Securities lending represents a growing part of the over-the-counter market, allowing investors to make short-term loans of their securities to generate revenue from their portfolios. Automation is a strong trend in the market, with several technology vendors offering different kinds of platforms to increase transparency and efficiency. The auction model, delivered over the Internet, is gaining acceptance among some of the big players.
Estimates suggest that the global balance of securities on loan far exceeds $3 trillion. Replacing a historically manual process between borrowers and lenders, the latest technology allows lenders to put their securities onto a Web-based auction platform and invite bids from potential borrowers. This model competes not only with manual processing but also with some existing platforms, which offer users electronic communication and execution to complete the lending process.
The concept of auctioning exclusive securities lending rights over the Internet has its origins with Boston-based service provider eSecLending, founded in 2000. The company sought to offer an alternative to custodial lenders keeping captive large pools of securities from funds and lending securities out stock by stock. "Our firm was established on the premise that beneficial owners could improve lending returns if their portfolios were removed from traditional lending pools and were marketed as separate and unique entities," says Chris Poikonen, managing director of auctions and trading at eSecLending. "The primary difference between our model and the traditional route is that we utilize a competitive bidding process to determine optimal borrower counterparts as opposed to relationship-based trading. We focus on exclusive principal programs, which offer unencumbered access to a portfolio or segment of a portfolio for a defined term."
eSecLending chose to offer this access through what was essentially a traditional auction, only in the dark. Typically, a Web site is created that displays information about a lender and its portfolio to an approved broker community. A three-hour auction window is then opened and the brokers are invited to make bids for the assets on behalf of their borrower clients, usually proprietary trading desks or prime brokers acting on behalf of hedge funds. eSecLending's auction model has been deployed to about 20 lender clients, including the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) and the Ohio Public Employees' Retirement System (OPERS). "Our primary focus is on blind auctions where the broker-dealers don't know who they're competing against or what bids are being made," says Poikonen. Although not fundamentally opposed to open auctions, he says that as the market is inefficient, with bidders willing to pay vastly different amounts to borrow securities, the blind model is a better way to exploit those inefficiencies.
Offering both open and blind auctions is New York City- and London-based vendor EquiLend Holdings, formed in 2000 by 10 large financial institutions to improve efficiency in the securities lending industry. Over the last two years, EquiLend has delivered AuctionPort to four lender clients to facilitate 10 separate auctions. Most have chosen to run open auctions. "Bidders don't know who else is bidding but they certainly know their bid terms so it tends to get really competitive close to the end of the auction," says Melissa Gow, director of sales at EquiLend. She adds that the overall popularity of the auction model is growing. "At the beginning, when we rolled out AuctionPort, we weren't really sure what the demand might be," she says. "But since then, auction has become a really hot topic and I think that agent lenders see this as a way to satisfy beneficial owner demand."
The main driver for using an auction platform is that it increases transparency in a market that has been known for its faults and inefficiencies. The borrower formerly had to depend on the prime broker's ability to source the right stock to borrow at a good price from a reliable vendor.
"The auction has provided a level of discipline and infrastructure and also a very simple order trail that has been lacking in some one-to-one negotiations," says Chris Taylor, head of the securities finance team at State Street Corp., which has used EquiLend's AuctionPort product to facilitate a number of auctions on behalf of its underlying clients seeking to lend their securities. Taylor says that the auction is a very attractive route to market for lenders holding special assets for which there is greater demand than supply. "It has to be something special to which the demand side will compete for access," he explains.
One of State Street's most recent auctions was for assets of roughly $15 billion held by investment funds managed by State Street Global Advisors France (SSgA), the French investment management arm of State Street, in Paris. "The French funds in question were relatively new to the securities lending market," says Taylor. "The funds' investment mandates and securities lending objectives were better suited than most to an auction model."
Aside from State Street's success, there is little doubt that auction is an effective way of automating the securities lending process. Bob McDowall, a senior analyst at TowerGroup, says as the sector has grown, automation became a necessity. "The business has grown exponentially, mainly because of the hedge funds," he explains. "They are very active traders who have been used to borrowing through their prime brokers." He agrees with market participants that the auction platforms have made the process more transparent. "You can see what's available, you can put in your bid for it and you can see what other bids are," he says. "It takes the onus away from the prime broker and results in greater transparency."
However, many lenders and borrowers still prefer to adhere to traditional methods, believing that a relationship-based business may yield better results, despite the inefficiencies of manual processing. "Auction is a route to market within an agency arrangement where there are multiple routes to market," says State Street's Taylor. "I don't anticipate that it will be the dominant one but it's certainly here to stay and it does work for a reasonable number of beneficial owners who are looking for some certainty and have attractive international-orientated portfolios."
Auction is also not the only alternative to manual processing and several service providers offer other electronic routes to market. SunGard's Loanet Centralized Order Routing (LCOR) product is a free interactive messaging network that helps participants submit requests to borrow, lend and execute the transactions. Launched in 1999, the service is now used by more than 65 borrowers and 50 lendersmostly broker-dealers, agent lenders and custodian banks.
Meanwhile, London-based interdealer broker Icap has broken away from these models to introduce its own platform. The i-Sec platform offers screen-based access to the securities lending markets in France, Germany, Italy, Japan Spain, and the UK. Designed by Icap in conjunction with traders from the securities lending market, the system allows borrowers to post bids with the aim of negotiating with lenders, custodians or other dealers, if they don't find what they need. But it still offers full anonymity and price transparency to lenders and borrowers. Four banks have selected to use the platform and another two are set to join soon, though none have yet been named.
Roy Zimmerhansl, head of electronic securities lending at Icap, explains that where other vendors have focused on improving direct bilateral communications between the lender and the borrower, users of i-Sec can see potential trades with more counterparties than they can deal with on a bilateral telephone basis. "This is the platform where they can all come together and have a real clearinghouse for borrowing and lending needs," he says.
Whether it is through Icap, SunGard or an auction model, automation has been a growing trend in the securities lending market and has resulted in real increases in efficiency and transparency. "The growth in securities lending over the last few years is quite impressive," says Brad Bailey, senior analyst at the Aite Group. "Increased transparency has given the lenders better returns but there are still a lot of holders of equities who don't know the value of the securities and their best options for lending." If there is any single factor that might drive an increase in the use of automated securities lending platforms, it will certainly be the eternal quest for transparency.
Joel Clark