February  2006  Market  Clearing  in  the  Energy  Industry  62  ©  Copyright  2006,  CCRO.  All  rights  reserved.  Much  of  NCC’s  value  proposition  is  premised  on  the  ability  to  provide  comprehensive  multilateral  netting  across  all  products  it  accepts  through  the  delivery  process  as  a  single  counterparty.  This  capability  extends  to  next  day  power  and  gas  contracts  that  do  not  fall  under  the  bankruptcy  code’s  definition  of  a  forward  contract,  due  in  large  part  to  a  “Cash  Flow  Contract™”,  or  CFC™,  that  is  entered  in  parallel  with  a  next  day  contract  in  conjunction  with  an  assignment  of  the  next  day  contract  payment  obligation.  The  CFC™  is  a  forward  and  swap  contract.  The  schematic  activity  flow  of  a  CFC™  contract  is  as  follows:  Role  of  the  CFC™--Next  Day  Contracts  CFC™  swaps  EEI/NAESB  payment  for  three  payments  CFC™  CFC™  payment  obligation  Next  Day  EEI/NAESB  Contract  Energy  Energy  Buyer  Seller  NECC-D  NECC-C  CFC™  payment  obligation  Standard  payment  obligation  The  CFC™  swaps  the  standard  EEI/NAESB  settlement  and  payment  schedule  for  a  specified  accelerated  payment  schedule.  Since  it  is  a  forward  contract,  the  CFC™  enjoys  the  same  rights  of  offset  and  exemption  from  the  automatic  stay  and  claw  back  provisions  under  the  bankruptcy  code  as  other  forward  contracts.  The  CFC™  obligation  is  collateralized  and  is  netted  against  that  of  all  other  forward  positions  held.  In  addition,  since  NECC  is  the  counterparty  through  the  delivery  process,  net  receivables  owed  to  sellers  can  be  offset  against  collateral  requirements.  NCC  uses  a  risk  transfer  framework  to  protect  itself  from  defaults  by  investment  grade  customers.  While  non-investment  grade  customers  are  required  to  post  cash,  treasury  securities  and/or  letters  of  credit  from  approved  banks,  NCC’s  risk  transfer  framework  utilizes  lines  of  credit,  backed  by  A+  or  higher  rated  financial  institutions  and  insurance  products  to  cover  credit  risk  for  investment  grade  customers.  Further,  NCC  provides  a  framework  to  provide  this  credit  support  to  the  majority  of  investment  grade  buyers  at  no  cost  to  them  (subject  to  sellers  opting  for  weekly  settlements)  and  the  opportunity  to  maintain  their  current  payment  cycles.  All  sellers  also  have  the  option  to  receive  their  cash  payments  on  a  weekly  basis  (three  days  after  the  conclusion  of  the  delivery  week),  thus  freeing  up  significant  capital.46  46  Net  sellers  that  opt  for  accelerated  weekly  settlements  take  a  discounted  payment  that  reflects  the  cost  of  investment  grade  credit  as  reflected  in  current  credit  derivatives  markets.  In  OTC  markets,  to  the  extent  that  all  net  sellers  chose  to  receive  accelerated  weekly  payment,  then  all  investment  grade  net  buyers  would  have  the  cost  of  financing  their  advances  covered.  In  the  absence  of  all  sellers  electing  accelerated  weekly  payments  for  OTC  cleared  trades,  NECC  will  allocate  any  cost  sharing  by  those  that  do  to  investment  grade  net  buyers  on  a  pro-rata  basis.  In  RTO  markets  it  is  intended  that  net  buyers  be  held  neutral  to  their  ‘unsecured  limits’  at  the  RTO  as  net  sellers  will  either  pay  the  financing  by  opting  for  accelerated  payment  or  take  a  pro-rata  share  of  default  risk.  
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