Assessment of ASX Clearing and Settlement Facilities Appendix C1. Financial Stability Standards for Central Counterparties

Standard 7: Liquidity risk

A central counterparty should effectively measure, monitor and manage its liquidity risk. A central counterparty should maintain sufficient liquid resources in all relevant currencies to effect same-day and, where appropriate, intraday and multiday settlement of payment obligations with a high degree of confidence under a wide range of potential stress scenarios that should include, but not be limited to, the default of the participant and its affiliates that would generate the largest aggregate liquidity obligation for the central counterparty in extreme but plausible market conditions.

ASX Clear ASX Clear (Futures)
Broadly observed Broadly observed

7.1 A central counterparty should have a robust framework to manage its liquidity risks from its participants, commercial bank money settlement agents, nostro agents, custodians, liquidity providers and other entities.

Sources of liquidity risk

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) face liquidity risk from two sources:

  • Default liquidity risk. The primary source of liquidity risk in ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) is the potential payment obligations arising from the default of a participant. CCPs rely on incoming payments from participants to meet their obligations to other participants. Payment obligations to and from participants may be in the form of payments for settlement of a securities transaction, or initial and variation margin, or related to the cash settlement of contracts. If a participant were to default, the CCP could face a liquidity shortfall. The size of these contingent payment obligations would generally be proportional to the credit exposures faced by the CCPs to its participants.

    In the case of ASX Clear, however, in the event of the default of a participant with net securities settlement-related payment obligations, its liquidity needs may be significantly greater than its credit exposure. From a credit risk perspective, ASX Clear is exposed only to replacement cost risk from an adverse price movement affecting the resale of any securities due to be purchased, including any transaction costs that may be incurred in closing out the defaulted participant's portfolio. Funds received from the sale may be used to offset the CCP's payment obligation. However, there is a timing mismatch between the point at which ASX Clear must meet the defaulted participant's payment obligation in relation to the purchased securities and that at which it receives funds from the resale of these (typically two days later). This creates a gross liquidity exposure for ASX Clear that may significantly exceed any replacement cost exposure on the same default.

    ASX Clear also faces liquidity risk from its material holdings of equity collateral against derivatives positions. If ASX Clear were to liquidate the defaulting participants' equity collateral, it would likely have to wait two days to receive the proceeds of the sale.

  • Investment liquidity risk. ASX Clear's and ASX Clear (Futures)' pooled prefunded resources, as well as a portion of margin posted by participants, are in the form of cash. These assets are reinvested and held by ASXCC, the holding company for the two CCPs, according to a defined investment policy and investment mandate (see CCP Standard 7.3). ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) face liquidity risk from this reinvestment since ASXCC would have to convert its assets into cash to meet any obligations arising from a participant default or for day-to-day liquidity requirements. The day-to-day liquidity obligations primarily arise from the CCPs' collection of cash initial margin. If initial margin requirements were to decline (e.g. due to lower open positions) or participants substituted their cash collateral for non-cash collateral, the CCPs may need to liquidate investments in order to return cash margin to participants.

For the majority of their payment obligations, the ASX CCPs do not rely on commercial bank money settlement agents, nostro agents, or custodians in meeting their payment obligations. The only exceptions are:

  • ASX Clear has some reliance on liquidity providers, namely participants' provision of liquidity via OTAs (see CCP Standard 7.3) and liquidity provision by ASX Limited under a $150 million committed liquidity facility. ASX Clear (Futures) does not rely on liquidity providers other than the Bank in meeting its payment obligations. The Bank provides the ASX CCPs access to liquidity on a secured basis through its standing facilities (see CCP Standard 7.7).
  • ASX Clear (Futures) relies on commercial settlement banks to settle USD intraday margin payments made during the overnight session, and to facilitate its acceptance of foreign currency collateral that is not NZD-denominated. Payment obligations involving commercial settlement banks account for less than 3 per cent of ASX Clear (Futures)' total payment obligations.

Managing liquidity risk

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) minimise the size of their default liquidity obligations to participants through daily (and in some cases, intraday) settlement of variation margin. This prevents the build-up of large liquidity (and credit) exposures. The CCPs' framework for managing their remaining liquidity risks involves the monitoring of liquidity exposures through daily and monthly stress tests (see CCP Standard 7.8) and the maintenance of sufficient liquid resources to be able to meet these modelled potential liquidity exposures (see CCP Standard 7.3).

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) also provide participants with information to help them manage their liquidity needs and risks, which in turn protects the CCPs to the extent this enhances participants' own liquidity risk management. Participants are provided with sufficient information to understand their intraday margin call obligations, and replicate stress test outcomes. ASX publishes a daily CME SPAN and CMM margin parameter file that allows participants to estimate payment obligations associated with margin requirements for actual or hypothetical ETD or cash market portfolios. Advance warnings and communications in respect of calls for additional margin and margin rate changes also assist participants in their liquidity planning. For example, participants are notified if their stress test results approach their STELs. Also, ASX works closely with participants where new obligations are likely to affect their liquidity needs. ASX Clear also provides monthly disclosures on participants' contingent liquidity exposures, including the potential liquidity impact of the use of OTAs (see CCP Standards 7.3 and 7.9).

