06.29.2017

New DTCC Repo Service Has First Trade

06.29.2017

Citadel and Morgan Stanley have christened the Fixed Income Clearing Corp.’s Centrally Cleared Institutional Tri-Party Service with its first trade, officials from the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. announced today.

“This marks an important milestone in the evolution of repo clearing and is a critical first step toward extending the benefits of clearing to a broader set of repo market participants,” said Dan Dufresne, managing director and global treasurer at Citadel.

Since the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission approved rule changes that allow institutional investors to participate directly in the clearinghouse through CCIT membership in May, FICC has been working with dealers and cash lenders – including corporations, asset managers, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, municipalities and state treasuries – to prepare all the necessary documentation and agreements to begin this next stage in the evolution of the repo market.

“We are very pleased to have been able to work with Citadel and Morgan Stanley to take this next step to make CCIT a reality,” said Murray Pozmanter, managing director and head of clearing agency services at the DTCC. “With a greater number of market participants leveraging the clearinghouse through the CCIT Service, we are able to strengthen both the safety and efficiency of the tri-party repo marketplace.”

The new CCIT membership expands the availability of central clearing in the repo market and extends central counterparty (CCP) services and the guaranty of the completion of eligible tri-party repo transactions between its dealer members and eligible institutional cash lenders. Expanding the CCP guaranty to a broader number of participants would lower the risk of diminished liquidity in the tri-party repo market caused by a large-scale exit of participants in a market stress situation.

The expanded membership also means more trading activity with a failed counterparty can be centrally liquidated in an orderly manner by FICC, which would reduce the risk of “fire sales” that drive down asset prices and spread stress across the financial system.

A recent Markets Media article highlights how @tZERO is resetting its vision - focusing on partnerships, regulated infrastructure, and global scale to make tokenized capital markets a reality.

Under CEO @Alan_Konevsky, the company is leveraging regulatory momentum to enable…

Want to know who calls the shots on trading tech? We partnered with @WeAreAdaptive to interview capital markets professionals globally to uncover key trends and evolving patterns in technology deployment. Reach the report here:

Load More

Related articles

  1. Fair Access Central to Market Review

    This lowers entry barriers for buy-side firms and others not holding a full exchange membership.

  2. ICE Clear Credit's framework would create a competitive U.S. Treasury clearing landscape.

  3. ‘Futurization’ Enters CME Metals Market

    Members can give one instruction for Euroclear to transfer multiple securities to meet margin requirements.

  4. The proposed ACS Triparty service has been developed to facilitate greater access to central clearing.

  5. FMX Futures Exchange was launched in September last year to compete with CME Group.

We're Enhancing Your Experience with Smart Technology

We've updated our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy to introduce AI tools that will personalize your content, improve our market analysis, and deliver more relevant insights.These changes take effect on Aug 25, 2025.
Your data remains protected—we're simply using smart technology to serve you better. [Review Full Terms] | [Review Privacy Policy] Please review our updated Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy carefully. By continuing to use our services after Aug 25, 2025, you agree to these

Close the CTA