Clarus Financial Technology

FX Options Data on the SDR

Chairman Massad has been vocal recently in his intent to clean up the quality of the data in the SDR.  I recall him a few months ago speaking about the progress the CFTC has made policing the industry on data quality for vanilla interest rate swaps, so I thought I’d go have a look at FX options to see if Mr Joe Public (me) can glean anything from the public dissemination.

HIGH LEVEL VIEW

SDR Data

Let’s start with trade counts on SDRView.  I picked some majors EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, AUD/USD, and USD/CAD.  I also kept USD/CNY in there as I was surprised to see such large numbers.  In fact, I would have thought all USD/CNY should be reported as non-deliverable options (NDO’s) instead of Vanilla options. (Editors note:  I have been informed that DTCC do not support CNH, so it is likely that all Vanilla USD/CNY is really USD/CNH).

FX Options Trade Counts Per CcyPair (YTD)

This shows some decent activity being reported:

Switching this to gross notional, let’s see these same figures but this time just split by On/Off SEF:

FX Options Notional by On/Off SEF (YTD)

Which tells us that on average, 12.6bn USD of vanilla options get traded on SEF per day, while 35.6bn is traded off SEF.  Hence only about 26% of options volume goes through SEFs, which is not bad considering the products are nowhere near being MAT’d.  I should reference, however, that footnote 88 would have required all multi-dealer options platforms to have registered as a SEF, so we might begin to interpret all On-SEF activity as electronic, multi-dealer executed.  But let’s leave that assessment to another day.  Note also, that all volumes on SDR are subject to notional cap sizes, so we’d expect these figures to be understated by some degree.

SDRView vs BIS Report

At a macro level, I wanted to understand how much of the global options activity is going through SDRs.  Just how much are we seeing?

It’s a bit tricky to use BIS data, given that it is every 3 years and aggregated at a high level.  However the BIS report claims there was 337 billion USD of daily activity in FX Options in April 2013.  If I look at daily FX Options activity for April 2013 on SDR, the daily activity was roughly 31bn USD.  Which might lead you to think we’re seeing 10% of global activity.

Worth noting that if I look at ADV for YTD 2016, that number is now 62bn.  But without a good global benchmark, it is hard to say.  Whether the number is 10%, 20%, or something slightly lower or higher, I have some confidence that we are at least seeing a significant portion of the market.  Particularly if you consider we’re probably not seeing many things like Asian crosses that would likely contribute to the BIS number but not contribute to the SDR.

SEF Data

The On-SEF market for options is largely in the interdealer brokers:

FX Options Notional Per SEF (YTD)

Some worthy tidbits:

Last thing to mention here – if I cherry-pick one currency pair and compare it across SEFView and SDRView, I can get a rough idea of how much the SDR under-reports trades due to cap limits.  Taking just EUR/USD, I was encouraged to find that year-to-date, the SDR reported 148bn USD, while SEFView reported 153bn.  So it would seem we are only missing a few percentage points through caps on the SDR tape.

MAKING SENSE OF THE DATA

When compared to vanilla swaps, options are unique in that the market does not trade on “price” – but rather trades on a quoted volatility.  Hence the transparency that one would wish to have is that of traded vol.

So, does the SDR tell you what vol was traded?

Of course not.

But fear not, if the other data is rich enough, we should be able to glean that information with some basic data cleansing, normalization and enrichment.

Case in point, I took all EUR/USD fx options activity on February 9, 2016, and began cleaning it up.

CLEANUP

In order to begin pricing options and doing some analysis, we need to do some basic cleaning:

The result is a nice simple view of options activity that I would want to see (I am left with 507 trades):

Portion of Normalized FX Options Trade Acitivity for 9-Feb-2016

This results in a fair representation of EUR/USD vol over the course of the day.  Here is the 1-month traded vol:

Scatterplot of 1M EUR/USD Vol over the course of February 9, 2016

You’ll have to forgive some of the nonsense at the end of the trading day, as well as a couple of intraday blips.  As a first pass, I am encouraged that it wasn’t complete nonsense.  The next step would be to assess this as a vol/delta surface, so we could see ATM vol, the smile and any skew.  Of course a few of those dots also deserve further attention, or to label the trade as “garbage” and keep out of my analysis.  However I’ll defer all of this until later; as we need to walk before we run.

Finally, we can also get some good insight into which tenors trade the most.  Clearly 1M options are king, and very little happens past 1 year.

EUR/USD Options Trade Count Per Tenor (09-Feb-2016)

THE DIRT

So in the spirit of constructive criticism, I thought I’d lay out the good, the not-so-good, and the ugly in options data on SDR.

To start with, I began with 550 or so EUR/USD options on February 9.  There were some trades that I wasn’t comfortable I could clean up enough – so I labelled them “Garbage” and kept them out of my aggregate analysis.  I’ll explain those in the “Ugly” section.

The Good
The Not-So-Good

There are a number of things that I would not expect to be on the SDR, but that I would like to have in order to make transparency better:

The Ugly

Many deficiencies made working with the data difficult, if not impossible:

SUMMARY

I learned quite a bit by digging into the SDR data:

Transparency is a great thing, but it would seem some policing on the quality of the data remains to be done.

If you have more interest to explore FX Options data on the SDR, please leave a comment or contact us.

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