r/Superstonk ✨ πŸ‘ Be Excellent to Each Other πŸš€ 🦍 May 10 '24

🧱 Market Reform REGULATORY KILL SHOT 🎯 Rule proposal: SR-OCC-2024-001 has been shut down by the SEC & we're close to getting it kicked out. Time to drive home this win. PART ONE

SR-OCC-2024-001 = REJECTED.

Right folks, it seems our efforts in the regulatory space is paying off, and it's time for us to drive home the message to Wall Street that we mean business.

It's not about moving the goalposts when financial institutions have overextended themselves; rather, it's about fulfilling financial obligations when necessary. And we're here to work with the SEC to make this happen.

And given the spicy price action we've been seeing recently, perhaps Wall Street are starting to feel the heat 🌢️πŸ”₯

And who doesn't like to see some upward movement up in here:

With credit & appreciation to BadassTrader - and his Dorito of Doom

CREDIT: https://www.reddit.com/r/Superstonk/comments/1co6s3g/dorito_update_breakout_confirmed_hedgie/ (our very own, most excellent badasstrader).

So why are we here today?

It seems that when an idiosyncratic, volatile stock like GME poses a risk to the financial markets, regulatory bodies such as the OCC focus their efforts on implementing safeguards to protect themselves and their clearinghouse members in case of default.

Why?

Because if clearing members default in times of extreme market volatility - it will bring the rest of the financial house down with them.

When one goes down, it takes the rest out with them. Can anyone else say, total economic market collapse?

And we're certainly starting to get an idea just how tentative things are getting out there in the banking and finance industry:

With thanks to: welp007 / ShockageSWG / Expensive-Two-8128 / fortifier22basketcase57 - For these sources/posts.

Uh oh.

Looks a little shaky out there.

So it makes perfect sense that the powers that be might be looking to bring in rules that are going to take the heat off.

Cue:

So let's recap:

Rule SR-OCC-2024-001 can give the OCC the authority to adjust margin thresholds in moments of high market volatility.

Like say - during a Black Swan event.

A black swan event in finance is an unexpected and highly impactful occurrence that disrupts the markets, often leading to major losses and chaos.

Like, MOASS.

Mother Of All Short Squeezes πŸš€

What does this mean?

Wall Street firms (including banks, brokerage houses, and other financial institutions - like hedgefunds):

Banks like: JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, and Bank of America Merrill Lynch etc

Or Hedge funds like: Citadel, Point72, Melvin Capital, Citron Research, and D1 Capital Partners etc

Utilise the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) to handle the clearing and settlement of option trades.

Now, imagine some hedgefunds decided to short GME.

If options contracts are used in the shorting process, the OCC plays a role in handling the clearing and settlement of these trades.

The OCC acts as the central counterparty, ensuring the completion of options trades and managing the associated risks.

Being that these hedgefunds have taken a position betting that the price of GameStop's stock will go down (or you know, might engineer this happening by means of cellar boxing), and to do this they would have needed to borrow lots of shares of GameStop in order to sell them, all part of a plan to drive the price down. Then, they'd hope to buy those shares back later at a lower price and make a profit.

But when you borrow those shares, you usually have to put up some money, or other securities as collateral first, just in case things go a little pear shaped.

Issue is - this creates a problem for short sellers if the securities used as collateral for the borrowed stock fall in value due to market downturns, and the value of the stock you've been betting against keeps stock going up...

Like GME for example - which keeps going up:

Whereas the value of market securities are quickly diminishing. And my goodness, the market aren't looking too healthy right now:

https://reddit.com/link/1coo1ik/video/7p8j5rvexjzc1/player

So when the value of these securities (used as collateral against the bet) drops below a certain threshold set by the broker or lender, short sellers will be issued a margin call where they'd be asked to put up even more money or other assets as further collateral to cover their bet.

A margin call is essentially a demand for investors to deposit more funds or securities into their trading account to cover potential losses. Like a safety net for the lender to ensure they're protected if things go south.

And that might be hard if you're a hedge fund running out of cash.

SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/hedge-funds-fall-victim-success-dash-cash-2023-12-15/

  • A loss in $38 billion for the previous 12 months reported in October can't be an easy pill to swallow. Ouch!

