Joshua Younger

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Essay
Volume 92.2
Central Clearing the U.S. Treasury Market
Yesha Yadav
Milton R. Underwood Chair, Associate Dean and Professor of Law, Vanderbilt Law School.

We benefited greatly from thoughtful comments and conversations in the preparation of this Essay. The authors are enormously grateful to Dan Awrey, David Bowman, Jonathan Brogaard, Adam Copeland, Darrell Duffie, Ellen Correia Golay, Frank Keane, Kate Judge, Megha Kalbag, Mike Koslow, Dina Marchioni, Rebecca McCaughrin, Saule Omarova, Julie Remache, Morgan Ricks, Will Riordan, Pradeep Yadav and participants at the University of Chicago Law Review’s Symposium on Financial Regulation in the Crucible: Private and Public Law Perspectives on a Sector in Crisis. We are also most appreciative of the extraordinarily talented editors and staff at the University of Chicago Law Review for their careful edits, commentary and patience. The views expressed by the authors are their own and may not reflect the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System.

Joshua Younger
Policy Advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Lecturer in Law at Columbia Law School.

We benefited greatly from thoughtful comments and conversations in the preparation of this Essay. The authors are enormously grateful to Dan Awrey, David Bowman, Jonathan Brogaard, Adam Copeland, Darrell Duffie, Ellen Correia Golay, Frank Keane, Kate Judge, Megha Kalbag, Mike Koslow, Dina Marchioni, Rebecca McCaughrin, Saule Omarova, Julie Remache, Morgan Ricks, Will Riordan, Pradeep Yadav and participants at the University of Chicago Law Review’s Symposium on Financial Regulation in the Crucible: Private and Public Law Perspectives on a Sector in Crisis. We are also most appreciative of the extraordinarily talented editors and staff at the University of Chicago Law Review for their careful edits, commentary and patience. The views expressed by the authors are their own and may not reflect the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System.

The market for Treasury securities, a deep and liquid market for risk-free debt, has anchored an ambitious and creative U.S. dollar economy while also ensuring the safety and soundness of its financial and monetary system. But as the market has grown, a series of disruptions to Treasury market trading have prompted policymakers to explore measures to strengthen the market’s foundations and shore up its resilience. This Essay considers this regulatory response. It focuses on the introduction of mandatory central clearing for most trades in U.S. Treasuries—a proposal seeking to significantly reshape the day-to-day functioning of the Treasury market. Central clearing is a well-established means by which to reduce the risk of loss associated when trading parties default. We analyze this mandate, detailing its likely advantages as well as its potential trade-offs from a public policy perspective.