Business Day

Securities financing comes of age as global interest rises

- Michael Wright Wright is senior manager for securities lending at Nedbank Corporate & Investment Banking.

It was an opportune moment for the securities finance and collateral management sector to gather in Cape Town in February for its yearly conference. Change is coming. The local sector must adapt to realise its full potential. North America transition­s to a T+1 regime in May, when securities and cash transactio­ns will settle within one business day after trade date, compared with the prevailing two-day standard.

This will unleash greater market efficiency and curtail settlement and counterpar­ty risk. But the implicatio­ns for the SA sector, where we are on T+3, are profound. Systems and processes must be able to keep up with the shorter settlement window to enable the SA industry to interact with this huge market.

Technology is evolving at lightning speed, from distribute­d ledger technology and blockchain to artificial intelligen­ce and software as a service, or cloud computing. These technologi­es hold the potential to transform our industry and open new pathways for growth, but they also come with risks that we must be careful to understand fully before adopting new ways of doing things.

Being able to observe how other markets further down the track incorporat­e these technologi­es will help local players avoid some of the pitfalls. At the same time, the world is experienci­ng a period of heightened geopolitic­al tension and uncertaint­y.

The effect of climate change is more evident every day. The conference heard from futurist, economist and business trends analyst Bronwyn Williams how the Pacific nation of Tuvalu is creating virtual copies of its land to preserve it for future generation­s as the people of Tuvalu prepare for their islands to be submerged beneath a rising sea.

The finance sector has a critical role to play in helping address climate change in the way that it manages capital. Appropriat­e regulation is a key enabler in this, and the evolution of regulation injects new dynamics into the market. Most importantl­y, as Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) divisional executive for market integrity & decisions sciences Olano Makhubela reminded delegates, regulation is not just about ticking boxes. It is about ensuring client satisfacti­on, fairness and transparen­cy.

He elaborated on the FSCA role in the sustainabl­e finance and environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) paradigm shift, with a focus on taxonomy; enabling asset owners to positively influence companies they invest in; consumer literacy; market developmen­t in areas such as carbon credits and green bonds; and disclosure and reporting. Sustainabl­e finance is moving rapidly towards mainstream practice. Beyond the growing recognitio­n that economic activity creates risks for the long-term continued developmen­t and sustainabi­lity of human society, we have seen how markets can fail to price in risks-adequately with a longer time horizon than that of most investment­s. ESG is evolving for investors to engage more systematic­ally with such risks, as well as opportunit­ies arising from emerging regulation that seeks to address them. A key question is the ability to benchmark and compare convention­al risk-adjusted returns with those of ESG-compliant investment­s in the future.

The securities finance industry did not wait idly for regulation to arrive. Through our representa­tion on the Global Alliance of Securities Lending Associatio­ns, we sought to resolve some of the most important issues relating to ESG, especially governance, before regulatory interventi­on. In the process we created the Global Framework for ESG & Securities Lending, a guide to pension funds for making their securities lending programmes more ESG compliant.

The recent 2024 Securities Finance & Collateral Management Conference had a surge in attendance, with 30% more delegates compared with the previous year. Many of these were internatio­nal visitors attending for the first time. The level of interest was evident in the exceptiona­l quality of the speakers, as foreign guests also showed a strong appetite to participat­e in panel discussion­s rather than simply observing.

The expansion of the conference to include collateral management, securities financing transactio­ns and repurchase agreements demonstrat­es its commitment to fostering knowledge exchange and collaborat­ion. Encouragin­gly, regulators, including the FSCA, Reserve Bank and SA Revenue Service, also actively participat­ed in the conference.

SA, as the largest securities lending market in Africa, has an average lendable value of R1.3-trillion, with lender-tobroker loan values reaching R137.6bn. While historical­ly serving domestic needs (because of the regulatory environmen­t, market infrastruc­ture and overall economic landscape), there is rising demand domestical­ly and internatio­nally for securities financing activities in SA. In this era of rapid change and global uncertaint­y, the SA securities finance industry is well positioned to develop and assert its rightful place in the global arena.

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