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The Forex Markets – 2012 Review and 2013 Outlook

BY John Lothian » December 18, 2012 AT 8:58 am

By: Dean Popplewell, chief currency strategist and Alfonso Esparza, senior currency strategist, OANDA

As the foreign exchange community winds down a typically eventful year, investors are already looking ahead to 2013.  In 2012, central banks exerted control over their balance sheets which led to limited volatility and decreased opportunities. The global economy is expected to strengthen somewhat as the effects of last year’s global liquidity injections finally move from the “financial arena” to the real economy. Most analysts expect even the modest upticks in economic growth intersecting with still-accommodative monetary policies to provide support for other asset classes like global equities.

But how many more “questionable assets” can policymakers absorb on their balance sheets? Last year this provided sustained downward pressure on volatility and led to tighter trading ranges. In 2013, expect investors to seek out more risk to sustain high returns, which will lead to change in the self-investment process. The market should expect future investing to reflect the intensity of credit and political risk in high-yielding assets. The US output gap and labor market will again come under intense scrutiny. Can policymakers initiate the fiscal tightening required to make budgets work in the medium term without undermining the ongoing present activity?

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MarketFactory CEO James Sinclair Explores Trends in Foreign Exchange Market Structure

BY Ryan » December 12, 2012 AT 11:39 am
MarketsWiki.tv

James Sinclair is CEO and co-founder of MarketFactory, a financial technology company that provides feed handlers to the forex market. The company’s FX Aggregator product is a single API that connects to all sources of liquidity in the foreign exchange market, including ECNs, banks, brokers and futures exchanges.

Sinclair has been a foreign exchange market expert for over 25 years, having spent several years as head of research and strategy at EBS, both before and after its 2006 acquisition by ICAP. He also spent 12 years as a vice president of Asia/Pacific at Citibank. Sinclair spoke with John Lothian News Editor at Large Doug Ashburn about several FX market structure trends, including volume as measured by CLS, the relation between volume and volatility, the rise of the electronic options platform, and what sets foreign exchange apart from other asset classes. He closes with an optimistic look at some of the new platforms, suggesting there is a lot more there than meets the eye.

Geronimo Redux or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Fiscal Cliff

BY Douglas Ashburn » December 4, 2012 AT 9:41 am

With less than a month to go before the end of the year, there is still no deal to be reached to avoid the fiscal cliff, a $540 billion combination of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts set to kick in at year’s end.

A couple months ago I wrote a column on the fiscal cliff (Geronimo!, JLN Forex, August 21, 2012) in which I laid out the argument for simply taking a swan dive off the cliff, accepting the inevitable pain, and then get to work rebuilding the economy from scratch. Needless to say, my advice has not been heeded, nor is it expected to anytime soon, since it requires both bold action and honesty, two traits that are sorely lacking in Washington these days.

Since the publication of that column, I have been patiently biding my time, waiting for a “deal” to be reached so that I may blast it for kicking the can down the road by offering short-term window-dressing, while promising to make hard choices and steep cuts after the next election cycle.

FX Swaps and Forwards: A Special Case?

BY Douglas Ashburn » November 20, 2012 AT 9:31 am

After the financial world (and much of the press that covers it) had “powered down” for the weekend, the U.S. Department of the Treasury issued its long-awaited “final determination” on FX swaps and forwards last Friday. In the final ruling, Treasury essentially exempted these FX instruments from certain Dodd-Frank requirements such as mandatory clearing and trading on a designated contract market or a swap execution facility.

For a full summary of the rule and its history, I invite you to visit the FX Swaps Regulation page in MarketsReformWiki, but outlined below are a few salient points to consider when asking whether FX is indeed a “special case” in need of a special exemption, or whether Treasury just delivered an early Christmas present to the banking sector.

Of note, self-proclaimed industry watchdog Better Markets is livid, not only because of the exemption, but also the manner in which it was delivered. Important and controversial rulings such as this should not be issued after 5 pm on a Friday, right after the election, during Congressional recess, into the Thanksgiving-shortened week. “Shamefully manipulating the release of information to prevent scrutiny, analysis and criticism,” said Better Markets, “should simply never be engaged in or tolerated.”  

So here are a few arguments promulgated by Treasury when issuing its decision, followed by, in the words of Better Markets, “scrutiny, analysis and criticism.”

“The forex market has certain unique characteristics and pre-existing oversight functions which already reflect many of the Dodd-Frank Act’s objectives for reform – including high levels of transparency, effective risk management, and financial stability.”

Three words – Russian ruble crisis.

Plus, 2008-09 was no walk in the park for those of us trading FX derivatives at the time. Sure, the spot market was mostly orderly (except for a few key days when I really needed them to be orderly). At crunch time, though, the forward markets were just as unquantifiable as every other asset class.

Besides, if an asset class that “self-medicates” with its own transparency and risk management outside regulatory jurisdiction, does that mean it, too, can get an exemption? Is Treasury indicating to the interest rate and credit derivative markets that there is a path to exemption?  

