ISDA®
INTERNATIONAL SWAPS AND DERIVATIVES
ASSOCIATION, INC.
NEWS
RELEASE
Immediate Release, Thursday, April 22,
2010
For More
Information, Please Contact:
San Francisco Press Room: +1 415–772–5422 (April 21 - April
23, 2010)
Rebecca
O'Neill, ISDA London, +44 203 088 3586, roneill@isda.org
Cesaltine
Gregorio, ISDA New York, +1 212-901-6019, cgregorio@isda.org
Donna
Chan, ISDA Hong Kong, +852 2200 5906, dchan@isda.org
ISDA’s
25th Annual Meeting Highlights Industry’s Efforts to Make Derivatives Safer
San Francisco, Thursday, April 22, 2010 – From central
clearing to complete regulatory transparency, the OTC derivatives industry is
implementing sweeping reforms that will transform and increase the safety of
this important area of finance. These ongoing initiatives – and the
significant work that lies ahead – are a key focus of ISDA's 25th Annual
General Meeting (AGM 2010) in San Francisco this week.
“ISDA and the OTC derivatives industry
clearly support financial regulatory reform in order to ensure market stability
and reduce systemic risk,” said Eraj Shirvani, Chairman of ISDA and Managing Director, Head of
Fixed Income EMEA, Credit Suisse. "Our
extensive, on-going work in three key areas – strengthening risk management
through the use of clearinghouses, improving transparency, and building a
robust operational infrastructure – underscores our commitment to making
derivatives safer."
Mr
Shirvani noted that the industry has made strong progress in clearing those
products that can be cleared, and that further improvement lies ahead. A
schedule of improvements is already well underway. But, he said, given their
inherent nature, not all OTC products can or should be centrally cleared.
Conrad Voldstad, ISDA’s Chief Executive Officer, said, "During the
financial crisis, it became clear that the interconnectivity of the banking
system has to be managed as well as the other risks inherent in the OTC
derivatives market. That has led to an appropriate focus on central clearing."
“However,”
Mr Voldstad noted, “corporate end-users did not create significant derivative
risk nor did they suffer large derivative losses. A case for mandatory clearing
of their derivatives activity cannot be made based on systemic risk.”
Mr Voldstad also addressed issues
related to mandatory exchange trading for OTC derivatives. “Exchange trading has nothing to do with reducing
credit risk,” he said. “There has also been a misguided belief that exchange
trading will bring more liquidity and better pricing to one of the most liquid
and most efficient markets in the world. In fact, mandating that all swaps be
exchange-traded will increase costs and risks for the manufacturers, technology
firms, retailers, energy producers, utilities, service companies and others who
use OTC derivatives. That’s because the risk-hedging products that they want
and need will no longer be available."
Robert
Pickel, ISDA's Executive Vice Chairman, affirmed that the industry’s goal is to
provide supervisors with a complete view of the OTC derivatives market, both
cleared and uncleared trades, across transactions, firms, and counterparties.
“When we have completed the task, we will no longer have issues like we did
after the Lehman bankruptcy, when market participants and others concerned
about firms’ exposures to that situation. And firms like AIG will no longer be
able to amass so much exposure virtually unnoticed.”
AGM
2010 will feature panel sessions on:
Keynote
addresses will be delivered by:
A
full agenda of AGM 2010 is available at http://www.isda.org/conf/AGM2010/agm2010agenda.html.
About ISDA
ISDA,
which represents participants in the privately negotiated derivatives industry,
is among the world’s largest global financial trade associations as measured by
number of member firms. ISDA was chartered in 1985, and today has over 820
member institutions from 57 countries on six continents. These members include
most of the world’s major institutions that deal in privately negotiated
derivatives, as well as many of the businesses, governmental entities and other
end users that rely on over-the-counter derivatives to manage efficiently the
financial market risks inherent in their core economic activities. Information about ISDA and its activities is
available on the Association's web site: www.isda.org.
ISDA® is a registered trademark of the
International Swaps & Derivatives Association, Inc.