Demand for equities rises as multi-asset broker clients seek security.
Analysts anticipate significant stock market volatility over the remainder of 2023.
According to the 2023 UK online investing report from research firm Investment Trends, the number of traders who placed at least one stock trade in the preceding 12 months remained almost unchanged between May 2021 (1.2 million) and May 2023 (1.23 million).
Stock Trading Is the New Trend
However, stock trading activity appears to have increased recently. AvaTrade has observed an increase in stock trading volumes over the past few weeks, which can be partly attributed to the earnings season the Chief Market Analyst, Kate Leaman suggested.
Kate Leaman, the Chief Market Analyst at AvaTrade
“Additionally, customers seeking dividend-paying stocks could have contributed to this surge, as they often look for stable investments with regular income streams in tumultuous markets,” she said.
Historically, Pepperstone’s equity clients are biased to momentum strategies in high beta plays (such as technology and AI names, as well as Tesla) and although at this juncture price action is choppy, that could change as traders eye year-end flows and a seasonally strong period.
Chris Weston, Head of Research at Pepperstone
“There has been some pick up in traders capturing tactical opportunities, with oil plays and banks getting two-way interest,” explained Chris Weston, the Head of Research at Pepperstone. “US Q3 earnings are ramping up, so we should see good interest in names that have outsized moves on the day of reporting. We typically see momentum names going with the move, while counter traders typically like to take the other side - especially in stocks that have had big moves driven notably by a high accumulation of short interest.”
It has been suggested in some quarters that increased stock trading volumes have come at the expense of foreign exchange transactions, but neither Leaman nor Weston have detected this trend.
FX Volumes Are Still High
“FX trading volumes have remained notably high, which can be explained by an increasing number of customers diversifying their cash holdings into USD,” said Leaman. “The US dollar, being a global reserve currency, tends to be a preferred choice for diversification during periods of economic uncertainty.”
The rampant sell-off in US real rates and long-end treasuries moving closer to 5%, along with broad US exceptionalism, has seen good trending conditions across the USD pairs, although volumes would have been far higher if the USD rally had been premised on genuine risk aversion, Weston suggested.
Heads up traders - A quick look at the key known event risks for next week:
Economic Data - NZ CPI (17 Oct 08:45 AEDT) - UK employment rate/wage data (17 Oct 17:00 AEDT) - US retail sales (17 Oct 23:30 AEDT) - Canada CPI (23:30 AEDT) - Fed chair Jay Powell speaks at the…
“The primary driver has been US economic resilience and a blow up in rising real rates,” added Weston. “There is certainly a view that central banks are done hiking, but when the bulk of clients are technically focused the view on rates is less important than reacting to intra-day price action.”
Alexander Kuptsikevich, a Senior Analyst at FxPro referred to a strong positive correlation between FX traders’ activity (in term of both numbers and volume) and market volatility. “So it was a quiet summer followed by a busy second part of September as the most traded instruments started updating their local extremes,” he said.
Alexander Kuptsikevich, Senior Analyst at FxPro
Kuptsikevich expects FX market volatility to increase notably in the next couple of weeks before reversing later in the year. “For EUR/USD it may be a new multi-month low that will wipe out a lot of retail positions from the market following a strong reversal,” he added.
With escalating tension in the Middle East exacerbating supply concerns, oil prices could remain elevated across the final quarter of the year, supporting the view that central banks will need to keep rates higher.
Fiona Cincotta, Senior Financial Markets Analyst at StoneX
“The mismatch between the Fed’s dot plot and the market pricing for rates creates a potential source of volatility in the market,” explained Fiona Cincotta, a Senior Financial Markets Analyst at StoneX. “The Fed and the market can’t both be correct so at some point over the coming quarter either the market will reprice a higher probability of a rate hike, or the Fed will lower its guidance.”
Russell Shor, a Senior Market Specialist at FXCM agreed that stock markets are set up for an interesting end to the year.
“As we move into Q4, the major US indices such as the S&P 500, the Nasdaq and the Dow Jones Industrial Average are all showing concerning signs,” he said. “They have charted lower peaks followed by lower troughs on significant time frame measures, which denotes weakness. Moreover, the smaller companies’ index, the Russell 2000, which is considered closer to the macroeconomics on the ground is also weak.”
Market participants face a number of uncertainties. The ‘higher for longer’ interest rate environment is acting as a headwind to risk markets, as is geopolitical risk. Potential earnings fragility and forward guidance are adding to concerns, while the big six US banks, cornerstones of bull markets, are underperforming.
Anticipated volatility in stock markets over the remainder of 2023 can be attributed to the uneasy political situation in the US, suggested Leaman.
“In addition, the holiday season tends to introduce volatility in financial markets,” she added. “During this period, trading activity can be affected by lower liquidity as many market participants take time off, which can exacerbate price fluctuations.”
Weston also expects volatility to rise but is hesitant to predict anything that could be considered disorderly. “A change in Bank of Japan policy that was not well telegraphed could see higher volatility across G10 FX, and China’s property sector has landmines that need monitoring,” he said.
“However, the US economy is the main issue, and timing a recession, if it comes at all, is still the big ticket risk to manage over the medium term. That is a Q2 2024 story at best and the Fed has already shown an appetite to react if needed and could use its balance sheet in any emergency.”
