PJM Interconnection on Monday put forward a proposal to raise the minimum capitalization threshold required of participants in its wholesale electricity markets to $2 million. The operator said the increase is intended to keep pace with inflation, improve risk management across the market, and reduce the likelihood of participant default.
The proposal represents the first adjustment to the minimum capitalization level since 2011. PJM outlined that implementation would not be immediate but would occur over time via a phased approach designed to provide market participants the opportunity to adjust their capital positions and other funding arrangements.
As part of the package, PJM would institute a 3% annual increase to the capitalization threshold to account for inflation, with that automatic adjustment scheduled to begin five years after the initial implementation. PJM framed the multi-step timeline as a way to balance the objectives of strengthening market resilience while allowing participants time to respond to the new requirements.
Under PJM's existing tariff, there are alternate pathways for new or emerging participants to obtain market access without meeting the minimum capitalization level directly. These alternatives include posting collateral, providing letters of credit or surety bonds, or securing access via a corporate guaranty. PJM noted these options remain available under the proposed changes.
The proposal received near-unanimous backing from the Members Committee in January. PJM indicated an implementation target of April 30, 2027, for the new minimum capitalization rule to take effect, subject to the phased rollout described in the proposal.
The operator framed the change as addressing both immediate and longer-term concerns: immediately by increasing the baseline capital that participants must demonstrate, and over the longer term by building in an inflation adjustment mechanism intended to preserve the real value of the threshold.
Summary
PJM has proposed increasing the minimum capitalization requirement for wholesale market participants to $2 million, with a phased implementation and a 3% annual inflation adjustment starting five years after implementation. The change, the first since 2011, is intended to bolster risk management and protect market participants from default, and was supported nearly unanimously by the Members Committee, with implementation set for April 30, 2027.