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T
The Global Foreign Exchange Mark
Growth and Transformation
William Barker, Financial Markets Department
The foreign exchange market is in a
periodof remarkable transformation that
is
changing who is trading, why, and
how.
The foreign exchange market is known to bthe largest financial market in theworld,
as measured by daily turnover. Themostrecent BIS Triennial Survey (BIS 2007)esti-
Not only are trading volumes in the
foreign exchange market
expanding
rapidly, the primary sources of this
marketgrowth are helping to define the
profound
structural transformation taking
place.
Deal flow in the foreign exchange
market
is increasingly transacted
electronically,
using automated computerizedtrading
routines, and by a much wider
array of
market participants.
These changes reflect innovativedevelop-
ments in electronic trading
technology
and institutional tradingarrangements
that are shifting the balance
market
participation between bank
non-bank accounts, large
small marketparticipants, and domesti
and global players.
As a result of this ongoingstructural
evolution, the foreign excha
market is arguably becomin
more liquid and operationally
efficient.
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es that the total turnover in global foreign exchangekets is US$3.2 trillion a daymore than 6 timeser than trading in U.S. Treasury bonds and 30ser than trading on the New York Stock ExchangeMA 2007; NYSEData.com 2007). What may be
arent is how quickly this market has grown overpast few years and why it is growing so quickly.
most estimates, the trading volumes in thegn
hange market are continuing to grow rapidly. The
er Group, for example, recently estimated thaty global trading volumes would likely reach5 trillion by 2010 (Profit & Loss Magazine 2007).uld this happen, foreign exchange trading vol-s will have more than tripled in this decade
art 1).As the foreign market expands, it isergoing a remarkablesformation that is changing who is tradinggn
exchange and how they are doing it. In turn,thesechanges are accelerating market growth. Anincreas-ing proportion of overall foreign exchangetrading vol-ume is being transacted on electronic tradingplatforms,both in the interbank market as well asbetweenbanks and clients; by large global investmentdealers
and non-bank market participants; and bycomputer-driven algorithmic trading strategies. Together,theseclosely related and mutually reinforcing elementsaredefining a new paradigm for the foreignexchange
market and, indeed, for global financialmarkets ingeneral.
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Chart 1
Global Average Daily Trading Volume inForeign Exchange
US$billions
6,000 6,000
Estimated
4,000 4,000
2,000 2,000
0 0
2001 2004 2005 2007 2010
Trading volume
Sources: Price (2007)
BIS, April 2007
This article describes how these factors arechangingthe structure of the foreign exchange market,from amodel that prevailed as recently as the mid-1990s to
a new model that is still evolving. It is importanttoemphasize that the foreign exchange market isstill ina period of transition: while the market as awhole,and particularly its most rapidly growing sectors,maybe moving towards a new trading model,differentmarket participants are nonetheless arrayed atdifferentpoints along a spectrum of change. As a result,
theforeign exchange market is currently a mixtureofold and new elements.
We begin describing this evolving mixture byexamining the factors behind the strong growth inthe foreign ex-change market: changing technology, theopening of market access to a broader range ofparticipants, and the automation of tradingfunctions. This is fol-lowed by a review of how these factors have
impacted market liquidity and operationalefficiency.
Innovations in ElectronDealing Technology
Through the mid-1990s, the foreign excmarketwas primarily reliant on phone-technology. Aclient needing to deal in foreign excwould phonea bank with whom it had a line of credask for atwo-sided price, i.e., a bid and offer ospecifiedamount of foreign exchange totransacted.1 Banks
1. The protocol was usually to ask for a two-sided price
than to
cate whether the transaction would be a purchase or s
that the dealer would not shade the price against the c
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d quote prices for their clients on demand, servingmarket-makers.The market-maker bank wouldecally transferred, or laid-off, the risk created by the
in the interbank market by phoning other banks
which it had established a dealing relationshipconducting an offsetting transaction. (Theser-k dealing relationships were mutual obligationsween banks to quote each other two-sided prices
emand for wholesale amounts of foreignhangepically US$5 million or larger.)This phone-based
work of direct relationships between banks was
cipal component of the interbank market, the
source of liquidity in the foreign exchangeket.2
uently, banks participation in these interbanking relationships was motivated solely by priceovery. Because the wholesale price apparent to a
er consisted only of the two-sided quotesidedemand by other banks (and even then, only forduration of the phone call) and because theyed with a constantly changing foreign exchange, banks were forced to make frequent calls to
hr throughout the business day to learn theentesale price. Banks would typically pay away the
ad (the difference between bid and offeres)rice-discovery transactions as a necessary cost
g business.
