Clarus Financial Technology

JPY Swaps – A Market Overview

For a few reasons, I’ve been looking into JPY IRS markets this past week. Below I share some of my findings.

CCP Market Share

Amir reported in his Q3 2018 Global Swaps Volume review that JSCC have a 55% market share and LCH enjoy a 45% market share in JPY swaps across all products – that is to say IRS, OIS and single currency Basis (plus some small volumes in VNS and ZC swaps).

I wanted to drill-down into these figures so that I could get a better understanding of what is trading and where.

This is particularly interesting for LCH and JSCC because we have tenor data for both CCPs in CCPView. So I can look at IRS (and OIS,Basis etc) to see trading volumes by tenor and hence DV01 (risk traded).

Market Share in 2 Year Swaps

Let’s start with the short stuff – 2 year tenors and below. These volumes could be impacted by FRA volume matching services, such as NEX’s Reset. These services provide important risk management to clean up swap portfolios. However, due to historic reasons, all JPY FRAs that are transacted are booked as single period swaps (with payment at the end of the period instead of at the beginning as for FRAs). Whilst this means that we cannot directly see where NEX send their FRAs for clearing, we can check the market share of LCH and JSCC in tenors of 2 year and less for IRS:

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Market Share in Longer Tenors

What is particularly valuable about the transparency in CCPView is the ability to look at a CCP’s business by tenor. This means that we can look at their market share in by tenor and subsequently by DV01 (i.e. the amount of risk actually traded).

First, as measured by notional for IRS tenors longer than 2 years:

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Market Share by DV01

What do the charts look like if we translate them to DV01 terms? I wouldn’t expect too much difference as when I look at the individual tenor buckets, it tends to be pretty consistent 60/40 split between the two. Let’s run the numbers anyway:

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What About OIS?

We cannot write an article these days without mentioning RFRs and OIS. So far in this blog we have looked at only JPY LIBOR swaps. What about the market share in TONAR, the JPY OIS index?

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(We’ve touched on TONAR trading before as part of our OIS Trading and LIBOR Reform overviews. Well worth a read to put the different international markets in perspective).

And now onto the Basis

We can’t really write an article about JPY swaps without mentioning “the basis”. But before I come onto the JSCC-LCH basis, I first wanted to look at the market share in single currency basis trading in JPY. Anecdotally, we understand that very little of this trading is in TONAR(OIS)-LIBOR, and most of it is in TIBOR-LIBOR or, more likely, 3m vs 6m LIBOR basis (as a result of cross-border JPY issuance). Let’s look at the DV01 market shares here:

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So, what has been happening in JSCC basis trading? We can see that the price of the 10y basis between two 6m JPY LIBOR swaps has been declining steadily through the past quarter:

And we can see from the Trads screen below (thank you @Tradition) that the whole curve has moved well down from previous highs (check out our previous JSCC-LCH blogs here and here).

We know from various Risk magazine articles that the basis finally became wide enough for hedge funds to start to want to play, and that a speech from the CFTC at the end of last year sparked another downward move.

Has this move tighter in basis over time done anything to the market shares of the CCPs? It’s difficult to say. On a month-by-month basis, measured by DV01, the JSCC started 2018 with a 59% market share. This went up to 67% and has since come down to 56%. But it’s a very volatile time-series, so I would wait to see how this develops rather than drawing conclusions from a single chart:

JSCC Market Share per month as measured by DV01 in vanilla JPY IRS.

Finally, it is worth noting that CME and Eurex also offer JPY clearing. CME sees regular monthly volumes, but have a market share of just 0.2%. Eurex volumes are far more sporadic.

And Clients?

Unfortunately, JSCC does not split their volumes between Dealer and Clients. This is a shame as it would provide valuable transparency to the market. LCH report a near 50/50 split for their volumes between Client and Dealer (in notional terms). It would be a worthwhile exercise to be able to compare these volumes, by tenor, versus JSCC to enable a full market picture. I’d love to see the previous chart for Client trades for example!

In Summary

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