The Borneo Post

Deutsche Bank shifts euro clearing as post-Brexit landscape emerges

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FRANKFURT/LONDON: Deutsche Bank has moved the clearing of a ‘large part’ of new euro-denominate­d derivative­s trades from London to Frankfurt, as financial firms ramp up their Brexit preparatio­ns.

The shift by Germany’s largest bank, which was confirmed by a spokesman on Monday, is a boost to Deutsche Boerse’s efforts to gain ground from London in the euro clearing market.

This ensures a deal completes even if one side of a trade goes bust, as Britain exits the European Union.

London Stock Exchange’s LCH division has long dominated clearing of euro-denominate­d derivative­s like interest rate swaps, which are used by companies to cover themselves against unexpected moves in borrowing costs.

The worry for the City of London is that if chunks of clearing move elsewhere, other activities like trading and jobs could follow, eating away at Britain’s biggest economic sector.

LSE declined to comment on Deutsche Bank’s largely symbolic move, first reported by the Financial Times, which was widely expected given that its base is in Frankfurt and it is moving other activities there due to Brexit.

The Deutsche Bank spokesman said no jobs were being transferre­d and that the bank was effectivel­y pushing a different button to route the clearing to Eurex, Deutsche Boerse’s clearing division, rather than LCH.

Internatio­nal banks with European bases in London have been opening hubs in the EU to avoid Brexit disrupting business.

Meanwhile trading firm Jane Street, one of the largest players in exchange-traded funds, said on Monday it had opened an office in Amsterdam, giving it a location from which to serve EU clients when Britian leaves the bloc.

The Dutch capital, with highspeed digital infrastruc­ture in the heart of Western Europe, has become a favourite destinatio­n for trading businesses looking for an alternativ­e to London.

And Credit Suisse is looking to shift about 50 jobs from London to Madrid as part of its efforts to continue doing business in the European Union after Britain leaves the bloc in 2019, a source close to the bank said on Monday.

The European Central Bank in Frankfurt, which declined to comment on Monday on Deutsche Bank’s move, told Reuters last week that being connected to local market infrastruc­ture like clearing is a requiremen­t for a euro zone licence.

LCH has see strong growth, with interest rate clearing at SwapClear up 23 per cent in the first half of 2018 at US$575.8 trillion, though a large chunk is denominate­d in dollars.

A spokeswoma­n for Eurex said that it now has a market share of 8.9 per cent in notional outstandin­g euro clearing, up from virtually zero a year ago, though still tiny compared with 89.07 per cent for LCH, according to calculatio­ns from Eurex.

Consultant­s Clarus have said the growth in Eurex has mainly come from euro denominate­d forward rate agreements (FRAs) or shorter-term products, rather than the full-duration rate swaps that LCH clears.

There are also no signs that Deutsche Bank or its peers are shifting existing euro positions from LCH to Eurex, a cumbersome process that would take time and customer permission, bankers say.

Deutsche Boerse has set up a clearing business model similar to that of LCH by introducin­g a profitshar­ing scheme last October to attract interest rate swap clearing.

There are now 29 firms in the scheme with more to come.

“Our focus for the next six months will be to increase buy side activity based on the good price quality provided by the banks participat­ing in our partnershi­p program,” Eurex said.

The ECB has long wanted eurodenomi­nated clearing relocated from London to the euro zone, arguing it should have some oversight, given that it would be called on to inject euros in the market if a clearing house got into trouble. — Reuters

 ??  ?? The towers of German Company Deutsche Bank are pictured in Frankfurt, Germany. Deutsche Bank has moved the clearing of a ‘large part’ of new euro-denominate­d derivative­s trades from London to Frankfurt, as financial firms ramp up their Brexit...
The towers of German Company Deutsche Bank are pictured in Frankfurt, Germany. Deutsche Bank has moved the clearing of a ‘large part’ of new euro-denominate­d derivative­s trades from London to Frankfurt, as financial firms ramp up their Brexit...

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