During the past decade, these interbankdealingarrangements began to shift to electronicprotocols.Reuters Dealing and EBS (Electronic BrokingServices)both introduced electronic interbank tradingplatformsin the early 1990s.3 Although uptake ofelectronic bro-king was relatively slow at first, by the late 1990sthese
platforms came to dominate interbank tradingflows.4
By most estimates, their combined market sharenowaccounts for about 90 per cent of interbanktrading inmost major currency pairs; voice brokingaccounts for
2. Alternatively, banks could use voice brokers (so called because
they used
squawk boxes that gave a live audio feed on available prices to
their clientbanks) as intermediaries in deals with other banks. Voice brokers would
search
for dealing interest among their client banks for transactions at a
given price
or amount, collecting a proportional fee every time a deal was
completed.
They acted solely as agents, and the prices they quoted were valid
only in the
size and for the amount of time determined by the banks acting as
principals.
3. The EBS platform was introduced in September 1993, and Reuters
Dealing
2000-2 in 1992. The 2000-2 version has live streaming prices, but an
earlier
version using electronic messaging for trading had been in place
since the
1980s. In 2007, EBS was bought by ICAP, a large interbank fixed-income broker and was renamed ICAP EBS.
4. These two interbank platforms dominate trade in different
currency pairs
rather than competing directly against each other. EBS, the largest,
carries
most of the interbank trading volume in the euro, yen, and Swiss franc;
Reuters
Dealing dominates trade in the pound sterling and the Canadian,
Australian,
and New Zealand dollars, as well as in several emerging-market
currencies.
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most of the rest, while direct dealing among majorbanks has all but disappeared.
The price-discovery process on Reuters DealingandEBS differs from the phone-based model ofdirectdealing in several key aspects. First, banksparticipatingon these platforms are not obliged to provide two-sidedprice quotes to other banks on demand. A bankcanpost a one-sided price (either a bid or an offer)andonly when it chooses to. Second, the minimumdealsize allowed on these portals is much smallerthan thestandard wholesale amounts used in thetraditionaldirect-dealing relationships between banks. Thisallowsany dealer with a smaller amount to transact toenterthe market without the obligation of making oraccept-ing delivery of unwanted, larger amounts.Third,
andperhaps most importantly, these electronicportalsprovide a live price stream that aggregates allbidsand offers posted on the system.This interbankpriceis visible at all times to all participating dealers.
The same technology that enabled electronicpricedelivery in the interbank market was relativelyeasilyextended to bank-to-client (B2C) relationships as
well.Single-bank portalsare bank-owned tradingplat-forms that establish an electroniccommunicationslink between the dealer and its end-user clients,sup-plying that dealer s price quotes and tradedetailselectronically.Multi-bank portalsare third-partyplat-forms that connect an end-user client with pricequotesfrom several banks simultaneously. (Examples ofmulti-
bank portals include FX Connect and FXaveragedaily trading volumes on these two platareshown in Chart 4, below.) The technologbothsingle and multi-bank portals now makedeala-ble, streaming price quotes (similar to thavailable
on electronic interbank platforms) availto end-user accounts.
A Changing Mix of MarketParticipants
Technological innovation dramatically redtradingcosts and has created new opportunitieswell asnew challenges, for a broad range of mapartici-
pants.This has occurred in several princways.First,the ability to transact in relatively samountson fully transparent prices on these globelectronicdealing platforms has led to fundamentachanges inthe operation of the interbank market. Sbanks nolonger need to engage in costly price-discovery trans-
actions and mutual dealing relationshipsotherdealers, the foreign exchange market habeen opened
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o much broader global participation among banksthe provision of liquidity. The electronicregation of a multitude ofworldwide orders andsparency in pricing has also led to sharppression in thecal interbank bid/offer spread.
