1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electronic trading system. Particularly, the present invention is directed to a system for trading instruments, such as over the counter instruments or futures contracts, on an electronic exchange wherein trades are settled either bilaterally or cleared based on participant preferences.
2. Description of Related Art
The present invention relates generally to the trading of instruments such as over the counter instruments and futures contracts. Generally, such trades are arranged through bilateral contracts, i.e., the exchange of written agreements between counterparties. Recently, electronic markets have arisen to facilitate the trading of these instruments. In some circumstances, the trades may be consummated automatically if each counterparty informs the exchange of predetermined credit limitations, and the counterparties satisfy each other's respective limitations. While this method has generally been effective, the increased popularity of trading in these instruments (especially electronically) has created a need for more conventional trading method involving clearing trades through a third party clearinghouse.
Each method of trading, bilateral and cleared, has its own advantages. Bilateral trades are often favored where the parties have a pre-existing bilateral netting agreement, or where clearing a trade may be more expensive. On the other hand, it may be preferable to clear trades through a clearinghouse when one of the parties has reservations concerning the other party's credit worthiness and wishes to have the trade guaranteed by a third party. Current electronic exchanges have not accounted for these preferences. Therefore, there is a need for a system on an electronic exchange in which participants may set preferences to trade either bilaterally or cleared depending upon the circumstances. There is also a need for a system in which the exchange will automatically default to a preferred trading method. It is also desirable to show the products being traded in a single price stream, regardless of how the trade is settled. Thus, the details of the trade (e.g., price, quantity, etc.) should not be affected by the method of settlement. The method of settlement will only be determined at the time of trade confirmation. This system will streamline electronic trading of the products being traded.
The purpose and advantages of the present invention will be set forth in and apparent from the description that follows, as well as will be learned by practice of the invention. Additional advantages of the invention will be realized and attained by the methods and systems particularly pointed out in the written description and claims hereof, as well as from the appended drawings.
To achieve these and other advantages and in accordance with the purpose of the invention, as embodied and broadly described, an embodiment of the invention includes a trading system for trading financial instruments on an electronic exchange involving bilateral and cleared trading, the system comprising:
Embodiments of the foregoing system have the advantage that they can be embodied in a user interface able to facilitate electronic trading, as described herein below.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and are intended to provide further explanation of the invention claimed.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute part of this specification, are included to illustrate and provide a further understanding of the method and system of the invention. Together with the description, the drawings serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiments of the invention, an example of which is illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The method and corresponding steps of the invention will be described in conjunction with the detailed description of the system.
The methods and systems presented herein may be used for electronic trading of financial instruments, such as over the counter instruments or futures contracts. The present invention is particularly suited for electronic trading of such instruments wherein a participant on an electronic exchange has predetermined preferences concerning settlement with specific counterparties.
Electronic over the counter trading systems are shown generally in
The present embodiments of the invention require first that the parties be set up to take advantage of the exchange. This process is described generally at
According to the method 400, the Risk Manager logs into a counterparty filter 410. The counterparty filter is depicted in
In
In the next step 420, the Risk Manager requests clearing accounts from the clearing firms of his choice. This process is preferably accomplished through an electronic interface. The Risk Manager will send a request to the Clearing Account Manager requesting access to one or more of the company's clearing accounts with the clearing firm. The Clearing Account Manager may access a screen which identifies all of the requests for accounts and may respond by making one or more of the accounts available for trading. Typically, the company has a pre-existing relationship with clearing firms for trading, and one or more of those pre-existing accounts is used. Once access has been given to a clearing account, the Risk Manager may edit and view trader profiles (i.e., trading profiles for users under the Risk Manager's authority). This may include assigning accounts to particular traders.
The trading process according to the preferred embodiments of the present invention is depicted in the flow charts shown in
According to
Referring back to
Assuming trading is available between P1 and P2, the trading logic 600 determines whether the trade is settled bilaterally, cleared or not at all. The first inquiries 610, 615 are whether the order is floated with a clearing account. If not, the trade can only proceed bilaterally, if at all. Thus, the system determined 620 whether P1's order passes P1's bilateral credit checks, i.e., tenor limits and daily dollar limits. If not, there is no trade. If P1's order passes its bilateral credit checks, the next inquiry 630 is whether the order will pass P2's bilateral credit checks. If not, there is no trade. If the order satisfies the tenor limits and daily dollar limits for both P1 and P2, and one or both does not have a clearing account for the order, the trade will be consummated bilaterally.
