I See Your Footnote 88, and Raise You Footnote 513, Or, Kafka Squared
Further muddying the waters is a footnote that was written into the margins of the final rules that could end up having a major impact. Footnote 88 requires certain entities that offer trade execution of swaps on a multiple-to-multiple basis to register as SEFs, even if they only execute or trade swaps that are not subject to the trade execution mandates.
This could lead to a significantly expanded SEF universe, which is already expected to be crowded. Trading participants would have to code and test to these various SEFs, some of which will have hastily assembled their platforms in order to be compliant. The on-boarding process will be rushed for participants in order to generate needed liquidity at the Oct. 2 starting point.
“For some of our members who have decided that they’re going to connect to each one of the platforms that’s available, they’re going to need this unique coding and connectivity to these new platforms,” Nevins says. “That’s a lot of work in a very short period of time.”Those who don’t want to connect to each venue will have to decide quickly which SEFs they want to work with, and they still need to hurry the coding and connection of pipes to the SEFs.
But two can play the footnote game. Today Bloomberg reports that the banks have found a footnote in the rule that allows them to shelter some trades from the SEF execution mandate. Footnote 513. (The number itself should give an indication of how bloated and complex the rule is.)
Wall Street, trying to preserve profits from swap trading in the face of tougher scrutiny from Washington, has found a new way to keep some of its overseas deals private. It’s called Footnote 513.
Banking lawyers have seized on the wording of the footnote, contained in an 84-page policy statement issued in July by the main U.S. regulator of derivatives. The largest banks told swap brokers in late September that the language means certain swaps still don’t fall under the agency’s new trading rules, according to three people briefed on the discussions.
London-based ICAP Plc (IAP), one of the largest swap brokers, told the banks it didn’t agree with their interpretation, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the discussions weren’t public. Other brokers accepted the banks’ position and have been trading billions of dollars in contracts outside the new regulatory system, the people said.
The deals in question include swaps for foreign clients that are arranged by U.S.-based traders or brokers and then booked through a U.S. bank’s overseas affiliate. Bank lawyers say that if the trade goes through an affiliate it can stay private and doesn’t need to be handled on one of the public electronic trading platforms approved by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, two people said.
Other than lawyers, who thinks this Duel of Footnotes is anyway to run a railroad? (I know, I know: most lawyers think this is stupid too. It’s just that they’ll be about the only ones that profit from it.)
And remember it’s not just footnotes. It’s commas too. As I wrote about a year ago, the decision overturning the CFTC’s position limit rule hinged in part on the placement of commas.
The whole structure is still under construction, and it is already requiring a plethora of ad hoc fixes, in the form of exemptions and no action letters, which Commissioner Scott O’Malia trenchantly criticized.
And it’s not just in the US. The rules and paperwork are metastasizing in Europe too. As one commentator puts it, “Regulation descends into a Kafkaesque bureaucracy.” Yeah. This will work. Especially when their Kafkaesque bureaucracy clashes with our Kafkaesque bureaucracy. Kafka squared. Woot!
And it’s not just derivatives. It’s hedge funds. And I could go on.
The hedge fund article also points out something I’ve been hammering on for years now: perversely, since compliance costs have a huge fixed cost element, the regulatory onslaught creates scale economies that favor concentration and consolidation, and which can potentially reduce competition. You are seeing it in hedge funds. You are seeing it in banking. You are seeing it in FCMs.
And I do mean perverse, because among the ostensible purposes of these regulations were mitigating the too big to fail problem, and promoting competition. The dramatic increase in regulatory overhead that favors the big over the small is completely at odds with these purposes.
Moreover, don’t forget another point that I’ve made. These rules are systemic in nature, in the sense that they affect myriad financial market participants, and in pretty much the same way. Meaning that if one of the rules is fatally flawed, it could lead to a serious systemic problem.
Which raises the question: what footnote-or what comma-in what rule will create a future crisis? Perhaps that’s a little hyperbolic, but not outrageously so.
Wow! Spot on, Prof: “The hedge fund article also points out something I’ve been hammering on for years now: perversely, since compliance costs have a huge fixed cost element, the regulatory onslaught creates scale economies that favor concentration and consolidation, and which can potentially reduce competition. You are seeing it in hedge funds. You are seeing it in banking. You are seeing it in FCMs.”
Big pharma, telecom, etc., figured this out decades ago.
Comment by markets.aurelius — October 25, 2013 @ 4:15 pm