margin Policy
already provides specific treatment, such as the add-on to address
specific wrong-way risk (``SWWR''), (i.e., the risk that the value of a
Clearing Member's positions is positively correlated with the
creditworthiness of the Clearing Member).\63\
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\62\ OCC has included anticipated drafts of these document in
confidential Exhibit 3B and 3C to File No. SR-OCC-2024-009,
respectively. OCC has also included in confidential Exhibit 3D to
File No. SR-OCC-2024-009 a numerical example of how Resource
Backtesting results are calculated using data for certain Clearing
Members from an actual activity date.
\63\ See Exchange Act Release No. 87718 (Dec. 11, 2019), 84 FR
68992 (Dec. 17, 2019) (SR-OCC-2019-010) (approving OCC's SWWR Add-
On).
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Implementation Timeframe
OCC will implement the proposed changes within sixty (60) days
after the date that OCC receives all necessary regulatory approvals for
the proposed changes. OCC will announce the implementation date of the
proposed change by an Information Memorandum posted to its public
website at least two (2 weeks prior to implementing the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge.
(2) Statutory Basis
OCC believes the proposed changes are consistent with Section 17A
of the Exchange Act \64\ and the rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to OCC. Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act \65\ requires, in
part, that the rules of a clearing agency be designed to promote the
prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of securities
transactions, and in general, to protect investors and the public
interest. If a Clearing Member defaults on its obligations to OCC, OCC
would use the margin collateral deposited by that Clearing Member,
among other prefunded financial resources from that Clearing Member, to
mitigate OCC's credit exposure. If OCC's margin models calculated
margin requirements insufficient to address default losses, then OCC
may need to utilize the mutualized funds deposited in OCC's Clearing
Fund.\66\ The proposed changes are intended to enhance OCC's process
for monitoring its margin coverage and the performance of its margin
models, which would help OCC maintain sufficient financial resources to
mitigate its credit exposure. To the extent that OCC identifies
Resource Backtesting deficiencies that bring a Clearing Member's margin
coverage below the target coverage level, the proposed Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge would require the impacted Clearing Member to
deposit additional margin resources to absorb a potential loss that
OCC's margin system may not otherwise capture. Collecting sufficient
margin resources to cover potential losses would help to ensure that
OCC may manage the default of a Clearing Member without disruption to
its clearance and settlement services and avoid loss mutualization that
could impose unanticipated costs on other Clearing Members and their
customers. Accordingly, OCC believes the proposed changes are
reasonably designed to promote the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions, and in general, to protect
investors and the public interest, in accordance with Section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act.\67\
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\64\ See 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\65\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
\66\ Prior to charging the Clearing Fund deposits of non-
defaulting Clearing Members, OCC would first contribute OCC's
Minimum Corporate Contribution and its liquid net assets funded by
equity in excess of 110% of OCC's Target Capital Requirement. See
Exchange Act Release No. 92038 (May 27, 2021), 86 FR 29861 (June 3,
2021), 29862 n.15 and accompanying text (SR-OCC-2021-003).
\67\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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OCC also believes the proposed changes described above are
consistent with SEC Rules under the Act for the following reasons.
(i) Backtesting Framework
Paragraph (vi) of Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6) \68\ requires OCC to
establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to cover its credit exposures to its
participants by establishing a risk-based margin system that, at a
minimum, is monitored by OCC's management on an ongoing basis and is
regularly reviewed, tested, and verified by, in relevant part: (A)
conducting backtests of its margin model at least once each day using
standard predetermined parameters and assumptions; (B) conducting a
review of its assumptions for backtesting on at least a monthly basis,
and considering modifications to ensure the backtesting practices are
appropriate for determining the adequacy of OCC's margin resources; (C)
conducting a review of its assumptions for backtesting more frequently
than monthly during periods of time when the products cleared or
markets served display high volatility or become less liquid, or when
the size or concentration of positions held by OCC's participants
increases or decreases significantly; and (D) reporting the results of
these analyses to appropriate OCC decisionmakers, including but not
limited to, its Risk Committee or Board of Directors, and using these
results to evaluate the adequacy of its margin methodology, model
parameters, and any other relevant aspect of its credit risk management
framework. As explained by the Commission, such backtesting ``is a
technique used to compare the potential losses forecasted by a model
with the actual losses that participants incurred'' that is ``intended
to reveal the accuracy of models.'' \69\ Accordingly, the Commission
promulgated Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6) \70\ to require covered clearing
agencies to establish and maintain ``policies and procedures that
provide for backtesting the margin models . . . to help uncover and
address possible errors in model design, misapplication of models, or
errors in the inputs to, and assumptions underlying, margin models.''
\71\
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\68\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi).