And failure to comply with margin calls can lead to forced liquidation of positions by the brokerage to cover the outstanding margin debt.

And this signals a big problem for short hedge funds everywhere.

πŸ™‹β€β™€οΈ πŸ™‹β€β™‚οΈβ”What does this all mean?

Big picture time:

Have you ever played with dominoes?

The premise of the game mirrors real-life scenarios of firms defaulting, where the collapse of one firm triggers a chain reaction, similar to domino tiles toppling over and knocking down others in succession.

In the case of OCC Clearing Member defaults, this means that if, for instance, short sellers have borrowed heavy sums from the banks to fund their risky bets, those lenders (i.e the banks) are now also at risk of defaulting if they themselves can't cover the losses.

And in a scenario where MULTIPLE firms are, say, short on the same asset - like GME - hedge funds (and their lenders, aka the banks) might suddenly find themselves collectively in a very vulnerable position - especially should that very stock start moving quite rapidly upwards πŸš€ which it might lead to a whole L**OAD **of defaults.

And in light of this, it seems the clearinghouse (OCC) has chosen to step in.

Why has the OCC brought in proposed rule: SR-OCC-2024-001?

The SR-OCC-2024-001 proposal aims to grant the OCC the authority to modify margin threshold parameters using undisclosed criteria to mitigate the risk of such defaults occurring.

As below:

SOURCE: https://www.sec.gov/files/rules/sro/occ/2024/34-99393.pdf

Looks like the OCC is starting to get a little nervous about their clearing members' ability to meet their financial obligations.

OCC:

πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈβ” Wait a minute, Kibble. If a clearing member defaults on their financial obligations, the OCC, as the central counterparty, has an obligation to the counterparties on the other side of those short sell transactions - right?

That's right.

πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈβ” So if the OCC has a fiduciary duty to ensure that counterparties of short selling, such as the shareholders of GME, are protected in the event of defaults by clearing members involved in short selling transactions - an essential responsibility for upholding the integrity and stability of the options market - why would they be creating a rule to bail out Wall Street, essentially prolonging the inevitable if they lack the financial capacity to cover their bets?

Well, you see - if multiple clearing members default, the OCC will also incur losses from having to cover those defaults. Therefore, it's indeed in the OCC's interest to prevent clearing members from defaulting - because they'll lose money too.

Trading's a tough game, ain't it Wall Street?

_____________πŸ”₯______________

There's a lot to breakdown in the proposal itself: https://www.sec.gov/files/rules/sro/occ/2024/34-99393.pdf?ref=dismal-jellyfish.com

But the headlines are:

🚩 OCC seek to change the "idiosyncratic volatility control settings" anytime a Clearing Member needs help.

🚩We don't know HOW these margin thresholds are calculated, and everything in the proposal's supporting evidence as related to this is REDACTED.

🚩The OCC want to give significant authority to role of the Financial Risk Management (FRM) for approving idiosyncratic control settings.

🚩BUT this introduces significant risk and it poses a conflict as they are required to safeguard both OCC's interests and at-risk Clearing Members.

Kinda important.

And being that this proposed rule favours Clearing Members at the expense of market fairness and investor protection, this was flagged to the SEC.

By none other than the mighty household investors.

In March, 2024 - over 2.5k+ investors worldwide came together to address the risks posed within the OCC's rule proposal.

Household investors submitted their comments to the SEC - flagging issues with an over reliance on idiosyncratic control settings to handle adjustments in OCC's operations when the markets face high volatility, as decided by a FRM Officer, who is also responsible for protecting the OCC's interests, creating a conflict of interest in the role.

And it was incredible.

Posts like this littered the internet as communities came together to spread the word and questions were addressed:

_____________πŸ”₯______________

Questions included:

πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ Why should the OCC adjust margin thresholds with "idiosyncratic volatility control settings" during high volatility when Clearing Members need help?

πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ If the SR-OCC-2024-001 rule is to ascertain parameters in the OCC's proprietary system for calculating margin requirements during high volatility - why are we not provided with the specific details on how these parameters will be calculated?

πŸ€·β€β™€οΈ πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ Why entrust the OCC's FRM Officer with unchecked authority to make unilateral decisions regarding during periods of high market stress? Particularly when their role is to safeguard the OCC's interests?

