Clarus Financial Technology

Swap Markets see Record Trading Volumes in response to COVID-19 Market Turmoil

Before I head onto the volume numbers, let’s analyse the market backdrop in the last two weeks by looking at USD Swaps.

USD Swaps

To begin, I want to update the previous COVID-19 blog on USD swaps.

In terms of volumes, SDRView Researcher shows that volumes have tailed off since we wrote that blog on March 25th:

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This series of blogs seems to be showing us, more than ever, that traded volumes are very closely linked to volatility. We can see that the intraday range of prices has been slowly trending tighter in recent trading sessions:

So far in April, 10Y USD Swaps have traded within a 10 basis point range. I’m sure that this reduction in intra-day volatility comes as quite a welcome respite to the market.

This is also highlighted by our choice of liquidity measure, Price Dispersion. We find in 10Y USD swaps that price dispersion has reduced back to February levels:

SEFs

Now let’s dig into the volumes. First up, SEFs. Looking at SEFView reveals the biggest surprise from the past two months: the combined market share of D2C SEFs in USD Swaps hit a 2020 high.

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This isn’t to say it was a bad month for the D2D SEFs! In fact, it was the highest volume month on record for D2D SEFs:

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In USD swaps trading, it therefore looks like Tradeweb, Bloomberg and ICAP were the big volume winners.

Cleared Markets

Now lets take a look at the volumes across the global cleared markets. These cover all market participants, not just US Persons, thanks to CCPView.

Major Currency Cleared Volumes

First off – this was a record month ever for volumes across USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD and CAD Rates markets:

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Cleared Volumes in Other Currencies

As we watch this crisis unfold, one of the defining features has been the rush to USD as the “global reserve” currency, and the resulting flood of USD offered to the market from the Fed.

This is consistent with investors seeking to “repair” portfolios which have suffered huge USD-denominated losses. Is this a pre-cursor for lots of defaults on USD-denominated debt, such as we saw in the GFC?

We do not yet know the answer, but it nonetheless piqued my interest to look at non-USD currencies in swap markets. Are USD swaps “sucking” liquidity from smaller currencies?

The data suggests otherwise. From CCPView, we see record volumes in the “non-major” currencies:

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It is interesting to see the market share changes between CCPs from February to March 2020:

In Summary

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