Clarus Financial Technology

Swaption Volumes by Strike Q1 2022

Markets Backdrop

You may have heard, but Q1 was not a great quarter for Fixed Income returns (if you were long!).

As shown by 10Y SOFR swaps in the US, the sell-off was pretty brutal, with the only reprieve coming from event risk around Russia/Ukraine. Even that didn’t last long….

The FT put it well – “everyone hates government bonds”:

This huge sell-off, of nearly 100bp in SOFR swaps, rivals the one we saw in Q1 2021, albeit we have started from higher levels this time around:

It has led to some remarkable volumes in USD Rates markets. In CCPView, we see close to all-time record volumes across USD Rates products (Bonds, Futures and Swaps). For example, our first chart shows USD long-end volumes (excluding FRAs and STIR futures):

And our second chart looks at products including these short-end volumes:

These are not quite all time records for the USD market. March 2020 saw higher volumes, as did June 2019 (even without US Treasury transparency data). But they are impressively large volumes compared to recent levels of activity.

Naturally I therefore expected to see some records in Swaptions as well…

Options Traders Shrugged and went ‘Meh’

I was therefore surprised when I checked in SDRView to update one of our popular blogs from last year – Swaptions activity.

Looking at USD Swaptions activity by trade count:

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Much as we noted in March 2020, Swaptions markets really don’t scale-up in line with underlying activity in Rates markets. It is a puzzle, but this is not the first time we have seen this.

Swaptions Activity by Strike

Does an analysis by Strike reveal anything to our readers? Here is a summary of Q1 2022 USD Swaptions activity:

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Receivers Activity

As we noted in our previous Swaptions blog, we can also split the activity by Receivers/Payers/Straddles. Looking only at the activity in Receivers:

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Payers Activity

Are there any differences in trading patterns for Payers activity?

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Straddles

Finally, we come onto Swaption Straddles. A strategy I always considered a “pure” volatility play, but happy to be proven wrong!

In Summary

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