Prime brokers respond to shifting composition of the hedge fund industry |
Date: Monday, September 23, 2013
Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek
This is according to Ernst & Young's survey of prime brokers, The balancing
act: how to navigate the evolving challenges of the prime brokerage
industry.
The firm surveyed executives from eight prime brokers to explore a variety
of topics, including organisational structure, new business (including
pricing and lockup agreements), client monitoring and revenue management as
it relates to securities lending. The survey reveals trends around how prime
brokers manage products, including ETFs, equity reverse repos,
stock-for-stock transactions and tri-party structures.
"The prime brokerage industry today is under tremendous pressure to respond
to the shifting landscape," says Mark DiMaio, principal, banking and capital
markets, Ernst & Young. "Therefore, the industry is focusing on how to
better quantify operational costs in order to increase the profitability
margins of new and current clients. Prime brokers need to understand these
costs to tier clients effectively."
Key findings from the report include:
Client acceptance process: According to the survey, most brokers (70 per
cent) have a formal acceptance process for new clients and take similar
steps when considering a new client, such as a pre-qualification and verbal
agreement followed by due diligence and approval by the acceptance committee
or the senior management group. That said, given the range of hedge fund
strategies, client acceptance requires a significant amount of judgment and
does not present much opportunity to find efficiencies. However, firms that
begin by gaining a better understanding of the potential operational cost of
a client under consideration will be best placed to decide whether the
relationship will be profitable over the long term.
Client onboarding and monitoring: The survey shows that prime brokers can
potentially gain advantages by introducing better technology into the
onboarding process. Less than half (44 per cent) of firms surveyed say they
use a semi-automated process for capturing data and tracking onboarding
progress and completion, and none of the firms surveyed have a tool that
configures and integrates all prime brokerage systems with client
information and unique business requirements, meaning no firm is able to
fully automate client set-up.
Organisational structure: Only one prime broker surveyed is a standalone,
separate and distinct business unit. The others work in the same silos that
affect the business, such as securities lending, FX and OTC clearing. The
majority (57 per cent) of the brokers surveyed have service-level agreements
between centralized back-office support and prime business lines and use
varying tactics for performing work such as P&L generation, confirmation and
affirmation and reconciliation. All participants reported that they use a
broker/dealer structure combined with an international entity that allows
them to move their derivatives business offshore, effectively reducing their
balance sheet burden and lowering regulatory capital.
Liquidity management: Liquidity management is an area that could benefit
from better data management processes and technology. The majority (71 per
cent) of prime brokers surveyed stated that they do not have a method for
notifying their treasury group of large cash inflows and outflows, while the
29 per cent that do, use email and phone calls to inform treasury. However,
prime brokers say that they speak with their clients about the best times
for cash deposits and how funds expect the prime broker to help to manage
their liquidity needs.
Revenue allocation: The survey showed that there is no standard way that
prime brokers allocate revenue between the securities lending desk and the
source of the long. The survey also found that collateral agreements are
usually written into the prime brokerage agreement. However, hard-to-borrow
securities require collateral negotiation on a case-by-case basis.
Lockup agreements: More than 70 per cent of respondents surveyed offer
lockup agreements, with the most popular terms being 30, 60 and 90 days,
though 29 per cent provide lockups for as long as 365 days, depending on the
client relationship. A longer lockup is usually granted if a hedge fund has
illiquid positions that would make a prolonged period necessary to duplicate
positions with another prime broker. Both centralized and decentralized
approaches are used to monitor lockups, with the former consisting of
dedicated groups monitoring and the latter involving multiple groups each
monitoring a different lockup requirement.
Enhanced leverage: Three-quarters of prime brokers surveyed offer margin
relief to their clients beyond the Federal Reserve's Regulation T margin
limit of 50 per cent through enhanced leverage and portfolio managing. While
enhanced leverage levels of 6:1 and higher are possible for large and
healthy hedge funds, regulators may still look askance at prime brokers who
push the envelope. There was no consensus among the respondents regarding
who should monitor the non-cash collateral provided in the enhanced leverage
transaction.
Arthur Tully, co-leader of EY's global hedge funds services, says: "Firms
must learn to adapt to the pressures on fees and the multi-prime trends that
have resulted from the changes in the hedge fund industry. While firms have
started to recognise these challenges, the survey reinforces the need for
brokers to develop ways to better integrate their systems with client's
information and enhance their ability to quantify associated operational
costs."
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