The composition of the market players offering electronic FX trading shifted somewhat over the past year. While traditional leaders in the face of Thomson Reuters and CME Group’s NEX acquisition kept things steady at the top, the company holding third spot changed in the latter part of 2018 as FXSpotStream raced ahead of CBOE FX.
Between 2017 and 2018, the dominance of the two biggest eFX trading volumes handlers which are reporting their numbers publicly declined by a touch over 5 percent. That said, Thomson Reuters and EBS are still holding close to two-thirds of eFX trading volumes as of 2018.
Over a year that was marked by low volatility, competition among market players has naturally increased. The trading venues have undertaken a number of initiatives to promote their services with FXSpotStream adding State Street in February and highlighting its NDFs offering which it launched in 2017.
We touched upon the in July last year, but towards the end of the year, that growth rate accelerated. FXSpotStream raced ahead of CBOE FX in the final quarter of 2018 and kept its lead intact in January.
The annual growth rate for January reached over 46 percent, a figure which was also highlighted by a monthly increase of 18 percent when compared to December of 2018. The company throughout last year and .
Asked about the reasons behind the growth of the company’s service, CEO Alan Schwarz pointed to FXSpotStream’s unique business model; the vast expansion of the offering beyond spot, which also includes swaps, forwards, NDFs/NDS and precious metal spot and swaps; the high touch level of support provided; and the continued migration of volume from anonymous to disclosed channels.
“FXSpotStream is the only bank owned consortium that offers a completely free disclosed service to taking clients while liquidity providers don’t pay a per transaction fee to trade with their clients, but rather pay a fee unrelated to the amount of volume transacted,” Schwarz explained.
Higher Volumes in a Slow Market
Overall, last year the foreign exchange market has been relatively slow. The first quarter proved to be somewhat active, as the US dollar ceded ground across the board. Over the next nine months however, the greenback slowly recovered its losses and finished the year close to unchanged.
Institutional traders have gradually lost appetite in the market as political uncertainty dominated the space in Europe. In the meantime the lack of further escalation in trade wars prevented any material trends from emerging. That didn’t prevent the overall volume across eFX products from increasing by 17 percent across the publicly reporting venues that Finance Magnates tracked.
With all that said and done, 2019 started with a bang for the FX market. Unfortunately for most traders however, the flash crash spike from the first big trading day of the year didn’t lead to a sustained rise in volatility.
Market Share Developments
When looking at market share developments across the eFX spectrum we are taking two different approaches. We first compared January 2018 to January 2019, a statistic that singled out FXSpotStream as the fastest growing eFX trading venue especially in the latter part of 2018 when it reported multiple records.
Looking at January 2019, the market share developments year-on-year show Thomson Reuters dropping by less than 1 percentage point when compared to January 2018 to just above 33% of the total volumes. CME Group’s NEX EBS division marks a more pronounced drop from 33% to 29%. CBOE FX drops slightly by about 1 point to just below 13%.
LMAX is another company that gained market share with a small bump to just below 5%. lost out to competitors over 2018, but is looking to an upbeat start in 2019 with roughly 7% of the total trading volumes transacted via venues tracked by the Finance Magnates Intelligence department.
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