The group said it was the first non-U.S. financial services
infrastructure to connect to the Fed's National Settlement
Service. While Euroclear UK and Ireland (EUI) already offers
settlement in "central bank money" for sterling and euro
transactions, hooking up with the Fed allows it to expand the
service to dollars.
Central bank or sovereign money refers to money issued by a
central bank. EUI's existing dollar settlement was based on
commercial bank money, which is generated when banks issue loans
or conduct transactions in excess of their actual currency
holdings.
Euroclear said customers would now get dollar cash proceeds from
a sale of securities from the moment each transaction settled.
Banks would be protected from possible risks stemming from
another settlement bank's failure to pay.
The ability of settlement banks to make payments in the Fed's
accounts would be underpinned by funds they hold with the Bank
of England, the group said.
Ian Dowglass, EUI's head of innovation and business
transformation, said there had been big client demand for the
service in dollars. It has offered settlement in central bank
money for sterling since 2001 and settles an average 425 billion
pounds worth of sterling transactions per day.
Dollar transactions, on the other hand, were between $2 billion
and $5 billion a day.
"It's all part of risk reduction. What clients now get is
absolute central bank settlement in all securities transactions
in three currencies," Dowglass told Reuters. "There is no longer
a layer of commercial bank risk."
Worldwide, the Euroclear group settled the equivalent of 733
trillion euros in securities transactions last year, via a total
215 million transactions and it held 28.6 trillion euros in
assets for clients.
(Reporting by Sujata Rao)
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