\69\ Exchange Act Release No. 71699 (Mar. 12, 2014), 79 FR
29508, 29530 (May 22, 2014) (File No. S7-03-14).
\70\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6).
\71\ Exchange Act Release No. 71699, supra note 69, 79 FR at
29530.
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The proposed Margin Policy would describe how OCC conducts
backtesting of its margin models at least once each day, as required by
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(A).\72\ OCC believes that the proposed Model
Backtesting is reasonably designed to assess the performance of OCC's
margin models in order to provide decisionmakers with information about
potential issues with or enhancements to those models. The proposed
enhancements would provide greater clarity and transparency about how
OCC establishes, reviews and adjusts the assumptions for backtesting,
including the role of the MRWG, Management Committee and Risk Committee
in approving changes thereto, as contemplated by paragraphs (B) and (C)
of Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi).\73\
[[Page 61221]]
Such reviews would occur on at least a monthly basis, but would occur
more frequently when the CCA Monitoring Thresholds are breached,
consistent with paragraph (C) of Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi).\74\ In
addition, the enhancements would also provide greater clarity about the
escalation of backtesting exceedances to appropriate OCC
decisionmakers, including that OCC maintains thresholds for such
escalations that are periodically reviewed and approved by the
governing body to which the escalation must be made, including to OCC's
Risk Committee, consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(D).\75\
Accordingly, OCC believes its proposed backtesting framework is
reasonably designed in a manner consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(6)(vi).\76\
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\72\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(A).
\73\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(B), (C).
\74\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(C).
\75\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi)(D).
\76\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(vi).
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(ii) Resource Backtesting
OCC believes that the proposed expansion of backtesting to include
Resource Backtesting is consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(4)(i),\77\
which requires OCC to maintain sufficient financial resources to cover
its credit exposure to each participant fully with a high degree of
confidence. OCC proposes to expand its backtesting analyses to include
Resource Backtesting in order to ensure that OCC maintains sufficient
margin resources collected from a Clearing Member, among other
prefunded financial resources, to cover its credit exposures to that
Clearing Member fully with a high degree of confidence. Such Resource
Backtesting would take into account other resources collected from a
Clearing Member, including non-CiM resources that are subject to fixed
collateral haircuts rather than valued through OCC's margin models. In
addition, Resource Backtesting would be done at the Clearing Member
level, taking into consideration netting rules based on the types of
liens OCC has on specific margin accounts. Accordingly, OCC believes
that such Resource Backtesting is designed to assess the sufficiency of
the margin resources collected from each Clearing Member, among other
prefunded resources, available to cover the default of that Clearing
Member at the Clearing Member level, consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(4)(i).\78\
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\77\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(4)(i).
\78\ Id.
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(iii) Resource Backtesting Margin Charge
OCC believes the proposed Resource Backtesting Margin Charge and
the changes to OCC's Rules and Margin Policy to effect it would be
consistent with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii), which requires OCC to
establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to cover its credit exposures to its
participants by, at a minimum, establishing a risk-based margin system
that calculates margin sufficient to cover its potential future
exposure to participants in the interval between the last margin
collection and the close out of positions following a participant
default.\79\ Rule 17Ad-22(a)(13), in turn, defines ``potential future
exposure'' to mean the maximum exposure estimated to occur at a future
point in time with an established single-tailed confidence level of at
least 99% with respect to the estimated distribution of future
exposures.\80\ The Resource Backtesting Margin Charge is designed to
require additional margin resources when OCC identifies Resource
Backtesting deficiencies that bring a Clearing Member's margin coverage
below 99%. The Resource Backtesting Margin Charge applied generally
would be equal to the third-largest Resource Backtesting deficiency
during the lookback period in order to achieve OCC's Resource
Backtesting coverage target, rounded up to the nearest $1,000. OCC
would also retain discretion to adjust the Resource Backtesting Margin
Charge based on facts and circumstances that would lead it to conclude
that a different amount was appropriate and consistent with achieving
its 99% coverage target. Accordingly, OCC believes that the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge is consistent with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(6)(iii).\81\
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\79\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).
\80\ 17 CFR 240.17ad-22(a) ``Potential future exposure''.
\81\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(6)(iii).