Technological innovationdramatically reduced trading costsand has created new opportunities,
as well as new challenges, for a broadrange of market participants.
ond,heightened competition between dealers
much greater degree of price transparency has
terbank spread tightening being passed along to
user accounts in the B2C market. As dealingsnd-user clients have declined, new accountsredforeign exchange market, and existing market
ants were able to profitably transact more.easedng by end-user clients was further facilitated by
cost efficiencies of using B2C dealing portals. The
of electronic foreign exchange trading by buy-
unts has been growing steadily: it is estimated
006, for the first time, more than half of all foreign
exchange transactions by end-user clients wereexe-cuted electronically (Greenwich Associates 2007).
Third, many of the market-making banks thatprevi-ously dominated the market have been forced tore-examine their business model as dealing spreadsinboth the interbank and B2C markets compress.
The
result has been a changing mix of large andsmallerbanks in the interbank market. Technology isexpen-sive. In addition to considerable start-up costs, it
requires continuous upgrades. Given the tighterbid/offer spreads in both the interbank and B2Cmarkets,most successful dealing banks have thereforeimple-mented a low-margin, high-volume business
modelthat amortizes these higher technology coststhroughcontinually building trading volumes. This gives a
competitive advantage to those banks with thesizeand large global distribution networks needed tosus-tain ongoing technological innovation and toprovidecompetitive, profitable price quotes. The result has
beenconsolidation in the foreign exchange market,with thelargest banks accounting for a growingpercentage ofthe overall global trading volume. For example,inthe May 2007 Euromoney foreign exchange poll,five
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banks accounted for over 60 per cent of clienttrading
activity.5
(See Chart 2.) In the 2006 poll, the topfivehad a 54 per cent market share; a decade ago,the topfive accounted for less than one-third of marketvol-ume.
Fourth, as a result of deal flow in the globalforeign exchange market consolidating among thelargest global banks, the role of second-tierdealers has been evolving. For smaller banks, thelevel of technological commit-ment needed to remain competitive in such a
low-margin environment or to operate in all currencypairs and all time zones is no longer feasible. Itoften makes more economic sense for them tooutsource this func-tion to large global institutions.
For some second-tier dealers, this outsourcinghastaken the form of white-labelling (or white-boarding),whereby the smaller bank will act as anintermediary
between an end-user client buying foreignexchangeand another larger bank that supplies it.Essentially,the smaller bank becomes a liquidity retailer,main-taining its single-bank B2C portal for servicingclientorders but using a larger bank to provide thewhole-sale liquidity.6 The smaller bank is thus able tospecializein managing the clients credit risk. The larger
bankprovides the liquidity and manages the marketrisk.
Chart 2
Combined Market Share of the Five LargestBanks in the Foreign Exchange Market
%
100 100
75 75
50 50
25
0
2004 2005 2006 2007
Source: Euromoney Magazine (2007)
5. The top five banks by global market share were D
Bank, UBS,
bank, RBS, and Barclays Capital.
6. White-labelling describes an electronic transmission
mechanism between the liquidity-supplying bank and the e
However, many banks engage in de facto white-labelling by
manually quoting clients a price taken directly off an interb
system (such as EBS or Reuters Dealing), simply adding a
and passing along the liquidity supplied by other banks.
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erated by the clients order. This institutional divi-of labour and specialization in areas ofpara-advantage supports better pricing for the end-client.
e white-labelling allows liquidity outsourcing in
market, a similar institutional dealingngementme brokerageallows outsourcing of liquidityision in the interbank market. Many smallerersot have access to a broad range of reciprocalit
s and thus to the most competitive interbanketes. Prime brokerage arrangements allow such
ers to access the interbank market by using
it relationships of a top-tier bank. The largerkas an intermediary, connecting the smallererscompetitive interbank market pricing anda-their credit risk, but not assuming any price
f. (As with white-labelling, the intermediary in
me brokerage simply passes through thengprice risk to the client.) Prime brokered dealing
cally provides the smaller bank with betterng it could obtain on its own; the prime broker, in
, earns a fee for this service.
