Risk Management - LTD
Robust and prudent risk management
The Clearing House needs to provide robust and prudent risk management in order to meet its overriding objective: to provide Clearing Members with a central counterparty of the highest quality and to safeguard the interests of the company's shareholders and contributors to its Default Funds.
For LCH Ltd specific information select from the links on this page.
For LCH Group risk management information, including an overview of LCH's risk mitigation approach, default waterfall structure and history of default management, select the Group Overview tab.
Risk governance
Matters concerning significant risks faced by the Group's CCPs are addressed by a Risk Committee appointed by the relevant subsidiary Board.
Chaired by an Independent Non-Executive Director (INED), membership of the Risk Committee is comprised of representatives of the CCP's users and their clients, and other INEDs. Further representatives from each CCP's user community and senior CCP executives may attend the meetings as risk experts in a non-voting capacity.
Where appropriate, The Risk Committee Chair and the Board are advised by the Chair of the Board Operational Resilience Committee (ORC). Chaired by an Independent Non-Executive Director, the ORC is tasked with ensuring that technology, security and operational resilience strategies, investments and outcomes support LCH's mission, values, and strategic goals.
Internally, an Executive Risk Committee (ERCo) reports to the Board Risk Committee. Chaired by the Chief Risk Officer (CRO), membership of the ERCo comprises heads of each clearing business as well as senior risk management and compliance executives.
Sub-Committees and Working Groups consider all risk matters prior to presentation to the ERCo.
Risk Committee and ORC Terms of Reference and current membership are available to view here.
A chart of the Risk Governance Committee structure is available to view here.
Risk classification
The LCH Risk Governance Framework identifies and establishes the Board's appetite/tolerance for the following risk classifications:
Financial & Model Risks |
Operational Resilience Risks |
Strategic Risks |
People & Culture Risks | Legal, Regulatory & Compliance Risks |
Default Management Risk |
Technology Risk |
Business Risk |
Risk Culture | Legal Risk |
Latent Market Risk |
Business Continuity Management Risk |
Transformation Risk |
People & Talent | Regulatory & Compliance Risks |
Procyclicality Risk |
Information Security & Cyber Risk |
Reputational Risk |
Conduct Risk | |
Credit Risk |
Physical Security Risk |
Sustainability (ESG) Risk |
Oversight & Governance Risks | |
Investment & Liquidity Risks |
Third Party Risk |
Geopolitical Risk |
Financial Crime | |
Settlement, Payment & Custody Risks |
Data Risk |
Tax Strategy |
Fraud Risk | |
Model Risk |
Operational Process Risk |
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Financial Reporting & Tax | |
Capital Risk |
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Pension Risk |
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Insurance Risk |
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Management of the Financial & Model and Operational Resilience risks identified above is effected through a set of risk policies maintained by the Risk Management department. All other risks are managed by specific business functions.
Each risk policy defines how the high level principles and standards contained in the Risk Governance Framework and relevant regulation are applied, and is supported by detailed annexes and procedural documentation which demonstrate how policy requirements are met.
All risk policies are subject to at least annual review by internal risk management committees and the Board Risk Committee, and require Board approval.
Margin
Initial margin for all services is calibrated to be sufficient to offset any losses under normal market conditions incurred during the close-out period of a Clearing Member default, to a 99.7% confidence level (except for Listed Rates which is to a 99% confidence level). The percentage applied is agreed by the LCH Board and set out in the LCH Risk Governance Framework which is shared with the competent authorities.
Additional margins are levied to cover position concentrations, wrong way risk, illiquid positions and Clearing Members with lower credit standing or capital support.
Margins are back-tested daily for each Clearing Member and sub account against this confidence level, and reported monthly at clearing service level to regulators and at least quarterly to the Risk Committee. Service level margin back-testing results are included in the quarterly quantitative disclosures available in the Resources section of this website.
Please refer to the following section on margin models and their governance for further information.
Model inventory
An up-to-date inventory of all models is maintained. All models are reviewed by an independent model validation team annually. Material changes and all new models are also subject to an independent validation.
The inventory and validation status are reviewed annually by the Board.
Model performance is assessed daily through portfolio back testing.
The margin models applied to each service are identified in the sections below.
Margin models – analytical
Market |
Model type |
Margin method used |
Minimum look-back period |
Holding period |
Frequency of Parameter review |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SwapClear |
VaR / Expected shortfall |
Historical simulation with volatility scaling |
10 years |
5 days for house accounts 7 days for client accounts |
Daily |
Listed Rates | VaR | Historical simulation with volatility scaling | 10 years | 2 days | Daily |
ForexClear |
VaR / Expected shortfall |
Historical simulation with volatility scaling |
10 years |
5 days for house accounts 7 days for client accounts |
Daily |
RepoClear |
VaR / Expected shortfall |
Historical simulation with volatility scaling |
10 years |
5 days |
Daily |
EquityClear |
VaR / Expected shortfall |
Historical simulation |
4 years |
3 days |
Daily |
LCH CCPs have detailed default management plans and procedures consistent with the Default Management Policy.
These provide clear criteria for when to call a Clearing Member into default and the steps to be followed in order to manage such a default event.
