If you would like to ask our webinar guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund a question please submit them here.

 

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRDSA.L Share News (RDSA)

  • There is currently no data for RDSA

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

RPT-Non-banks notch a win in long-running derivatives battle

Wed, 09th Apr 2014 11:00

(Repeats with no changes)

By Lauren Tara LaCapra

NEW YORK, April 9 (Reuters) - A group of small brokeragesand large commodities companies convinced lawmakers to tweak arule that they say would have made derivatives trading moreexpensive for them and sent more business to Wall Street banksthat already dominate the market.

Companies including INTL FCStone Inc, NomuraHoldings Inc, Cargill Inc and Royal DutchShell Plc lobbied a congressional committee to change arule proposed by the U.S. Commodities Futures Trading Commissionon how much capital they must hold against derivatives trades asdealers. Cargill and Shell have derivatives trading arms.

Under proposed CFTC rules, these companies would be requiredto hold more capital against certain derivatives trades - alsoknown as "swaps" trades - than banks. That is because the CFTCrules, created as part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reformlaw, allow banks to calculate capital needs using their ownproprietary models but force non-bank swaps dealers to usestandardized models.

By using their own models, big Wall Street banks can, forinstance, minimize their capital requirements by combining thepotential risk of two trading positions that offset one another,rather than holding capital against the risk of each one goingsour. Non-bank dealers complained that the CFTC's proposal didnot allow them to perform such "netting" of offsetting trades.

The brokerages and commodities companies lobbied the HouseAgriculture Committee after they failed to gain traction withthe CFTC.

The committee has drafted a bill that will provide fundingfor the CFTC and has inserted the tweak requested by thesecompanies in legislation. The bill still needs to go through therest of the legislative process before it is passed, but ifsuccessful it will allow non-bank dealers to also useproprietary capital models.

"The provision would simply level the playing field betweenbank and non-bank swap dealers," said Mark Klein, a spokesmanfor Cargill.

In announcing the proposed legislation, the committee saidthe change "corrects an illogical and unworkable capitalrequirement" that would have pushed non-bank dealers out of thederivatives market, making it less competitive for banks. Of the84 registered swap dealers, less than a quarter are non-bankentities.

The effort to change the CFTC's proposed rule is the latestexample of how, nearly four years after Dodd-Frank passed,companies are still scrambling to blunt the impact of newregulations on their businesses.

In this instance, the stakes are particularly high for thesmall, non-bank brokers. At last year's hearing, Dunaway arguedthat the CFTC's proposed rules would force his company to hold"hundreds of times more" capital than a bank for an identicalbook of trades.

Small changes to the way capital charges are calculatedcould lead a dealer to hold anywhere from $3.9 million to $536.7million worth of capital against the same trade, according toevidence submitted by FCStone to the Agriculture Committee.

"If left unchanged, these capital rules will eventuallycause non-bank swap dealers to exit the business," Dunaway saidat the hearing.

FCStone does not disclose how much of its trading revenue isrelated to derivatives.

The lobbying effort also offers a window into the strangebedfellows that the years-long derivatives lobbying effort hascreated. In previous instances, big companies have sided withbanks on derivatives rules, fearful that changes would maketrading more expensive for them as counterparties.

For example, the Coalition for Derivatives End Users, whichincludes Cargill and Shell among many others, lobbied alongsidebanks as Dodd-Frank was being written and in its aftermath toease some derivatives reform proposals like higher marginrequirements. The Agriculture Committee's proposed legislationon Tuesday - titled "The Customer Protection and End-User ReliefAct" - also addresses some of those concerns for customers.

Corporations just want to make sure their trading costs arecontained and are indifferent about who is on their side, saidone lawyer in Washington who has worked on derivatives reform.