, prime brokerage has recently created newng
ortunities for market participants outside theking sector. Although prime brokeragenatedspecialized relationship between dealers in
theinterbank market, in the past couple of yearsthesedealing relationships have been extended to alargeand growing class of market participants largelyout-side the banking sector, the professional tradingcom-munity (PTC). Hedge funds, in particular, havegrownenormously in the past decade, both in numbers
andin the amount of capital under management, toformthe core of the PTC. The PTC also includescommodity-trading advisers that manage exchange-tradefuturesaccounts, as well as currency-overlay managersthatactively manage foreign exchange exposures ininvest-ment portfolios. Significantly, the PTC alsoincludes
the proprietary trading desks at major banksandinvestment dealers.
The PTC has proven extraordinarily efficient atlocatingpricing inefficiencies and quickly trading themaway.
Trading strategies typically involve rapid tradinginand out of positions, with profits highlydependent oncost-efficient execution, which in turn is
supported bythe cost and efficiency advantages of electronicdealingplatforms and prime brokerage arrangements.Despiteinitial resistance by some banks to opening upinter-bank dealing platforms to non-bank participants,bothEBS and Reuters report very strong PTC demandforprime brokerage dealing relationships. As aresult,
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non-bank trading accounts are increasingly gainingaccess to the interbank market through prime
broker-age channels.
The PTC has proven extraordinarilyefficient at locating pricinginefficiencies and quickly
trading them away.
Sixth, the efficiency of electronic price deliveryhasalso allowed a specialized subsector of the B2Cmar-ket, the retail aggregator platform, to develop.
Theseelectronic dealing portals cater to the smallestaccounts,including households as well as smallcorporations,asset managers, trading firms, and institutions.
Tech-nology has so lowered the price of dealing in
foreignexchange that some firms have found aprofitableniche providing electronic services for foreignexchangedealing in retail amounts, typically defined as lessthanUS$1 million (some retail platforms will opentradingaccounts for amounts as small as US$250). Retailag-gregators capture the efficiencies in electronicprice
delivery and pass along very competitive pricingtoretail accounts. As the costs of foreign exchangetradinghave dropped, retail participation in the markethassurged. Some surveys suggest that retailaccountsglobally traded as much as US$60 billion a dayin2006; this number is projected to increase to welloverUS$100 billion a day by 2009 (Aite Group 2007).As a result of these various factors, the range offoreign
exchange market participants has beenbroadening.
This can be seen in Chart 3, which indicathat theproportion of overall trading volumeaccounted for bynon-bank financial institutions, such as tPTC, insti-tutional money managers, and retailaggregators, has
been increasing, while the proportionaccounted forby interbank trading has been decliningpropor-tion of activity accounted for by corporaaccountshas been relatively stable.
Increasingly automatedtrading functions
Through the mid-1990s, most tradingfunctions were
done manually. This implied that dealermarket-making and proprietary trading activitiewere, ingeneral, not systematically implemented
Traders hadwide latitude when quoting prices to clieand other
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3
t Foreign Exchange Flow by Organizational Type
100
Interbank 75
50
Non-bank financialinstitutions 25
Corporate
0
1995 1998 2001 2004 2007
Source: BIS and Reuters
ks, using their best judgment to manage theouss generated by the market-making process and
me proprietary risk positions. As a result, thereoften little distinction between market makingproprietary trading, since market making involved
ehousing imbalances (and thus price risks) in the
nt order flow, as well as trading in and out of theket in a continuous price-discovery process.e-, to manage the banks position in the currency,ers were typically expected to have an opinion
market and to express that bias when quotinges to clients. Thus, a close relationship existed
between agency trading functions (executingclientorders) and principal functions (proprietarytradingand the management of price risk). At manybanks,one trader performed both functions.
With the technological innovations of the pastdecade,many trading functions once performedexclusivelyby traders are now increasingly performed by
special-ized computer programs. What distinguishesrecentdevelopments in this area is the use ofapplicationprogramming interface (API), the protocols thatcon-nect trading algorithms directly with the livepricefeeds on electronic trading platforms. With API,atrader can program the computer-basedtrading
model to receive data from the market, processthisinformation according to predetermined rules,andthen generate buy and sell orders that aretransmitteddirectly and immediately to the market withouthumanintermediation.7 The development of API hastrans-formed all aspects of the trading process;specialized
7. Of course, human intermediation is required to reprogram the
trading model for changing market circumstances or to override
the algorithms orders, if required.
