CW Pakistan
  • Legacy
    • Legacy Editorial
    • Editor’s Note
  • Academy
  • Wired
  • Cellcos
  • PayTech
  • Business
  • Ignite
  • Digital Pakistan
  • PSEB
    • DFDI
    • Indus AI Week
  • PASHA
  • TechAdvisor
  • GamePro
  • Partnerships
  • PCWorld
  • Macworld
  • Infoworld
  • TechHive
  • TechAdvisor
0
0
0
0
0
Subscribe
CW Pakistan
CW Pakistan CW Pakistan
  • Legacy
    • Legacy Editorial
    • Editor’s Note
  • Academy
  • Wired
  • Cellcos
  • PayTech
  • Business
  • Ignite
  • Digital Pakistan
  • PSEB
    • DFDI
    • Indus AI Week
  • PASHA
  • TechAdvisor
  • GamePro
  • Partnerships
  • PayTech

Inside NCCPL’s Regulatory Overhaul: Margin Reforms, Digital Bank Entry, and ETF Flexibility

  • August 19, 2025
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0
Share
Tweet
Share
Share
Share
Share

The National Clearing Company of Pakistan Limited (NCCPL) has unveiled proposed amendments to its 2015 regulations, inviting public feedback before final implementation. The changes aim to simplify margin requirements, expand clearing access to digital banks, and ease obligations for equity-based Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs). While these proposals reflect a forward-looking approach, they also raise important questions about systemic safeguards and market stability.
One of the most notable reforms relates to margins. NCCPL has proposed removing Market-Wide and UIN-Wide concentration margin requirements, instead shifting toward higher Broker-Wide margins by absorbing UIN-level exposures into the broker’s slab. The stated goal is to streamline risk management, align collection with actual exposure bearers, and reduce the complexity of calculations. Simplification, however, comes with trade-offs. Market-Wide metrics previously served as an important safeguard against multi-broker concentration in thinly traded stocks. Their removal could obscure systemic risk and make it harder to detect vulnerabilities in situations where a client holds exposures across multiple brokers. By eliminating client-level margins, risk visibility shifts upward without providing granular tracing at the user level. Analysts recommend that NCCPL retain periodic Market-Wide stress indicators as non-intrusive checks and introduce voluntary UIN-level exposure dashboards to assist brokers in monitoring risk. Pilot-testing the proposed margin tables against historical volatility events is also seen as necessary to calibrate effectiveness.
Another important development is the proposed admission of State Bank of Pakistan-licensed digital banks as Clearing Members and Settling Banks. Unlike traditional institutions, these digital entrants would not be required to maintain physical branches and could receive a six-month waiver from mandatory credit rating requirements. This measure is intended to foster fintech participation, modernize settlement channels, and expand participant choice. Yet, the proposal raises concerns about operational resilience. The absence of physical branches increases reliance on robust technical systems to ensure uninterrupted settlement. A temporary rating waiver could also open the door to undercapitalized participants entering the system without adequate safeguards. Industry observers suggest external audits, system readiness certifications, and contingency clauses to mitigate risks related to technology failures or systemic disruptions before final admission of digital banks.
In parallel, NCCPL has proposed exempting equity-based ETFs from mandatory admission as Non-Broker Clearing Members (NBCMs) and from volume-based trading thresholds that trigger such requirements. The intent is to reduce regulatory overhead, align local practices with global norms, and provide operational flexibility for ETF issuers. While ETFs are generally considered passive instruments, they are not immune to risk. Market rebalancing or periods of heightened volatility can cause sudden spikes in ETF trading activity. Without clear definitions of what qualifies as an equity-based ETF, there is also a risk of regulatory arbitrage. Market experts recommend introducing qualifiers such as minimum equity holdings, turnover thresholds, and ETF-specific activity flags to track unusual trading behavior. Voluntary NBCM pathways could also remain open as an additional layer of risk monitoring.
Taken together, the proposals underscore NCCPL’s commitment to modernizing Pakistan’s clearing and settlement infrastructure while embracing digital transformation and global best practices. By easing rules for ETFs and digital banks, and simplifying margin structures, the company aims to create a more agile financial ecosystem. At the same time, the challenge lies in maintaining robust checks and balances to safeguard systemic stability. Streamlining regulation must be matched with enhanced analytical tools, stronger contingency frameworks, and more transparent risk monitoring to ensure that efficiency does not come at the cost of resilience.
L, equity-based ETF Pakistan rules

