Clarus Financial Technology

MIFID II Data – APA Market Share

Same old gripes

As we all know, MIFID II transparency is still falling well short of any definition of transparency. We will continue to gripe, moan and point out the failings until we see changes. In light of which, bravo to NEX for improving access to their data (we can now search by trading venue, the so-called “MIC code”). Hurrah! Hopefully any deal with CME will only serve to further improve transparency….!

The Fallback Solution – Hard Graft

Our solution, so far, to the barriers thrown in our faces has been the age-old approach – sheer hard work and pigheadedness.

So, in an effort to answer the most asked question so far – what is the market share of each APA? – we’ve manually collected data for a one week time period for the five largest* APAs.

*How do we know they are the largest? We don’t. But if you are only going to make “public” data available via proprietary data feeds accessed via physical lines into a data centre, then you aren’t making data public. And you should NOT need to have a relationship with a data vendor to access public transparency data. So I am afraid we have no choice but to ignore those APAs that do require this.

APA Market Share

For European markets, in cut-out and keep small multiples format:

APA Market Share

First, let’s look at the data and how much work is involved to create four simple charts for five venues.

And now let’s explain how you can actually make sense of the data:

I cannot imagine any of this is what the G20 had in mind when thinking about transparency for markets after the financial crisis. Sure, you can pay for a Bloomberg or Reuters terminal and hope that they provide an APA aggregator. But you have to pay $2,000 a month for that privilege. That level of transparency has ALWAYS been available by becoming a data client of ICAP, Tulletts, BGC or Trads. I’m sure they would throw in some volume information as well at that price point.

Transparency is best achieved in markets when useable data is made freely available to the public – the prior examples in the US evidence this with TRACE for corporate bonds and Dodd-Frank for OTC Derivatives.

I’ll stop complaining now and turn to our findings:

Major Currencies – EUR, GBP, USD

Scandi Currencies – DKK, SEK and NOK

CE3 Currencies – PLN, HUF, CZK

Emerging “Europe” – TRY, RUB, RON

In Summary – The League Table of APAs

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