According to the 2023 UK online investing report from research firm Investment Trends, the number of traders who placed at least one stock trade in the preceding 12 months remained almost unchanged between May 2021 (1.2 million) and May 2023 (1.23 million).
Stock Trading Is the New Trend
However, stock trading activity appears to have increased recently. AvaTrade has observed an increase in stock trading volumes over the past few weeks, which can be partly attributed to the earnings season the Chief Market Analyst, Kate Leaman suggested.
Kate Leaman, the Chief Market Analyst at AvaTrade
“Additionally, customers seeking dividend-paying stocks could have contributed to this surge, as they often look for stable investments with regular income streams in tumultuous markets,” she said.
Historically, Pepperstone’s equity clients are biased to momentum strategies in high beta plays (such as technology and AI names, as well as Tesla) and although at this juncture price action is choppy, that could change as traders eye year-end flows and a seasonally strong period.
Chris Weston, Head of Research at Pepperstone
“There has been some pick up in traders capturing tactical opportunities, with oil plays and banks getting two-way interest,” explained Chris Weston, the Head of Research at Pepperstone. “US Q3 earnings are ramping up, so we should see good interest in names that have outsized moves on the day of reporting. We typically see momentum names going with the move, while counter traders typically like to take the other side - especially in stocks that have had big moves driven notably by a high accumulation of short interest.”
It has been suggested in some quarters that increased stock trading volumes have come at the expense of foreign exchange transactions, but neither Leaman nor Weston have detected this trend.
FX Volumes Are Still High
“FX trading volumes have remained notably high, which can be explained by an increasing number of customers diversifying their cash holdings into USD,” said Leaman. “The US dollar, being a global reserve currency, tends to be a preferred choice for diversification during periods of economic uncertainty.”
The rampant sell-off in US real rates and long-end treasuries moving closer to 5%, along with broad US exceptionalism, has seen good trending conditions across the USD pairs, although volumes would have been far higher if the USD rally had been premised on genuine risk aversion, Weston suggested.
Heads up traders - A quick look at the key known event risks for next week:
Economic Data - NZ CPI (17 Oct 08:45 AEDT) - UK employment rate/wage data (17 Oct 17:00 AEDT) - US retail sales (17 Oct 23:30 AEDT) - Canada CPI (23:30 AEDT) - Fed chair Jay Powell speaks at the…
“The primary driver has been US economic resilience and a blow up in rising real rates,” added Weston. “There is certainly a view that central banks are done hiking, but when the bulk of clients are technically focused the view on rates is less important than reacting to intra-day price action.”
Alexander Kuptsikevich, a Senior Analyst at FxPro referred to a strong positive correlation between FX traders’ activity (in term of both numbers and volume) and market volatility. “So it was a quiet summer followed by a busy second part of September as the most traded instruments started updating their local extremes,” he said.
Alexander Kuptsikevich, Senior Analyst at FxPro
Kuptsikevich expects FX market volatility to increase notably in the next couple of weeks before reversing later in the year. “For EUR/USD it may be a new multi-month low that will wipe out a lot of retail positions from the market following a strong reversal,” he added.
With escalating tension in the Middle East exacerbating supply concerns, oil prices could remain elevated across the final quarter of the year, supporting the view that central banks will need to keep rates higher.
Fiona Cincotta, Senior Financial Markets Analyst at StoneX
“The mismatch between the Fed’s dot plot and the market pricing for rates creates a potential source of volatility in the market,” explained Fiona Cincotta, a Senior Financial Markets Analyst at StoneX. “The Fed and the market can’t both be correct so at some point over the coming quarter either the market will reprice a higher probability of a rate hike, or the Fed will lower its guidance.”
Russell Shor, a Senior Market Specialist at FXCM agreed that stock markets are set up for an interesting end to the year.
“As we move into Q4, the major US indices such as the S&P 500, the Nasdaq and the Dow Jones Industrial Average are all showing concerning signs,” he said. “They have charted lower peaks followed by lower troughs on significant time frame measures, which denotes weakness. Moreover, the smaller companies’ index, the Russell 2000, which is considered closer to the macroeconomics on the ground is also weak.”
Market participants face a number of uncertainties. The ‘higher for longer’ interest rate environment is acting as a headwind to risk markets, as is geopolitical risk. Potential earnings fragility and forward guidance are adding to concerns, while the big six US banks, cornerstones of bull markets, are underperforming.
Anticipated volatility in stock markets over the remainder of 2023 can be attributed to the uneasy political situation in the US, suggested Leaman.
“In addition, the holiday season tends to introduce volatility in financial markets,” she added. “During this period, trading activity can be affected by lower liquidity as many market participants take time off, which can exacerbate price fluctuations.”
Weston also expects volatility to rise but is hesitant to predict anything that could be considered disorderly. “A change in Bank of Japan policy that was not well telegraphed could see higher volatility across G10 FX, and China’s property sector has landmines that need monitoring,” he said.
“However, the US economy is the main issue, and timing a recession, if it comes at all, is still the big ticket risk to manage over the medium term. That is a Q2 2024 story at best and the Fed has already shown an appetite to react if needed and could use its balance sheet in any emergency.”
Paul Golden is an experienced freelance financial journalist with a strong institutional background. Over the past two decades, he has written for globally recognised financial publications, covering topics such as market structure, regulation, trading behaviour, and economic policy.
TradeStation Takes the MiFID Route to Bring Europe Closer to Wall Street
Featured Videos
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment