Assessment of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. – March 2017 Appendix A: Activity in CME

A.1 OTC IRD

CME clears OTC IRD denominated in 19 different currencies, including Australian dollars. The notional value of cleared OTC IRD transactions outstanding with CME decreased over the assessment period, from US$19.1 trillion at end December 2015 to US$15.0 trillion at end December 2016 (Graph 1). USD-denominated OTC IRD accounted for around 73 per cent of OTC IRD transactions cleared by CME in 2016. On average over the assessment period, 1.2 per cent of the total notional value of OTC IRD outstanding with CME was denominated in Australian dollars. The reductions in notional value outstanding over the assessment period were largely driven by trade compression cycles for US dollar, euro, UK pound and Mexican peso-denominated OTC IRD contracts.

Graph 1
Graph 1: OTC IRD: Notional Value of Trades Outstanding, by Currency (Stock)

CME clears six types of OTC IRD: IRS, zero-coupon swaps, basis swaps, forward rate agreements, overnight index swaps (OIS) and swaptions. The swaptions service was launched by CME in April 2016. CME also launched Australian dollar-denominated OIS during the assessment period. Graph 2 and Graph 3 depict notional value registered and notional value outstanding in CME's OTC IRS service, respectively, by product type. IRS constitute the largest component of the outstanding value of open trades.

Graph 2
Graph 2: OTC IRD: Notional Value of Trades Registered, by Type (Flow)
Graph 3
Graph 3: OTC IRD: Notional Value of Trades Registered, by Type (Stock)

A.2 Exchange-traded Derivatives

As noted above, CME clears a range of exchange-traded derivatives through its Base service. CME is licensed in Australia to clear a subset of these products: non-Australian dollar-denominated IRD traded on the CME market or the CBOT exchange for which CME permits portfolio margining with OTC IRD – currently, US Treasury futures and US deliverable swap futures traded on the CBOT exchange, and Eurodollar futures traded on the CME exchange.[15]

The number of trades registered and outstanding in these products, by product type, is depicted in Graph 4 and Graph 5, respectively.

Graph 4
Graph 4: Futures: Number of Trades Registered, by Type (Flow)
Graph 5
Graph 5: Futures: Number of Trades Outstanding, by Type (Stock)

A.3 Australian Activity

CME does not currently have any direct Australian clearing participants. However, a number of Australian-based banks, superannuation funds and other institutional investors clear OTC IRD products indirectly with CME, as clients of direct clearing participants. At end December 2016, the notional value outstanding of indirect Australian participants' OTC IRD trades in all currencies was around A$65 billion (Graph 6).

Graph 6
Graph 6: OTC IRD: Notional Value of Outstanding of Australian Indirect Participants (Stock)

Graph 7 and Graph 8 depict the notional value of Australian dollar-denominated OTC IRD trades outstanding and registered with CME. At end December 2016, CME had around A$290 billion notional value of Australian dollar-denominated OTC IRD trades outstanding.[16] This represents around 3 per cent of the notional value outstanding of all centrally cleared Australian dollar-denominated OTC IRD trades (around A$20 trillion at end December 2016).[17]

Graph 7
Graph 7: OTC IRD: Notional Value of AUD-denominated Trades Outstanding (Stock)
Graph 8
Graph 8: OTC IRD: Notional Value of AUD-denominated Trades Registered (Flow)

Footnotes

Portfolio margining is where margin calculations are made at the portfolio level rather than at the product level, allowing for reduced margin requirements to the extent that there are offsetting open positions across the portfolio of products. [15]

This figure counts one side of each trade. [16]

This is as a proportion of the Australian dollar-denominated OTC IRD trades cleared at ASX Clear (Futures), CME Inc. and LCH.Clearnet Limited's SwapClear service. These figures count both sides of each trade. [17]