Clarus Financial Technology

A Final Check-In On RFRs For The Year

This is my final blog for the year, but the 2023 retrospectives will have to wait for January once all of the data is in.

However, as the year draws to a close, I doubt 2023 will be remembered as the year that USD LIBOR finally ceased. That has to be considered a good thing. Nothing (systemic) went wrong, and IRD volumes remain huge post-cessation. Cessation was a non-event on the markets side, although I doubt project teams who gave up numerous weekends would agree!

Cessation does mean that there is now a huge legacy book of “fallenback” trades out there. I wonder how many trading relationships really have the desire to run those until maturity? That could be one to monitor in 2024, but predictions in this space have been famously wrong. I certainly never expected so much Fed Funds trading after LIBOR transition.

November 2023 – Big Increases But Falling Short of New All Time Highs

ISDA has now published the November 2023 review of RFR Adoption. In summary;

Showing;

Size Matters

The SOFR market is now a beast. No matter how you cut it, November 2023 was a big month for SOFR risk. Remember this was before the recent Fed meeting and the repositioning around Rate cuts next year.

The total amount of SOFR risk traded in Swap markets was a record in November 2023, as measured by both DV01 and notional amounts:

DV01 of USD SOFR Swaps per month in $m. Source: CCPView

That has resulted in a record amount of Notional Outstanding in SOFR – this will likely decrease again into year-end as GSIBs reduce their gross notionals for balance sheet dressing:

Notional Outstanding of USD SOFR Swaps in $m. Source: CCPView

Similarly, outside of a conversion month, SOFR Futures saw the largest amounts of risk ever traded. It all leaves me wondering whether such volumes can really be repeated in 2024? The market is setting a very high bar for “base levels” of SOFR activity here!

Why Has The European RFR Group Disbanded?

You may have noticed in my last blog that the European RFR Working Group is no longer. It appears that it was working to a much narrower remit than other RFR groups – namely to establish €STR as the successor to EONIA rather than replace derivatives trading in EURIBOR with the RFR.

As such, it is hard to envision a meaningful change in €STR trading going forward. EUR Swap markets have grown relative to USD Swap markets in 2023, largely as a result of operating in a multi-index environment (despite such large activity in Fed Funds!):

Split of EUR and USD risk traded in Swaps across all IRD OTC products. Source: CCPView

This relative growth of EUR Swap markets is a particularly interesting one in light of the Active Account Requirement in Europe, and one that will no doubt feature heavily on the blog next year. Don’t forget to:

Read the blog for the latest on European plans to move a portion of the EUR IRD market to Europe:

Take a look at the data for €STR Adoption at rfr.clarusft.com. We have a lot of data over there:

Subscribe to the podcast which will also be covering Europe in-depth over the coming months:

In Summary

That just leaves me to say THANK YOU to all of our subscribers, readers and listeners for your support this year. I wish you a very happy festive period, a prosperous New Year and I look forward to being back in 2024.

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