Clarus Financial Technology

SOFR – What you need to know

Major markets across our industry are looking to transition (some) liquidity away from Libor-based products and towards Risk Free Rates. We’ve variously looked at Libor Reform, Euribor, SONIA and SARON but so far have not done a deep dive into new RFRs in the US.

SOFR – What is it?

As we reported in our review on Libor Reform, the US ARRC (Alternative Reference Rates Committee) identified a “broad Treasuries repo refinancing rate” as their preferred Risk Free Rate. Now known as SOFR (the Secured Overnight Financing Rate), it has been officially published since early April 2018. It is an overnight interest rate, calculated using actual transactions in repurchase agreements versus US Treasuries.

As a preferred Risk Free Rate, it is expected that some trading liquidity of interest rate derivatives will transition to SOFR-based contracts as we move away from a LIBOR-dominated world.

In the words of ARRC:

The ARRC accomplished its first set of objectives and has identified the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) as the rate that represents best practice for use in certain new U.S. dollar derivatives and other financial contracts.

SOFR is published and administered by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY, or New York Fed to you and I).

Included Transactions

The SOFR rate is calculated using a very broad spectrum of repo trades (repurchase agreements).

Generally, a repo trade means that Counterparty One lends a bond to Counterparty Two in exchange for cash. For the purposes of the SOFR fixing, the maturity of these repo trades is overnight. Therefore, on the following day, Counterparty One receives the bonds back and Counterparty Two receives their cash back (plus or minus interest).

The SOFR fix includes all “flavours” of Repo trades:

The rates on all of these repo trades are used to calculate the fix except for FICC DvP trades that have rates falling below the 25th percentile of the whole FICC DvP data each day. These are deemed to be too “special” and hence excluded from the calculation.

(Note: Bonds that are “special” may see repo trades executed at rates below those for general collateral repos if cash providers are willing to accept a lesser return on their cash in order to obtain that particular bond. That’s the law of supply and demand if a particular bond is scarce for whatever reason – think futures rolls, one large holder who does not participate in repo markets etc).

Data Sources

The New York Fed is the administrator of the SOFR fixing and publishes it each day on the website here. However, it is not the NY Fed (FRBNY) that generates the transaction level data itself. The transactions are sourced from different places:

That’s a lot of reliance on the DTCC. I’m a bit surprised that DTCC are not therefore the administrator of this rate…..although it is common amongst other markets to see regulators stepping into that role (Australia, Japan, UK).

Calculating the fixing

The fixing is the “volume-weighted median”. According to the NY Fed:

“a volume-weighted median approach.., compared to a volume-weighted mean approach, is more robust to erroneous data and outliers and more frequently reflects a transacted rate.”

What does this mean? It’s a three step methodology;

  1. We order the transactions from lowest to highest RATE. 
  2. We take the cumulative sum of volumes of all of these transactions.
  3. We identify the rate at which the trades at the 50th percentile of dollar volume were transacted.

As well as publishing the 50th percentile rate (which is the fixing), the FRBNY website also includes the 1st percentile (i.e. lowest, and probably where the cut off for the FICC DvP “specials” inclusion is), the 25th percentile (which is NOT the aforementioned exclusion rate for FICC DvP trades), plus the 75th and 99th percentiles.

It is also possible for the NY Fed to use “expert judgement” to exclude trades from the calculation. I guess that helps with mis-booked trades as there doesn’t seem to be any automatic filtering of trades done at a level too high?

The rate is published on the FRBNY website by 8am Eastern Time the following day.

The SOFR Fixing

A theoretical history since 2014 is available on the FRBNY website, including the published SOFR fixings since April 2018. This is a great level of transparency:

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In Summary

We have a new, transparent fixing to get to grips with in the US. If we were armed with the transaction level details (I wonder if DTCC make these available commercially?), we could replicate the fixing.

I wonder if the new SFTR (Securities Financing Transactions Reporting) in Europe will allow us to mirror these calculations? I fear not, as it appears these trades are being sent to the blackholes of transparency known as European Trade Repositories. The best we can probably hope for is some aggregated statistics, not the trade-level details that are actually useful.

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