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Feature

An evolving collateral ecosystem


12 June 2018

Graham Gooden and Tim Meredith of J.P. Morgan discuss macro-level themes that are currently influencing counterparties and other ecosystem participants

Image: Shutterstock
Managing collateral has become highly strategic. A complex ecosystem that encompasses providers and takers, agents and vendors, venues and clearing houses, it facilitates the interplay of regional and global demands.

In conversations with clients and industry partners to assess the global state of collateral, we’ve identified 10 macro-level themes. Learn how these are influencing counterparties and other ecosystem participants as they make decisions, evaluate opportunities and deploy their resources.

Focus on growth

Across the industry, we are seeing a subtle shift: a focus on revenue growth and profitability as institutions have become more efficient at managing and adapting to regulatory change. In tandem, demand for scalable and cost-effective solutions is increasing, even as firms focus on optimising their management of collateral.

Taking a global perspective, we see balances growing but with an important caveat: borrowers tell us that this growth is driven more by that focus on optimisation instead of a rising balance sheet.

Drive for efficiency

As institutions met the regulatory requirements of the last decade, financing and lending activities kept pace. Not surprisingly, the individual developments needed to comply with multiple waves of regulatory change have not necessarily resulted in an optimal operating model. Post-implementation, firms are looking to fine-tune and drive for efficiency, seeking to maximise the effective use of collateral and manage their internal capital utilisation across specific desks, regionally and on a firm-wide basis before going out to the market.

Interest in sensible standardisation

While standardisation is essential in order to achieve desired efficiency, it should not be at the expense of innovation. Many believe that the creation of new market constructs for the future should be agreed upon rather than defined or imposed by any one single industry participant. It is, however, important to agree on best practices so that counterparties are able to effectively interact with one another. That could come either through industry conversations on best practices, based on the experiences of individual firms, or by normalisation and acceptance of models put forth by external providers. The key will be to balance the flexibility needed by individual firms with the benefits that stem from common processes.

Desire for control

Institutions are focused on where they can effect change based on the things they can control, such as identifying and creating a target operating model, directing investment, managing price and optimising their collateral. Tri-party provides one engine to facilitate the deployment of those optimisation strategies, with capabilities that support margin management, stock loan and repo.

Changes to traditional approaches

While the operational management of collateral remains in the middle and back office, its importance has made it a front-office concern. Trading desks increasingly focus on the cost or availability of collateral, or the collateral requirements of a transaction, as part of their decision-making process. Furthermore, collateral itself has value: depending on the type, source, term or counterparty, excess collateral could be traded like any other scarce financial resource.

The ability to mobilise collateral across regions is also essential: this requires knowing what assets you have, where they are and how you can move idle or unused collateral to the right place. In certain Asian markets, tri-party structures are helping to unlock assets trapped in illiquid markets for use in onshore and offshore financing.

However, legal entities create additional layers of complexity, particularly for large universal banks. This is due to the need to manage complex internal connections and adhere to different jurisdictional or cross-border requirements.

Demand for quality, in counterparty and in collateral

The quality of the counterparty remains paramount, but your counterparty, and how you face it, is evolving:
  • If you use a central counterparty (CCP), the CCP becomes your counterparty and your credit decision is effectively outsourced under the CCP’s mutualised risk model
  • Alternatively, peer-to-peer networks facilitate bilateral arrangements, requiring a direct review of counterparty quality
Lending counterparties are also evaluated for credit quality and to determine whether they will be able to provide meaningful supply and liquidity during times of high demand.

Finally, collateral quality remains a keen focus. High-quality liquid assets are in high demand, particularly for broker dealers managing against complex balance sheet, capital and liquidity constraints.

Anticipation of future integration

Interoperability and industry solutions, such as CCPs, vendor solutions and the ability to assemble components into partially bespoke solutions are giving institutions more choices in managing their financing and collateral portfolios.

The traditional supply chain is likely to expand in order to include non-traditional solutions. However, new options will require adaptation and adoption to be effective. For example, peer-to-peer platforms will require critical mass and scale to make them attractive in terms of access and liquidity, and counterparties will need to conduct their own due diligence on the institutions they face in these bilateral platforms.

Agent lending models are also evolving to attract new borrowers and lenders and expand the available pool of assets.

Push for flexibility

Tri-party structures continue to expand beyond traditional stock loan or repo. Pledge structures, which were originally discussed as a solution to manage haircuts or margin, could be used for the entire loan exposure amount following the successful use of pledge models in tri-party for segregated initial margin. These structures leverage the existing market infrastructure, and may be quicker to market than other emerging options, such as CCP structures for securities lending.

The pace of change also depends upon the appetite of buy-side institutions to adopt new structures. This continues to be the topic of significant conversations amongst collateral borrowers, lenders and agents, given the introduction of uncleared margin rules.

Investment in technology

Intense investment spending to comply with regulatory change over the last decade is now giving way to more flexibility in allocating spend. Investment funding is focused on increasing efficiency, reducing costs, improving the customer experience and increasing connectivity. Online tools facilitate eligibility schedule management and collateral allocation deployment, while big data initiatives and advanced analytics aid decision making. Being able to combine data across an institution, for one common source of information, is critical, particularly across multiple desks or regions.

Technology that supports interconnectedness and interoperability amongst members of the collateral ecosystem will ultimately create additional efficiencies. As individual firms continue to innovate internally, we expect that financial technology will help to connect the dots between different institutions in order to improve the broader model.

Role of the agent

As with any ecosystem, participants must remain adaptable in order to thrive. For agents, that means going beyond the critical service of mitigating operational and counterparty risk. As the management of collateral becomes more sophisticated, agents must now be able to:
  • Provide collateral eligibility and allocation services that are nimble and can support complex, bespoke and fluid counterparty requirements
  • Support a wide variety of asset classes, underlying principal trade structures and markets to facilitate the global deployment of collateral across multiple client legal entity structures
  • Work closely with clients, providing tools to help them achieve the optimal use of their collateral in accordance with their own internal demands and binding constraints (for example, capital, liquidity)
  • Deliver on-demand reporting and transparency to facilitate intraday collateral and funding requirements
We expect the pace of change to accelerate as innovative technology and new platforms create evolutionary opportunities, and traditional barriers continue to soften, and we will continue to work closely with borrowers, lenders and industry partners to identify and adapt to emerging opportunities
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