Unlocking Portfolio Potential with Securities Lending
A well-managed securities lending program can be a valuable portfolio management tool, and can enable funds to receive an additional source of income that can add incremental risk-adjusted returns to a fund’s overall investment return objective.
What is Securities Lending?
A securities lending transaction involves the temporary transfer of securities from one party (the lender) to another party (the borrower). Frequently, a securities lending agent (the agent) is employed by the lender to facilitate the transaction. Securities lending enables funds enrolled in the securities lending program to potentially generate an additional source of income.
The borrower pays a fee to the lender for borrowing the securities. Sometimes, if cash is transferred as collateral, the borrower may expect interest to be paid on the cash (a rebate). In this case, instead of a borrow fee, the lender will earn the interest differential between what is earned by investing the cash in money markets and the rebate due to the borrower. The agent will typically retain a portion of the borrow fees, or interest differential, as a fee for their service. In SPDR's securities lending program, cash in not accepted as collateral.
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Figure 1: How the Securities Lending Program Works
![How the Securities Lending Program Works How the Securities Lending Program Works](/library-content/assets/images/emea/sec-lending/2023/unlocking-portfolio-potential-sec-lending-figure1.png)
Potential Risks
As with all investment activities, securities lending bears risk. Here are some of the key risks and mitigants typically used to control the risk.
Figure 2: Risk & Mitigation
![Source: State Street Global Advisors as of 30 November 2024. Potential Risks](/library-content/assets/images/emea/sec-lending/2023/sec-lending-overview-figure2.png)
Governance
The State Street Global Advisors Global Investment and Product Committee (Committee) oversees and comprehensively reviews performance and effectiveness of the State Street Global Advisors Global securities lending programs.
The Committee evaluates the performance of the State Street Global Advisors securities lending agents. It also reviews and challenges State Street Global Advisors’ global securities lending programs against industry standards and performance, current risk appetite levels, and current market conditions.
In addition, the securities lending program for each participating fund is reviewed, approved and overseen by the respective fund boards.
About the Lending Agent: State Street Bank and Trust Company
State Street Bank and Trust Company (SSBT), which has been appointed as lending agent, is one of the world’s most experienced lending agents, providing both custodial and third-party lending services covering more than 30 international markets. SSBT operates through entities within the State Street group of companies (which are affiliates of State Street Global Advisors). SSBT has been providing securities lending services since 1974, and now operates from trading desks based in London, Boston, Hong Kong, Toronto and Sydney.
This international presence provides local expertise and 24-hour access to the securities lending markets. SSBT offers considerable depth of inventory and market presence, thus attracting high credit-quality borrowers and providing insights into the level of demand for securities.
SSBT employs a number of safeguards for clients engaged in securities lending, including:
- Indemnifying clients against borrower default
- Monitoring the daily activity of the borrowers
- Maintaining liquid collateral with appropriate margins
- Ensuring collateral diversification
Indemnification
SSBT provides a borrower default indemnity as part of the contractual agreement as lending agent for the funds. If a borrower defaults, and fails to return a lent security to a fund, SSBT will liquidate the collateral held and repurchase the lent security in the market with the proceeds. Should those proceeds be insufficient to replace the security and all associated cash flows due to the fund, SSBT will cover the difference. Should the security not be available for purchase, SSBT will credit the fund an amount of cash equal to the market value of securities and associated cash flows due.
Approved Borrowers
State Street Global Advisors has a dual review and approval process for borrowers in the securities lending program. Counterparties are reviewed and approved by the State Street Global Advisors Counterparty Risk Management (SSGA CRM) team and the lending agent, State Street Bank and Trust (SSBT). Both quantitative and fundamental approaches are leveraged in evaluation of borrowers. Borrowers are also subject to a continuous monitoring regime to identify developments that may impact the creditworthiness of a borrower. Generally, it is State Street Global Advisors’ practice to approve the largest and strongest participants in any market.
Collateral
Forms of acceptable collateral are limited to:
- Government securities whose long-term debt ratings are at or above A- (or a rating equivalent) by two or more internationally recognized rating agencies.
- Select equity securities that are traded on a regulated market that operates regularly and are officially recognized and open to the public
- Select Supranational Bonds
The collateral amount is marked to market daily. If collateral levels are insufficient for a particular loan, the borrower is required to provide more collateral. If the loan is over-collateralised, the lending agent may return some of the collateral to the borrower. Collateralisation levels are frequently negotiated between 102–110%. This is often above the contractual minimums and based on the liquidity, price volatility, and currency of individual instruments.
