Course description
Bilateral Margining and Central Clearing
Current regulation requires that OTC derivative markets implement bilateral margin rules with the requirements applying to virtually all significant OTC derivative users from September 2020. These rules are being phased-in with the aim of reducing systemic risk and promoting central clearing. This, along with related implications, is creating significant changes in the nature of collateralization both in terms of variation margin and initial margin – with the latter, in particular, being very complex to model in terms of costs and risk mitigation benefit.
In this hands-on Bilateral Margining and Central Clearing course we will explore in detail the mechanics of bilateral margin rules for OTC derivatives and assess future scenarios along with their opportunities and risks. The program also covers initial margin methodologies, namely SPAN, Historical VAR, and the ISDA Standard Initial Margin Model (SIMM™). Aspects such as segregation and required CSA changes, multilateral netting, and the growing use of MVA (Margin Value Adjustment) are also explored.
The program is suitable for both banks and end-users of OTC derivatives.
Participants will be able to take away all worked examples, as well as additional exercises and models implemented using Excel functions and macros. They will also receive a copy of Dr Jon Gregory's book "Central Counterparties: Mandatory Clearing and Bilateral Margin Requirements for OTC Derivatives ", published by Wiley Finance.
Upcoming start dates
Suitability - Who should attend?
Bilateral Margining and Central Clearing course is especially suitable for:
- Credit traders
- Derivatives traders and marketers
- Risk managers and credit risk practitioners
- Structurers
- IT
- Middle office
- Senior management
- Quantitative researchers
- Product control
- Portfolio managers
- Operations / Collateral management
Participants should have a basic understanding of derivatives products and financial modelling with Microsoft Excel.
Training Course Content
This course is scheduled as follows:
Day One
Background
- The OTC derivatives market
- Impact of the financial crisis
- The clearing mandate
- BCBS-IOSCO margin requirements
- Requirements
- Phase in
- Thresholds
Case Study: Impact of bilateral margin requirements for banks under Phase I and II
Counterparty Risk and Risk Mitigation
- Netting
- Portfolio compression
- Margin (collateral)
- Variation margin
- Initial margin (independent amount)
Case Study: Comparison of traditional bilateral clearing, central clearing and clearing under the new margin requirements
The Impact of Collateral
- Discounting and collateral optionality
- Impact of collateral on exposure
- Rehypothecation and segregation
- Collateral and funding
- The impact of initial margin
Case Study: Comparison of collateral usage under traditional bilateral clearing, central clearing and BCBS-IOSCO rules
Mechanics of Bilateral and Central Clearing
- History of central and OTC clearing
- Contractual terms
- Close-out process
- The margin period of risk (MPR)
- CCP loss waterfall and comparison to bilateral markets
Case Study: NASDAQ default fund losses
Day Two
Traditional Initial Margin Methods
- Standard portfolio analysis of risk (SPAN)
- Value-at-risk (VAR) and expected shortfall (ES)
- Historical simulation
- Example CCP methodologies
- Potential problems
- Procyclicality
- Data history
- Normal vs. absolute returns
Example: Initial margin calculation with historical simulation
The ISDA Standard Initial Margin Model (SIMM™)
- The fundamental review of the trading book (FRTB)
- Variance-covariance approximation to VAR and ES
- SIMM methodology
- Asset classes and risk classes
- Risk weights and basis formula
- Netting
- Comparison to Historical simulation
Example: SIMM calculation examples
Initial Margin – Risk Reduction and Cost
- Capital and SA-CCR
- Reduction of counterparty risk (CVA)
- Capital relief from initial margin
- The cost of initial margin
- MVA (margin valuation adjustment)
- The CCP basis
Example: MVA calculation
The Impact of Netting and Margining
- Bilateral vs. multilateral netting
- Does multilateral netting reduce exposure?
- The impact of variation margin
- The impact of initial margin
- Impact on CCP risk management
- Risks of increase in margin requirements
Example: The impact of netting and margining on counterparty risk and CVA
Course delivery details
Courses are delivered in the London classroom and live online via LFS Live in London, New York, and Singapore time zones.
Please contact LFS for more details.
Why choose London Financial Studies
Established 1997
Training delivered to 14,300 professionals from almost 2,000 companies
97% recommendation rate
Customer Outreach Award 2019
We believe that it should be easy for you to find and compare training courses.
Our Customer Outreach Award is presented to trusted providers who are excellent at responding to enquiries, making your search quicker, more efficient and easier, too.
Reviews
Average rating 4.7
Excellent lectures and material from Dr John
Jon Gregory strikes a brilliant and insightful balance between context, main principles and issues to tackle, bringing a much needed broader and deeper understanding. I left the...
Request info
Exclusive Teaching for Capital Markets Professionals in Europe, Americas and Asia Pacific
London Financial Studies are specialists in delivering professional development for finance professionals focusing on capital markets. LFS provide individuals, teams and companies with expert teaching that combines theoretical understanding with practical experience, giving them the knowledge to operate at the...
Dr Gregory gave a friendly and very insightful 101 crash course on complex counterparty credit risk and XVA concepts. The flow of the presentation was easy to follow and kept us...