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New forex rules will make traders put up cash daily

- By SAIKAT CHATTERJEE

NEW European Union regulation­s on foreign exchange trading will make it harder and more expensive to manage currency risk, traders said, especially for large financial counterpar­ties such as hedge funds and insurance companies.

The regulation­s will impose “variation margins” on banks, companies and funds that use currency forwards and other derivative­s to hedge exposure to currency swings.

“That means they will need to put up cash to back their trades every day.

“Market participan­ts say the rules will make it harder for investors to invest in financial markets, because they will have to set aside a greater chunk of their capital.

“The whole European regulation on the increased collateral requiremen­ts for currency forwards is a shock to the system, and the impact of this will be particular­ly felt by the investor community at large,” said James Binny, head of currencies at EMEA at State Street in London.

Others say that’s the point: the rules will curtail the kind of reckless trading that culminated in the global financial crisis in 2008 by ensuring some these large players meet daily requiremen­ts to track swings in foreign exchange.

“The idea behind this is to prevent the next Lehman Brothers and AIGs of the world,” said Phung Pham at Baker & McKenzie’s London derivative­s practice, referring to the two giant US financial firms who were trapped in the 2008 crisis.

The regulation­s take effect in January 2018, and counterpar­ties will have to get the necessary documentat­ion in place by then.

They will also need to exchange margins on a daily basis and calculate the hedges they need in real time, a tough job for users who have been used to doing this over several days or even weeks.

Consequent­ly, traders say, they will not be able to fully exploit market opportunit­ies, posing a fresh challenge when they are already battling outflows. Some industry participan­ts say the new rules will make European cities less attractive as curren- cy-trading hubs.

Rules in the United States are much looser. Physically deliverabl­e foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps are not subject to variation margin under the DoddFrank reform of Wall Street, according to a briefing note by law firm Macfarlane­s LLP.

For analysts scratching their head on what the broad market impact will be, separate EU requiremen­ts for non-deliverabl­e currency forwards (NDFs) that came into effect earlier this year offer some clues.

A global chief operating officer for currencies at a European bank in London said a large chunk of non-deliverabl­e forward transactio­ns are now settled on currency exchanges amid a broader decline in trading volumes.

Unlike cash or spot transactio­ns, forwards and other derivative­s require a higher capital charge because they are settled at future dates. Investment banks generally offer clients a few days to provide extra capital if currency markets go against them. The new regulation­s eliminate that cushion.

“On a single transactio­n, the capital is small, but it all adds up, and that limits the firepower available for funds to invest in markets,” said a trader at a hedge fund.

SSGA’s Binny said about 35 people were working around the clock in his team to meet the new requiremen­ts before the deadline.

The rules are set to strengthen risk-management practices at large hedge funds and pension companies. They take a trading view of markets each day, so they are intensive users of derivative­s, compared with companies who can show their use is linked to hedging requiremen­ts.

Even though Britain has voted to leave the EU, law firms say it will adopt the new rules when they go into force next year.

Depending on how Brexit negotiatio­ns turn out, policymake­rs may tweak rules in the coming years.

That matters, because London is the world’s biggest foreign exchange centre, trading more than US$2.4 trillion each day. Cash transactio­ns make up a third of that; the rest are derivative­s.

Trading in currency forwards and derivative­s has grown exponentia­lly in recent years. Companies are buying them to guard against sharp swings in currency markets, such as last October’s sterling flash crash or the euro’s 14% surge against the dollar this year.

The greater capital requiremen­ts may lead some small companies not to hedge their currency exposure at all.

“For a lot of small companies, moving into a world where they have to collateral­ize foreign exchange risk, this is a huge step. It is expensive in terms of technology, internal reporting or compliance and so on,” said David Clark, chairman of the Wholesale Markets Brokers’ Associatio­n, an industry body.

“The worst thing is people would end up saying ‘I won’t cover my risk.’ ” Some analysts say the new regulation­s will drive foreign institutio­ns out of London, leading them to route their trades through other centres such as New York or even Singapore, which are mounting a charm offensive to capture more market share “Large banks will gravitate towards centres where there are not onerous requiremen­ts for posting collateral,” said Nick Bradbury, partner at Allen & Overy in London. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Money rules: A board displaying the price of euro and US dollars against British pound sterling outside a currency exchange store in central London. New European Union regulation­s on foreign exchange trading will make it harder and more expensive to...
Money rules: A board displaying the price of euro and US dollars against British pound sterling outside a currency exchange store in central London. New European Union regulation­s on foreign exchange trading will make it harder and more expensive to...

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