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computer programs now initiate trades, managetrade
execution and order flow, and use complexalgorithms to handle dealers market-makingfunctions.
Many trading functions onceperformed exclusively by traders
are now increasingly performed byspecialized computer programs.
API and algorithmic trading have had a markedimpacton trading volume. The immediacy ofcomputerizedtrading programs can produce a staggeringnumber oftrades, particularly for active-trading PTCaccounts.Hedge funds already control a very large andrapidlygrowing pool of capital (estimated to be almostUS$2.5
trillion in 2007 (Hedge Fund Intelligence 2007),and,like other PTC accounts, typically apply leveragetoamplify their trading capacity. This extremelylargepool of capital can then be rapidly traded throughthemarket.
The combination of PTC penetration into theinterbankmarket and computer-based trading has led to asurge
in the proportion of algorithmically sourcedforeignexchange volume. It is estimated that, since itsintro-duction, algorithmic trading has achieved anapproxi-mate market share of 30 per cent on interbankplatforms.Some analysts predict that algorithmic tradingwilleventually account for up to 70 per cent ormore offoreign exchange volume, similar to what hasoccurredin equity markets (West 2007). The widespread
availa-bility of retail electronic trading portals aninexpensivecomputer power has enabled even smalspeculativeaccounts (such as day traders) to particin theforeign exchange market.
A New, Hybrid Market
These three interrelated factorselectrodealing platforms, a changing mix of maparticipants, and algorithmic tradingarrapidly changing the cost structure of thforeign exchange market. Reflecting thisforeign exchange is in a period of transitas global competition forces marketparticipants to focus on areas where thehave a clear comparative advan-tage. This is leading to a more distinctseparation of principal and agency tradfunctions in the new paradigm foreignexchange market.
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one hand, a growing proportion of global marketdity is supplied by large global dealers acting as
cipals, accepting and managing market risk fort. Their client lists generate a significant order(especially through their PTC accounts), buteers will nonetheless warehouse temporaryal-es in the market and use client order flow toagerietary trading positions. In many respects,etier dealers duplicate the market-makingtionscal banks under the previous market structure,
one significant difference: their market-makingvity is increasingly algorithmic in order to copethe high speed and volume of modern foreign
hange markets. These market-makingrithmsoften analyze client order flow and use the infor-on gathered to guide the dealer s risktioning,ning a form of automated, flow-based proprietary
ng.
Foreign exchange is in a period oftransition as global competition
forces market participants to focuson areas where they have a clear
comparative advantage.
On the other hand, the new paradigm marketstruc-ture also contains significant agency elements,sincemany dealers also execute the orders of othermarketparticipants, but without assuming market riskthem-selves.There are two sources of agencyoperationsthat between them appear to account for agrowingproportion of foreign exchange trading volume.First,an increasing proportion of the overall deal flowpassingthrough the larger banks represents non-bankPTCaccounts using prime brokered market access.Second,smaller (often domestic) banks that lack acompara-tive advantage in liquidity provision are
increasinglyoutsourcing this function to larger banks viawhite-labelling or prime brokerage arrangements. Bothprimebrokerage and white-labelling are flow-based,low-margin commodity-like business models thatsucceedby keeping operating costs down, transactionsvolumeshigh, and exposure to market risk low.
As these agency functions grow in relative
importance,the new paradigm foreign exchange market isadoptingsome characteristics of an exchange model.
This
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model already exists for several other assetclasses
notably equities and commoditieswherestandardized financial products are traded onformal public exchanges by exchange members
(e.g., the New York Stock Ex-change). An exchange-based market model is nolonger defined by the existence of a trading floor(many stock and commodity exchanges aremoving towards elec-tronic trading platforms). Rather, an exchangemodel has certain defining characteristics,including:
1. End-user accounts( clients) trade with
each otherthrough dealers (exchange members) whoact only as their agents. Dealers do not actas principals by accepting or warehousingprice risk, but provide only market access,credit-risk management, and other fee-based ancillary trading services.
2. This client-to-client (C2C) market is totallyanonymous because end-useraccounts(clients)trade through agents; there is no need forend-user accounts to know the identity oftheir ultimate counterparty as long as their
agents (credit-risk managers) provide suretyof settlement.8
3. With total trading anonymity and surety ofsettlement, all end users face the same priceon the exchange without discrimination.
