Clearing and settlement
After a trade has been matched by a trading system, it needs to be cleared and settled so that the seller gets paid and the buyer gets ownership of the security traded.
Clearing:Clearing is all steps of the post-trade processes apart from the final settlement — i.e. apart from the final payment and change in ownership.
Clearing is closely associated with the control of counter-party risk. Clearing houses may act as central counter-parties, for example.
Settlement:
Settlement is the last step in the post-trade process. Settlement may be:
•net: obligations between participants are set-off against each other, or,
•gross: each transaction is settled individually,
and may be:
•real-time: transactions are settled as and when trades are agreed with no delay, or,
•occur at regular intervals, usually on a rolling schedule at the end of a day.
If settlement is not real-time then it is usual to settle at the end of the days trading. This usually takes place a set number of days after trading that is the standard for a particular market or type of security. The standard terminology is to express this as T + number of days to settlement: so a T + 3 transaction will be settle at the end of the third day after the trade takes place.
Gross settlement is usually real-time, as there is no reason not to set off it batch end of day processing is used. Conversely real-time settlement is usually gross as there are no other transactions made in the same instant to set-off.


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