Clarus Financial Technology

SACCR vs CEM for FX Products

Blame our active community of readers if you must. But we’ve had the most requests for a comparison of FX products under SACCR and CEM in response to my original blog.

Therefore, here we go…

SACCR is Coming

If you need a refresher on SACCR and CEM, then please check out our comprehensive coverage below:

Suffice to say that we expect SACCR to be live by January 2022 at the very latest across all jurisdictions and even earlier for leverage ratio calculations:

Overview of Basel III Post-Crisis Reforms

SACCR for FX Products

When we delved into the SACCR calculations, we found that it is necessary to start from the bottom-up when calculating Risk Weighted Assets under SACCR. However, I realise that not all of our readers want the absolute detail. Fortunately we provide a simple Excel add-in that calculates Exposure at Default under SACCR.

SACCR for Excel has free trials available here.

SACCR for Excel

I will use our SACCR for Excel tool to demonstrate some simple portfolios. Alongside the calculations I will do some manual comparisons to what the equivalent CEM number would have been.

SACCR for FX

It is useful to use some simple examples in FX to illustrate the main parts of SACCR. Crucially, FX in SACCR has only one maturity bucket (very different to CEM). This increases the netting opportunities under SACCR.

Let’s start with 3 NDFs in USDBRL, all uncleared and with 3 different counterparties. They operate under a daily CSA with a zero threshold:

Uncleared NDFs

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  1. Is the trade cleared?
  2. If not, what are the details of the bilateral CSA?
  3. Does it have daily, weekly, monthly margining?
  4. Are there any disputes across the CSA?
  5. Are there any “difficult to replace” derivatives in the CSA?

The answer to those questions dictate the variable in SACCR known as the “Margin Period of Risk”. There is not an equivalent to compare to under the Current Exposure Methodology.

Margin Period of Risk

What we can do for SACCR is try to demystify what the Margin Period of Risk really does. If you think of a SACCR FX exposure as being approximately calculated as:

\( \tag {1} EAD = 1.4 \times NetNotional \times 0.04 \times \dfrac{3}{2}. \sqrt{ \dfrac{M POR}{250}} \)

where;

1.4 is the regulatory defined value of “alpha” (α). This multiplier was completely absent from CEM.
0.04 is the Supervisory Factor (“risk weighting”) for FX of 4%. If we were looking at Rates, this would be 0.005 (0.5%).
\( \dfrac{3}{2}. \sqrt {\dfrac{M POR}{250}} \) is the “Maturity Factor” which can change depending on how the trade is margined/cleared.

To understand the implication, it is therefore useful to keep a handy reference of the Maturity Factors that can apply to your trades depending on the CSA in place. The values range from:

Range of Maturity Factors under SACCR

Optimising the terms of CSAs will therefore have a significant impact on regulatory capital. Disputes and “hard to replace” derivatives are bad, daily margining and clearing are good!

Clearing

Away from the intricacies of the margin period of risk, the biggest single difference for dealer banks will be the use of net notional when calculating SACCR exposures. Previously, CEM was always based on gross notional and only allowed for a limited amount of netting – up to 40% based on the mark to market of the derivative, not the direction (bizarre!).

The impact of netting is going to be most evident for cleared trades. If we take the 3 NDFs above and move them to LCH ForexClear (other CCPs are available!) we see the following SACCR and CEM exposures:

Cleared NDFs

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Directional Portfolios

What I find interesting under SACCR is the impact to directional portfolios. SACCR is intended to be a more risk-sensitive measure than CEM.

For our simple portfolio, let us assume that I am a seller of USDBRL across all maturities, and that we move them to clearing. We see the following exposures under SACCR and CEM:


A directional NDF portfolio in Clearing

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If you have a a lot of FX in your portfolio, it is therefore likely that moving from CEM to SACCR will decrease your exposures and hence result in a decrease in regulatory capital requirements.

Optimisation in FX

I am going to leave it there for now so that we do not get lost in too many intricacies. However, we can think of more ways to optimise exposures in FX:

Let us know if you want to see a run-down of STM under SACCR across both Rates and FX.

In Summary

Finally, some SACCR FX soundbites:

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