7.2 A central counterparty should have effective operational and analytical tools to identify, measure and monitor its settlement and funding flows on an ongoing and timely basis, including its use of intraday liquidity.

Daily cash flows and investment of funds across the ASX CCPs are monitored and managed by the Portfolio Risk Management team. In addition, CRPM reviews a daily report of key risk indicators related to liquidity demands. Any issues are escalated to the CRO. Funding arrangements, such as settlement flows, are also monitored in real time by the CRPM and treasury functions.

Portfolio Risk Management uses reports provided by CRPM to monitor CME SPAN-calculated margin flows originating from ASX Clear's DCS and ASX Clear (Futures)' Collateral Management System, which feed into ASX's Treasury Management System. Portfolio Risk Management enters trades required to manage daily cash-flows into ASX's Treasury Management System. Post Trade Operations uses daily settlement reports produced by the Treasury Management System to generate settlement instructions in Austraclear. Resulting cash flow movements are monitored in RITS. Margin payments from ASX Clear's participants must be made by 10.30 am, and margin payments from ASX Clear (Futures)' participant must be matched in Austraclear by 10.30 am and settled by 11.00 am. Outward payments to participants from both CCPs are manually managed in the RITS queue, and are only released once all incoming margin obligations have been settled (generally by 12.00 pm).

7.3 A central counterparty should maintain sufficient liquid resources in all relevant currencies to settle securities-related payments, make required variation margin payments and meet other payment obligations on time with a high degree of confidence under a wide range of potential stress scenarios that should include, but not be limited to, the default of the participant and its affiliates that would generate the largest aggregate payment obligation to the central counterparty in extreme but plausible market conditions. In addition, a central counterparty that is involved in activities with a more complex risk profile or that is systemically important in multiple jurisdictions should consider maintaining additional liquidity resources sufficient to cover a wider range of potential stress scenarios that should include, but not be limited to, the default of the two participants and their affiliates that would generate the largest aggregate payment obligation to the central counterparty in extreme but plausible market conditions.

Reflecting the Bank's supplementary interpretation of the FSS, the Bank has concluded that ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) are systemically important in multiple jurisdictions and therefore subject to the higher financial resource requirement that each CCP should maintain additional liquid resources to cover liquidity needs in the event of the default of the two participants and their affiliates that would generate the largest aggregate payment obligation to the CCP in extreme but plausible market conditions.

Consistent with the supplementary interpretation, a major objective of the ASX Liquidity Risk Policy is for the CCPs to maintain, with a high degree of confidence, sufficient liquidity to manage the default of two participants and their affiliates and meet reasonably foreseeable operational cash flows.

Default liquidity risk

The primary resources the CCPs would rely on to meet the payment obligations arising directly from the default of the two participants and their affiliates is the defaulting participant's initial margin and each CCP's Available Financial Resources (AFR). ASX Clear (Futures)' AFR is comprised entirely of the CCP's default fund, currently sized at $650 million. ASX Clear's AFR is also defined in its internal documentation to include only the CCP's default fund, currently sized at $250 million, but ASX would also have recourse to a $150 million committed liquidity facility from ASX Limited, of which $100 million is backed by a committed liquidity facility from one of the major banks to ASX Limited.

To address the timing mismatch for securities-related payment obligations discussed above (CCP Standard 7.1), ASX Clear can supplement its AFR and committed liquidity facility with additional liquidity from OTAs to settle cash market transactions when due. If a participant were to default due to a shortfall of funds, the ASX Default Management Committee (DMC) would first determine whether ASX Clear could inject sufficient liquidity, from the combined AFR and committed liquidity facility of $400 million, to ensure that settlement of payment obligations occurred as expected.

It is expected that available liquidity resources would first be injected. In recognition of this, ASX Clear has implemented a target minimum cash market liquidity buffer of $100 million, which is monitored on a daily basis (see CCP Standard 7.8). However, if it was not possible or prudent to rely solely on available liquidity, ASX Clear would settle transactions by entering into OTAs with participants that were due to deliver securities to the defaulted participant. In these circumstances, ASX Settlement's back-out algorithm would identify settlement instructions in the batch that, if removed, would reduce ASX Clear's payment obligations on behalf of the defaulted participant to the amount injected by ASX Clear, while avoiding (or at least minimising) any increase in net payment obligations for other participants (see Appendix C.2, SSF Standard 10.2). ASX Clear would then settle the novated trades that have been identified by the back-out algorithm by entering into OTAs with participants due to deliver securities under these trades. OTAs enable the CCP to settle its payment obligations with these participants on the intended settlement date through an arrangement to offset the underlying settlement obligations to and from those participants.

