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Bankhaus Herstatt 1974 : Settlement Asymmetry & Gross Principal Exposure │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP 84 T2

Bankhaus Herstatt 1974 : Settlement Asymmetry & Gross Principal Exposure │ GP/LP Analysis - 3 Red Flags │ EP 84 T2

Season 2 Episode 84 Published 3 weeks, 4 days ago
Description

. This GP/LP technical episode dissects the structural mechanics of settlement timing asymmetry as principal risk: how cross-border currency legs route through disconnected national payment systems operating on separate schedules, and why a counterparty can be perfectly solvent while the transaction fails to complete due to clearing execution gaps. We analyze the structural parallel to cross-border operational restructurings like Agrokor and Icesave, framing how jurisdictional boundaries split supervisory oversight from actual settlement execution. We identify three institutional-grade red flags and risk metrics derived from clearing data🔴

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Settlement risk and credit risk are not the same analytical category. Credit risk asks if a counterparty can pay; settlement risk asks if the infrastructure itself will allow the transaction to complete. At Bankhaus Herstatt, that systemic distinction cost global counterparty banks billions and forced a multi-decade rewrite of international financial market infrastructure: (1) gross principal exposure vs net replacement cost—the critical measurement failure where risk frameworks understated exposure by looking at marked-to-market numbers rather than full principal value during the settlement window; (2) settlement channel concentration—the high-cliff operational risk of routing multi-currency clearing through a single correspondent node or window; and (3) cross-jurisdictional supervisory coordination gaps—the structural reality that national regulators retain authority to close local institutions at their own convenience without regard to non-domestic settlement legs. We provide the active market context: what CLS Bank's payment-versus-payment mechanism resolved for 18 major currencies, and where unmeasured settlement exposure remains live today in emerging market currencies, swaps, and over-the-counter options. For credit risk officers, FX desk managers, treasury allocators, and institutional due diligence teams managing multi-currency books. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer.

KEYWORDS

Herstatt settlement risk analysis, gross principal exposure FX, payment versus payment mechanism, settlement timing asymmetry risk, CLS Bank residual risk, foreign exchange risk management, CPSS report 1996 banking, interbank clearing channel concentration, replacement cost vs principal risk, cross jurisdictional supervisory gap, Bankhaus Herstatt GP LP analysis, counterparty credit risk metrics, non-CLS currency risk due diligence, Basel Committee banking standards, payment system infrastructure failure


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