Clarus Financial Technology

Fed Surprises in the USD OIS Data

USD OIS Trade Counts

Following a client enquiry, I realised I may have jumped the gun a little bit last week. So let’s rewind slightly and revisit a few market statistics on USD OIS trading. We’ll then have a look at price information for the most-commonly traded structures – naturally, hand-in-hand with the volume information.

I traded Eonia swaps for a few years, therefore I got very used to trading swaps that mirrored the exact date-gap between the ECB meeting dates. These matched the so-called ECB “Maintenance Periods” and are the “purest” representation of ECB monetary policy decisions. The Eonia market has always seen peaks and troughs in the overnight fixings due to demand for cash at different times of the maintenance period, driven by the different ways that banks manage their balance sheets to meet average reserve requirements. (See Gary’s thoughts here on this so-called “heartbeat”).

Historically, whether due to liquidity, a tighter range in fixings or simply a bigger market, we have not seen a similar “heartbeat” in Fed Funds fixings. Therefore, I always thought that spot-starting, vanilla OIS trades such as 1 month, 2 month and 3 month maturities were most commonly traded in USD.

Whether my assumption was wrong, or whether the market is now worried about Fed balance-sheet unwinds affecting the range of Fed Fund fixings, the data shows that USD OIS is now most commonly traded on exact Federal Reserve (FOMC, Federal Open Market Committee) meeting dates:


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USD OIS Trade Notional

As Amir pointed out in his original blog, OIS trades are large notional, short maturity trades. This means that trade count is actually a pretty good indicator for where liquidity is as well. And when we look at the notional traded in USD OIS, we see a decent concentration in FOMC-dated structures:

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These two charts suggest that Fed-dated (FOMC-dated) OIS are the most liquid OTC instrument at the short-end and allows market participants to exactly hedge their exposures to rate-change decisions.

Are these traded On or Off-SEF?

Fed-dated OIS trades are amongst the lowest percentage (by unadjusted notional) to trade on-SEF:


So much for volumes, what about prices?

With that background to volumes and execution in place, please consider this as another (small) stepping stone in my series about a “Fed Surprise Indicator“. Seeing as we know that the Fed-dated swaps are so liquid, that also means they contain some of the most valuable price information. So let’s have a close look at this.

VWAP Price Data

Volume Weighted Average Prices of these structures provide an important insight into what the market has traded, and with what kind of conviction. It’s consensus (and particularly the wrong consensus) that can cause sharp price moves (for example, due to stop-loss activity). Let’s see what the data has shown us for the past six months:

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Combining the two

This chart therefore has my curiosity piqued and acts as a nice follow-on to the previous blog about the Fed Surprise Indicator. The “surprise” level looks to be largest when volumes increase hand-in-hand with a change in VWAP. Therefore, by looking at the change in VWAP plus the volume, September would clearly come out on top- eliminating one of the weaknesses from last week’s analysis.

The next step is therefore a combination of these past two week’s work. We’ve looked at the change in volumes versus average volumes last week. Now we’ve looked at the change in prices in tandem with volumes.

Next week, we’ll look at the change in VWAP over increasingly granular periods, coupled with the volumes traded to try and finally arrive at a “Fed Surprise Indicator” that makes sense….and that fits with history!

In Summary

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