As the foreign exchange market evolves, someof the exchange-like characteristics are beingintegrated into its structure in several ways.
First, the relative importance of agency activitiesat many dealers is increasing as their businessmodel ex-pands to include fee-based market access,
order exe-cution and settlement, and credit-riskmanagement for active trading accounts andother clients.
Second, although large dealers provide market-makingfunctions, these market-making principalactivities areincreasingly provided by PTC accounts, both bankandnon-bank. Dealers proprietary trading deskshave
been likened to in-house hedge funds and clientsofthe dealers agency-based order execution
services.Prime brokerage allows non-bank PTCaccounts toplace orders in the interbank market likeotherparticipant. In some aspects, the tradingactivities ofthe PTCboth bank and non-bankreplthefunctions of locals on the floors of
commodity ex-changes, or of specialists on some equitexchanges:
8. Exchange members manage the credit risk of their clie
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orbing temporary imbalances in the order flowspeculating on future price movements. In thisner, the ultimate source of liquidity in theket is more often a PTC account than a bank.
d, prime brokerage arrangements provideny-s trading for end-user PTC accounts, guarantee
gn exchange delivery to their clients, and giveaccounts access to the same pricing as largeal dealers. Surety of settlement is furtherforced be-se prime broker banks generally clearsactions among themselves through the CLSk.9
th, not only have PTC accounts been increasingr access to the main interbank tradingforms,e recently, several electronic portals that cater
e brokered PTC order flow have sprung up. Known
ectronic communications networks (ECNs),eese larger portals have been attracting trading
mes that are beginning to rival those of thenrbank platforms and multi-bank portals. (Anmple of an ECN is Hotspot FXi; its average dailyng volume is shown in Chart 4, below.10)
eover, while trading volumes on these exchange-ECNs have been building, an explicit exchange
el has already developed in foreign exchange:
thecurrency futures market at the ChicagoMercantileExchange (CME). Recent (December 2006)estimatesput average daily turnover volume for currencyfutureson the CME at US$80 billion. This rivals dailyturnoveron the main interbank portals and exceeds thaton themajor ECNs and multi-bank dealing portals.
Moreo-ver, volume growth on the CME is surging, sincePTCaccounts find the central clearing houseexchangemodel well suited to their preferred tradingstrategies.11
The CMEs electronic trading platform alsoprovidesthe high-speed API access and deep, liquidmarkets
9. The CLS Bank is a clearing organization sponsored by the worlds
major central banks through which investment dealers can settle their
trades. Surety of settlement is ensured through delivery-versus-
payment protocols: banks must deliver their side of the trade to the
CLS Bank before they will receive their counterpartys funds. More
recently, and for a variety of cost and techni-
cal reasons, some banks have been exploring the possibility of
netting trades between themselves outside of the CLS Bank.
10. Chart 4 also shows the average daily trading volume for
Currenex, an electronic platform that combines modules from multi-
bank portals and ECNs. FXall has recently introduced an ECN called
Accelor, which operates separately from its multi-bank portal.
11. At the CME and other futures exchanges, all trades are settled
through a central clearing house that provides total anonymity, surety
of settlement, and non-discriminatory pricing for all counterparties.
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Chart 4
Daily Trading Volume (end 2006)
$USbillions
200 200
Interbank
150 Futures Exchange 150
MBP
100 ECN 100
50 50
0 0
EBS Reuters CME FX FXall Currenex Hotspot
Connect FXi
Trading volume
Source: FX Week, 14 May 2007
that algorithmic trading routines depend on. As aresult, the average daily trading volumes on theCME may be growing more rapidly and gainingon the tra-ditional interbank trading platform.
While trading in currency futures contracts is notspot
foreign exchange, it provides an efficient meansofmanaging currency risk. Although this suitsmanyPTC accounts, spot foreign exchange settlementisimportant to a broader array of marketparticipants.Accordingly, to expand the exchange model, theCMErecently entered into a joint venture with Reuters,namedFXMarketSpace. This electronic trading platform
duplicates the exchange-market features of afuturesexchange, but in the spot foreign exchangemarket.Moreover, FXMarketSpace is open to all end-useraccounts: the PTC, banks, institutional moneymana-gers, and corporations. This essentially creates auni-versal C2C trading space where dealers(exchange
members) provide only market access and otheragency-
based ancillary trading services.
