本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛The market for credit-default swaps is huge–$55 trillion–but was largely unknown to most of the populace until the downfall of Bear Stearns and the federal rescue of insurer American International Group.
Now, with their central role in the credit crunch, these little-regulated “insurance policies” that enable investors to bet on whether a company will go bankrupt have gone mainstream. Thethe New York branch of the Federal Reserve has called a meeting for Friday to smooth out the tangles in the market once and for all.
Among those jostling to get a bigger portion of the CDS market is CME Group, parent of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange that handles the bulk of U.S. futures trading. CME is trying to capitalize on the chaos in the market by grabbing more trading from broker-dealers like Goldman Sachs Group, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers, who typically handle the CDS business by acting as counterparties to every trade. The financial crisis has changed their business models and increased uncertainty as Bear Stearns and Lehman were wiped off the map and Merrill awaits a takeover by Bank of America.
This week, CME agreed to form a CDS trading platform with the hedge fund Citadel Investment Group. CME hopes to lasso more revenue by “clearing” CDSs, meaning that the CME would get involved as a counterparty in every CDS trade and manage the credit exposures from the time the trade is made to when the trade is officially settled. Clearing also means ensuring delivery of the securities and making sure trades are settled legally and according to the rules of the market, even if the buyer or seller becomes insolvent. Though technical, the fees can be lucrative; CME recorded $458 million in clearing and transaction fee revenue in the second quarter, a 9% boost from a year earlier. Deal Journal talked to CME CEO Craig Donohue recently–well before he announced the deal with Citadel–and an edited version of our conversation is below. This is part 2 of a two-part interview; you can read part 1 here.
Deal Journal: How is CME faring in this financial crisis?
Craig Donohue: At the highest level, one would say that there’s that appetite for insuring transparency and avoidance of systemic risk, and that’s right in our wheelhouse. Most of what people are talking about in terms of better regulation is what we do today: we have large trader data, and open and transparent pricing mechanism on our products. At the end of the day, they’re driving more regulation, more market integrity and lower risk. The pressure is going to be balance sheets, allocation of capital for trading and dealing purposes, lowering leverage ratios, lowering operational costs and operational risk. Processing manually the CDS trade that is being done, the inability to know the net exposure of the bank and not very strong collateralization of obligations–that world is not going to survive. People are going to need to make better use of their capital.
Deal Journal: How do you protect yourself?
Donohue: It’s worth pointing out that we have a very active risk-management program and oversight of our member firms. We have tremendous confidence in the system. We have a twice daily mark-to-market system where we evaluate what the firms have on a real-time basis. They have to pay us twice a day at least. It helps flush losses. The other thing that is valuable is that we have complete segregation of customer funds from the proprietary accounts of the firm. At a minimum, there’s an absolute necessity for more of this business to be centrally cleared. The banks are constrained in terms of balance-sheet strength and leverage ratios, and they need the central counterparty clearing we offer. The question is how the market might benefit from a more regulated counterparty [like CME]. There’s tremendous growth for [the market in listed derivatives]. There’s no greater need for risk management today than in the past. We are just in a situation where we have much more uncertainty geopolitically and economically than we’ve had any time in the past. That driver of our products has increased, not decreased in my view.
Deal Journal: Is this a good time to enter the credit-default swap market?
Donohue: CDS is an area where we have not been active in the past, but we’ve never had a default and never lost money because a customer had a default. We’ve been working on CDSs for a year, and we’re close to being offer these services to the CDS market. These will be better regulated, more transparent and have more risk through the counterparty trading system. Clearly what we will do is bring a higher level of market integrity and risk level.
Deal Journal: You may end up seeing more business if regulators do end up doing heightened regulation. Will the CDS market continue to grow as quickly as it has?
Donohue: I fundamentally believe that it can. I believe that when you have a more open market with price transparency, competition and a significantly lower risk profile and cost of doing business, that market will expand in a way that reflects lower risks. The cost of capital is increasingly less attractive given what is going on in the marketplace, and at the end of the day, you don’t have a very high degree of price transparency given what you have in the market.
Deal Journal: Where are you expanding the business?
Donohue: We’re growing on global basis, throughout Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East. Investable assets are increasing in Asian sovereign-wealth funds and central banks. Some of the biggest growth we’ve had is in electronic trading outside of North America and outside the North American trading day. We’re working hard on India, China and other Asian partnerships. Globalization will be a significant driver of growth for us.
Deal Journal: A lot of what has happened recently seems to bode badly for the entire business of taking risk, which is at the heart of what Wall Street does.
Donohue: As I’m sure you recognize, there’s a fundamental distinction between the exchange-traded derivatives market like CME and the risk embodied in these less transparent, less regulated, bilateral markets that are not centrally cleared. You’re continuing to see the marketplace embrace our model. Where you’ve seen people exiting, it’s been in these more complex markets and instruments where they can’t value this stuff properly. They have one counterparty, whereas when you trade on our exchange, you trade anonymously with many parties. I think what you’re going to see is people increasingly standardizing more of the over-the-counter trade so that you can have price transparency so you can clear it and risk-margin it correctly, which is a change from what we’ve seen over the past 20 years.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
Now, with their central role in the credit crunch, these little-regulated “insurance policies” that enable investors to bet on whether a company will go bankrupt have gone mainstream. Thethe New York branch of the Federal Reserve has called a meeting for Friday to smooth out the tangles in the market once and for all.
