Deutsche Boerse steps up clearing fight with London
ahead of Brexit
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[October 09, 2017]
By Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Deutsche
Boerse has introduced a profit-sharing scheme on interest rate
swaps at its clearing business, seeking to wrest trade from the London
Stock Exchange amid the uncertainty over Britain's departure from the
European Union.
The German company's Eurex Clearing business in Frankfurt said on Monday
it would launch a partnership program in November, where members will
get a share of profits from clearing interest rate swaps (IRS) depending
on the volume of business they provide.
The 10 most active program participants will be eligible for a
"significant" share in revenues of IRS clearing, and have a say in how
Eurex is run, the clearing house said
The London Stock Exchange (LSE) declined to comment.
German politicians said the new program would help Frankfurt in its
wider battle with other EU financial centers to attract business from
London ahead of Brexit.
"With the partnership program announced today, Eurex Clearing is very
clearly throwing its hat in the ring," said Thomas Schaefer, finance
minister for German state of Hesse, one of Deutsche Boerse's regulators.
"Frankfurt as a financial center will profit from this because clearing
will become more attractive for German and international players,"
Schaefer said.
An IRS is a popular derivatives contract used by companies to insure
themselves against adverse moves in borrowing costs. The clearing of IRS
in Europe is dominated by the LSE's LCH unit.
"This market-led initiative will benefit clients and the broader market
place through greater choice and competition, improved price
transparency as well as reduced concentration risk," Eurex Clearing CEO
Eric Mueller said in a statement.
A clearing house stands between two sides of a trade and is backed by a
default fund to ensure a transaction is completed even if one side goes
bust.
Some of Europe's biggest trading houses in swaps, Bank of America
Merrill Lynch, Citi, Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, JP Morgan and Morgan
Stanley, have already registered an early interest in the program, Eurex
said.
"We welcome this market-led initiative to promote greater choice,
flexibility and transparency for our global client base," said Jerome
Kemp, global head of futures, clearing and collateral at Citi.
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A notebook with the logo of Deutsche Boerse Group (German stock
exchange) is pictured before their New Year's reception at the
headquarters in Eschborn, outside Frankfurt, Germany, January 25,
2016. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
POLITICAL CHALLENGES
LCH roughly clears more IRS daily than Eurex has cleared in total so far, but
Eurex expects volumes to increase in coming months as banks seek to "Brexit-proof"
their operations.
Industry bodies backed by the big banks have warned splitting up euro clearing
would force banks to set aside billions of euros in extra collateral to cover
positions.
Eurex has repeatedly dismissed such estimates, and Deutsche Bank said on Monday
the program would help the market navigate the "political and regulatory"
challenges it faces.
The partnership program mimics a set-up already in use at LCH, where banks have
a large minority stake in the clearing house and a strong say in its running.
The European Central Bank, and French policymakers in particular, have long
wanted IRS denominated in euros to be cleared in the single currency area,
saying this was necessary to ensure financial stability in market turbulence.
After Brexit, it is unclear whether market participants in the EU will still be
able to use LCH in London, because the bloc has proposed a draft law that would
require clearing of euro-denominated swaps to take place in the EU under certain
circumstances.
Eurex's move could see France put pressure on LCH to introduce IRS clearing at
its unit in Paris to avoid losing the broader Brexit race with Frankfurt.
This comes after plans for LSE and Deutsche Boerse to merge were vetoed by the
EU in March because it would have created a monopoly.
LSE CEO Xavier Rolet has said that if euro clearing was forced out of London, it
would likely end up in New York rather than the EU, and put up to 100,000 UK
financial services jobs at risk.
(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Rachel Armstrong and Mark Potter)
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