CLEARING: SEC Proposes Rules for Systemically Important Clearinghouses

(Bloomberg) — Clearinghouses guaranteeing trades in part of the $693 trillion swaps market would have to meet new standards to guard against defaults and failure under rules proposed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

The SECs five commissioners voted unanimously today to seek comment on the measures aimed at clearinghouses whose importance was boosted by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which required most swaps to be guaranteed at clearinghouses, traded on exchanges or other platforms, and reported to the government.

In 2012, U.S. regulators designated as systemically important clearinghouses that guard against default by holding collateral from buyers and sellers. The designation for the clearinghouses — four of which are overseen by theSEC— subjects them to enhanced supervision because their collapse could threaten the broader economy.

Under the SECs proposal, a clearinghouse would have to ensure it has sufficient cash and easily sold assets to withstand a members default that would generate the largest aggregate payment obligation,SECAssociate Director Peter J. Curley said at an meeting in Washington where commissioners voted. They also would be subject to a new minimum capital requirement — equal to at least six months of operating expenses — to manage their wind-down in case of failure.

Adverse Events

The proposal would sensitively and robustly enhance management of the risks faced by clearing agencies and make them better able to withstand adverse events that may arise in stressed market conditions,SECChairman Mary Jo White said.

The clearinghouses subject to the SECs proposal include the Depository Trust Co., Fixed Income Clearing Corp., National Securities Clearing Corp. and the Options Clearing Corp. Those firms are primarily subject to the SECs rules, while the Fed can consult on regulations that affect them.

The SECs proposal, open for public comment for 60 days, also would create new governance rules intended to reduce conflicts of interest, including requirements for independent audit and risk-management personnel at clearinghouses. The plan also proposes new qualifications for the boards of directors and senior managers of clearinghouses, theSECsaid in a fact sheet distributed today.

Smaller clearinghouses that havent been designated as systemically important wouldnt face the enhanced requirements. They will have to meet less stringent rules to provide flexibility for new entrants that might seek to operate as registered clearinghouses, theSECsaid in its fact sheet.