Clarus Financial Technology

Fed meetings and OIS Volumes

Amir last week highlighted the surge in USD OIS Volumes we are seeing. This increase in volumes is largely related to the structures I looked at during my series of blogs in January this year (here, here and here). These all focused on increased trading in Federal Reserve meeting dated OIS structures.

FOMC Dated OIS Volumes

Looking at the past year of OIS volumes, we can see that the change in volumes in OIS trading is down to Fed-dated trades:


Recall from our previous blog that;

The chart above further shows that;

Interestingly, as volumes have grown in FOMC-dated products, the percentage of the market that has been Cleared has steadily been dropping:


Fed Rate Moves

Looking at the volumes that have traded, the market clearly believes the Fed rhetoric that all meeting dates are “live” – i.e. we could see a change in Rates at any of the future meeting dates.

How does this play out when trying to interpret recent price action though? How have Friday’s terrible jobs report and Yellen’s (apparently dovish) remarks yesterday affected the Rates outlook?

Pure Price Charts

If we take the price series of both the June 2016 meeting and the September 2016 meetings, you can see relatively wild gyrations in price since the beginning of February (when we last looked at OIS FOMC meetings):

Price Time Series of FOMC Dated OIS trades covering the June and the September 2016 meetings

Bear in mind that the current Effective Federal Funds Rate is 0.37% (37 basis points), therefore for either of these contracts, a no-change decision on policy would (approximately) result in them settling at 0.37% (which is bang in the middle of the Fed’s current target range of 0.25-0.50%).

The chart shows;

Fed Pulse Index

Why is the market trading these structures now? Obviously, the potential changes in monetary policy need to be hedged. But interpreting even simple price charts (such as the above) can be very confusing, as we typically need to monitor more than one meeting date to assess the likely path of rates in the future.

Therefore, I believe there is inherent value in assessing the change in rates across all of the FOMC-dated OIS trades at any point in time. This then gives us an idea of the cumulative changes across all of the meeting dates – not just one.

I also like to take that concept one step further and weight these changes in rates by their volumes. This gives us an idea of the conviction behind price changes. We should put more value on large trades that move the market than on small trades.

This approach leads to the Clarus Fed Pulse Index. And yields a nice simple chart :

The Value of the Fed Pulse Index in basis points

Showing;

We can therefore see that the OIS market is currently very dovish. We are at the extreme negatives of the Index readings. This has been in response to the weak NFP number on Friday, plus Yellen’s comments yesterday taking any June rate move off the table for now.

However, as we noted in the original blog, such extremes of the Index typically represent a turning point or reversal. Therefore I’ll leave you this week with both of the two charts above overlaid. It looks like prices are about to head higher again. That also ties-in nicely with the latest Bond Vigilantes blog over here.

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