Prime brokerage economics

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Prime Brokerage Anatomy™
There is no industry standard prime brokerage agreement, so this is not so much an anatomy as a collection of resources about an amorphous subject.
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Prologue: bank economics

Consider how a traditional bank makes money: on one side it has a loan book, usually in the shape of mortgages, on the other side it accepts customer deposits.[1] To make money it must ensure its total interest revenue on its loans (after credit losses) exceeds its total interest costs on its deposits and borrowings, and the total amount it must pay to keep the organisation running.

The bank’s treasury department ensures that its capital requirements — its lending and borrowing needs — are suitably matched. The internal cost that a lending business incurs promise treasury department may be high, especially for a business that is perceived to be high-risk or for which the cost of capital is great.

The bank has two challenges in managing its business and ensuring it stays profitable:

  • Minimise credit losses: it must minimise credit losses on its loan portfolio
  • Minimise interest and running costs: It must minimise interest costs on its borrowings.[2] It is axiomatic that, for a given loan, the cheaper a bank’s cost of funding, the fatter its margin. This is simple mathematics.

Banks minimise credit losses by taking security and putting in place other credit mitigation techniquesclose out netting, guarantees, credit support — which it can use to offset its losses should customers to whom it has lent money default. For example a mortgage, under which the bank may repossess a defaulting customer’s house.

It may seem obvious, but it is worth saying that security interests over customer property may relieve credit risk, but they do not minimise interest or operating costs (and indeed may contribute to them in the form of legal and registration costs).

Once credit mitigation is in place, and since there are natural market limits to the amount of interest a bank can charge on its loans, the key question for the bank is how do I reduce my overall borrowing costs?. This is the way to fatter margins.

If only it could take the houses it has lent against and raise money against them somehow! But customers have an inconvenient habit of occupying their houses, which makes it harder to repurpose them. Customers do not usually give vacant possession to the bank. But there is a proxy here: the value of a house is reflected in the value of the loan: the bank’s asset is not the house itself, but the present and future cashflows the customer pays the bank to repay its loan and continue living in the house. These too have a present value.

In the 1980’s some resourceful bankers hit upon the idea of monetising the value of a mortgage portfolio not by reusing the property itself, but rather the cashflows it was secured upon. They did this through securitisation: they repackaged future cashflows due on the mortgage loans into secured bonds which they sold at par on the open market. That the banks were less dependent on expensive customer deposits to fund their Lending operations.

This all may have ended badly for the mortgage backed securisation market in the mid-2000s, But we can see the idea here is to optimise the banks financial position.

Exactly the same economic drivers are behind the prime brokerage business. The prime broker is essentially margin lending to its customers, either in the form of physical margin loans or or synthetic prime brokerage transactions in the form of swaps. It's facing similar risks: credit losses should its customers default; financing costs which its incurs from its own Treasury Department when it provides financing to its customers,

Prime brokerage economics

Apply all that to the business of prime brokerage. For all the excitement, the hedge fund offices in Mayfair, the hookers, the parties, the leverage, the exotic strategies, and all the buzzwords with which the business overflows, prime brokerage is at its heart a lending business. The prime broker makes money by lending money and earning interest in return. The risks and challenges to its business are the same: It needs to avoid credit losses as a result of the implosion of its customers before they can repay its loans. For this it takes security over its customers assets, and may impose netting obligations and other margin arrangements. Once the side of its business is taken care of it must minimise its liabilities: by trimming operating costs and in particular offsetting as best it can the cost of funding the loans it advances to its customers. Just like a mortgage lender, a prime brokerage business must borrow these funds from its treasury department.

Unlike mortgage lenders, prime brokerage customers tend not to need to live in the investments they bought with their loan proceeds. They care about the return their investments bring them, but as long as that is assured they are happy to hand over possession of their investments to the prime broker “for safekeeping” and as collateral for their obligations to repay their loans.

And unlike residential properties in suburban Las Vegas, the investments that prime broker customers make tend to be liquid, transferable securities. The thing about a transferable security is that you can sell it or lend it and thereby raise money against it. If it is liquid you can do this quickly, and quickly get it back if, having lent it out, you find the customer needs it.

Hence the fabulous idea of “re-hypothecation” (as described for Americans) or “reuse” (as described for ordinary people).[3] Under this strategy, the customer permits the prime broker to take assets from its custody accounts and finance them in the market, Usually by borrowing higher quality assets and using the prime brokerage investments as collateral in an agency lending arrangement. The prime broker takes the high-quality assets it has raised and returned them to its Treasury Department for credit on its internal borrowing account.

==See also==

References

  1. And may enter into other forms of term borrowing in the financial markets such as by issuing commercial paper, bonds and so on.
  2. It must also minimise its operating costs in terms of personnel, plant and equipment et cetera, needless to say.
  3. Legally, re-hypothecation and reuse are very different operations; in practice they amount to exactly the same thing. As usual, form is far more important than substance in the mind of the legal eagle.