Opinion

US Treasury clearing is coming: What market participants should do now

Sydney Hassal, and Emma Wooldridge, managing consultants at D2 Legal Technology explore how the upcoming US Treasury clearing mandate is set to reshape financial markets, and why firms should begin preparing now for major operational, legal, and strategic changes despite some remaining uncertainties.

US Treasury clearing remains one of the most significant structural changes to the financial market since the financial crisis. In December 2023, the SEC finalised the mandatory central clearing for both case and repo transactions. The compliance deadlines for these extend into 2026 for cash trades and 2027 for repos, but the implications are already being felt.

It is critical that businesses plan now to avoid costly disruption. Not only that, but this will improve the likelihood of these institutions realising the efficiency gains as the rules come into force.

Focus now must be on: the implementation timeline and key milestones, how the final rule interacts with existing regulatory frameworks, which issues remain unresolved, and what actions can be taken now to prepare.

The regulatory countdown is underway

The phased compliance schedule is now set, and progress is accelerating. Most recently, the SEC approved CME Group’s CME Securities Clearing, enabling both “done with” and “done away” clearing options for US Treasury trades.

The next major compliance milestone is 31 December 2026, when cash Treasury trades must be centrally cleared, followed by 30 June 2027, when the clearing obligation extends to term repos.

While these dates may seem distant, previous regulations, such as Reg IM and VM, demonstrate that legal documentation, onboarding, and operational redesign can take longer than expected.

A recent report by the ValueExchange underscores the scale of the challenge, highlighting that 88% of respondents require greater clarity on CCP operating models and system changes to support USTC. Only 47% report being very confident that they will meet the mandatory clearing deadline.

Clearly, many firms will need to fully re-evaluate how they trade, settle and finance US Treasury secondary market transactions.

Assessing the scale of impact

Mandatory clearing affects every aspect of the trade lifecycle. Many organisations have already established cross-functional working groups to redesign documentation, reassess clearing access models and put governance frameworks in place for settlement and margin.

Unsurprisingly, documentation has emerged as a particular pressure point. While SIFMA has published the Master Treasury Securities Clearing Agreement (MTSCA) for “done with” trading, approaches across the market are diverging. Many firms are adopting sponsored member models and have begun repapering to avoid time pressure. However, one notable gap is the absence of a standard “done away” agreement from SIFMA, which remains highly anticipated.

Beyond documentation, decisions are becoming increasingly strategic. Firms are weighing direct, sponsored or hybrid clearing models across different desks and client groups. The recent SEC approval for CMESC introduces new dimensions to these decisions, offering alternative models and potential capital efficiencies. The subsequent filing by CME and FICC to expand cross-margining arrangements further increases both complexity and opportunity. However, the market framework remains in development. Firms cannot wait for every structural detail to be settled before progressing their own implementation plans.

What’s been settled – and what still needs resolution

While elements of the clearing landscape are still evolving, regulators have provided important clarifications on several operational questions. Market participants have been clear: successful implementation of the rule leaves no room for dysfunction. Some of the most immediate concerns raised have now been addressed. Mixed-CUSIP triparty repos have now been confirmed as out of scope for mandatory clearing. Agent clearing members are not required to bring client trades onto their balance sheets, and the fog appears to be lifting around cross-margining.

Rule 15c3-3a also allows customer margin held with clearing agencies to be included as a debit in the reserve formula, easing pressure on broker-dealer liquidity.

These changes and clarifications remove some of the most immediate obstacles to implementation. However, several critical issues remain unresolved, including the treatment of inter-affiliate transactions, permanent relief for SLR and eSLR requirements, custodial and double-margining challenges for registered funds, and coordination across jurisdictions for non-US entities. Additional uncertainty persists around capital treatment for “done away” trades, failed trade handling and the finalisation of legal opinions required for netting recognition.

If left unresolved, these issues could materially impact the economics and operational feasibility of clearing, especially for dealers and buy-side firms operating on thin margins.

What preparation looks like for firms now

Experience teaches us that early, structured preparation for regulatory firms is essential.

Those in the best position now are the ones who have already mapped impacts across their businesses, identified priority desks and client segments, and begun working through documentation and workflows with clearing partners.

Looking ahead, three priorities stand out: establishing internal clarity around clearing models, engaging early on documentation strategy, and maintaining continuous awareness of regulatory and CCA updates.

After all, while the rule is final, the ecosystem continues to evolve. Acting now may be the only way to avoid last-minute disruption and unintended consequences as mandatory clearing becomes a reality.

Increased transparency could help Europe turn green shoots into blossoming trees

Record €104 billion daily trading volumes suggest European equities are entering a new phase of sustained participation. Converting this momentum into global competitiveness will depend on closing transparency gaps, reducing reporting noise and modernising fragmented post-trade infrastructure across the region, writes Nicholas Phillips, market structure research analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence (BI).

EU market integration package must focus on real bottlenecks

As policymakers debate reforms under the Market Integration Package, the priority should be preserving competition and innovation while tackling genuine structural weaknesses - particularly market data costs and inefficient post-trade infrastructure across Europe, writes Pete Tomlinson, managing director of equities trading and post-trade at the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME).

Extended hours are coming of age – and the market needs to catch up

Extended-hours trading in US equities is rapidly moving from niche to necessity. With pre- and post-market volumes approaching 9% of daily activity and overseas demand surging - particularly across Asia - the overnight session is evolving into a structural feature of global equity markets, writes Jason Wallach, chief executive, Bruce Markets.

Europe’s move from OTC to listed markets

Jon Light, senior director of product management at Devexperts, explores the trend of CFD brokers across Europe moving to a multi-asset model, from why regulations are changing, to the importance of business model transparency, the role of neobanks and the evolution of traders themselves.

Fixed income in focus: How automation and tokenisation are reshaping markets

As fixed income post-trade operations enter a pivotal transformation phase, Jon Hodges, head of trading and asset services, APAC at FIS, analyses how regulatory shifts, T+1 settlement pressures, automation advances, and tokenisation are driving firms to replace costly legacy systems with real-time, integrated platforms.

Hedge funds need a clearer operational reality

Stefan Schmaltz, managing director, quantitative analytics at Clearwater Analytics highlights the need for hedge funds to have real-time front-to-back technology platforms to manage risk, compliance, and faster settlement effectively, as fragmented systems and manual processes create dangerous delays and operational vulnerabilities in today’s volatile, fast-moving markets.

Collateral is falling behind risk and markets are paying the price

With time becoming one of the most expensive frictions in finance, David Mercer, chief executive of LMAX Group, explores how delayed settlement and limited mobility are undermining capital efficiency, and why continuous 24/7 collateral movement is becoming the next frontier of market structure.

Japan’s long-dated JGB moves are a warning for margin risk

Yutaka Imanishi, head of OSTTRA Japan, explores how sharp Japanese government bonds repricing can impact derivatives, margin and collateral flows, amplifying volatility and liquidity stress irrespective of the political backdrop.

24/7 trading a reality in 2026? Actually, it’s already here

With 24-hour trading quickly becoming a reality across financial markets, John Shammas, chief growth officer of DriveWealth explores how this is reshaping investor behaviour, technology demands and regulatory priorities, and how the industry can tackle the challenge of delivering continuous trading efficiently and effectively.