Assuming both P1 and P2 have an open account in which to clear the order, the order must pass the clearing account checks 700 for both P1 and P2, 625 and 635, respectively. Such clearing checks include, for example, the order size, the credit line available in the clearing account, maximum net long and short limits, and a net trade position balance (calculated from all cleared trades in a trading day) to determine maximum long and short thresholds per trade opportunity. These checks are described in
If clearing account credit checks are satisfied, the trade may still be settled either bilaterally or cleared depending upon the parties' preferences. If P1 will only trade cleared with P2645, the trade will automatically proceed as a cleared trade. If P1 will trade either way, but simply has a preference for one or the other 655, the trade will trade cleared if P1 prefers cleared, but will depend on P2's preferences if P1 prefers bilateral. If P1 prefers bilateral, but P2 will only trade cleared 665, the trade will be settled through clearing. Similarly, if P2 will trade either way but prefers cleared 675, the trade will be settled through clearing. If both P1 and P2 prefer bilateral trading 655, 675, the trade will settle bilaterally even though cleared trading is available to them. Thus, if cleared trading is available based on clearing account credit checks, and either party prefers cleared trading or mandates cleared-only trading, the trade will settle through clearing. If cleared trading is unavailable, or if available but both parties prefer bilateral trading, the trade will settle bilaterally if both parties satisfy bilateral credit limits.
Assuming first the account is set to open, the next inquiry is whether the party is making a bid or an offer 730. If it is a bid, it is determined whether the lot quantity exceeds lot size limitations placed on the account 732. If the lot size is not under the limit, the clearing account is unavailable and the order fails clearing account checks. If the lot size is under the limit, the next inquiry 734 is whether the bid exceeds the net account balance. If the bid is not less than the maximum trade long position minus the net account balance, the order will fail the account checks. If the bid is within range, clearing is available on that account.
If the party is making an offer instead of a bid, the inquiries are similar. The first inquiry is whether the lot size meets lot size limits 736. If not, the order fails. If so, the system determines 738 if the offer exceeds the max trade short position plus the net account balance. If not, the trade fails clearing accounts. If so, trading may proceed on a cleared basis with this account (assuming the remaining trade logic is satisfied).
If the clearer has the party set to liquidate, the first inquiry 740 is again whether the party is making a bid or an offer 740. If it is a bid, and the account net balance is long 742, the trade will fails account checks. If the account net balance is short 742, the clearing account checks proceed as described above in steps 732 and 734. If the order is an offer, and the account net balance is short 744, the order fails account checks. If the account net balance is long, the clearing account checks proceed as described above in steps 736 and 738.
It will be understood the present invention can be adapted to other types of clearing account checks.
Another aspect of the system according to preferred embodiments is a user interface that displays parties' trading preferences and settings with respect to each other. In the preferred embodiments, the counterparty filter (see
Although the counterparty filter identifies the possible trades that can be made with a specific counterparty for specific products, in the preferred embodiment trading is done anonymously and whether the trade is settled through clearing or bilaterally is not decided until actual trade execution. Thus, the first party may float on offer for a particular product on which both bilateral and cleared trading is available. Whether the trade will be settled bilaterally or through clearing will depend on the preferences of the party to accept the offer. If the party making the offer, for example, has bilateral trading closed with a particular counterparty and at least one of the party or counterparty does not permit cleared trading of the product, the product will show up as red on the trading screen. If trading is possible, the product offer will show up as white. The color coding acts as the means for indicating whether trading is possible. The color coding may also be tied to the particulars of the trade (e.g., notional amount or tenor limits) and those trade particulars compared to a counterparty's bilateral credit limits to determine if trading is possible. Accordingly, if the two parties have bilateral trading open with respect to each other, but the trade would exceed bilateral credit limits, the product offer might still show up as red.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the method and system of the present invention without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention include modifications and variations that are within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/385,337, filed May 31, 2002.
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