“Clearing members whose activities drive growth in the size of the overall clearing fund today are not responsible for funding that increase,” wrote Stuart Bourne, co-head of global equities and global head of prime financing at BofA Securities; Stephen Berger, global head of government and regulatory policy at Citadel Securities; and Alicia Crighton, global co-head of futures and global head of clearing at Goldman Sachs.
The row is a sign of growing tensions between Wall Street and retail brokers over risk management amid the explosion in retail derivatives trading since the Covid pandemic, with the Options Clearing now handling trades worth about $4 trillion in notional value a day. The clearinghouse wants risk charges “more fairly” allocated among large banks and retail brokers such as Robinhood Markets and Charles Schwab, which have helped fuel a 130% increase in average daily volume to 69 million trades a day, according to the clearinghouse.
