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Can a CCP Ever Fail, and What Would Be the Implications?

While extremely rare due to robust risk management, a CCP failure is possible if losses from a major default exceed the entire default waterfall resources. The implications would be catastrophic, leading to systemic risk, a loss of market confidence, and potential freezing of financial markets as contract performance could no longer be guaranteed.

Regulators have "Too Big to Fail" concerns about CCPs.

How Does the Default Waterfall of a CCP Protect Its Non-Defaulting Members?
What Is the “Waterfall” Structure of a CCP’s Financial Resources?
How Does the CCP’s Default Fund Contribute to Systemic Stability?
What Is the Role of Stress Testing in a CCP’s Risk Management Framework?