FXMarketSpace began trading early in 2and it isstill too early to assess its overall impacthe spotforeign exchange market. But regardlesswhetherFXMarketSpace or ECN-based exchangeprevailoreven new trading platforms and protocoto bedevelopedthe traditional paradigm of
geographi-cally confined, relationship-based, bank-intermediatedover-the-counter (OTC) market is beingincreasinglysuperseded by new participants, new busmodels,and new trading relationships that emboimportantelements of a global, C2C, exchange-stymarket.
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reased Liquidity in the Newrketign exchange trading volumes have soared as
iers toket accessthe priceealing ingn
hangee declined.only aretingketcipantsng more, but new participantsrapidly entering the market.The democratiza- of the foreign exchange market has resulted innvolvement of a much broader array of trading
unts. Indeed, much of the recent growth hasem PTC algorithmic traders, retail aggregators, cor-
te accounts, and institutional money managersare increasingly treating foreign exchange as
arate, tradable asset class.
The larger trading volumes,increasing ticket numbers, and
broader range of market participantshave improved the liquidity of
most currency pairs.
ddition to boosting trading volumes, this broader
e of market participants has increased the
diver-sity of opinion expressed in the market. Many ofthesenew accounts trade in huge volumes but willsplitorders into a myriad of smaller deals spreadthrough-out the trading day (growth in the number oftradetickets has exceeded growth in trading volume).Bymost measures, the larger trading volumes,
increasingticket numbers, and broader range of marketpartici-pants have improved the liquidity of mostcurrencypairs. For example, bid/offer spreads have beendra-matically compressed; market flow is moreevenlydistributed across the trading day; order booksaredeeper (there are more resting orders at everyprice
point); markets are more resilient to shocks; andbothhistorical and implied volatility have recentlybeentrending towards low levels.
Despite these measurable improvements, somehaveexpressed concern over the growing PTC role inpro-viding foreign exchange market liquidity becausetheseaccounts typically use highly leveraged,
aggressivetrading strategies.This may lead somespeculativeaccounts to overcrowd similar positions, toover-extrapolate existing price trends, or toinappropriatelyover-leverage price and credit risk. Suchbehaviour
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has the potential to make the foreign exchangemarket
less resilient or liquid under stressed conditions.Although the foreign exchange market has notrecentlybeen tested by a period of severe stress, theincreasedprice volatility observed in many global financialmar-kets through the summer and autumn of 2007was notaccompanied by a marked deterioration inforeignexchange market liquidity. To the contrary,anecdotal
evidence suggests that market participation byalgo-rithmic PTC accounts, as well as overall foreignex-change trading volumes, increased remarkablyduringthis period. By many accounts, liquidity remaineddeepin most foreign exchange markets even duringthemost volatile trading days of this extraordinaryperiod.12
Whether broader PTC participation and the use of
high-frequency trading algorithms have helped
to
moderate extreme price movements, or whethertheymay occasionally lead to price distortions andilliquidityin times of extreme market stress, remains anopenquestion in foreign exchange and in many othermar-kets. On balance, however, recent trading activity
sug-gests that broadening the foreign exchangemarket hasled to deeper liquidity, tighter pricing, moreadvancedtrading technology, and more flexible,accommodativecredit arrangements underlying market access(e.g.,through prime brokerage). Moreover, foreignexchangemarkets have arguably become moreoperationallyefficient as the automation of trading hasdramatically
lowered transactions costs. Allocativeefficiency hasalso improved as technological innovatioand newinstitutional trading arrangements have atradingrisks to be unbundled, priced separateltrans-ferred to those more willing to bear themallows
each market participant to manage thosein whichit has a comparative advantage.
As a result, the ongoing evolution in foexchange markets has benefited almomarket participants, not just the investment dealers or the PTC.
ConclusionThe foreign exchange market is in a pertransi-tion. Electronic trading platforms, algori
tradingstrategies, and a changing mix of mparticipantsare driving market growth and accountian creasingly large share of global trvolume. In theprocess, the market structure characterized foreign
12. There were some reports of illiquidity in forward c
markets during this period, reflecting credit and t
concerns, but liquidity in spot
eign exchange markets remained firm.
