FISL London 2018: SFTR fallout will change the seclending market, so who pays the bill?

SFTR is going to change how market infrastructures work, and how that shapes up could mean new power struggles between participants. It will without question result in higher costs.

Finadium’s SFM recently covered some of the consequences of delegated reporting in SFTR, like exposing buy-side positions, but it’s hardly the only major impact the securities financing industry is going to have to think about.

For example, how does the delegated reporting model work from a charging perspective? Who is paying who? Does that get passed on to the beneficial owner or not? The borrower? And how does the borrower deal with that? Would this be an add-on service that agent lenders might charge beneficial owners, or would it be considered part of the fee split like a custody move in most cases?

These are some of the additional dynamics resulting from SFTR that the industry hasn’t worked through.
This content requires a Finadium subscription. Articles with an unlocked symbol can be accessed with free registration. Log in or create a free account by signing up here..

Related Posts

Previous Post
FISL London 2018: reputational risk and liquidity hurdles to buy-side adoption of emerging market infrastructures
Next Post
FISL London 2018: buy-side debates CCP market share, considers route to cheaper borrow rates

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

X

Reset password

Create an account