Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC)
Overview
The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC) is the primary clearing, settlement, and information-services provider for U.S. securities markets. Established as a holding company in 1999, DTCC centralizes and automates post-trade processes through subsidiaries such as the Depository Trust Company (DTC) and the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC). It processes trillions of dollars in securities daily, supporting efficiency and reducing market risk.
Key takeaways
- DTCC centralizes clearing and settlement for most U.S. securities transactions.
- Its main subsidiaries include DTC (securities depository and settlement) and NSCC (clearing and multilateral netting).
- DTCC’s services improve market efficiency, lower costs, and help maintain investor confidence.
How DTCC works (high level)
DTCC coordinates the movement of securities and funds after trades execute on exchanges and trading platforms:
1. Brokers submit trade details to NSCC for clearing.
2. NSCC netting (continuous net settlement, CNS) aggregates buy and sell obligations among participants to produce net positions and payment obligations.
3. NSCC sends settlement instructions to DTC.
4. DTC transfers securities ownership between broker accounts and facilitates the corresponding funds transfers.
5. Brokers update client accounts to reflect settled trades.
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This automated sequence typically completes on the same day the trade occurs for many instruments, with institutional and retail processes following the same basic flow.
Settlement and its importance
Settlement finalizes a securities transaction by exchanging securities for payment. Timely, accurate settlement:
* Ensures investors receive securities or funds owed, reducing counterparty and operational risk.
Supports liquidity and confidence in the marketplace.
Minimizes the number of physical movements and manual reconciliations through electronic recordkeeping and centralized processing.
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Products and services
DTCC and its subsidiaries provide clearing, settlement, asset servicing, and information services for a broad set of instruments:
* Equities and corporate actions
Government and mortgage-backed securities
Corporate and municipal bonds
Derivatives and futures (clearing via related clearing facilities)
Mutual funds, money-market instruments, and alternative investment products
* Insurance-related and other asset-servicing functions
Clearing fees
Clearing and settlement services are fee-based. Fees vary with:
* Transaction size and instrument type
Service level and processing complexity
Frequency of trading (active traders can generate substantial cumulative fees)
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For futures and other contract instruments, per-contract fees can accumulate over holding periods.
History and evolution
Prior to central clearing, trade settlement relied on physical stock certificates and manual recordkeeping. That process was costly and slow, prompting reforms:
* 1973: Creation of the Depository Trust Company (DTC) to centralize custody and electronic recordkeeping of securities.
1976: Formation of the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) to enable multilateral netting and centralized clearing.
1999: Establishment of DTCC as a holding company to consolidate and coordinate clearing, settlement, and related services across its subsidiaries.
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Multilateral netting (summing multiple parties’ obligations before settlement) and electronic depositories dramatically reduced paperwork, liquidity needs, and settlement risk.
DTC vs. NSCC — roles compared
- DTC (Depository Trust Company): Acts as the central securities depository, handling custody, book-entry transfers of ownership, corporate actions processing, and settlement of net positions.
- NSCC (National Securities Clearing Corporation): Provides clearing, risk management, and multilateral netting services that determine participants’ net securities and cash obligations prior to settlement.
Both are regulated and operate together to complete post-trade processes efficiently.
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Ownership and governance
DTCC’s common shares are held by participants of its clearing agencies, meaning member firms that use its services effectively own the corporation. DTCC operates under regulatory oversight applicable to clearing and settlement organizations.
Bottom line
DTCC is a cornerstone of U.S. market infrastructure. By centralizing custody, clearing, netting, and settlement, it reduces operational complexity, lowers costs, and mitigates risk across a wide range of financial instruments—helping ensure that trades are completed accurately and on time.