Under the first leg of the OTA, ASX Clear would, in effect, re-deliver the stock to the relevant non-defaulting participant in return for payment equal to the amount of the payment obligation of ASX Clear to that participant. Under these arrangements, ASX Clear would agree to repurchase the stock the next business day under the second and final leg of the transaction. If this transaction was unable to be settled on the next business day, subsequent OTAs would be entered into on a daily basis until the settlement of on-market close-out trades had taken place.

Investment liquidity risk

To mitigate investment liquidity risk, ASXCC's treasury investment policy requires that a minimum portion of ASXCC's investments must be in liquid assets to meet its minimum liquidity requirements. ASX assesses the value of its liquid resources against its liquidity requirements on a daily basis.

Liquidity Requirements

ASX's primary liquidity requirement is the Core Liquidity Requirement (CLR). The CLR is calculated as the sum of the Default Liquidity Requirement (DLR) for each CCP and Ordinary Liquidity Requirement (OLR) across both CCPs. The DLR for each CCP is the amount required to cover the estimated payment obligations in the event of the joint default of the two largest participants (as measured by payment obligations to the CCP) and their affiliates under the stressed market conditions envisaged in the CCP's liquidity stress test (see CCP Standard 7.8). ASX uses two different methodologies to calculate each CCP's DLR:

  • ASX Clear's DLR is the sum of the CCP's default fund and the aggregate margin requirement for the two largest defaulted participants and their affiliates. The default fund, in turn, is calibrated to cover the largest stressed liquidity exposures to any two participants and their affiliates arising from derivatives transactions and a portion of exposures arising from cash market transactions (see CCP Standard 7.8).
  • ASX Clear (Futures)' DLR for AUD is the sum of:

    – the liquidity stress test result for the two participants and their affiliates that result in the largest payment obligation for the CCP (see CCP Standard 7.8)

    – the aggregate margin requirement of the two largest participants and their affiliates, used to cover payment obligations associated with variation margin or the close-out of positions in normal market conditions.

ASX Clear (Futures) separately calculates a DLR for each non-AUD cleared currency (currently only NZD) which comprises Cover 2 participants' total margin requirement for NZD-denominated positions and an estimate of their stress testing exposures (calculated as 130 per cent of their initial margin requirement in NZD).

The OLR is intended to cover day-to-day liquidity requirements, such as the return of margin to participants, and is specified as a percentage of the ASXCC investment portfolio. This portfolio comprises both CCPs' pooled prefunded resources as well as the cash margin posted at both CCPs. ASX sets currency-specific OLRs for each currency in which it has payment obligations. The OLRs for AUD and NZD are calibrated to the maximum one-day margin outflow in the ASXCC investment portfolio (as a percentage of the value of the sub-portfolio in each currency) over the last 12 months, subject to a floor of 10 per cent. The current OLRs for AUD and NZD are 10 and 20 per cent respectively. The OLR rates for non-cleared currencies which ASX Clear (Futures) accepts as collateral (currently EUR, GBP, JPY and USD) are set at 100 per cent of the ASXCC portfolio denominated in these currencies. OLR rates are reviewed annually.

The ASX CCPs also have an Additional Liquidity Requirement (ALR) which is designed to reflect the potential for unexpected non-default-related liquidity needs. ASX has calibrated the AUD and NZD currency-specific ALRs to ensure that it has sufficient liquid assets to cover the maximum historical AUD or NZD one-day margin outflow in the ASXCC investment portfolio (as a percentage of the value of the sub-portfolio in each currency) since late 2008 (the earliest date from which data are available). The current ALRs for AUD and NZD are 11 and 21 per cent of AUD and NZD-denominated assets in the ASXCC portfolio respectively. ASX has created liquidity-specific stress tests to assess the adequacy of the liquidity requirements related to the CCPs' investment portfolio and the actual liquidity of the portfolio (see CCP Standard 7.8).

In June 2018, ASX updated its investment mandate to place a limit of 25 per cent for each participant on the proportion of initial margin requirements that can be met with collateral in currencies other than the margin requirement currency (non-matching cash collateral). This replaced a previous limit placed on the percentage of total liquid assets that ASXCC could hold in non-AUD currencies. ASX does not conduct liquidity stress tests in non-AUD currencies.

Definition of liquid assets

ASXCC's investment mandate establishes a clear definition of liquid assets: liquid assets comprise cash available for use within two hours, and securities traded in a liquid market which can be sold for same day value with settlement proceeds available within two hours and which are eligible for repurchase with the Bank.

