I had missed that this was happening. Read at the Market Ticker that it's a done deal, but haven't found a good source so far.
CME and Citadel are putting together an exchange and central clearing house for CDS. (One of the things the bailout bill should have had as a requirement IMO.) Short term it could hurt if prices crash, but it hopefully can advert future CDS asshattery from ****ing everyone over.
CME and Citadel are putting together an exchange and central clearing house for CDS. (One of the things the bailout bill should have had as a requirement IMO.) Short term it could hurt if prices crash, but it hopefully can advert future CDS asshattery from ****ing everyone over.
CME Group and Citadel Investment Group said on Tuesday they are creating a platform for electronic trading of credit default swaps, amid calls by regulators to migrate trading of the $55 trillion private market onto exchanges.
The platform will be integrated with a central clearing house, the companies said in a release.
Regulators and industry participants have voiced concern that the private nature of the credit default swap market poses systemic risks as no one knows the size of a counterparty's derivative portfolio, and the failure of a large counterparty can create massive losses globally.
Proponents argue that exchange trading, by contrast, would remove the system risk posed by a counterparty failure, provide price transparency and offer simpler, more standardized settlement of contracts when an issuer defaults.
CME Group [CME 282.15 6.48 (+2.35%) ] and Citadel will launch a joint venture for the platform within 30 days, and are offering major participants in the market equity stakes in the company to encourage them to support trading on the exchange.
"This joint venture is a best-of-both-worlds solution that will reduce much of the systemic risk inherent in the current CDS market structure," CME Group Executive Chairman Terry Duffy said in the release.
The launch comes at a time of increasing calls for the market to be regulated, and trading of swaps to move to exchanges.
The New York Federal Reserve is hosting a meeting with banks and institutional investors on Tuesday to discuss establishing a central counterparty for the global credit default swap market.
The collapse of major counterparty Lehman Brothers last month brought fresh urgency to the calls for rules to improve the transparency and safety of the market.
"It is imperative to bring stability and transparency to the CDS market," said Ken Griffin, Chief Executive of Citadel said in the release.
Challenges
Despite the plan, CME and Citadel may face an uphill struggle in convincing dealers to provide the exchange with the liquidity it will require to be successful.
Dealers have been hesitant to support exchange trading in the past as they generate more profit from the private nature of the market.
Attempts to shift foreign exchange trading from over-the-counter (OTC) onto exchanges have failed, which demonstrates "how difficult is for an exchange to shift OTC business without dealers support," said Diego Perfumo, analyst at Equity Research Desk, a Connecticut -based advisory firm specializing in exchanges.
Nonetheless, Citadel has a good track record in competing against dealers, he added.
"Citadel has demonstrated its strength to compete against dealers when it captured 20 percent share in Treasuries-an OTC market previously controlled entirely by the 'club' of dealers," Perfumo said. "Citadel may do it again in CDS."
The platform will be integrated with a central clearing house, the companies said in a release.
Regulators and industry participants have voiced concern that the private nature of the credit default swap market poses systemic risks as no one knows the size of a counterparty's derivative portfolio, and the failure of a large counterparty can create massive losses globally.
Proponents argue that exchange trading, by contrast, would remove the system risk posed by a counterparty failure, provide price transparency and offer simpler, more standardized settlement of contracts when an issuer defaults.
CME Group [CME 282.15 6.48 (+2.35%) ] and Citadel will launch a joint venture for the platform within 30 days, and are offering major participants in the market equity stakes in the company to encourage them to support trading on the exchange.
"This joint venture is a best-of-both-worlds solution that will reduce much of the systemic risk inherent in the current CDS market structure," CME Group Executive Chairman Terry Duffy said in the release.
The launch comes at a time of increasing calls for the market to be regulated, and trading of swaps to move to exchanges.
The New York Federal Reserve is hosting a meeting with banks and institutional investors on Tuesday to discuss establishing a central counterparty for the global credit default swap market.
The collapse of major counterparty Lehman Brothers last month brought fresh urgency to the calls for rules to improve the transparency and safety of the market.
"It is imperative to bring stability and transparency to the CDS market," said Ken Griffin, Chief Executive of Citadel said in the release.
Challenges
Despite the plan, CME and Citadel may face an uphill struggle in convincing dealers to provide the exchange with the liquidity it will require to be successful.
Dealers have been hesitant to support exchange trading in the past as they generate more profit from the private nature of the market.
Attempts to shift foreign exchange trading from over-the-counter (OTC) onto exchanges have failed, which demonstrates "how difficult is for an exchange to shift OTC business without dealers support," said Diego Perfumo, analyst at Equity Research Desk, a Connecticut -based advisory firm specializing in exchanges.
Nonetheless, Citadel has a good track record in competing against dealers, he added.
"Citadel has demonstrated its strength to compete against dealers when it captured 20 percent share in Treasuries-an OTC market previously controlled entirely by the 'club' of dealers," Perfumo said. "Citadel may do it again in CDS."
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