The US stock market has finally moved back to single day trade settlement after 100 long years. Under the new Securities and Exchange Commission rules, from Tuesday, the share trades in New York will have T+1 stock trading system.
The change has now halved the time it takes to complete every transaction and has occured in jurisdictions including Canada and Mexico on Monday. The T+1 transaction settlemet system was abandoned earlier as volumes became too heavy. As per Bloomberg the switch is made now to reduce risk in the financial system.
However concerns such as sourcing dollars on time by international investors, global funds moving at different speeds to their assets and less time to fix errors remain. The Bloomberg report also quoted the US Securities and Exchange commission that said said last week that the transition may lead to a “short-term uptick in settlement fails and challenges to a small segment of market participants.”
Meanwhile, Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, has instigated what it calls the T+1 Command Center to identify problems and coordinate a response.
As per Bloomberg, firms across the spectrum have been preparing for months, relocating staff, adjusting shifts and overhauling workflows, and many say they’re confident in their own readiness. The worry is whether every other counterparty and intermediary is similarly organized.
“There’s a lot of dependencies within the industry and there may be some rough patches with individual firms,” Tom Price, managing director and head of technology, operations, and business continuity for Sifma told Bloomberg. “But I’m encouraged that firms are staffing up. They’re making sure folks are not at the beach over the transition period but in the office.”
As per Bloomberg, Industry experts have voiced out that the T+1 transition would be the most challenging, even as Wall street had undergone transitions before.
In 1920, the era that was famously dubbed as “the roaring ’20s” had T+1 transition system. However, this ended because the manual nature of transactions meant it was impossible to keep up with surging trading activity. The settlement time was eventually pushed out as far as five days.
This was then reduced to three days in the wake of the 1987 Black Monday crash, and then to two days in 2017 to better reflect the modern market.
However, the cut to just one day is more challenging due size and scale of the market today, the complexity of investment across borders, and the fact the US is leaving many other jurisdictions behind.
“There will likely be an adjustment in liquidity requirements towards the end of the FX trading day and shortly after — between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. in New York,” Michael Wynn, head of execution services for the securities services arm of Citigroup Inc told Bloomberg. “Over the medium to long term, we expect that liquidity will improve as we get into a normal course of business.”
The immediate tests for this transition include Wednesday’s double settlement day, where T+2 trades from Friday come due at the same time as Tuesday’s T+1 transactions. Then MSCI Inc.’s index rebalancing at the end of the week, when funds around the world tracking its gauges will be reshuffling holdings at the same time
Also watch: SEBI introduces T+1 settlement cycle, to shorten time span for share transactions