Clarus Financial Technology

ISDA SIMM 2.0 – What You Need to Know

Version 2.0

ISDA have announced ISDA SIMM v2.0. The press release tells you all you need to know;

  1. New products have been added which introduce new risk factors.
  2. Risk weights have been recalibrated for all products.
  3. It goes live as of December 4th 2017.

This is the 4th iteration of the ISDA SIMM model. Our Clarus calculators support all versions of the model (yes, we are live with 2.0 already), and our tools are designed to give quick and easy comparisons between the models.

Sign up now for your free trial to test the impact ISDA SIMM v2.0 will have on your portfolio.

It’s not just a calibration

As with most margin models, maintenance should be a single annual calibration exercise. The chance of a new product being introduced to the market during any year that requires new risk factors to be added are quite slim (although maybe we’ll need some catastrophe swaps added in 2018?).

But the reality of introducing a new IM model to cover all OTC derivatives, from scratch, is far more daunting than that. As large banks continue to back-test their portfolios and report those results to local regulators, the process of refining the model, adding risk factors and identifying gaps is bound to continue. The reality of maintaining an ISDA SIMM solution for software providers begins to bite from v2.0 onwards.

Luckily, we are strong advocates of ISDA SIMM at Clarus. We have had v2.0 live across our products for a few months now. We are well acquainted with it.

Today’s blog will look at some of the changes and how you can analyse them using SIMM for Excel.

Your Margin will change under SIMM 2.0

As with all multi-asset models, a recalibration exercise can cause unexpected changes in margin levels. These can be up or down. It is therefore important to have the tools at your disposal that explain these changes, allowing you to drill-down into the numbers and get to the root cause of the changes.

SIMM for Excel, encompassing our Clarus functions in Excel, allows you to do exactly this. I constructed a simple SIMM Compare worksheet to compare v2.0 to the predecessor models. I would be happy to share this workbook with any of our current trialists and subscribers – feel free to reach out to me.

Per Counterparty Changes

Hands up, I thought this was going to be an easy blog this week. All I care about is how much my margin changes between counterparties, right?

ISDA SIMM v1.3 versus v2.0

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Basically, it is a classic example of being given a little bit of information but immediately needing to know more.

Is your SIMM tool limited to providing only output calculations? The Clarus tool is far more flexible than that.

Risk Factor Changes

I wanted to understand these changes. So I turned to Excel and the SIMM_MARGIN function to solve this. By calculating SIMM margin on each trade as if it were a standalone trade, I can see which risk factors are causing the biggest changes:

ISDA SIMM v2.0 Risk Factor changes

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These changes are difficult to appreciate without the right analytics. This is where SIMM for Excel comes in.

A sample Cross Currency Book for What-If Analysis

A “typical” cross currency book is likely to be hit particularly hard by the changes in risk weights;

XCCY Exposures

As a result, the shift to ISDA SIMM v2.0 is particularly painful:

Cross Currency portfolios will feel the pain

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As an example, to ensure that our margin doesn’t increase due to SIMM v2.0 we could do a risk-mitigation trade between BankNO and BankGHIJ in EURUSD basis:

Risk Mitigation trades in Cross Currency Swaps

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In Summary

To manage the transition to ISDA SIMM v2.0, I need analytics that:

This is why you need SIMM for Excel from Clarus. Sign up for your free trial today.

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