When a trader can’t pay, a central counterparty (CCP) steps in. It uses a layered defense called the default waterfall. Think of it like a series of safety nets. Each net catches what the one above couldn't hold.
Skin-in-the-game means the CCP puts its own money at risk. This aligns everyone's interests. The waterfall shows who pays first, second, and last. Let's see how each layer works.
Losses are absorbed in a predefined order. You cannot skip a layer. The defaulting member always pays first. The CCP's own money is used before non-defaulting members' contributions.
| Layer | Source of Funds | Who Provides It |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Initial Margin (IM) | Defaulting Member |
| 2 | Default Fund Contribution (DF) | Defaulting Member |
| 3 | CCP Skin-in-the-Game (SITG) | The Clearing House Itself |
| 4 | Default Fund Contributions | Non-Defaulting Members |
| 5 | Assessment Powers / Recovery Tools | Non-Defaulting Members / CCP Capital |
The first two layers belong to the failed firm. The CCP only touches its own money at Layer 3. This is the core of "skin-in-the-game".
Imagine a tenant breaks a window. First, the landlord uses the security deposit (Margin). Then, the landlord pays from his own pocket (Skin-in-the-Game) before asking other tenants to chip in.
This keeps the landlord honest about screening tenants. He has something to lose.
Regulations like EMIR in Europe and the Dodd-Frank Act in the US demand this structure. The CCP must have significant skin-in-the-game. Usually, it's 25% of the CCP's regulatory capital.
This placement ensures the CCP manages risk carefully. If it doesn’t, its own capital burns quickly.
It prevents moral hazard. Without it, a CCP might ignore risky behavior. The cash commitment forces the CCP to set strict margin requirements and monitor positions closely.
The CCP's dedicated own resources can be a junior tranche. It sits right above the defaulter's funds. Here is how regulators compare SITG requirements globally.
| Region | Regulation | SITG Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Europe | EMIR (Article 35) | 25% of CCP’s regulatory capital |
| United States | CFTC Rules (Subpart B) | At least 6 months of operating expenses or 25% |
| Global | PFMI (CPSS-IOSCO) | Substantial own capital in the waterfall |
After the CCP's SITG is exhausted, the mutualization layer kicks in. Non-defaulting members must contribute. This creates peer pressure to watch each other.
A club has a house fund. If one member trashes the kitchen, his deposit is used first. The club officer might pay a small fine too. Only then do the other members split the repair cost.
Members will quickly stop the wild guy from joining the next party.
The default fund is also called the "default fund" or "guarantee fund". It’s a pooled resource. If the waterfall fails, recovery tools like variation margin haircuts come in.
| Resource Type | Belongs To | Risk Characteristic |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Margin | Defaulter | Non-mutualized; purely defaulter-pays |
| Default Fund (Defaulter) | Defaulter | Non-mutualized; second layer |
| CCP SITG | CCP | Semi-mutualized; protects non-defaulters |
| Default Fund (Survivors) | Survivors | Fully mutualized; shared risk |
Cover 2 standard requires the CCP to survive the default of the two biggest members. This stress test defines the size of the waterfall. If two giants fall, the system must hold.
Margin is calculated daily, sometimes intraday. It covers potential future exposure. The CCP must hold enough to handle extreme but plausible market moves.
All resources up to the survivor default fund must cover the stress scenario. If not, the CCP must increase margin or default fund sizes. This protects against extreme events.
Default fund contributions are proportional to risk. The member trading the most volatile contracts pays the most. This is fair. It also discourages excessive risk-taking.
Two shops share a fire insurance pool. The one storing fireworks pays a bigger share than the one selling books. If the fireworks shop catches fire, its deposit extinguishes first.
If the waterfall is fully consumed, the CCP enters recovery. Cash calls on survivors and forced allocation of contracts are extreme tools. The end goal is to avoid taxpayer bailouts.
| Tool | Type | Impact on Non-Defaulters |
|---|---|---|
| Default Fund Replenishment | Recovery | Cash call up to a capped amount |
| Variation Margin Haircutting | Recovery | Reduces gains due to non-defaulters |
| Partial Tear-Up of Contracts | Recovery | Forced closure of positions |
| Sale of Business | Resolution | Transfer to a healthy CCP |
Haircutting reduces the gains owed to winning traders. It spreads the loss across the book. This is controversial. Traders don't like surprises.
These rules apply to all asset classes: derivatives, equities, and repos. The core logic remains identical. A defaulter pays, then the platform pays, then the group pays.
Key Takeaways
| Key Point | What It Means | Action Item |
|---|---|---|
| Waterfall Sequence | Defaulter pays first, non-defaulters pay last | Monitor the CCP disclosure on how big layers are |
| Skin-in-the-Game | CCP puts its capital before survivor funds | Verify the CCP uses at least 25% of capital |
| Cover-2 Standard | Waterfall must survive top-2 defaults | Check quarterly CCP stress test results |
| Default Fund Structure | Risk-based contributions align skin-in-the-game | Ensure your fund proportion reflects your risk |
| Recovery Tools | Layers exist to avoid state bailouts | Understand if haircutting can affect your gains |