"Sometimes issues involving non-bank dealers overlap withend-user issues and in those cases, they can be working with thebanks and against the banks at the same time," the lawyer said. (Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Richard Chang)

More News
7 Jan 2022 08:17

LONDON BRIEFING: Shell warns on cash outflows but continues buybacks

LONDON BRIEFING: Shell warns on cash outflows but continues buybacks

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:57

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Shell says buybacks to continue "at pace"

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Shell says buybacks to continue "at pace"

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:49

Shell to proceed with share buyback 'at pace' despite weaker oil performance

(Sharecast News) - Royal Dutch Shell said its $7bn share buyback programme would continue "at pace" despite weaker oil product sales due to the Omicron Covid variant and forex headwinds in Turkey.

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:27

UPDATE 3-Shell pursues $7 billion buyback 'at pace' despite LNG troubles

* LNG production hit by outages in Australia* Marketing earnings impacted by Omicron slowdown (Adds share price)By Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said it will pursue "at pace" a $7 billion share buyback largely funded from t...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:27

UPDATE 1-Shell to continue $7 bln buyback programme 'at pace'

(Adds detail)By Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Friday its $7 billion share buyback programme, of which $1.5 billion has been completed, will continue "at pace" despite a slowdown in fuel demand due to the Omicron COV...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:27

UPDATE 2-Shell pursues $7 billion buyback 'at pace' despite LNG troubles

* LNG production hit by outages in Australia* Marketing earnings impacted by Omicron slowdown (Adds details, graphics)By Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said it will pursue its $7 billion share buyback programme after selling ...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:10

Shell to continue $7 bln buyback programme 'at pace'

LONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Friday its $7 billion share buyback programme, of which $1.5 billion has been completed, will continue "at pace" despite a slowdown in fuel demand due to the Omicron COVID-19 variant.(Reporting b...

Read more
6 Jan 2022 23:48

U.S. court rejects laundromat owners' bid to block sale of Texas oil refinery to Mexico's Pemex

By Stefanie EschenbacherHOUSTON/MEXICO CITY, Jan 6 (Reuters) - A U.S. court on Thursday tossed out a request from two laundromat owners to block Mexican state oil company Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) from acquiring majority control of a Texas oil r...

Read more
6 Jan 2022 12:16

UPDATE 2-Key Kazakh oil fields pump despite protests

(Updates with Shell, details, background)By Ron Bousso and Rowena EdwardsLONDON, Jan 6 (Reuters) - Oil production at Kazakhstan's top three fields is continuing even as some contractors gathered outside the largest Tengiz field in support of protes...

Read more
6 Jan 2022 12:00

Shell-backed U.S. solar developer raises $775 million in equity

By Nichola GroomJan 6 (Reuters) - Silicon Ranch Corp, the U.S. solar project developer backed by Royal Dutch Shell, on Thursday said it raised $775 million in equity capital from new and existing investors.The announcement comes as renewable energ...

Read more
5 Jan 2022 09:54

UPDATE 2-Commodity-linked stocks lift UK's FTSE 100 after dull start

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* Ocado, LSEG, Ferguson gain as brokerages raise share ratings* Gains in oil majors offset risk-off sentiment* FTSE 100 up 0.2%, FTSE 250 of...

Read more
4 Jan 2022 17:00

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks start 2022 in style as airlines fly higher

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks start 2022 in style as airlines fly higher

Read more
4 Jan 2022 12:04

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Bright start to 2022 as travel stocks take off

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Bright start to 2022 as travel stocks take off

Read more
3 Jan 2022 13:26

U.S. refiner HollyFrontier warns of lower than expected throughput

Jan 3 (Reuters) - U.S. oil refiner HollyFrontier Corp's fourth-quarter throughput will be lower than forecast, hit by weather and turnaround setbacks at refineries in Washington, New Mexico and Oklahoma, the company warned on Monday.Flooding in B...

Read more
31 Dec 2021 13:08

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Muted finish as FTSE 100 rallies 14% in 2021

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Muted finish as FTSE 100 rallies 14% in 2021

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.