The policy also requires frequent default management testing or ‘fire drills', at both product and cross product levels.
The LCH Ltd Rulebook outlines the relationship between LCH and its Clearing Members, covering the rights and obligations of each during a Clearing Member default.
Default funds and stress testing
Mutualised Default Funds, segregated for each service, are calibrated monthly and tested daily to be sufficient to withstand the default of the two Clearing Member groups giving rise to the largest losses calculated under scenarios of extreme conditions. Default Funds have both a floor and a cap to ensure minimum levels of protection and avoid over-mutualisation.
Clearing Member contributions are subject to a minimum amount and re-calibrated monthly in proportion to the risk they introduce.
A proportion of CCP capital is placed ahead of non-defaulting Clearing Member contributions in the waterfall.
The default waterfall structure can be viewed here.
Clearing Members with large stress losses over margin are charged additional margins where the cap would otherwise be exceeded and intra-month if credit related tolerances are reached.
Analysis of stress testing and Default Fund adequacy is reviewed by the Risk Committee at least quarterly.
Stress test data linked here is designed to answer two key questions:
- How safe are my margins, and by extension, my default fund contribution?
- What is the maximum assessment that I could be asked to provide, and in what circumstances?
Credit risk and membership
LCH Group CCPs review the counterparty risk of Clearing Members and other counterparties including sovereigns by continually monitoring market indicators and financial information.
An Internal Credit Scoring (ICS) framework assesses the entity’s:
Financial Profile, including:
- Asset quality
- Capital adequacy
- Funding & liquidity; and
- Profitability
Operational Capability, including:
- External support (if applicable)
- Operating environment
- Operational profile; and
- Risk management policies & procedures
- Support and sovereign ceiling considerations
The rating model is validated at least annually and the rating scale is continuously monitored for performance.
A minimum credit score is set for joining a clearing service and the same entry requirement is applied to existing Clearing Members wishing to join another service within LCH.
Increased margins are applied when the credit score deteriorates below the entry level. Other actions may include reduced credit tolerances and forced reduction of exposures.
More detailed information on membership, including entry criteria, the application process and current membership, for each of the Group CCPs can be viewed here.
Member and client risk disclosure
The key risk connected with being a Clearing Member (or client of a Clearing Member) of any LCH clearing service will be risk of financial loss. Some of the associated risk scenarios are described below:
- Clearing Member default – Non-defaulting Clearing Members are at risk of losing Default Fund contributions and further Default Fund assessments. Each service also has a process to allocate further losses to Clearing Members of that service. In the event of service closure, replacement costs could be incurred. Clients of a Clearing Member may also incur losses or disruption to their activities as a result of the default management process. For further information please refer to the Default Rules.
- Extended Member Liability – Risk arising due to the default of the Clearing Member's PPS bank while funds are held on the account of LCH at the PPS bank. For further information please refer to pps-concentration-activities and to Section 3 of the Procedures and Section 3 of the FCM Procedures.
- Default of LCH – For the applicable rules please refer to General Regulations 45 and 46 and FCM Regulations 37 and 38.
- In the event of market disorder, impossibility of performance, trade emergency or force majeure, General Regulations 37 and 38, or FCM Regulations 29 and 30, may apply and Clearing Members could suffer losses as a result of invoicing back of contracts or other action taken by LCH. LCH is also entitled, under General Regulation 40 and FCM Regulation 32, to meet obligations in alternative currencies.
Disclaimer: The above description is a summary of the key financial risks to which Clearing Members of LCH and/or clients of Clearing Members may be exposed. This list is not exhaustive and Clearing Members and clients should review the Rulebook and carry out their own risk analysis.
Investment risk arises through the investment of Clearing Member cash posted as collateral for margin liabilities and Default Fund contributions. Investments are made in such a way as to ensure that principal is protected and liquidity is available when needed, even under stressed conditions.
To deal with this:
- All investment counterparties meet minimum credit standards according to an internal credit assessment
- All investments meet minimum credit criteria, and must be explicitly Government guaranteed
- The average term of the investment portfolio is consistent with regulatory standards
- Unsecured investments are limited to <5% of total lending to commercial banks and must be no longer than overnight in term
Collateral Risk
Cash and securities eligible to cover margin liabilities are restricted to those with low credit, liquidity, and market risks. Default Fund contributions can only be made in cash in the primary currencies designated by each clearing service.
Haircuts and/or limits are applied to securities to cover market, credit, concentration/liquidity, wrong way and foreign exchange risks. Haircuts are calculated to a 99.7% confidence level over a 3 day horizon based on a 10 year look-back and a stressed period.
Types of collateral currently acceptable, their haircuts and other conditions can be viewed by selecting the following link:
LCH Ltd does not usually have a right of use of margin or Default Fund contributions collected within the meaning of Article 2(1)(c) of Directive 2002/47/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 June 2002 on financial collateral arrangements, and therefore does not provide for such right in its operating rules. However, if a Sponsored Member enters into a Title Transfer Agreement with LCH Ltd, that Sponsored Member undertakes to transfer legal and beneficial title in non-cash collateral to LCH Ltd.