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hange through the mid-1990s is increasingly beingaced by a new structure that is different in
eral fundamental ways.
lines of demarcation between buy-side and
accounts; price-takers and price-makers;le-
and retail trading platforms; and marketers,ks, and the PTC are becoming increasinglyred.too, are the distinction between exchange-edOTC transactions and those between bank-
r-iated markets and disintermediated capital-. In place of a primarily domestic market largely
inated by local banks, foreign exchange is
ingards an electronically linked international mar-lace dominated by large global banks and non-k trading funds, where all participants canessdly similar pricing on a range of competing-c platforms, and where a growing professionalng community increasingly supplies more of the
dity and manages more of the price risks. Manyks are increasingly being disintermediated in the
gn exchange market and having to adjust theirness models accordingly, making difficultcesto where their core competencies lie: in an
agencyrole providing fee-based ancillary tradingservices, oras risk-managing principals.
The distinctions between various financial marketshavealso been blurring as this new market modelbecomesincreasingly multi-asset class in nature. ManyPTCaccounts have been moving into new assetclasses, looking for new sources of return. The
PTCs trading strategies have been generalizingto trade across dif-ferent asset classes simultaneously, exploitingcross-price movements on multiple financial products.Real money institutional investors also havereasons to trade multiple asset classessimultaneously (for example, to buy foreignassets and hedge them at the same time, or toactively manage currency-overlay programs fortheir multi-asset-class portfolios).
The organizational structure of many banks is
also evolving to reflect this new model.Departmental divi-sions are breaking down individual product silosin order to allow clients a more fully integratedmulti-asset-class approach to transacting business.
The skill set demanded of traders and dealers ischanging as well: individuals well versed in high-value-added, multi-asset-class trading solutionsare displacing sin-gle-product specialists who essentially providefor-eign exchange price quotes on demand.
Similarly, electronic trading platforms areevolving to reflect the multi-asset-class approachincreasingly
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demanded by influential PTC accounts. Severalelec-
tronic trading portalsincluding many thatoriginallyfocused on foreign exchangeare striving tointegrateother financial products into their platforms, bothbymerger and acquisition, as well as by internalproductdevelopment. Likewise, many public stock andcom-modity exchanges are not only moving awayfromtrading floors to electronic platforms, but are
alsolooking to bring a broader array of financialproductsinto their organizations to help amortize thehighfixed costs of advanced trading technologies.
As a result of these various inter-related, mutuallyreinforcing changes, foreign exchange (andother) markets are arguably becoming more open,transparent, and liquid. Operational efficiencieshave also improved as trading costs havedeclined and innovations in risk managementand broader market participation have allowedtrading risks to be unbundled, priced moreeffectively, and dispersed more broadly.
Literature CitedAite Group. 2007. Retail FX: Taking Center inOver-
all Market Growth. 23 July. Available at
.
Bank for International Settlements (BIS). 2007.
Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign
Exchange and Derivatives Market Activity in
April 2007: Preliminary Global Results.
Mone-tary and Economic Department. Available at
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Euromoney Magazine. 2007. Top Five
Consolidate
Lead in FX Market. July, pp. 165-78.
FX Week. 2007. Market Nonchalant aboutFXMS
Data. 14 May, p. 2.
Greenwich Associates. 2007. Electronic TradingSys-
tems Capture One-Half of Global FX Volume.
11 April. Available at .
HedgeFund Intelligence. 2007. GlobalHedge Fund
Assets Surge 19% to $2.48 Trillion.Press Release,
1 October. Available at .
NYSEData.com. 2007. NYSE GroupVolume in All
Stocks Traded, 2007. Available at
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e, T. 2007. Consolidation: Threat or Opportunityor FX Execution Venues? e-FOREX Magazine,anuary, p. 27.
t & Loss Magazine. 2007. FX Just Keeps on
Growing, Says Tower Group. July/August, p. 8.
urities Industry and Financial Markets Association
SIFMA). 2007. Average Daily Trading Volume in
U.S. Bond Markets. Available at .
West, K. 2007. Algorithmic Trading: Behind theTrade. International Banking Systems (IBS)
Journal(June) Trading Platforms Supplement: 10-
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