Is This Normal? The Cost of Assuming that Derivatives Have Normal Returns

Available as: PDF

Derivatives exchanges often determine collateral requirements, which are fundamental to market safety, with dated risk models assuming normal returns. However, derivatives returns are heavy-tailed, which leads to the systematic under-collection of collateral (margin). This paper uses extreme value theory (EVT) to evaluate the cost of this margin inadequacy to market participants in the event of default. I find that the Canadian futures market was under-margined by about $1.6 billion during the Great Financial Crisis, and that the default of the highest-impact participant generates a cost of up to $302 million to be absorbed by surviving participants. I show that this cost can consume the market’s entire default fund and result in costly risk mutualization. I advocate for the adoption of EVT as a benchmarking tool and argue that the regulation of exchanges should be revised for financial products with heavy tails.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.34989/swp-2024-46