ASX measures whether it has enough liquid assets to meet the combined value of the CLR and ALR on a daily basis. ASX applies haircuts to the value of its investments when assessing the adequacy of its liquid resources against its core and additional liquidity requirements. These haircuts incorporate historical extreme but plausible (once-in-20-year) movements in the prices of securities over a three-day holding period, as well as the relevant haircut that would apply if these securities were used to collateralise a repurchase agreement at the Bank. Non-AUD denominated cash and investments held to meet AUD margin requirements are also adjusted by a haircut calibrated to the worst single-day foreign exchange movement in the last 20 years. ASX Clear (Futures) does not currently stress non-cash collateral using extreme but plausible price moves but has plans to determine and implement an approach to stressing non-cash collateral in its credit and liquidity stress tests during the next assessment period. Currently, ASX does not use forward-looking scenarios to estimate liquid resources in stressed conditions.

ASX places further restrictions on the types of assets that can be used to meet the CLR. The CLR must be met with high quality liquid assets such as cash held in accounts at the Bank, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ), or at creditworthy commercial banks, securities issued by the Australian Commonwealth or state governments or the New Zealand government (held outright or via repo), and eligible securities issued by the German, Japanese, UK and US governments (held as collateral for repo transactions). All other AUD and NZD liquid assets in its portfolio are eligible to meet the ALR.

ASX assesses the value of its currency-specific liquid resources against its liquidity requirements in each currency on a daily basis. If a breach of the requirements occurs at either CCP, it is reported to the CRO and CFO. ASX would also review the circumstances and nature of the breach, the size of the breach and possible mitigants. Breaches are also reported on a quarterly basis to the Risk Committee. In addition, if there were three breaches in a calendar quarter, this would require an emergency meeting of the Risk Committee, which would decide on the response. The primary potential response to a breach would be to increase the proportion of liquid assets held in the relevant currency in ASXCC's investment portfolio.

7.4 For the purpose of meeting its minimum liquid resource requirement, a central counterparty's qualifying liquid resources in each currency include cash at the central bank of issue and at creditworthy commercial banks, committed lines of credit, committed foreign exchange swaps and committed repos, as well as highly marketable collateral held in custody and investments that are readily available and convertible into cash with prearranged and highly reliable funding arrangements, even in extreme but plausible market conditions. If a central counterparty has access to routine credit at the central bank of issue, the central counterparty may count such access as part of the minimum requirement to the extent it has collateral that is eligible for pledging to (or for conducting other appropriate forms of transactions with) the relevant central bank. All such resources should be available when needed.

ASXCC holds an Exchange Settlement Account (ESA) at the Bank to facilitate money settlements on behalf of ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) (see CCP Standard 7.7). Under this arrangement, ASXCC is eligible for access to AUD liquidity under the Bank's overnight and intraday liquidity facilities (against eligible collateral specified by the Bank that is held within ASXCC's investment portfolio), including in times of market stress.

The ASX Liquidity Stress Testing and Liquidity Requirement Standard and the ASXCC Investment Mandate require the Portfolio Risk Management team to meet ASX Clear's and ASX Clear (Futures)' currency-specific minimum liquidity resource requirements, or CLR, with high-quality liquid assets consistent with the definition of qualifying liquid assets under this standard. High-quality liquid assets must be cash held in accounts at the Bank, the RBNZ, or at creditworthy commercial banks that is available for use within two hours, or held in a restricted set of highly liquid securities eligible for repurchase transactions with the Bank. Securities that could be used to meet the CLR include eligible securities issued by the Australian Commonwealth or state governments or the New Zealand government (held outright or via repo), and eligible securities issued by the German, Japanese, UK and US governments (held as collateral for repo transactions). All other AUD and NZD liquid assets in ASXCC's portfolio, such as bank bills, negotiable certificates of deposit and authorised deposit-taking institution (ADI) issued securities are eligible to meet the ALR. Eligible investment counterparties are discussed under CCP Standard 15. OTAs with participants (see CCP Standard 7.3) also meet the definition of qualifying liquid resources for the purpose of this standard, since they are prearranged, committed and reliable (given that they effectively utilise funds otherwise due to participants).

ASX Clear's committed liquidity facility with ASX Limited is contractually based. ASX Limited would source funds to support the facility from a combination of its own cash resources ($50 million), which are not routinely utilised in any other part of ASX's operations, and a committed liquidity facility with one of the major banks ($100 million). The bank facility is also contractually based, and could only be drawn down by ASX Limited for the purposes of funding ASX Clear's default management liquidity requirements. ASX conducts six-monthly due diligence to ensure that the facility could be drawn upon if needed (see CCP Standard 7.6).

7.5 A central counterparty may supplement its qualifying liquid resources with other forms of liquid resources. If the central counterparty does so, these liquid resources should be in the form of assets that are likely to be saleable or acceptable as collateral for lines of credit, swaps or repos on an ad hoc basis following a default, even if this cannot be reliably prearranged or guaranteed in extreme market conditions. Even if a central counterparty does not have access to routine central bank credit, it should still take account of what collateral is typically accepted by the relevant central bank, as such assets may be more likely to be liquid in stressed circumstances. A central counterparty should not assume the availability of emergency central bank credit as part of its liquidity plan.

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) do not supplement their qualifying liquid resources with other forms of liquid resources.