Share
Tweet
Share
Share
Share
Related Topics
  • digital banks clearing system
  • ETFs clearing membership
  • margin structure reforms NCCPL
  • NCCPL 2015 amendments
  • NCCPL regulation changes
  • Pakistan capital markets reforms
  • Pakistan fintech integration
  • Pakistan margin requirements
  • SBP digital banks clearing
Previous Article
  • PayTech

RDA Inflows Reach $185 Million in July, Total Crosses $10.7 Billion

  • August 19, 2025
Read More
Next Article
  • PayTech

Digitt+ to Integrate Airalo eSIMs, Enabling Seamless Global Connectivity

  • August 19, 2025
Read More
You May Also Like
Read More
  • PayTech

Pakistan Moves To Regulate 40 Million Digital Asset Users And Secure $38 Billion In Remittances

  • Press Desk
  • May 2, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

PM Shehbaz Orders Full Operationalisation Of Virtual Asset Regulatory System To Boost Digital Economy

  • Press Desk
  • May 2, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

Ashfaque Ahmed Highlights Digital Transformation As Key To Scaling Islamic Banking At UNConference 26

  • Press Desk
  • May 2, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority Begins Writing Crypto Regulations With Input From Industry Leaders

  • Press Desk
  • May 1, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

Air Link Communication Launches AirFin Consumer Finance Subsidiary To Enter Pakistan’s Buy Now Pay Later Market

  • Press Desk
  • April 30, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

Pakistan Loses $1.61 Billion Annually To E-Commerce Checkout Inefficiencies, Payoneer White Paper Reveals

  • Press Desk
  • April 29, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

SECP Proposes IBAN Verification And Facial Recognition To Strengthen Anti-Money Laundering Framework For Digital Investor Onboarding

  • Press Desk
  • April 27, 2026
Read More
  • PayTech

Federal Board of Revenue Integrates 12,950 Retailers Into Point Of Sale System For Real-Time Tax Tracking

  • Press Desk
  • April 27, 2026
Trending Posts
  • HEC Launches Online Degree Attestation System Effective May 1, 2026
    • May 3, 2026
  • Karachi International Books And Technology Fair Kicks Off At Expo Centre With Record Crowds
    • May 3, 2026
  • Former NADRA Chairman Tariq Malik Named Among Top 25 Global Digital Identity Experts By Okta
    • May 3, 2026
  • Aga Khan University Global Research Showcase To Focus On Harnessing AI And Digital Intelligence For Impact
    • May 3, 2026
  • TDAP And PSEB Host Pakistan-Chile Joint IT Webinar To Explore Cross-Border Technology Opportunities
    • May 3, 2026
about
CWPK Legacy
Launched in 1967 internationally, ComputerWorld is the oldest tech magazine/media property in the world. In Pakistan, ComputerWorld was launched in 1995. Initially providing news to IT executives only, once CIO Pakistan, its sister brand from the same family, was launched and took over the enterprise reporting domain in Pakistan, CWPK has emerged as a holistic technology media platform reporting everything tech in the country. It remains the oldest continuous IT publishing brand in the country and in 2025 is set to turn 30 years old, which will be its biggest benchmark and a legacy it hopes to continue for years to come. CWPK is part of the SPIN/IDG Wakhan media umbrella.
Read more
Explore Computerworld Sites Globally
  • computerworld.es
  • computerworld.com.pt
  • computerworld.com
  • cw.no
  • computerworldmexico.com.mx
  • computerwoche.de
  • computersweden.idg.se
  • computerworld.hu
Content from other IDG brands
  • PCWorld
  • Macworld
  • Infoworld
  • TechHive
  • TechAdvisor
CW Pakistan CW Pakistan
  • CWPK
  • CXO
  • DEMO
  • WALLET

CW Media & all its sub-brands are copyrighted to SPIN-IDG Wakhan Media Inc., the publishing arm of NCC-RP Group. This site is designed by Crunch Collective. ©️1995-2026. Read Privacy Policy.

Input your search keywords and press Enter.