Institutional FX Volumes Rose Across Major Venues in June, Led by Cboe and FXSpotStream

Tuesday, 07/07/2026 | 19:00 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • Average daily volumes rose at Cboe, FXSpotStream, 360T and Euronext FX, with an extra trading day lifting the monthly totals further.
  • On Tokyo's Click 365, the Turkish lira overtook the dollar against the yen as traders crowded into high-yield carry pairs.
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Foreign exchange trading volumes rose across the largest institutional venues in June, with average daily activity up between roughly 6% and 9% from May at Cboe FX, FXSpotStream, 360T and Euronext FX.

The gains came alongside an extra trading session, but per-day figures also improved, pointing to a real pickup rather than a calendar quirk.

June carried 22 trading days against 21 in May, which lifted headline monthly totals more than the daily averages. Even so, the daily numbers extended a run of firm institutional activity that has held through most of 2026, after volumes jumped to start the year on renewed dollar swings.

Cboe and FXSpotStream Set the Pace

Cboe's spot FX platform handled $1.31 trillion in June, with average daily volume of $59.63 billion, up 8.7% from May's $54.86 billion, according to exchange data. That daily pace stayed below the $63.3 billion the venue clocked in January, still one of its stronger readings of the year.

FXSpotStream, the bank-backed aggregation service, reported total average daily volume of $160.05 billion, a 7.9% rise from May and above the $154.3 billion it posted in January.

Spot trading made up $113.19 billion of the daily average, with swaps and other products accounting for the rest. The platform has climbed steadily since the near-record volumes it set in early 2025.

Euronext FX and 360T Round Out the Gains

Euronext FX, the venue formerly known as FastMatch, processed $671.6 billion over the month for average daily volume of $30.53 billion, up 8.8% from May, based on its daily disclosures. That extended a slow recovery from the subdued readings of mid-2025, when low volatility pushed several platforms to multi-month lows.

360T, the FX arm of Deutsche Börse, ran higher again, with $932.7 billion in total volume and average daily activity of $42.39 billion, a 6.4% rise from May. The German venue's daily pace was about a quarter above its year-ago level, one of the steeper annual gains among the major platforms.

Venue

June ADV

MoM

YoY

Cboe FX (spot)

$59.63B

+8.7%

+23%

FXSpotStream (total)

$160.05B

+7.9%

+60%

360T

$42.39B

+6.4%

+25%

Euronext FX

$30.53B

+8.8%

+10%

TFX Click 365

83,679 contracts

+2.9%

+55.9% (total)

Source: Cboe, FXSpotStream, 360T and Euronext FX daily data, and TFX. ADV = average daily volume. Click 365 shown in contracts.

Turkish Lira Overtakes the Dollar on Tokyo's Click 365

The Tokyo Financial Exchange told a different story beneath the growth. Click 365, its retail-facing FX futures market, saw total volume rise 7.8% to 1.84 million contracts, but daily activity edged up just 2.9% to 83,679 contracts, meaning most of the monthly gain came from the extra session.

The bigger shift was in what traders bought. The Turkish lira against the yen jumped 40.6% from May to 701,623 contracts and sat 384.7% above its year-ago level, overtaking dollar-yen as the most active contract on the exchange.

Dollar-yen, long the anchor of Japanese retail FX, fell 36% on the month to 253,751 contracts and was down 37.4% from a year earlier.

Other high-yielders drew similar flows, with the Hungarian forint against the yen up 38.2% on the month and more than 800% on the year, the rand-yen pair up 22.1%, and the Mexican peso-yen holding near the top of the table.

The pattern points to demand for carry trades, where traders fund positions in a low-yielding currency like the yen to buy higher-yielding ones. FM has tracked the easing of the major yen crosses for several months as activity drifted toward exotic pairs.

Volumes Run Well Above Year-Ago Levels

Across venues, June activity sat far above the same month in 2025, when institutional FX was weathering the dollar's slide. Cboe's daily volume compared with $48.3 billion a year earlier, a 23% increase, against a June 2025 monthly total of $1.01 trillion.

FXSpotStream's daily average ran about 60% above the $99.8 billion it recorded in June 2025, while 360T was up around 25% from $33.9 billion, Euronext FX rose roughly 10% from $27.66 billion, and Click 365 volume was 55.9% higher than a year ago.

The strength fits a wider lift in trading demand, with retail flow hitting a record early in 2026.

