The year-on-year gains remain solid across most platforms despite fewer trading days
Fixed-income markets post broad gains, with Tradeweb ADV up 23% and credit volatility lifting MarketAxess
Foreign exchange (FX) trading volumes declined
month-over-month across major institutional platforms in February, but the
pullback largely reflected a shorter calendar rather than a loss of market
appetite. With only 19-20 trading sessions compared to January's 21, total figures
fell at most venues while average daily volumes held up or posted year-on-year
gains.
Cboe's spot FX platform processed $1.19 trillion in total
February volumes, down from $1.33 trillion in January across 20 trading days.
Average daily volume came in at $59.7 billion, compared to $63.3 billion the
prior month.
On a year-over-year basis, however, the picture looks
notably stronger, February 2025 had generated an ADV of $48 billion, putting
this February roughly 24% ahead of year-ago levels.
January's rebound had already set a high bar, with Cboe
posting $63.3 billion in daily turnover as dollar volatility returned to
markets. February's modest pullback from that level is broadly in line with
seasonal norms.
FXSpotStream and 360T Face Month-on-Month Dip
FXSpotStream's institutional ECN recorded total ADV of
$151.7 billion in February, with spot ADV at $105.6 billion and other products
contributing $46 billion. That compares to $154.3 billion total ADV in January,
a modest decline consistent with the reduced trading day count. Year-over-year
comparisons remain favorable given that the platform had reported $101.2
billion total ADV in January 2025, though February 2025 comparable figures were
not immediately available.
Deutsche Börse's 360T recorded total monthly volumes of
$798.2 billion in February, translating to average daily turnover of $39.9
billion. That daily figure edged up from January's $38.8 billion despite the
shorter month, suggesting underlying flow remained steady. In February 2025,
360T had posted an ADV of $33.9 billion, putting the year-on-year gain at
roughly 18%.
Euronext Trails Peers on Daily Average
Euronext FX processed $622 billion in total February volumes
with a daily average of $31.1 billion. That figure represents a decline from
January's $34.9 billion daily pace and sits modestly above the $29.4 billion
recorded in February 2025.
The platform has consistently trailed its European peer 360T
on ADV growth over the past year, a gap that widened further in February.
The month's more notable moves came in less-traded pairs.
Offshore Chinese yuan-yen contracts exploded 254.6% month-on-month to 46,382
contracts, while the Hungarian forint-yen pair jumped 30.7% to 61,009. The
Australian dollar-yen pair posted a 62.6% year-on-year gain, reaching 153,182
contracts.
On the other end, GBP/JPY and EUR/JPY both fell sharply, down
24.4% and 31.8% from January, respectively, and both more than 50% below their
February 2025 levels.
Outside spot FX, fixed-income electronic trading showed
robust year-on-year growth in February. Tradeweb Markets reported total monthly
trading volume of $61.8 trillion, with average daily volume reaching $3.1
trillion, up 23.4% from February 2025.
The company said rates derivatives ADV climbed 38.9%
year-on-year to $1.2 trillion, driven by what Tradeweb attributed to
"evolving U.S. inflation expectations, shifting global monetary policy
outlooks, and elevated geopolitical risk."
U.S. government bond ADV rose 6.4% to $268.4 billion, while
European government bond ADV jumped 34.5% to $77.3 billion, the firm said. Repo
ADV hit a record $866.4 billion, up 21% year-on-year, according to the company.
U.S. ETF ADV on the platform reached $10.8 billion, up 40.3%
year-on-year, with Tradeweb attributing the gain to broader client
participation and growth in automated trading adoption.
MarketAxess Sees Credit Gains Offset by Market Share Pressure
MarketAxess posted total trading ADV of $45.7 billion in
February, up 5% year-on-year but down 4% from January's $47.7 billion. Credit
ADV excluding single-dealer portfolio trading came in at $17.3 billion, 11%
above year-ago levels but 7% below January. The company operated across 19 U.S.
and 20 U.K. trading days.
Chris Concannon, CEO of MarketAxess
CEO Chris Concannon acknowledged pressure on the high-grade
market share metric, noting that "our estimated U.S. high-grade market
share in February was negatively impacted by strong new issuance and a decrease
in portfolio trading activity by our core clients." The company's
estimated share of fully electronic U.S. high-grade TRACE slipped to 16.7% from
17.6% in January and 17.8% a year earlier.
Still, the company pointed to growth across its newer
trading channels. Block trading ADV in U.S. credit rose 30% year-on-year to
$3.4 billion. Emerging markets ADV climbed 13% to $4.6 billion, and eurobonds
ADV gained 18% to $2.7 billion. Open Trading ADV rose 17% year-on-year to $5.4
billion, the firm said.
Concannon said the company believes "recent
geopolitical events, as well as the very strong new issuance calendar
year-to-date are supportive of a return to higher levels of volatility, as well
as an increase in the velocity of trading in the global credit markets."