7.6 A central counterparty should obtain a high degree of confidence, through rigorous due diligence, that each provider of its minimum required qualifying liquid resources, whether a participant of the central counterparty or an external party, has sufficient information to understand and to manage its associated liquidity risks, and that it has the capacity to perform as required under its commitment. Where relevant to assessing a liquidity provider's performance reliability with respect to a particular currency, a liquidity provider's potential access to credit from the central bank of issue may be taken into account. A central counterparty should regularly test its procedures for accessing its liquid resources at a liquidity provider.

ASX Clear's qualifying liquid resources include contingent contributions from participants and other liquidity providers. ASX Clear (Futures) does not rely on liquidity providers other than the Bank. Both CCPs have similar procedures for accessing liquid resources. The Bank provides the ASX CCPs access to liquidity on a secured basis through its standing facilities (see CCP Standard 7.7).

ASX Clear's participants

ASX Clear's participants commit to provide overnight liquidity to the CCP up to the value of their outstanding cash equity exposures to the CCP. This commitment arises from ASX Clear's reliance on OTAs to meet its minimum liquid resource requirement. Unlike other liquidity providers, however, participants' capacity to perform on these commitments is guaranteed, as participants entering into OTAs with ASX Clear provide liquidity in the form of funds they were due to receive as part of that day's cash equity settlement.

The exact size of a participant's potential liquidity exposure to OTAs in the event a participant were to default is dependent on the mix and profile of transactions scheduled for settlement after the event of default. Consequently, it is not possible for ASX to provide detailed ex ante information to participants on their contingent liquidity exposures to OTAs. Nonetheless, to assist participants to understand and manage the potential liquidity risks associated with OTAs, ASX Clear provides monthly disclosures on participants' contingent liquidity exposures. This disclosure shows the daily ‘worst-case’ liquidity exposure for each participant arising from the default of the two participants and their affiliates that would cause the greatest liquidity exposure for the clearing house on a particular day. ASX has also engaged with participants on their liquidity management, including their consideration of OTAs and the implications of these contingent liquidity exposures for participants' liquidity requirements.

ASX Clear's guidance note Managing Liquidity Requirements, sets out the minimum liquidity management arrangements a participant should have to meet its obligations under the ASX Clear Operating Rules. Under this guidance, participants other than ADIs or related bodies corporate of ADIs are generally required to have:

  • a formal liquidity risk management framework in place that is appropriate to the nature, scale and complexity of their activities
  • a nominated officer responsible for liquidity management
  • a board-approved annual liquidity plan which considers ‘normal’ and stress' conditions
  • robust liquidity-related operational processes and management reporting.[29]

ASX Clear's committed liquidity facility

ASX Clear also relies on a $150 million committed liquidity facility from ASX Limited in meeting its minimum liquid resource requirement. $100 million of this is backed by a committed liquidity facility from one of the major banks to ASX Limited. The contract governing this facility details, among other things, the events of default that may trigger activation of the facility. ASX conducts due diligence to ensure that the committed liquidity facility from ASX Limited to ASX Clear could be drawn upon if needed. This includes six-monthly checks of whether ASX Limited continues to meet the requirements set out in its agreement with the major bank liquidity provider, whether ASX Limited has enough funds to deliver on its portion of the facility, and analysis of the combined exposure of ASX Clear to the major bank liquidity provider, including via any affiliated participant.

Procedures for accessing liquid resources

Consistent with the guidance related to this substandard, ASX has internal procedures for using its liquidity resources to complete settlement during a liquidity shortfall. The Portfolio Risk Management team, in consultation with the CRO, is responsible for the provision of timely liquidity to fund margin and settlement obligations to non-defaulting participants. The Default Management Standard (see CCP Standard 12.1) provides a high-level summary of the factors to be considered in the liquidation of participant non-cash collateral, as well as the liquidation of treasury investments representing participant cash collateral and other prefunded financial resources. While the order of use of particular collateral types will depend on the particular circumstances, a typical order of use may be AUD cash first, followed by non-cash collateral and foreign currency collateral. The order of liquidation of non-cash and foreign currency collateral to meet funding requirements will depend on factors such as prevailing market conditions, liquidity needs and the amount of funds required relative to the size of each collateral lodgement. Procedures for dealing with liquid assets in the treasury investment portfolio are documented, and are available for the Portfolio Risk Management team at both primary and backup sites.

ASX has processes to periodically test its procedures for accessing its liquid resources. Every six months, ASX reviews the range of transactions conducted over the period to confirm that it has tested its operational capability to conduct transactions to liquidate the full range of assets held by ASXCC. ASX also conducts repos with the Bank and commercial banks on at least a six monthly basis to confirm operational readiness, and regularly review the terms of its committed liquidity facility to ensure ongoing compliance with those terms. ASX most recently tested its operational capacity to liquidate assets held by ASXCC and its readiness to conduct repos with the Bank and commercial banks in January 2018.

