TK: The runway to compliance will be phased, but it will come quickly. While arguably the runway was longer than many anticipated, we do expect frictions to compliance. The SEC is looking to the FICC to re-define their rulebook to support the clearing requirements by March 31, 2025 – this will lead to some delayed ambiguity. Market participants must be ready to quickly react to FICC’s Rulebook amendments by this date; changes could cover a host of important topics including access, treatment of failed innovations, margin requirements and requirements for Netting Members to prove compliance with the clearing mandate. Shortly after clarity prevails, by December 31, 2025, all US Treasury purchases and sales by direct participants acting as interdealer brokers as well as transactions among direct participants, broker-dealer and government securities dealer must be cleared.
Most important to the buy-side, clearing of all reverse repo and repo transactions with a direct participant will be required by June of 2026. Thus, nearly every US Treasury agreement traded with a buy-side’s dealer relationship today – whether bi-lateral or tri-party – will be required to fall under a FICC clearing umbrella.
All institutions that trade and settle US Treasuries should review the SEC’s proposal and begin planning immediately to be ready to meet clearing requirements for their activities. We will likely see a number of bottlenecks as market participants digest the new requirements and the impact these requirements will have on their businesses.
While these services generally introduce a perceived cost, there are a number of buy-side benefits to sponsored clearing that we’ve observed from our experience in running a sponsored repo program with more than 150 clients. For example, liquidity, scale, spot date servicing and competitive pricing to traditional repo make cleared repo attractive. The number of sponsors participating in FICC’s service has grown significantly, and providers’ offerings have evolved to reduce complication and cost of contracting, onboarding, trading and trade servicing.
For US Treasury repo and reverse repo transactions, a buy-side firm should consider reaching out to current sponsors and dealers, or engage with members who are prepared to handle the size and scale of new servicing. The DTCC has a number of public resources and updates as well. Anecdotally, State Street has seen a number of prospects and clients interested in migrating to sponsored activity already, and we look forward to providing value through these services globally to a number of others.
It’s worth noting that:
- Overnight and term US Treasury repo activity is supported in the sponsored service (as well as agency mortgages outside of the mandate), in both traditional bi-lateral delivery-versus-payment and tri-party constructs
- FICC has approved over 40 jurisdictions for sponsorship and continues to add more jurisdictions to the mix