Clarus Financial Technology

STIR Trading Volumes – Will They Recover?

Note: This post has been updated since first publication to reflect updated data for CHF SARON contracts at ICE.

2022 So Far….

I think we would all agree that 2022 has been a crazy year for markets. The combination of:

….all lead to elevated volatility. For dealer desks, frequent re-positioning and changes in risk positions normally lead to elevated volumes.

These elevated volumes are typically seen first and foremost in futures markets (Exchange Traded Derivatives). Why?

I’m sure you can all add your own reasons.

However, 2022 appears to be different. Let’s take a look at some markets where Futures are not seeing record volumes and talk about the underlying reasons why.

CHF Short Term Interest Rates

Short Term Interest Rate futures for CHF market participants have transitioned from LIBOR to SARON – no news there. Our data in CCPView shows that the transition happened late, but it did happen:

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Are There Reasons to Expect Reduced Activity in RFR STIRs compared to LIBOR STIRs?

From my own experience trading a CHF swaps book (for example), in a CHF LIBOR world:

And what happens when LIBOR ceases and Interest Rate Swaps all trade versus the overnight rate, SARON? I am sure everyone is well aware by now:

Of course, this doesn’t preclude the fact that market participants still need to hedge themselves against long-term changes in the structural level of SARON. The SNB cannot maintain negative rates for ever – I can personally testify to the fact that day-to-day inflation is alive and well here in Switzerland! And standardised products such as futures serve as an extremely efficient hedge, particularly in Switzerland where SNB meetings tend to coincide with IMM dates.

Long-term, we will be monitoring where the balance lies between OTC SARON products and SARON futures. The ISDA-Clarus RFR Adoption Indicator already maintains a measure of the percentage of risk traded in Futures vs Swaps (see chart 4 here).


Primers on Short End Trading

For those of you a bit lost in the technical details, we have some resources here on the blog that walk through the intricacies of trading short-end risk in interest rate derivatives. Some examples include:

The blog below on Toxic FRAs was also really well received last year. I guess we could update this one for those still grappling with USD LIBOR transition:


JPY Short Term Interest Rates

Back to the topic in hand. With JPY LIBOR also ceasing, we have seen a dramatic reduction in volumes in JPY STIRs. Also from CCPView:

Whoah, I find it surprising that this chart is so different to the market behaviour in CHF!

When will we see a TONA futures contract again? Puzzling….

GBP Short Term Interest Rates

The GBP market has seen acute competition recently. With new entrants and multiple different offerings in SONIA futures, it has been a competitive landscape (see here for example). Now that GBP LIBOR has ceased, it is no longer quite so competitive!

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In the intervening years (2020 and 2021), I find it hard to unpick the impact of LIBOR vs SONIA positions and the potential “replication” of liquidity across different exchanges. The key points going forward for GBP SONIA trading are:

Remember – Futures can Still Hedge Swaps!

Finally, please note that futures can still be used to hedge the term interest rate risk arising from the fixed leg of an interest rate swap. Trading the four front SONIA futures versus a one year SONIA OIS is a perfectly valid hedging strategy. It is just that as the SONIA fixings come in on the one year SONIA OIS, even if the dates do not match the underlying futures, there is little need to rebalance the hedge. Rebalancing will be focused on date differentials, particularly over MPC periods, and these will be very carefully monitored/managed across dealer desks.

For what it’s worth, I think all futures contracts on overnight rates should not be traded on IMM dates, but should match the underlying central bank meeting dates. But I think that is a blog for another time.

In Summary

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