The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act


Book Description

The Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203) sought to remake the OTC market in the image of the regulated futures exchanges. Crucial reforms include a requirement that swap contracts be cleared through a central counterparty regulated by one or more federal agencies. Clearinghouses require traders to put down cash (called initial margin) at the time they open a contract to cover potential losses, and require subsequent deposits (called maintenance margin) to cover actual losses to the position. The intended effect of margin requirements is to eliminate the possibility that any firm can build up an uncapitalized exposure so large that default would have systemic consequences. The size of a cleared position is limited by the firm's ability to post capital to cover its losses. That capital protects its trading partners and the system as a whole. This report describes some of the new requirements placed on the derivatives market by the Dodd-Frank Act.




The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act: Title VII, Derivatives


Book Description

The financial crisis implicated the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives market as a major source of systemic risk. A number of firms used derivatives to construct highly leveraged speculative positions, which generated enormous losses that threatened to bankrupt not only the firms themselves but also their creditors and trading partners. Hundreds of billions of dollars in government credit were needed to prevent such losses from cascading throughout the system. AIG was the best-known example, but by no means the only one. Equally troublesome was the fact that the OTC market depended on the financial stability of a dozen or so major dealers. Failure of a dealer would have resulted in the nullification of trillions of dollars' worth of contracts and would have exposed derivatives counterparties to sudden risk and loss, exacerbating the cycle of deleveraging and withholding of credit that characterized the crisis. During the crisis, all the major dealers came under stress, and even though derivatives dealing was not generally the direct source of financial weakness, a collapse of the $600 trillion OTC derivatives market was imminent absent federal intervention. The first group of Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) recipients included nearly all the large derivatives dealers. The Dodd-Frank Act (P.L. 111-203) sought to remake the OTC market in the image of the regulated futures exchanges. Crucial reforms include a requirement that swap contracts be cleared through a central counterparty regulated by one or more federal agencies. Clearinghouses require traders to put down cash (called initial margin) at the time they open a contract to cover potential losses, and require subsequent deposits (called maintenance margin) to cover actual losses to the position. The intended effect of margin requirements is to eliminate the possibility that any firm can build up an uncapitalized exposure so large that default would have systemic consequences (again, the AIG situation). The size of a cleared position is limited by the firm's ability to post capital to cover its losses. That capital protects its trading partners and the system as a whole. Swap dealers and major swap participants—firms with substantial derivatives positions—will be subject to margin and capital requirements above and beyond what the clearinghouses mandate. Swaps that are cleared will also be subject to trading on an exchange, or an exchange-like “swap execution facility,” regulated by either the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) or the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), in the case of security-based swaps. All trades will be reported to data repositories, so that regulators will have complete information about all derivatives positions. Data on swap prices and trading volumes will be made public. The Dodd-Frank Act provides exceptions to the clearing and trading requirements for commercial end-users, or firms that use derivatives to hedge the risks of their nonfinancial business operations. Regulators may also provide exemptions for smaller financial institutions. Even trades that are exempt from the clearing and exchange-trading requirements, however, will have to be reported to data repositories or directly to regulators.







Dodd-Frank Manual Series


Book Description

With regulatory implementation of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010 well underway, it has never been more critical for counsel and their corporate clients to have a deep understanding of the implications of these regulatory changes on the banking, securities, and financial services sectors. At Wolters Kluwer Law & Business, we've created the Dodd-Frank Manual Series to identify the issues, explore the topics, and dissect the "need-to-know" regulations. Each volume in this new series, written by Wolters Kluwer Law & Business Attorney-Editors, explains issues by Title of the Act, providing a focused discussion and analysis of specific topics that will expedite your research, giving you the knowledge to confidently advise clients and ensure corporate compliance. This volume, Derivatives (Title VII), authored by Wolters Kluwer Attorney-Editors Lene Powell, J.D., and James Hamilton, J.D., LL.M., explains the extensive derivatives reform measures implemented by the Dodd-Frank Act and accompanying regulations. The authors analyze the impact on various entities, including swap and security-based swap dealers and major swap participants, designated contract markets, swap exchange facilities, and derivatives clearing organizations. They also cover new registration, reporting, and recordkeeping requirements; new product and entity definitions; protection of cleared swaps customer contracts and collateral; and more.










Derivatives Market Reform


Book Description

The 2008 turmoil in the financial markets provided the primary impetus for significant financial reform of U. S. financial service institutions. The profound economic disruption had multiple causal factors, including, in part, the widespread use of privately negotiated over-the-counter derivatives instruments. Transactions outside the structure of exchanges or centralized clearing facilities did not universally face collateralization, margin and transparency typically associated with exchange traded derivatives. As a consequence, a significant volume of derivatives transactions lacked the limiting brakes of traditional collateral and were largely opaque to financial service regulators. These, and other factors, magnified structural and regulatory gaps that accelerated economic and financial challenges in U. S. and global markets.This paper discusses rule initiatives implementing Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act or DFA) involving derivatives market reform that affect life insurers' asset and liability risk management through derivatives transactions, and that impact selected insurance products. The discussion will summarize the legislative purposes of Title VII of the DFA and evaluate rulemakings implementing the broad scope of the legislation, including: 1. “Swap” and “Security-Based Swap” Definitions; 2. The Stable Value Contract Study; 3. The Definition of Major Swap Participant and Major Security-Based Swap Participant; 4. Collateral and Margin for Uncleared Swaps; 5. Segregation and Protection of Customer Collateral; 6. Swap Documentation Challenges; and, 7. Mandatory Clearing Requirements.




Implementing Derivatives Reform


Book Description




Oversight Hearing


Book Description