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TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION. BRIEF HISTORICAL JOURNEY OF BESAOUR REGULATORY STRUCTURECHARACTERISTICS OF AN EFFICIENT MARKETBONDS vs. EQUITY MARKETSDIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIESKEY STRUCTURAL ISSUES FOR GROWTH OF BOND MARKETSLESSONS WE HAVE LEARNTPRACTICAL POINTS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION IN DEVELOPIN
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2. TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION BRIEF HISTORICAL JOURNEY OF BESA
OUR REGULATORY STRUCTURE
CHARACTERISTICS OF AN EFFICIENT MARKET
BONDS vs. EQUITY MARKETS
DIFFERENCES AND SIMILARITIES
KEY STRUCTURAL ISSUES FOR GROWTH OF BOND MARKETS
LESSONS WE HAVE LEARNT
PRACTICAL POINTS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION IN DEVELOPING A BOND MARKET
3. BESA – BRIEF HISTORICAL JOURNEY 1987 Stals / Jacobs report
1989 Bond Market Association (BMA) formed
1995 Electronic settlement implemented
1996 Bond Exchange licensed
1997 T+3 rolling settlement = G30 compliance
1998 Primary dealer structure for auctioning of government bonds
4. BESA – BRIEF HISTORICAL JOURNEY 1999 BESA starts ATS project (BATS)
2000 BATS implemented
Total Return Index (TRI) implemented
Risk management project started
2001 Big increase in corporate bonds listed
Restructuring recommendation approved
5. BESA – BRIEF HISTORICAL JOURNEY 2002 Restructuring proposal approved
More corporate bonds listed
Including:- 3 Securitisation issues (Credit cards, motor vehicles, commercial bank loan book)
2003 Commercial paper of banks issued
6. MAJOR FEATURES OF SA MARKET Primarily a government bond market >90% turnover
Electronic net settlement = T+3 (rolling)
Guaranteed by settlement banks on settlement commitment
Meets G30 guidelines
Counterparty risk between participants
Period between trade (T) and settlement commitment by settlement banks
7. MAJOR FEATURES OF SA MARKET Very high turnover velocity (+/ - 10% of market cap / day)
Very efficient, liquid (concentrated in few bonds)
Huge buy / sell back (Repo) activity
No defaults experienced – no claims on Guarantee Fund
8. MAJOR FEATURES OF SA MARKET Floor closed in October 1998
Inter-dealer broker screens – Garban (ICAP), Tullet & Tokyo, Prebon Yamane - (matched principal & name give up)
Telephone
Automated trading system (BATS) is not used by members
Only used for trade reporting
To be replaced by new trade capture system and price dissemination system in 2004
9. SETTLEMENT Electronic settlement since 1995
Outsourced to UNEXcor (Licensed clearing & settlement system – owned by custodian banks)
Central Scrip Depository (CSD)
4 – Settlement Agents (Custodian banks)
Daily settlement processes – 2 separate runs
Net rolling – T+3 (since 1997)
Gross – T+0 (Same day trades)
BESA - settlement supervisors
- settlement fines
10. SA Bond Turnover (Total Nominal Traded)
11. SA Bond Turnover (Total Trades)
12. SPOT & REPO (Nominal Traded - Trillion)
13. Bond Market Turnover (Billion Rand Nominal Traded)
14. SPOT & REPO (Nominal Traded - Trillion)
15. Nominal Outstanding by major issuer Groupings
16. Total Bond Market Turnover Breakdown by Major Issuers (Nominal Traded) 1989-2003
17. REGULATORY FRAMEWORK & MARKET STRUCTURE
18. CHARACTERISTICS OF AN EFFICIENT MARKET Timely and accurate information is available
Market has to be liquid
The transaction costs must be low in relation to the value of the trade
The prices rapidly adjust to new information
All transactions and costs are transparent and are disclosed
The market has integrity
There is surveillance in the market
19. BOND MARKETS vs EQUITY MARKETS EQUITIES
Brokers are dominant players
Strong retail presence
Corporates – Generally vanilla issues
4. Exchange traded
5. ATS systems (exchange driven and run) – few floors left
6. Central single point of price discovery in ATS
7. Centralised risk management (Trade with impunity)
20. BOND MARKETS & EQUITY MARKETS
21. BOND MARKETS vs EQUITY MARKETS So what you might ask ?
I will attempt to answer this in the last topic heading
“points for your consideration”
22. KEY ISSUES FOR GROWTH OF BOND MARKETS Sound monetary and fiscal framework
Will and commitment of central government to develop markets
Effective, appropriate and harmonised financial market legislation and regulations
Money markets are a starting point – asset / liability matching / mismatches
Role of pension fund legislation
prescribed investments – promote but could also distort
Do not force a structure onto a market
23. LESSONS WE HAVE LEARNT Authorities and participants need a common objective
Talk / talk and decide
Leadership comes from both!
Do not force a market structure on participants – recipe for disaster
Remember bonds and equity markets are different but have some similarities
Settlement is the same – cash / underlying
Corporate actions very different for equities
Trading – different trading methodologies
Risk – concepts identical - management very different
“One solution fits all” - Does not work!
Size does matter – biggest balance sheet counts!!
Intermediaries / speculators are important participants – do not squeeze them out!!
Do not re-invent the wheel
24. PRACTICAL POINTS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION
WILLING AND ABLE PARTICIPANTS THAT CAN BE
INNOVATIVE AND CAN MAKE MONEY
What are objectives of your market development
Do you need your own market? (National airlines analogy)
No easy answers to this question – business issues compared to economics
It starts at the top
Sound monetary and fiscal framework
Will and commitment of central government
Good financial market legislation and regulation
Have few restrictions as possible – your competitors may not have them
Harmonise laws and regulations with region
Money markets are a key starting point – asset / Liability matching / mismatches
25. PRACTICAL POINTS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION A National Payment system is crucial for any market developments
Bonds and equities are different but the participants may wish to use similar processes / structures to develop the bond markets
Conversely they may not
Get practical training/exposure from those who have done it before or do it now
Regulators, banks, traders, Exchanges, settlement people
Importing big trading systems and market structures from Europe may be completely inappropriate for you
Is there a regional solution for settlements that makes sense – economics of scale?
26. PRACTICAL POINTS FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION Be practical – if you do not have all the right things in place
Botswana Bond Issue is a good example
But have a plan!
Start Small - if you cannot use / do not want to use regional systems
Settlements can be run on Excel spreadsheets
Use local banks as custodians, Central Bank
Economies of scale
Trading can be call auctions (2 - 3 / day)
Appointing primary dealers is not necessarily the magic wand for take-off