Among those jostling to get a bigger portion of the CDS market is CME Group, parent of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange that handles the bulk of U.S. futures trading. CME is trying to capitalize on the chaos in the market by grabbing more trading from broker-dealers like Goldman Sachs Group, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers, who typically handle the CDS business by acting as counterparties to every trade. The financial crisis has changed their business models and increased uncertainty as Bear Stearns and Lehman were wiped off the map and Merrill awaits a takeover by Bank of America.
This week, CME agreed to form a CDS trading platform with the hedge fund Citadel Investment Group. CME hopes to lasso more revenue by “clearing” CDSs, meaning that the CME would get involved as a counterparty in every CDS trade and manage the credit exposures from the time the trade is made to when the trade is officially settled. Clearing also means ensuring delivery of the securities and making sure trades are settled legally and according to the rules of the market, even if the buyer or seller becomes insolvent. Though technical, the fees can be lucrative; CME recorded $458 million in clearing and transaction fee revenue in the second quarter, a 9% boost from a year earlier. Deal Journal talked to CME CEO Craig Donohue recently–well before he announced the deal with Citadel–and an edited version of our conversation is below. This is part 2 of a two-part interview; you can read part 1 here.
Deal Journal: How is CME faring in this financial crisis?
Craig Donohue: At the highest level, one would say that there’s that appetite for insuring transparency and avoidance of systemic risk, and that’s right in our wheelhouse. Most of what people are talking about in terms of better regulation is what we do today: we have large trader data, and open and transparent pricing mechanism on our products. At the end of the day, they’re driving more regulation, more market integrity and lower risk. The pressure is going to be balance sheets, allocation of capital for trading and dealing purposes, lowering leverage ratios, lowering operational costs and operational risk. Processing manually the CDS trade that is being done, the inability to know the net exposure of the bank and not very strong collateralization of obligations–that world is not going to survive. People are going to need to make better use of their capital.
Deal Journal: How do you protect yourself?
Donohue: It’s worth pointing out that we have a very active risk-management program and oversight of our member firms. We have tremendous confidence in the system. We have a twice daily mark-to-market system where we evaluate what the firms have on a real-time basis. They have to pay us twice a day at least. It helps flush losses. The other thing that is valuable is that we have complete segregation of customer funds from the proprietary accounts of the firm. At a minimum, there’s an absolute necessity for more of this business to be centrally cleared. The banks are constrained in terms of balance-sheet strength and leverage ratios, and they need the central counterparty clearing we offer. The question is how the market might benefit from a more regulated counterparty [like CME]. There’s tremendous growth for [the market in listed derivatives]. There’s no greater need for risk management today than in the past. We are just in a situation where we have much more uncertainty geopolitically and economically than we’ve had any time in the past. That driver of our products has increased, not decreased in my view.
Deal Journal: Is this a good time to enter the credit-default swap market?
Donohue: CDS is an area where we have not been active in the past, but we’ve never had a default and never lost money because a customer had a default. We’ve been working on CDSs for a year, and we’re close to being offer these services to the CDS market. These will be better regulated, more transparent and have more risk through the counterparty trading system. Clearly what we will do is bring a higher level of market integrity and risk level.
Deal Journal: You may end up seeing more business if regulators do end up doing heightened regulation. Will the CDS market continue to grow as quickly as it has?
Donohue: I fundamentally believe that it can. I believe that when you have a more open market with price transparency, competition and a significantly lower risk profile and cost of doing business, that market will expand in a way that reflects lower risks. The cost of capital is increasingly less attractive given what is going on in the marketplace, and at the end of the day, you don’t have a very high degree of price transparency given what you have in the market.
Deal Journal: Where are you expanding the business?
Donohue: We’re growing on global basis, throughout Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East. Investable assets are increasing in Asian sovereign-wealth funds and central banks. Some of the biggest growth we’ve had is in electronic trading outside of North America and outside the North American trading day. We’re working hard on India, China and other Asian partnerships. Globalization will be a significant driver of growth for us.
Deal Journal: A lot of what has happened recently seems to bode badly for the entire business of taking risk, which is at the heart of what Wall Street does.
Donohue: As I’m sure you recognize, there’s a fundamental distinction between the exchange-traded derivatives market like CME and the risk embodied in these less transparent, less regulated, bilateral markets that are not centrally cleared. You’re continuing to see the marketplace embrace our model. Where you’ve seen people exiting, it’s been in these more complex markets and instruments where they can’t value this stuff properly. They have one counterparty, whereas when you trade on our exchange, you trade anonymously with many parties. I think what you’re going to see is people increasingly standardizing more of the over-the-counter trade so that you can have price transparency so you can clear it and risk-margin it correctly, which is a change from what we’ve seen over the past 20 years.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net