Going forward, market participants should ensure that all existing agreements successfully transitioned, and they should monitor any further changes and check exposures/assess impact to plan for transition as well as ensure that robust fallback language is in place where possible.
4. REFORMS TO CLEARING MANDATE
Finally, another key trend that we have witnessed over the past months are the proposed reforms to the derivatives clearing mandates. Indeed, the requirement to clear standardized OTC derivatives contracts through central counterparties (CCPs) is aimed at reducing systemic risk via a reduction in the counterparty credit risk associated with the most actively traded contracts. However, in the context of LIBOR transition and the international efforts to migrate to RFR-referencing contracts, not all of the RFR-referencing contracts are included in the current scope of the clearing obligation. This would mean that a large proportion of OTC derivatives activity would no longer be centrally cleared and would therefore undermine the policy objective of the clearing and negatively impact financial stability. It is therefore no surprise that various reforms to the clearing obligation took place.
Notably, in Switzerland, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) announced in May 2022 the review of FMIO-FINMA to update the catalogue of interest-rate derivatives that must be cleared through a CCP, aligning with the clearing obligation reforms that have already taken place in the EU and in the UK. On December 14th, 2022, FINMA published the partly revised FINMA Financial Market Infrastructure Ordinance (FMIO-FINMA). The ordinance updates the scope of interest-rate derivatives subject to a clearing requirement, in light of the benchmark reforms – the update aligns with the EU’s scope for products subject to the clearing obligation. The partly revised ordinance entered into force on February 1st, 2023.
In the EU, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published in July 2022 a consultation on extensions to RFR related clearing obligation and derivatives trading obligation. The proposals contained in the consultation introduce additional classes to the scope of the clearing and derivatives trading obligations. These changes also complement the first set of regulatory technical standards (RTS) that were adopted by the European Commission in February 2022 and published in the Official Journal on 17 May 2022. The first set of RTS removed the EONIA and LIBOR classes, while it introduced overnight index swap (OIS) classes referencing €STR and SOFR to the clearing obligation as well as expanded the maturities in scope for the OIS class referencing SONIA. The second set of RTS included in the consultation introduce the OIS class referencing TONA, expand the maturities in scope of the clearing obligation for the OIS class referencing SOFR, and for the derivatives trading obligation, introduce certain classes of OIS referencing €STR.
On February 1st, 2023 ESMA published its final report on changes to the scope of CO and DTO, following a consultation held last year. The report includes proposed draft RTSs amending the scope of the CO and DTO for OTC interest rate derivatives denominated in EUR, GBP, JPY, and USD. The proposals include for the CO – introduction of the TONA OIS (with maturities up to 30 years) class and extend the SOFR OIS class (up to 50 years); and for the DTO – introduction of certain €STR OIS classes.
Before being published in the Official Journal, the draft RTSs will have to be endorsed by the European Commission and receive non-objection by the Council and European Parliament.
Finally, in the US, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued a final rule modifying its clearing requirement for interest rate swaps (IRS) in August 2022. Following this, the final rule updates the types of IRS subject to mandatory clearing by eliminating the requirements to clear IRS referencing LIBOR and other IBORs as well as by introducing, in their place, new requirements to clear IRS referencing the relevant replacement RFRs.
Market participants should therefore continue to closely monitor updates and plan accordingly.
Summary
Market participants must continue to focus on transition efforts and seek to transition the stock of USD LIBOR legacy contracts ahead of June 2023. Further, market participants should also continue to look ahead and increase focus on the cessation of other IBORs as well as take note of ongoing reforms to the clearing mandate in the context of benchmark reform.