Lending Limits
The percentage out on loan will depend on the type of fund and securities held:
- Maximum of 95% on loan for a single security on a per-fund basis.
- The aggregate outstanding value of loaned securities for any fund in the ETF range shall not exceed 70% of its total net asset value for fixed income ETFs and 40% for equity ETFs.
Securities Lending Revenue and Costs
Various fees may be assessed to operate a securities lending program including revenue sharing fee-splits, cash collateral management fees, administrative and operational fees. However, SPDR simplifies this and only assesses a single fee-split. A fee-split is a form of revenue sharing whereby the agent lender retains a portion of the program revenue, and covers all operating costs and expenses associated with executing the program and providing the indemnification. State Street Global Advisors as investment manager does not receive compensation for overseeing the lending program, and all revenues arising from securities lending in respect of an ETF, net of the fee-split, are returned to the fund.
The funds enrolled in the securities lending program receive 75% of the gross securities lending revenue, while the lending agent receives 25%. These revenues are paid net to the fund on a monthly basis.
Revenues from securities lending vary between funds and overtime based on many factors. Some of the key factors include: market demand for specific securities held by a fund, design of the lending program including specific risk controls, general market conditions for interest rates and collateral, and efficient execution of the program by the lending agent.
Securities Lending Report
The Securities Lending Report is regularly updated and is available to download here .
SPDR ETFs Engaged in Securities Lending
SPDR ETFs Europe I plc
SPDR Bloomberg 0–3 Year U.S. Corporate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR Bloomberg Euro Corporate Bond UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 10+ Year U.S. Corporate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR Bloomberg Euro Government Bond UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 1–10 Year US Corporate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR Dow Jones Global Real Estate UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR FTSE EPRA Europe ex UK Real Estate UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 10+ Year U.S. Treasury Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P U.S. Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 7–10 Year U.S. Treasury Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P 500 UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg Euro High Yield Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P 500® Low Volatility UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 1–3 Month T-Bill UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P® 400 U.S. Mid Cap UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg Euro Aggregate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR SPDR MSCI World UCITS ETF (Acc) |
SPDR Bloomberg Sterling Corporate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR FTSE UK All Share UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg Emerging Markets Local Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI EMU UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI Japan UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 1–3 Year U.S. Treasury Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI ACWI UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 1–5 Year Gilt UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI Emerging Markets UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 15+ Year Gilt UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P Pan Asia Dividend Aristrocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 3–7 Year U.S. Treasury Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P Global Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg U.S. TIPS UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI EM Asia UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg U.S. Treasury Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI Emerging Markets Small Cap UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg UK Gilt UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P Emerging Markets Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 0–3 Year Euro Corporate Bond UCITS ETF (Dist) | SPDR MSCI ACWI IMI UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 10+ Year Euro Government Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P Euro Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 1–3 Year Euro Government Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P UK Dividend Aristocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P Developed Quality Aristocrats UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P 500 Quality Aristocrats UCITS ETF |
SPDR ETFs Europe II plc
SPDR Bloomberg 0–5 Year Sterling Corporate Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P U.S. Communication Services Select Sector UCITS ETF |
SPDR Refinitiv Global Convertible Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P U.S. Consumer Discretionary Select Sector UCITS ETF |
SPDR ICE BofA 0–5 Year EM USD Government Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR Russell 2000 US Small CAP UCITS ETF |
SPDR Bloomberg 3–5 Year Euro Government Bond UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P U.S. Energy Select Sector UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P U.S. Industrials Select Sector UCITS ETF | SPDR S&P U.S. Materials Select Sector UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P U.S. Technology Select Sector UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI Europe Small Cap Value Weighted UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P U.S. Consumer Staples Select Sector UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Small Cap UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P U.S. Financials Select Sector UCITS ETF | SPDR EURO STOXX Low Volatility UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P U.S. Health Care Select Sector UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Value UCITS ETF |
SPDR S&P U.S. Utilities Select Sector UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI Europe Value UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI USA Small Cap Value Weighted UCITS ETF | SPDR Morningstar Multi-Asset Global Infrastructure UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI USA Value UCITS ETF |
Previous existing SPDR ETFs engaged in securities lending
SPDR MSCI Europe Communication Services UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI Europe UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Consumer Discretionary UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Communication Services UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Consumer Staples UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Consumer Discretionary UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Energy UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Consumer Staples UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Financials UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Energy UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Health Care UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Financials UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Industrials UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Health Care UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Materials UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Materials UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Small Cap UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Technology UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Technology UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Industrials UCITS ETF |
SPDR MSCI Europe Utilities UCITS ETF | SPDR MSCI World Utilities UCITS ETF |