7.7 A central counterparty with access to central bank accounts, payment services or securities services should use these services, where practical, to enhance its management of liquidity risk. A central counterparty that the Reserve Bank determines to be systemically important in Australia and has obligations in Australian dollars should operate its own Exchange Settlement Account, in its own name or that of a related body corporate acceptable to the Reserve Bank, to enhance its management of Australian dollar liquidity risk.

ASXCC holds an ESA. Under this arrangement, ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) may, via ASXCC, access AUD liquidity under the Bank's standing facilities (against eligible collateral specified by the Bank). ASX Clear (Futures) may also, via ASXCC, access NZD liquidity under similar arrangements with the RBNZ. ASXCC's investment mandate clarifies its ability to make use of these services, by specifying the list of securities (from the Bank's and RBNZ's eligible securities list) available for repurchase, including the securities of the Commonwealth government, certain state governments, the New Zealand Government, and ADIs (CCP Standard 15).[30]

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) use ASXCC's ESA to settle their AUD margin and cash settlement obligations in RITS (see also CCP Standard 9). NZD settlement obligations at ASX Clear (Futures) are settled on a real-time gross settlement (RTGS) basis across ASXCC's Exchange Settlement Account System (ESAS) account at the RBNZ.

7.8 A central counterparty should determine the amount and regularly test the sufficiency of its liquid resources through rigorous stress testing. A central counterparty should have clear procedures to report the results of its stress tests to appropriate decision-makers at the central counterparty and to use these results to evaluate the adequacy of, and adjust, its liquidity risk management framework. In conducting stress testing, a central counterparty should consider a wide range of relevant scenarios. Scenarios should include relevant peak historic price volatilities, shifts in other market factors such as price determinants and yield curves, multiple defaults over various time horizons, simultaneous pressures in funding and asset markets, and a spectrum of forward-looking stress scenarios in a variety of extreme but plausible market conditions. Scenarios should also take into account the design and operation of the central counterparty, include all entities that might pose material liquidity risks to the central counterparty (such as commercial bank money settlement agents, nostro agents, custodians, liquidity providers and linked FMIs) and, where appropriate, cover a multiday period. In all cases, a central counterparty should document its supporting rationale for, and should have appropriate governance arrangements relating to, the amount and form of total liquid resources it maintains.

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) use daily liquidity stress tests to assess the adequacy of their liquidity arrangements in a default scenario. These stress tests are supplemented by liquidity-specific stress tests conducted at the end of each month using daily data, which are used to assess the adequacy of the CCPs' core and additional liquidity requirements and the actual liquidity of the ASXCC investment portfolio.

Default-related liquidity stress tests

ASX's daily liquidity stress tests, which are adapted from the CCPs' credit stress tests (described under CCP Standard 4), estimate the maximum liquid funds that the CCPs would need to access in order to meet obligations arising in the event of the joint default of two clearing participants and their affiliates (including affiliations between participants involved in OTC and futures clearing at ASX Clear (Futures)) in extreme but plausible market conditions.

ASX Clear

The liquidity stress test exposure for an ASX Clear participant comprises two components: a derivatives market exposure and a cash market exposure. ASX Clear conducts separate liquidity stress tests to determine the potential liquidity exposure arising from derivatives transactions only and from both derivatives and cash market transactions. This approach reflects the fact that liquidity exposures generated by the securities settlement cycle in excess of ASX Clear's default fund and committed liquidity facility could be addressed through OTAs entered into with non-defaulting participants (see CCP Standard 7.3), whereas liquidity exposures arising from derivatives transactions cannot be met using OTAs. The stress test result used in the liquidity stress test model is taken from the day with the largest cumulative three-day requirement. The cash market and derivatives stress tests each apply three default scenarios, combined with a number of market change scenarios (described below).

In its liquidity stress testing, ASX Clear currently applies the two market-wide scenarios that typically result in the largest losses in credit stress testing: an increase of either 9.8 per cent or 13.0 per cent (depending on recent market conditions), and a decrease of 15.5 per cent. Other market scenarios, such as sector- or stock-specific shocks, are not currently used in liquidity stress testing. ASX Clear has plans to review its liquidity stress testing model following the completion of its work to define, justify and document its SPOR and risk factors used in credit stress testing (see CCP Standards 4.2 and 4.6).

The market-wide scenarios are then combined with three different close-out scenarios in which four assumptions are varied, three related to the cash market and one to the derivatives market. For the cash market these assumptions relate to:

  • the priming of settlement accounts before default (either 90 per cent or 100 per cent of deliverable securities are assumed to be in the defaulted participant's settlement account)
  • the use of non-novated transactions to offset obligations in respect of novated transactions
  • whether the defaulter's sell transactions are deferred for two days or settled as soon as securities are available.