“FX swaps and forwards are predominantly short-term transactions (68 percent of the market matures in one week or less and 98 percent in one year or less). This greatly reduces the counterparty credit risk prevalent in other swaps contracts.”

Wait a minute. Wasn’t it the blowing out of the LIBOR-OIS spread in 2008 that really got the ball rolling on the crisis? Very few financial instruments are shorter in duration than the overnight rate.

“Settlement of the full principal amounts of the contracts would require substantial capital backing in a very large number of currencies, representing a much greater commitment for a potential clearinghouse in the FX swaps and forwards market than for any other type of derivatives market.”

Uh-oh. It looks to me as if a regulator may have conducted a bit of cost-benefit due diligence, and did not like the outcome. The lack of adequate cost-benefit analysis first sunk the proxy access rule in 2011 and was used to beat back the position limits rule in September. Most recently, CME Group cited it in its recent spat with the CFTC over data sharing. Now, Treasury says a market must be exempt because it would be too expensive and impractical to collateralize. Does this open the door for more challenges?

All that aside, Treasury does make a couple of compelling points to support a special exemption for FX:

FX derivatives involve fixed, predetermined payments, making them resemble, say, insurance obligations, which were specifically defined as “not swaps” in the product definition rules. Plus, parties to FX swaps and forwards typically do not exchange periodic payments during the life of the transaction. Finally, such instruments do involve the exchange of actual principal.

I certainly see the point here. Where foreign exchange is used as a facilitator to the global balance of payments, adding a central counterparty and margin requirements to the mix would add a cumbersome layer of bureaucracy that would not necessarily serve the public interest.

Besides, the Treasury determination has not given FX a full exemption. Options and non-deliverable forwards must comply with the full slate of Dodd-Frank mandates. Swaps and forwards will still need to follow the new business conduct standards and all data must still be sent to a repository.

Is this enough to make FX swaps and forwards a special case?

One thing we know for sure is that FX derivatives have been wildly profitable for the mega-banks – over $3 billion in trading revenue in the second quarter of 2012 alone, according to the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. These banks, who have been lobbying intensely for the special carve-out, are the same banks that received government assistance during the crisis and who, to this day, have access to the free borrowing at the Fed window. Allowing them their status quo does not sit well with some of us.

Isn’t that special?

Harrell Smith of Portware on FX Market Structure

BY JLN Forex » November 6, 2012 AT 12:19 pm
MarketsWiki.tv

Harrell Smith is the head of product strategy for Portware, a software company specializing in trade execution systems for equities, futures, options and foreign exchange markets. He spoke with John Lothian News Editor-at-Large Doug Ashburn about several critical topics affecting FX, including the regulatory landscape, algorithmic and high-frequency trading, and transaction cost analysis.

Watch the Harrell Smith video at MarketsWiki.tv.

Rand / Ore

BY Jon Matte » October 23, 2012 AT 8:59 am

Quick commentary today, in honor of it being International Brevity Day.  I’m pretty sure that’s today because somebody shared an announcement for it on Facebook.
 
Looking at the South African rand versus USD, I see that it’s taken a smidge of a tumble in recent days (when viewed using the last several years as a backdrop).  My personal opinion on that subject is twofold:  I think it’s a miracle it hasn’t done far worse; and, it’s going to get far worse eventually.
 
I’m not much of a subscriber to doom and gloom forecasts that predict the end of the world.  Most of the time, what really happens in a crisis is that after a lot of noise and anxiety, things muddle along painfully for a while, getting a little worse before eventually straightening out.  And while I don’t think South Africa will fall any further into or out of the ocean than its present position, I also think that some complex events are just beginning to unfold there that will harshly challenge the region.
 

SURFACExchange CEO Evgeni Mitkov Discusses the Potential for FX Options

BY Ryan » October 16, 2012 AT 12:38 pm
MarketsWiki.tv

Evgeni Mitkov, CEO of SURFACExchange, launched the FX options ECN in August 2011. Just over a year later, they’ve attracted almost 50 firms by offering the ECN to currency options traders through a no-install browser-based platform. Mitkov spoke with JLN Editor-in-Chief Jim Kharouf during the Profit & Loss Forex Network Chicago, about how the FX market is holding up, how the participation base is shifting away from banks, and where the FX options space is moving.

Interview: Five Minutes with Michael Cairns, CEO, FX Solutions

BY Douglas Ashburn » October 2, 2012 AT 7:58 am

Michael Cairns is CEO of FX Solutions LLC and Managing Director, Americas and Middle East for the firm’s parent company, City Index Group. Cairns spoke with John Lothian News Editor-at-Large Doug Ashburn about the company’s history, the state of forex volumes, and emerging trends in FX.

