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Forex derivatives nudged out into the open as regulations increase costs

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Foreign-exchange investors are moving more of their over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives trades to lookalike products on exchanges to avoid higher costs due to recent global regulations, helping inject transparency into a multitrillion-dollar market that is largely hidden from the public eye.

The growing interest in clearing trades through an exchange comes as regulations capture more users of these contracts, bolstering the need to shift away from bilateral trading and manage rising compliance cost.

“There is more transparency, lower margin requirement overall (in trading listed products), which is a benefit for asset managers and hedge funds in leveraging their positions,” said Ben Feuer, head of FX trading and head of sales trading at Societe Generale in New York.

The gradual behavioral change in FX derivatives trading is being caused by increasing margin and collateral costs, said Joe Midmore, chief commercial officer at OpenGamma, a derivatives analytics firm.

Effective September 2022, buy-side firms with uncleared OTC derivatives totaling at least $8 billion are subject to the regulations – set by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and the International Organization of Securities Commissions – and have to ensure there is enough margin to cover the risk of a default by a counterparty to the transaction.

OTC derivatives are privately negotiated contracts while cleared derivatives, though bilaterally negotiated, are booked with a clearinghouse such as a listed exchange. The new margin rules exempt cleared trades.

Higher interest rates make posting margin more expensive.

“Lots of exchange salespeople have been going out to investors for a long time saying ‘look at how much more efficient trading in listed futures is,’ but it didn’t matter until now when interest rates are 5% instead of zero,” said Michael Riddle, CEO at Eris Innovations which partners with the CME Group and other exchanges to develop futures and options products.

The shift is most acute for buy-side firms that have to post margin for the first time, said Paul Houston, head of FX markets at CME Group.

“They will also incur the operational, legal and custody costs of setting up margin facilities as well as the capital costs of posting margin,” Houston said.

CME’s listed FX futures and options market now trades an average daily volume of $85 billion versus $76 billion in 2021, indicating more investors are using exchange-traded derivatives to replace OTC trades where possible.

That is still a fraction of the $7.5 trillion that trades daily in the FX markets, the vast majority of which happens OTC.

British clearing house LCH’s ForexClear also had a record May for FX options, surpassing $200 billion in notional value, meaning the total value of a derivatives trade, for the first time.

“For the buy-side, FX clearing materially lowers counterparty risk, enables portfolio optimization and provides operational benefits,” said James Pearson, head of ForexClear.

GROWING ACCEPTANCE

Some 60 firms started trading FX futures and options at the CME Group for the first time this year, more than two-thirds of which are buy-side clients, according to CME data. Last year, 300 firms were trading new instruments for the first time.

An estimated 775 firms came under the scope of the new rules last September, according to ISDA.

Some clients of Record Financial Group, a specialist currency and asset manager, were exploring listed alternatives while others were adjusting their risk management programs to “stay within or under the regulatory threshold,” said the firm’s head of sales, Tom Arnold.

Joe Spiro, director of product management at Hazeltree, said as a firm’s exposure grows more may have to adhere to the new rules, widening the appeal for trading on exchanges.

Investors can also now transact on a relationship basis as they do in the OTC space and access clearing.

For instance, some 274,000 contracts in privately negotiated blocks and exchange-for-related-positions (EFRPs), products that allow users to trade on a disclosed, relationship basis against their liquidity providers and access clearing, were traded on CME on March 8, up 23% from the previous record in December.

Client clearing of nondeliverable forwards at ForexClear for January to May reached $261 billion, 58% higher than the corresponding period in 2022.

Not all see the need to shift even with higher costs and not all derivative products have a cleared alternative, which limits broader adoption.

Exchange-traded futures contracts have a fixed settlement date relative to OTC forwards, making them unattractive to some investors, said Peter Vassallo, a portfolio manager for the currencies team at BNP Paribas Asset Management.

There are also concerns that pushing more trades to the clearinghouse will consolidate risk rather than reduce it.

“There is inherently risk involved in lots of people transacting derivatives with each other,” said Riddle. “And there is no model that removes all that risk, it only changes where it is, but can mitigate it.”

Forex

British pound extends losing streak on first trading day

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The British pound continued its historical trend of starting the year on a weak note, marking a seventh consecutive year of losses on the first trading day after New Year’s Day.

Deutsche Bank (ETR:) analysts noted that the pound fell over one percent today, contributing to a long-term pattern where sterling has only posted three positive returns on the first trading day of the past twenty years.

The bank’s analysis suggested that the pound’s performance is not isolated, as the Euro against the U.S. dollar () has shown a similar pattern, though slightly less pronounced. The movements in the Cable, the term used for the currency pair, often align with the repricing of relative interest rates at the start of the year.

However, today’s interest rate movements were minimal, despite a downward revision in the UK’s manufacturing PMI and more favorable unemployment claims data from the U.S.

Deutsche Bank attributed the additional underperformance of the pound to a “beta of the technical breaks” from last year, referencing the fall of the Euro to last year’s lows and the decline of the pound to multi-month lows.

The technical analysis suggests that these breaks in key support levels have contributed to the downward pressure on sterling.