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(iv) Conforming Changes
OCC also believes that the proposed changes are consistent with SEC
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(2),\82\ which provides in relevant part that OCC must
establish, implement, maintain and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to provide for governance arrangements
that are clear and transparent and specify clear and direct lines of
responsibility.\83\ OCC would make conforming changes to the Margin
Policy and Model Risk Management Policy that would reflect the
consolidated backtesting procedures governed by those policies, thereby
ensuring that cross-references in those rule-filed policies remain
accurate. In addition, OCC believes the proposed rule change would
provide greater clarity about OCC's backtesting framework, including
OCC's governance arrangements for reviewing backtesting assumptions and
escalating backtesting exceedances to appropriate decisionmakers within
OCC. While OCC's current rule-filed policies provide for escalation of
exceedances ``as necessary,'' for example, the proposed changes would
provide greater clarity about governance processes currently maintained
in OCC's internal procedures by providing that OCC will maintain
thresholds for escalation that FRM will adhere to if the criteria are
met. As discussed above, the Margin Policy would provide that such
escalation criteria would include, but not be limited to: (i)
thresholds related to the size and number of exceedances for Model
Backtesting of actual portfolios, (ii) thresholds related to
statistical tests applicable to Model Backtesting of hypothetical
portfolios, and (iii) thresholds related to the size of Resource
Backtesting deficiency and the coverage rate across all Clearing
Members in the aggregate. The changes would also provide greater
clarity about the lines of responsibility with respect to the MRWG's,
Management Committee's and Risk Committee's roles in approving changes
to the backtesting assumptions and escalation criteria. Accordingly,
OCC believes the proposed changes are consistent with SEC Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(2).\84\
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\82\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2).
\83\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2)(i), (v).
\84\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2).
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For the above reasons, OCC believes that this proposed rule change
is consistent with Section 17A of the Exchange Act \85\ and the rules
and regulations thereunder applicable to OCC.
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\85\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
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(B) Clearing Agency's Statement on Burden on Competition
Section 17A(b)(3)(I) of the Exchange Act \86\ requires that the
rules of a clearing agency not impose any burden on competition not
necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Act.
With respect to the proposed changes to OCC's backtesting framework and
the addition of Resource Backtesting, OCC does not believe that the
proposed rule change would impact or impose any burden on competition.
The proposed changes would provide greater clarity concerning OCC's
backtesting framework, including how OCC monitors the performance of
[[Page 61222]]
margin models used to calculate margin requirements for each Clearing
Member account and how OCC monitors the sufficiency of the margin
collateral it collects to cover losses that may arise from the default
of a Clearing Member. OCC does not believe that these changes would
unfairly inhibit access to OCC's services or disadvantage or favor any
particular user in relationship to another user.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(I).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to the proposed Resource Backtesting Margin Charge,
whether a particular Clearing Member would be charged and the amount it
would be charged would depend on the Clearing Member's activity and the
performance of OCC's margin models. OCC has designed the Resource
Backtesting Margin Charge to ensure its compliance with regulations
that require OCC to calculate margin resources sufficient to cover each
Clearing Member's maximum exposure estimated to occur at a future point
in time with an established single-tailed confidence level of at least
99 percent with respect to the estimated distribution of future
exposure in the interval between the last margin collection and the
close out of positions following a participant default.\87\ To the
extent a Clearing Member's margin coverage falls below OCC's coverage
target, a Resource Backtesting Margin Charge would be applied.
Accordingly, OCC believes that the proposed rule change would not
impose any burden on competition not necessary or appropriate in
furtherance of the Act.
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\87\ See supra notes 79-81 and accompanying text.
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(C) Clearing Agency's Statement on Comments on the Proposed Rule Change
Received From Members, Participants or Others
Written comments were not and are not intended to be solicited with
respect to the proposed change and none have been received.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
Within 45 days of the date of publication of this notice in the
Federal Register or within such longer period up to 90 days (i) as the
Commission may designate if it finds such longer period to be
appropriate and publishes its reasons for so finding or (ii) as to
which the self-regulatory organization consents, the Commission will:
(A) by order approve or disapprove such proposed rule change, or
(B) institute proceedings to determine whether the proposed rule
change should be disapproved.
The proposal shall not take effect until all regulatory actions
required with respect to the proposal are completed.
IV. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit written data, views and
arguments concerning the foregoing, including whether the 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-regulations/self-regulatory-organization-rulemaking);
or
Send an email to [email protected]. Please include
file number SR-OCC-2024-009 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Vanessa Countryman,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549-1090.
All submissions should refer to file number SR-OCC-2024-009. 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-regulations/self-regulatory-organization-rulemaking). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent amendments, all written statements with
respect to the proposed rule change that are filed with the Commission,
and all written communications relating to the proposed rule change
between the Commission and any person, other than those that may be
withheld from the public in accordance with the provisions of 5 U.S.C.
552, will be available for 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 filing also will be available for inspection and
copying at the principal office of OCC and on OCC's website at https://www.theocc.com/Company-Information/Documents-and-Archives/By-Laws-and-Rules.
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-OCC-2024-009 and
should be submitted on or before August 20, 2024.
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\88\
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\88\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
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Sherry R. Haywood,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2024-16661 Filed 7-29-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P