Variation margin: Difference between revisions

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A topic of some excitement in the dog days of January 2017, because [[Financial counterparty - EMIR Provision|financial counterparties]] and [[NFC+|non-financial counterparties]] (at least where trading over the [[clearing thresholds]] are suddenly obliged to pay and collect it as a matter of regulatory necessity.
{{Variationmargindescription}}
{{Variationmargindescription}}

Revision as of 13:55, 17 January 2017

A topic of some excitement in the dog days of January 2017, because financial counterparties and non-financial counterparties (at least where trading over the clearing thresholds are suddenly obliged to pay and collect it as a matter of regulatory necessity.

Variation margin, or “VM”, is a credit mitigation technique designed to minimise the credit risk parties have to each other under bilateral derivative transactions. It requires the counterparties give each other collateral — typically cash — each day to ensure that their net collateralised exposure is effectively nil. For example, if the net “replacement cost” of the swaps between two counterparties on a given day is $10 million, the “out-of-the-money” party, who would have to pay it were all the transactions terminated, has to pay the “in-the-money” counterparty $10 million in cash (subject to agreed Thresholds and Minimum Transfer Amounts). This happens every day; variation margin can be paid either way, depending on how the net portfolio moves. Volatile markets can quickly move — a day is a long time when black swans are on the wing — so parties often want a little something extra to tide them over for expected movements between now and the next variation margin payment date. For that, you need initial margin.