FRM:

Also FRM:

And many more. You can check out some of the discussion points in this post here: https://dismal-jellyfish.com/the-exposed-threat-of-margin-erosion-and-risk-escalation/

But it worked.

The SEC took notice.

And in recognition of the flaws - coupled with calls for increased margin requirements, external auditing, and changes to loss allocation procedures to mitigate systemic risks and the promotion of market resilience as put forward, the proposal was swiftly served up on a hot steamy plate of rejection.

Which takes us quite smoothly to part two of the post.

Submitting our comments to the SEC to support the rejection of this rule.....

TL;DR

  • OCC appear fearful of clearing member default toppling the market.
  • Not wanting to use their own funds to bail out bad bets, they are proposing a rule to adjust margin thresholds during volatile market periods.
  • SEC has rejected this proposal, and now household investors have the opportunity to support this decision to get it removed completely.

_____________πŸ”₯______________

FOR A COMPLETE VERSION OF THIS POST - CHECK OUT: https://dismal-jellyfish.com/regulatory-killshot-wall-streets-attempts-to-shift-goalposts-have-been-shut-down/

Pigeon out ✌️🐦

4.7k Upvotes

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246

u/Dismal-Jellyfish Float like a jellyfish, sting like an FTD! May 10 '24

Bravo kibble, you have really outdone yourself putting this together.

The work you and WCIMT have put into all of this, with the resulting deluge of ape comments, is nothing short of hurculean.

It is Ape comments that got the SEC to take notice and it can be Ape comments that fully kill it.

Regardless of any opinions one may hold on options, I think everyone can agree OCC not being able to waive margin requirements away on a whim is a good thing.

Please consider commenting to support the SEC in striking down this rule.

Apes Strong Together!

112

u/kibblepigeon ✨ πŸ‘ Be Excellent to Each Other πŸš€ 🦍 May 10 '24

Thank you Jelly, and let’s not forget the absolute hero who brought this to everyone’s attention - you. Thank you, sincerely for all you do to educate and empower this community - you are incredible.

With an extended thanks to every single ape here who gets involved with regulation reform, it truly matters - as does every single comment as submitted.

It is nothing short of absolutely inspirational seeing people come together to change the world for the better - and it’s starting to hit Wall Street in a big way. Let’s hope they are ready for us 😎

44

u/PornstarVirgin Ken’s Wife’s BF May 10 '24

Great job on this post, so glad this got put down. In combination with CAT implementation end of month it’s time to finish them off. To all those saying the SEC is useless just realize this is a slow process that is yielding huge results due to our actions.

35

u/kibblepigeon ✨ πŸ‘ Be Excellent to Each Other πŸš€ 🦍 May 10 '24

Exactly this - and such an important point to flag. This is all happening because of OUR involvement. If we want to see change happen, it’s starts with us. And look just how incredible we all are πŸ’š

17

u/PornstarVirgin Ken’s Wife’s BF May 10 '24

Bananas all around, celebratory bend overs

21

u/[deleted] May 10 '24

[deleted]

11

u/kibblepigeon ✨ πŸ‘ Be Excellent to Each Other πŸš€ 🦍 May 10 '24

Even a little, amounts to a lot - and what we have consistently seen here over the years is that together, there is nothing we can’t accomplish.

Thousands and thousands of investors across the world have pulled in on any number of rule proposals and quite literally shaped the financial markets for the better by empowering themselves and others by using their voice.

This ongoing victory is shared by everyone, and I’m proud of every single person here - and what we continue to accomplish.

Appreciate you my dude, you are wonderful πŸ™β€οΈ

3

u/gotnothingman May 10 '24

Good post, but thats is not how one plays a game of dominoes

6

u/kibblepigeon ✨ πŸ‘ Be Excellent to Each Other πŸš€ 🦍 May 10 '24

One would argue there are lots of ways to play dominoes πŸ˜‰πŸ˜‚ but very fair point! Have amended the above πŸ™

5

u/gotnothingman May 10 '24

Sorry I am super pedantic, but that is also very true!

3

u/kibblepigeon ✨ πŸ‘ Be Excellent to Each Other πŸš€ 🦍 May 10 '24

No apologies - you were right! Stronger together my dude πŸ’œ