For the derivatives liquidity stress test, the assumption relates to ASX Clear's ability to transfer all, some or no loss-making client accounts. In June 2018, ASX updated its Liquidity Stress Testing and Liquidity Requirements Standard to remove this porting assumption from ASX Clear's stress testing model, in favour of the more conservative assumption that it will not be able to transfer any customer positions in the event of default. ASX implemented the removal of the porting assumption from ASX Clear's stress testing model in July.

Since securities settle on a two-day cycle, to measure cash market exposures in liquidity stress tests, projected cash inflows and outflows from settlements and margin payments are used to calculate the cumulative liquidity requirement for each of the three days following a participant default. In addition, ASX Clear's liquidity stress tests make a worst-case assumption with respect to the timing of variation margin and option premium payment receipts: default is assumed to occur just prior to receipt of the previous day's variation margin and option premium payments, if owed by the defaulter.

ASX Clear (Futures)

The liquidity stress test exposure for an ASX Clear (Futures) participant comprises two components: the credit stress test result for that participant, and the actual variation margin payable by, or due to, that participant on that day. The addition of actual variation margin is intended to serve as a proxy for any additional liquidity needs that ASX may face over and above any credit losses incurred over the close-out period. Scenarios are based on those used in credit stress testing; historical moves have been set so that they replicate extreme market moves that have a probability of occurrence of once in 20 years (see CCP Standard 4.6). Scenarios cover single-asset price moves, as well as movements in price and volatility occurring jointly across the equity index futures, AUD interest rate futures, and electricity futures contracts. In addition, scenarios also cover movements in the AONIA, BBSW, NZONIA and BKBM rates that are used as the reference rates for AUD and NZD OTC IRD. Additional scenarios account for various forms of basis risk between futures and OTC prices, and the AONIA, BBSW, NZONIA and BKBM curves at various tenors. Scenarios also cover a range of hypothetical macroeconomic and market events, such as a commodity collapse, or sovereign default. Stress test scenarios reflect the most extreme close-to-high or close-to-low price movements observed over the relevant holding period, including intraday price movements.

ASX Clear (Futures)' liquidity stress tests make a worst-case assumption with respect to the timing of AUD variation margin flows.

ASX Clear (Futures) does not conduct liquidity stress tests for non-AUD currencies.

Reporting of Results – Both CCPs

The results of ASX Clear (Futures)' liquidity stress tests are compared with the CCP's default fund of $650 million (see CCP Standard 4.4). For ASX Clear, the results from the derivatives-only liquidity stress test are reviewed against a threshold of $300 million; this threshold reflects the level of the CCP's default fund and committed liquidity facility after subtracting the cash market liquidity buffer of $100 million. This ‘buffer’ approach is designed to assess whether ASX Clear would be able to cover a pre-specified value of stressed liquidity exposures arising from cash market transactions, while continuing to maintain sufficient liquid resources to cover the stressed liquidity exposures arising from derivatives transactions.

If a liquidity stress test breach occurs at either CCP, it is reported to the CRO and CFO. ASX would also review the circumstances and nature of the breach, the size of the breach and possible mitigants. Breaches are also reported on a quarterly basis to the Risk Committee. In addition, if there were three breaches in a quarter, this would require an emergency meeting of the Risk Committee, which would decide on the response. Potential responses to a breach could be to increase the CCPs' prefunded resources, or establish or increase the size of committed liquidity facilities. When assessing the materiality of a liquidity stress test breach, the CCPs will consider contributing and mitigating factors, such as changes in the ICR of the participant, atypical trading activity, and any STEL AIM, intraday margin and overnight margin buffer that is being held.

Liquidity-specific stress test scenarios

ASX supplements its daily default liquidity stress testing with four liquidity-specific stress test scenarios. These scenarios consider stresses to cash margin outflows arising from various sources across both CCPs.

  • Market contraction resulting from a market stress event. An extreme but plausible market event is assumed to result in a significant decline in cash market turnover and derivatives open interest, resulting in margin outflows.
  • Market contraction resulting from the default of two ASX participants. In addition to the default-related liquidity stresses outlined above, the close-out of the defaulted participants' portfolios is assumed to result in margin outflows from non-defaulting participants. ASX assumes that the decline in non-defaulter derivatives open interest over a three day period is equal to 50 per cent of the net positions held by the two defaulted participants.
  • Historical scenario (decline in open interest from other sources). ASX applies historical declines in open interest to current portfolios in order to determine hypothetical margin outflows. The liquidity stress test result is based on the largest hypothetical margin outflow based on historical three-day changes in open interest since 2004.
  • Collateral substitution. Participants are assumed to replace 25 per cent of cash collateral with non-cash collateral, across all markets.

ASX conducts its liquidity-specific stress tests on a monthly basis using daily data. The results from these scenarios are presented to the Risk Committee, and are used to assess the adequacy of the CCPs' core and additional liquidity requirements and the actual liquidity of the ASXCC investment portfolio.

