SEC Finalizes Treasury Clearing Rule

The rule requires most secondary transactions to be centrally cleared by June 2026.



The Securities and Exchange Commission finalized a rule Wednesday that requires central clearance of a wider range of Treasury security secondary transactions, a market of approximately $26 trillion. The commissioners voted 4 to 1 in favor of the rule change.

The rule would require clearing agencies that provide counterparty services for Treasurys to require certain secondary market transactions to be cleared. Clearing agencies also will need to update their policies to “calculate, collect, and hold margin for their direct participants’ proprietary transactions separately from transactions submitted on behalf of indirect participants.”

Secondary transactions in Treasury securities do not need to be submitted for clearing when a counterparty is a central bank, sovereign entity, international financial institution or natural person.

According to the SEC, the rule will “enhance risk management for central counterparties” because of the relative transparency of the clearing process, compared with private trades. The rule would require secondary market participants to post collateral to back their positions or cap their use of repo trades.

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The SEC’s fact sheet on the amendments stated that the regulator views the changes as necessary, in part because the “U.S. Treasury market plays a unique role in the U.S. and global economy.” Central clearing for the Treasury market “can help increase the safety and efficiency of securities trading, reduce costs, and mitigate the potential for a single market participant’s failure to destabilize other market participants or the financial system.”

SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw, who voted in favor of the rule, said in her statement Wednesday that the need for more clearing is in part motivated by past instances of market stress, including the “flash rally” in October 2014, a spike in repo rates in September 2019 and during the COVID-19 pandemic. She noted that, currently, about 13% of Treasury secondary transactions are centrally cleared.

Jay Gould, a special counsel with Baker Botts LLP, explains that the SEC and other regulators “are trying to address systemic risk” in this space. He says many investment banks and hedge funds are trading Treasurys “in dark pools,” where “nobody knows what’s happening.” This makes it difficult for regulators to assess and mitigate systemic risk in the economy, he says.

Gould expects the new rule to cover a “substantial majority” of secondary trades and to bring more transparency on “how leveraged the markets are,” which will help the Federal Reserve better understand the impact of interest rate changes, because they will have more data on leverage in the Treasury market.

Trading outside of clearing agencies can permit some hedge funds to trade using unreported leverage, making it harder for others to trade against them, Gould explains. He expects the rule to have the largest impact on hedge funds and other large institutional traders.

The SEC’s rule has a staggered implementation stage. Starting on March 31, 2025, requirements for clearing agencies to change management and access policies will come into effect. After that, direct participants of a clearing agency must clear secondary cash transactions by December 31, 2025, and repo transactions by June 30, 2026.

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Pennsylvania SERS Commits $220M to Private Equity, Real Estate

Along with new commitments to alternatives, the pension fund is also boosting pay for staffers.

The Pennsylvania State Employees’ Retirement System will commit $220 million in new investments to real estate and private equity, the board announced in its December meeting. The Pennsylvania SERS board also approved staff pay raises and reported quarterly and year-to-date returns.

The new investments continue the current trend among allocators to plug money into alternative assets. The SERS board approved an allocation of $100 million to private equity firm Clearlake Capital Partners’ new VIII fund. An additional $20 million could be allocated to follow-up investments, such as a sidecar vehicle in which SERS will co-invest alongside the PE fund.

An additional $100 million will be committed to real estate, specifically to the Ares PA Opportunities Fund LP’s Ares US Real Estate Opportunity Fund IV. Co-investments will also be made with Ares.

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Asset Class Returns

The SERS board also gave insights into its asset returns in the year’s third quarter. Notably, only private credit, private equity and cash generated positive returns in the quarter, with the classes returning 2.96%, 2.22% and 1.33%, respectively.

For the quarter, Penn SERS returned negative 2.22%, but its year-to-date return through September was 5.10%, with much of that gain coming from equities, as U.S. stocks returned 11.88% and international developed market equities returned 7.58%.

Compensation

The board also approved new compensation guidelines for SERS staff, effective January 1, 2024. SERS investment professionals will receive a 3.6% increase in their salary. A cost-of-living adjustment was also made for SERS Executive Director Joseph Torta.

As of September 30, the system manages $34.4 billion in assets in its defined benefit plan and $155 million in assets in a defined contribution plan, jointly serving more than 239,000 members.

Related Stories: 

Pennsylvania PSERS Reports Preliminary 3.54% Return for 2023 

Pennsylvania SERS Will Join Pilot Project to Combat Securities Fraud 

‘Ongoing Market Changes’ Lead to Penn PSERS Allocation Adjustments 

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