Q. How did you get your start, and what brought you to New York from Northern Ireland?

A. My background is in trading. I worked previously in the U.K., first for Ulster Bank, then for National Westminster Bank. I came to New York 20 years ago to take up a position with NatWest Plc, to trade in interest rates – forward FX, interest rate futures, swaps, and some government securities as well.

I have been with FX Solutions since we started in 2001 and I’ve been responsible for a lot of the business rules and business logic calculations within our GTS trading system, a system launched in October 2002. We have added onto it and changed it through the years, but it is still our core system. We also offer the MetaTrader (MT4) trading platform, which is very well known globally, so we would be foolish not to incorporate into our offering as well.

In 2004-05 FX Solutions added a sister company called Financial Labs, consisting of a team of Harvard astrophysicists who algorithmically traded, via API, through multiple money-center banks. FX Solutions handled the reconciliations, the prime brokerage, and basically facilitated the trades. Although Financial Labs was sold on to Bank of America in 2007, much of our current risk management philosophy and price discovery comes from working with those guys.

In 2008 FX Solutions was purchased by City Index. Up until then, City Index had been involved primarily in contracts-for-differences (CFDs) and spread betting, especially in the U.K., so in purchasing FX Solutions they got a global footprint in forex. There were a lot of synergies and we have done a lot in the last four years to embed our software with theirs and vice versa.

Commentary: The addiction of the temporary fix

BY Jon Matte » September 27, 2012 AT 4:07 am

While aggregating news for various JLN newsletters this morning, I came across this press release:

Aggressive Central Bank Actions Will Continue As Long As Global Economic Prospects Remain Bleak, According to BNY Mellon-Sponsored Report
Central banks are unlikely to pull back from the more prominent role they have carved out for themselves following the financial crisis, according to a new BNY Mellon-sponsored report from the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), The Search for Growth: Central Banks in Uncharted Territory.
http://jlne.ws/NSL5nt
 
The report summary is unsurprising, but it misses out on a key supporting concept:  This is not merely a money issue.  Underneath the plans and goals of the global monetary system live billions of people.  Those people, whether running the banks or living in the effects of the economy, will latch quickly onto whatever makes them feel better or live better, and they will not willingly relinquish those life benefits simply to re-tune a system.  Witness the reactions around the world to austerity programs and proposals:  nobody wants to give up comfort or security to fix budget problems, whether individual, national or global.  
 
Personally, I think that’s a combination of, “Why should I live a hard life so that others can be more comfortable?” and “I have no assurance that by living a harder life, the incompetent administrators of my home/country/planet will actually fix anything for the future.” The first complaint, I can argue against in at least a couple of limited ways (not the least of which may be, “Because the money just isn’t there anymore”).  The second… not so much.  
 

Interview: Five Minutes with Colin Lambert, Editor, Profit & Loss

BY Douglas Ashburn » September 25, 2012 AT 7:48 am

Colin Lambert is Editor-in Chief at P&L Services, Ltd., publisher of monthly FX magazine Profit & Loss, and host of numerous conferences covering the foreign exchange market. Lambert, in town for this week’s Forex Network Chicago conference, sat down with John Lothian News Editor-at-Large Doug Ashburn to discuss Lambert’s migration from forex dealer to news editor, and what we can expect later this week when P&L brings its Forex Network conference series to Chicago.

Q. Tell us a bit about your FX background and your transition from trader to journalist.

A. I traded for, I believe it was 26 years, all foreign exchange, banking and corporate side. My job was a flow trader – basically a market maker. Around 2001 I saw the coming of the machines and thought, “soon they will be doing my job, so I should get out in front of it.” One of the few trades I got right.

I decided I would do something different. I figured I knew quite a bit about the foreign exchange market, so I could become a writer on the foreign exchange market. I was wrong, as it turns out, about how much I knew, because it was changing so amazingly fast. I switched over in 2001, right as the real e-commerce boom started in foreign exchange. It was a very high profile time for e-FX, because you had two platforms (FXall and Currenex) vying to be seen as the platform of the future. We already had EBS and Reuters matching, but this was a different concept.

I had been in the job about three weeks when [P&L founder Julie Ros] took an extended maternity leave and, all of a sudden I was “it.” It was a baptism of fire.

Q. By the time she returned, you had immersed yourself, then?

A. For me, it was one of the better things that could have happened, as it forced me to say, “I have got to learn this.” Fortunately, I knew a lot of people in the industry – people I had been trading with and working with – which gave me a good “in.” Luckily, I had a decent reputation as a trader, not letting people down, so that helps as a journalist.

Q. How did you get started with Profit & Loss?

A. Profit & Loss formed in 1999, and I joined in 2001 to sort of push the FX side of it. We focus on market structure. I don’t believe that as a monthly magazine, or even as a weekly, that you can really give good directional news reporting. That has got to be real-time. We focus on the infrastructure – the bank and multi-dealer platforms. We run the monthly magazine, plus the weekly publication, Squawk Box, and the conferences, which have been the biggest growth area over the last few years.

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