Institutional desks have since booked some of their busiest stretches on record, a turnaround from the April 2025 peak that followed Trump's tariffs and the pullback that came weeks later.

Foreign exchange trading volumes rose across the largest institutional venues in June, with average daily activity up between roughly 6% and 9% from May at Cboe FX, FXSpotStream, 360T and Euronext FX.

The gains came alongside an extra trading session, but per-day figures also improved, pointing to a real pickup rather than a calendar quirk.

June carried 22 trading days against 21 in May, which lifted headline monthly totals more than the daily averages. Even so, the daily numbers extended a run of firm institutional activity that has held through most of 2026, after volumes jumped to start the year on renewed dollar swings.

Cboe and FXSpotStream Set the Pace

Cboe's spot FX platform handled $1.31 trillion in June, with average daily volume of $59.63 billion, up 8.7% from May's $54.86 billion, according to exchange data. That daily pace stayed below the $63.3 billion the venue clocked in January, still one of its stronger readings of the year.

FXSpotStream, the bank-backed aggregation service, reported total average daily volume of $160.05 billion, a 7.9% rise from May and above the $154.3 billion it posted in January.

Spot trading made up $113.19 billion of the daily average, with swaps and other products accounting for the rest. The platform has climbed steadily since the near-record volumes it set in early 2025.

Euronext FX and 360T Round Out the Gains

Euronext FX, the venue formerly known as FastMatch, processed $671.6 billion over the month for average daily volume of $30.53 billion, up 8.8% from May, based on its daily disclosures. That extended a slow recovery from the subdued readings of mid-2025, when low volatility pushed several platforms to multi-month lows.

360T, the FX arm of Deutsche Börse, ran higher again, with $932.7 billion in total volume and average daily activity of $42.39 billion, a 6.4% rise from May. The German venue's daily pace was about a quarter above its year-ago level, one of the steeper annual gains among the major platforms.

Venue

June ADV

MoM

YoY

Cboe FX (spot)

$59.63B

+8.7%

+23%

FXSpotStream (total)

$160.05B

+7.9%

+60%

360T

$42.39B

+6.4%

+25%

Euronext FX

$30.53B

+8.8%

+10%

TFX Click 365

83,679 contracts

+2.9%

+55.9% (total)

Source: Cboe, FXSpotStream, 360T and Euronext FX daily data, and TFX. ADV = average daily volume. Click 365 shown in contracts.

Turkish Lira Overtakes the Dollar on Tokyo's Click 365

The Tokyo Financial Exchange told a different story beneath the growth. Click 365, its retail-facing FX futures market, saw total volume rise 7.8% to 1.84 million contracts, but daily activity edged up just 2.9% to 83,679 contracts, meaning most of the monthly gain came from the extra session.

The bigger shift was in what traders bought. The Turkish lira against the yen jumped 40.6% from May to 701,623 contracts and sat 384.7% above its year-ago level, overtaking dollar-yen as the most active contract on the exchange.

Dollar-yen, long the anchor of Japanese retail FX, fell 36% on the month to 253,751 contracts and was down 37.4% from a year earlier.

Other high-yielders drew similar flows, with the Hungarian forint against the yen up 38.2% on the month and more than 800% on the year, the rand-yen pair up 22.1%, and the Mexican peso-yen holding near the top of the table.

The pattern points to demand for carry trades, where traders fund positions in a low-yielding currency like the yen to buy higher-yielding ones. FM has tracked the easing of the major yen crosses for several months as activity drifted toward exotic pairs.

Volumes Run Well Above Year-Ago Levels

Across venues, June activity sat far above the same month in 2025, when institutional FX was weathering the dollar's slide. Cboe's daily volume compared with $48.3 billion a year earlier, a 23% increase, against a June 2025 monthly total of $1.01 trillion.

FXSpotStream's daily average ran about 60% above the $99.8 billion it recorded in June 2025, while 360T was up around 25% from $33.9 billion, Euronext FX rose roughly 10% from $27.66 billion, and Click 365 volume was 55.9% higher than a year ago.

The strength fits a wider lift in trading demand, with retail flow hitting a record early in 2026.

Institutional desks have since booked some of their busiest stretches on record, a turnaround from the April 2025 peak that followed Trump's tariffs and the pullback that came weeks later.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
  • 3715 Articles
  • 115 Followers
About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch. Education: MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
  • 3715 Articles
  • 115 Followers

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