Clarus Financial Technology

Pre-Hedging in Swaps

FMSB

The FICC Markets Standard Board (see my 200th Clarus blog), known as the FMSB, recently published the paper “Spotlight Review on Pre-Hedging“. It makes great reading for anyone involved in Swaps markets – dealers, sales, trading, buyside. Read it!

Source: FMSB
Previous FMSB work here

What is “Pre-Hedging”?

According to the FMSB report, pre-hedging is the act of a dealer hedging risk in anticipation of a possible incoming transaction. Let’s flesh that out a bit with an example:

When Pre-Hedging is not Front Running

The FMSB references two specific cases of pre-hedging (see regulatory action from the CFTC here and ASIC here) that were considered too close to the behaviour of front-running for comfort.

Given these regulatory actions, some readers may see “pre-hedging” and think it is just a euphemism. In my opinion, that really isn’t the case, and the FMSB report provides a useful comparison table of the different practices:

Source: FMSB

To put it succinctly;

In day to day business in Swaps markets, it has been typically sufficient that:

That isn’t to say that Front Running could not happen in the case of a particularly motivated individual or a bad client relationship. So I really salute trade bodies, such as the FMSB, for trying to flesh-out what is acceptable behaviour and what runs contrary to best practice. The table highlights that it helps both dealers and clients to have something written down!

Information “leakage”

So why (and how) do clients give dealers even a sniff of the possibility of “front running” or “pre-hedging” a transaction? Well, swaps don’t really operate in a standardised, “click to trade” order book. A client will typically want to hedge a specific risk of theirs – e.g. an upcoming bond issue. This bond issue has to be marketed, with some degree of specificity (e.g. size, currency, maturity) to drum up interest from potential investors. That information makes its way onto news wires (see BondRumours for example). Good sales people who cover the accounts should then pick up the phone and say “do you want an indicative price from my bank to enter into a swap with you”?

The client now has a number of choices. Which would you choose?

If you think about it, all of those actions contain some type of information leakage regarding the potential of a potential transaction! They are either saying “we are already speaking to your competitors, we don’t want to mess up their market” or “we plan to do a swap” or “we’ve done a swap”.

By the very nature of swaps being customisable instruments and requiring a conversation of some kind, information leakage can happen irrespective of whether a client explicitly asks for a price or not.

What Does the FMSB Say?

Helpfully, the specific case of a New Issuance swap is dealt with as Case Study #4. I think the FMSB does a great job of;

Have a read. For clarity, a “JLM” is a Joint Lead Manager on the bond – i.e. the banks running the issuance process for the new bond (on behalf of the issuer).

In Summary

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