Although ASX identifies the failure of settlement banks or central securities depositories (CSDs) as a source of liquidity risk, ASX does not capture this risk in liquidity-specific stress tests since it does not identify the risk as material.

Review and validation

ASX's Model Validation Standard requires that models used by the ASX CCPs in their credit, collateral, margining and liquidity risk management systems must undergo a full annual validation (see CCP Standard 2.6). Under this framework the liquidity stress test model must be validated annually by an independent expert.

ASX conducts sensitivity analysis on the effect of the priming assumption on ASX Clear's liquidity stress test exposures. The analysis involves varying the priming assumption to either 70 or 80 per cent in its liquidity stress tests in ASX Clear, from the current assumption of either 90 or 100 per cent. ASX conducts this sensitivity analysis annually.

7.9 A central counterparty should establish explicit rules and procedures that enable the central counterparty to effect same-day and, where appropriate, intraday and multiday settlement of payment obligations on time following any individual or combined default among its participants. These rules and procedures should address unforeseen and potentially uncovered liquidity shortfalls and should aim to avoid unwinding, revoking or delaying the same-day settlement of payment obligations. These rules and procedures should also indicate the central counterparty's process to replenish any liquidity resources it may employ during a stress event, so that it can continue to operate in a safe and sound manner.

ASX Clear's OTAs aim to enable the CCP, in all circumstances, to fully address any liquidity obligations related to the settlement of securities transactions (see CCP Standard 7.3). Although OTAs cannot be directly used to address liquidity shortfalls related to derivatives transactions or the return of cash market margin, OTAs used to meet payment obligations for settlements may allow for greater use of prefunded liquid resources for these other obligations.

ASX Clear and ASX Clear (Futures) have arrangements that allow them to comprehensively address a liquidity shortfall (including on derivatives transactions). Under these arrangements, prefunded liquid resources (and OTAs at ASX Clear) are supplemented by the following additional tools:

  • Recovery Assessments. A remaining liquidity shortfall resulting from a participant default would initially be addressed, where possible, via Recovery Assessments called in cash from surviving participants (see CCP Standard 4.8). ASX Clear's Recovery Assessments would be capped at $300 million; ASX Clear (Futures)' Recovery Assessments would be capped at the level of participants' default fund contributions (a maximum of $200 million in aggregate) if assessments were called in relation to a single default; or at three times the level of participants' default fund contributions (a maximum of $600 million in aggregate), if assessments were called in relation to multiple participants defaulting within a defined default period.[31] Each CCP has the flexibility to call for assessments where it anticipates a liquidity shortfall resulting from a participant default, increasing the likelihood that these funds will be available to meet liquidity needs on a timely basis.
  • Payment haircutting. ASX Clear (Futures) would also have the power to reduce (haircut) outgoing payments to participants. For example, a haircut could be applied to variation margin payments due to participants with net in-the-money positions in the event of mark-to-market loss on the defaulter's portfolio. Payment haircuts could be applied to a broad range of ASX Clear (Futures)' payment obligations, excluding the return of initial margin. There is no cap on the use of payment haircutting to address a liquidity shortfall, although ASX Clear (Futures) would consult with the RCC in determining whether to continue payment haircutting if losses allocated via this tool exceed $650 million. ASX Clear also has a limited capacity to haircut payments, but this only applies to settlement payments in the context of complete termination (see below).
  • Complete termination. Any residual liquidity shortfall that could not be addressed via Recovery Assessments or payment haircutting would be addressed via a power to completely terminate all open contracts. Complete termination would be reserved as a last resort tool if there was no other means of addressing a liquidity shortfall (including via intervention of the Bank as resolution authority if current proposals for a special resolution regime for FMIs are implemented). Under complete termination, all open contracts at the CCPs would be settled with participants at their current market value, with any residual liquidity shortfall of the CCPs addressed by haircutting settlement payments to participants. Prefunded liquid resources and Recovery Assessments at ASX Clear are set at a level that seeks to minimise the potential for reliance on complete termination to address a residual derivatives-related liquidity shortfall. Similarly, reliance on complete termination is considered extremely unlikely at ASX Clear (Futures), since payment haircutting provides an uncapped mechanism to address liquidity obligations associated with the majority of payment flows.

Footnotes

ASX exempts ADI participants from these requirements as these entities are subject to more stringent liquidity risk management requirements under APRA regulations. Related bodies corporate of ADIs are also exempt under certain conditions, including that the related ADI is responsible for the entity's liquidity risk management. [29]

A list of securities eligible for use in the Reserve Bank's domestic market operations is available. The list of repo-eligible securities at the RBNZ is available at <https://www.rbnz.govt.nz/markets-and-payments/domestic-markets/repo-eligible-securities-and-haircuts>. [30]

The cap on assessments for multiple defaults remains in place until the expiry of a ‘default period’ that commences with the default of the first participant and concludes 22 business days after completion of the default management process for the final defaulting participant, where each default is separated from completion of the default management process for the preceding default by 22 business days or less. [31]