Cboe Reports Higher Trading Volumes Across All Business Lines

, Inc. (Cboe: CBOE | NASDAQ: CBOE) has just reported ‎its trading volumes for the month ending August 2019, which saw a ‎stronger performance in key business segments.‎
During August 2019, Cboe disclosed a total trading volume for options contracts at 186 million, up 19 percent year-on-year from 156 million contracts back in August 2018. This corresponded to an average daily volume (ADV) of 8.45 million contracts per day, which was up 24 percent year-on-year from 6.81 million contracts per day in the same month a year earlier.

Additionally, the figures illustrated a similar pattern at the Cboe over a monthly interval, which in terms of total ADV volumes during August 2019 marked an increase of 25 percent month-on-month from 6.73 million contracts in July 2019.
Across its futures business, Cboe Global’s total volumes came in at 7.93 million contracts in August 2019, up by 36 percent over a yearly basis from 5.82 million contracts a year back. The figure also marks an advance of 53 percent month-on-month when compared with 5.19 million in July 2019. The exchange yielded an average daily volume (ADV) of 361,000 contracts per day, which was higher by nearly 42 percent from 253,000 contracts in the previous month.
FX business improves
Cboe’s institutional  saw its average daily trading volumes amounting to $33.92 billion in August 2019, up 20 percent month-over-month from $27.5 billion in July 2019. However, this figure is lower by five percent over a yearly basis when compared with $34.8 billion in the previous year.
Looking at its total volumes,  inked a figure of $728 billion in August 2019, up 15 percent on a month-over-month basis from ‎$632 ‎billion in July 2019‎. In a similar pattern, the figure was even lower by -9 percent year-over-year when weighed against $802 billion in August 2018.
August had been a more active month compared to July, but overall volatility is still benefiting from rising geopolitical tensions, concerns about US-led trade wars with several countries, and the prospect that the slow global economic growth is not nearing its bottom. Key currency pairs have departed its wait-and-see mode seen in the second quarter where they were stuck in narrow price ranges.

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