Foreign exchange (FX) trading volumes declined
month-over-month across major institutional platforms in February, but the
pullback largely reflected a shorter calendar rather than a loss of market
appetite. With only 19-20 trading sessions compared to January's 21, total figures
fell at most venues while average daily volumes held up or posted year-on-year
gains.
Cboe's spot FX platform processed $1.19 trillion in total
February volumes, down from $1.33 trillion in January across 20 trading days.
Average daily volume came in at $59.7 billion, compared to $63.3 billion the
prior month.
On a year-over-year basis, however, the picture looks
notably stronger, February 2025 had generated an ADV of $48 billion, putting
this February roughly 24% ahead of year-ago levels.
January's rebound had already set a high bar, with Cboe
posting $63.3 billion in daily turnover as dollar volatility returned to
markets. February's modest pullback from that level is broadly in line with
seasonal norms.
FXSpotStream and 360T Face Month-on-Month Dip
FXSpotStream's institutional ECN recorded total ADV of
$151.7 billion in February, with spot ADV at $105.6 billion and other products
contributing $46 billion. That compares to $154.3 billion total ADV in January,
a modest decline consistent with the reduced trading day count. Year-over-year
comparisons remain favorable given that the platform had reported $101.2
billion total ADV in January 2025, though February 2025 comparable figures were
not immediately available.
Deutsche Börse's 360T recorded total monthly volumes of
$798.2 billion in February, translating to average daily turnover of $39.9
billion. That daily figure edged up from January's $38.8 billion despite the
shorter month, suggesting underlying flow remained steady. In February 2025,
360T had posted an ADV of $33.9 billion, putting the year-on-year gain at
roughly 18%.
Euronext Trails Peers on Daily Average
Euronext FX processed $622 billion in total February volumes
with a daily average of $31.1 billion. That figure represents a decline from
January's $34.9 billion daily pace and sits modestly above the $29.4 billion
recorded in February 2025.
The platform has consistently trailed its European peer 360T
on ADV growth over the past year, a gap that widened further in February.
The month's more notable moves came in less-traded pairs.
Offshore Chinese yuan-yen contracts exploded 254.6% month-on-month to 46,382
contracts, while the Hungarian forint-yen pair jumped 30.7% to 61,009. The
Australian dollar-yen pair posted a 62.6% year-on-year gain, reaching 153,182
contracts.
On the other end, GBP/JPY and EUR/JPY both fell sharply, down
24.4% and 31.8% from January, respectively, and both more than 50% below their
February 2025 levels.
Outside spot FX, fixed-income electronic trading showed
robust year-on-year growth in February. Tradeweb Markets reported total monthly
trading volume of $61.8 trillion, with average daily volume reaching $3.1
trillion, up 23.4% from February 2025.
The company said rates derivatives ADV climbed 38.9%
year-on-year to $1.2 trillion, driven by what Tradeweb attributed to
"evolving U.S. inflation expectations, shifting global monetary policy
outlooks, and elevated geopolitical risk."
U.S. government bond ADV rose 6.4% to $268.4 billion, while
European government bond ADV jumped 34.5% to $77.3 billion, the firm said. Repo
ADV hit a record $866.4 billion, up 21% year-on-year, according to the company.
U.S. ETF ADV on the platform reached $10.8 billion, up 40.3%
year-on-year, with Tradeweb attributing the gain to broader client
participation and growth in automated trading adoption.
MarketAxess Sees Credit Gains Offset by Market Share Pressure
MarketAxess posted total trading ADV of $45.7 billion in
February, up 5% year-on-year but down 4% from January's $47.7 billion. Credit
ADV excluding single-dealer portfolio trading came in at $17.3 billion, 11%
above year-ago levels but 7% below January. The company operated across 19 U.S.
and 20 U.K. trading days.
Chris Concannon, CEO of MarketAxess
CEO Chris Concannon acknowledged pressure on the high-grade
market share metric, noting that "our estimated U.S. high-grade market
share in February was negatively impacted by strong new issuance and a decrease
in portfolio trading activity by our core clients." The company's
estimated share of fully electronic U.S. high-grade TRACE slipped to 16.7% from
17.6% in January and 17.8% a year earlier.
Still, the company pointed to growth across its newer
trading channels. Block trading ADV in U.S. credit rose 30% year-on-year to
$3.4 billion. Emerging markets ADV climbed 13% to $4.6 billion, and eurobonds
ADV gained 18% to $2.7 billion. Open Trading ADV rose 17% year-on-year to $5.4
billion, the firm said.
Concannon said the company believes "recent
geopolitical events, as well as the very strong new issuance calendar
year-to-date are supportive of a return to higher levels of volatility, as well
as an increase in the velocity of trading in the global credit markets."
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
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