Looking ahead, Deutsche Bank found no strong pattern that would indicate whether the initial losses of the pound on the first trading day would reverse or continue in the week following.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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Dollar trades higher on underlying strength in 2025

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Investing.com – The US dollar was trading higher on Thursday, the first day of 2025 trading, on hopes that U.S. growth will beat peers, a more hawkish Fed stance and expectations for the incoming Donald Trump administration.

At 12.30 ET (5:30 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.8% higher to 109.170. 

Dollar to remain in demand in 2025

The index rose 7% in 2024 as traders drastically cut back Fed rate-cut expectations in the wake of the projections of the policymakers after the December policy-setting meeting.

The US central bank projected just two 25 bp rate cuts in 2025 at its last policy meeting of the year, a sharp reduction from the four cuts it had indicated in September. 

In fact, markets are currently only pricing in 42 bps of cuts from the US central bank in 2025, with the return of Donald Trump to the White House adding a degree of uncertainty given his policies of looser regulation, tax cuts, tariff hikes and tighter immigration are seen as both pro-growth and inflationary.

Focus turns to the release later in the session of weekly numbers as well as the December number, for clues towards the strength of the US economy.

In Europe, traded 0.9% lower to 1.0258, following the more than 6% drop in 2024. 

Data released earlier Thursday showed that manufacturing activity in the eurozone declining at a faster rate at the end of the year, offering scant signals of an imminent recovery.

HCOB’s final , compiled by S&P Global, dipped to 45.1 in December, with the downturn broad-based as the bloc’s three largest economies – Germany, France and Italy – were stuck in an industrial recession. 

Traders expected more interest rate cuts from the European Central Bank in 2025, with markets pricing in 113 basis points of easing, much more than the Federal Reserve.

This divergence in Fed & ECB policy “will push the euro to parity vs the dollar in the course of 2025,” said analysts at ABN Amro, in a note.

traded 1.2% lower to 1.2366, adding to the fall of 1.7% last year, but was nevertheless the best-performing G10 currency versus the dollar.

UK rose in December, according to mortgage lender Nationwide, jumping by 0.7% in monthly terms during December, following a 1.2% increase in November. 

The resilience of the UK housing market has surprised many given indications of weakening activity across the wider economy, with prices ending the year 4.7% higher than their level of December 2023, up from 3.7% in November – the highest annual growth rate since late 2022.

The held interest rates unchanged last month after consumer prices rose above target, and this central bank is likely to remain more cautious than its eurozone counterpart in 2025.

Slowing Chinese manufacturing growth

In Asia, rose 0.6% to 7.3435, climbing to its highest level in over a year after data showed that the country’s manufacturing sector grew less than expected in December. 

The reading came just days after government PMI data also showed weaker-than-expected growth in the manufacturing sector. 

The prints ramped up concerns over a slowing economic recovery in China, with recent stimulus measures having provided only limited support. 

traded 0.35% higher to 157.79, amid a mostly dovish outlook for 2025 from the Bank of Japan.

 

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Asia FX skittish as dollar hits 2-yr high on bets of slower rate cuts

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Investing.com– Most Asian currencies moved in a flat-to-low range on Friday, pressured by strength in the dollar as traders positioned for a slower pace of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve in 2025.

Regional trading volumes remained slim on account of the new year holidays, with Japanese markets remaining closed until next week.

The Chinese yuan was among the worst performers in Asia, hitting its weakest level in nearly 16 months as a Financial Times report said the People’s Bank of China will cut interest rates further in 2025. 

The yuan, along with its regional peers, was also nursing steep losses in 2024, as the dollar benefited from a hawkish Fed and the prospect of protectionist policies under incoming President Donald Trump.

Dollar at 2-yr high as rate cut bets ease 

The and fell 0.1% in Asian trade after racing to a fresh two-year high on Thursday.

The greenback’s latest round of gains came after weekly data read stronger than expected, indicating that the labor market remained strong. A strong labor market gives the Fed more headroom in considering future monetary easing.

The central bank signaled during its December meeting that it will cut interest rates at a substantially slower pace in 2025, citing concerns over sticky inflation.

Resilience in the U.S. economy also gives the Fed less impetus to cut rates, although the Atlanta Fed’s was revised lower for the fourth quarter on Thursday. 

Chinese yuan weakens as PBOC flags more rate cuts 

The Chinese yuan was among the worst performers in Asia, with the pair rising nearly 0.4% to 7.3275 yuan- its highest level since September 2023.

The FT reported that the PBOC will cut interest rates further in 2025, as the central bank pivots to a more conventional monetary policy structure under a singular benchmark interest rate.

The monetary policy reform comes as a slew of liquidity measures largely failed to stimulate China’s economy over the past two years. This is expected to elicit more monetary easing by the PBOC, which bodes poorly for the yuan. 

The yuan was already nursing losses for the week, as purchasing managers index data released earlier showed slowing growth in China’s manufacturing sector.

Broader Asian currencies moved in a tight range, but were nursing steep losses in recent months as traders positioned for a slower pace of U.S. rate cuts in 2025. 

The Japanese yen’s pair fell 0.1% after hitting an over five-month high in late-December.

The Australian dollar’s pair rose 0.2%, while the South Korean won’s pair fell 0.2% amid repeated assurances of financial stability from the government. 

The Indian rupee’s pair steadied at 85.8 rupees after hitting a record high above 86 rupees earlier this week. 

 

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