Clarus Financial Technology

Do you know what LIBOR cessation has done to volumes?

I wanted to follow up on two of our 2022 blogs to estimate the impact on overall volumes in GBP, JPY and CHF markets of LIBOR cessation (which was only 7 months ago, believe it or not!).

  1. DECIPHERING THE END OF LIBOR IN THE DATA
  2. THE ENDGAME FOR BASIS SWAPS?

All of the data in this blog is taken from CCPView, and looks at the impact of LIBOR cessation on trading volumes in Interest Rate Derivatives alone.

Overall Volumes

Taking a look at total volumes in Rates products in these 3 currencies shows that overall volumes are now lower in the post-LIBOR world:

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Disappearing Products

To quantify the reduction in volumes, let’s first look at the absolute loss that results from the following products no longer trading:

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This amount likely understates the reduction in OTC volumes because:

Anyway, let’s carry forward our $2.5Trn in lost volumes so far and take it as a starting point.

Reduced OTC Activity

We have obviously seen a great increase in OIS activity as RFRs are now the standard product to trade. However, have OIS products fully stepped into the shoes of previously traded IRS markets? Let’s look at the data:

This chart doesn’t look so bad! Let’s look at the data;

We therefore see a total reduction of ~$1.5Trn in monthly volumes since 2020.

Adding that to the previous $2.5Trn reduction leaves us with a nice round $4Trn reduction in monthly volumes so far. And this is just in OTC products.

Let’s now turn to futures.

STIRs

Money market futures have likewise moved from LIBOR to RFR-based contracts. How have volumes help up?

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Even with Central Banks so active in this space, LIBOR cessation has significantly reduced volumes. Let’s call this one a 34% reduction (the average of 2020 and 2021 given that volumes increased significantly), meaning another $4Trn reduction in activity.

Our running total now stands at $8Trn reduction in activity from LIBOR cessation.

And yet…

And yet…one LIBOR currency has laboured on! One LIBOR currency still remains…and it really is the daddy of them all. If we run the same data, but including USD:

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However, it could be argued that these OTC volumes are really just a rounding error compared to the explosion in Futures trading activity we’ve seen, as a result of increased SOFR adoption in USD futures markets.

You can forget all about a measly $8Trn in reduction from GBP, CHF and JPY activity when USD are adding $45Trn a month in activity…

In Summary

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