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Derivatives: The year ahead for U.S. commercial end users, funds, and other financial end users

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With 2020 now behind us, we look forward to the year ahead while noting just one of the many lessons of the past year: the difficulty of prediction. We simplify the task by limiting our focus to five topics in derivatives that should be important to commercial end users, funds, and other financial end users that trade derivatives.

  • In the beginning of 2021, we expect swap dealers to contact you, if they have not already, regarding the ISDA 2020 IBOR Fallbacks Protocol (the Protocol).
  • For those that are financial end users, on March 1, 2021, the three-month calculation period begins to determine whether your corporate group’s average aggregate notional amount of derivatives (AANA) exceeds the US$50 billion threshold and puts you in scope for the initial margin requirements as of September 1, 2021.
  • August 6, 2021 marks the earliest possible compliance date for security-based swap dealers, ushering in the beginning of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) overseeing security-based swap dealers, paralleling the swap dealer regulations of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the CFTC). As a result, certain transaction-level requirements such as reporting and margin will begin to apply to security-based swaps, potentially resulting in the need to update additional trade documentation.
  • Clients should be aware of the increased usage of electronic signatures and perhaps even the adoption of smart derivatives contracts by dealers.
  • Finally, we discuss how the incoming Biden Administration may alter the CFTC’s policy agenda.

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Authored by Evan Koster and Adam Lapidus

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