Foreign Exchange Markets: Market Structure

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Market Structure

FOREIGN EXCHANGE MARKETS


An FX transaction involves the purchase of one currency
Overview against the sale of another currency for settlement (or
value) on a specified date. The rate of exchange is the
price per unit of one of the currencies expressed in units of
In this introductory section we describe the broad
the other currency.
structure and composition of the foreign exchange (FX)
markets. We also discuss briefly the main regulators in
About USD 30 billion of goods and services are traded
this market and the reasons why some regulation is
necessary. across international borders every day. To help fund this
trade, banks around the world lend to their prime
Objectives customers in almost any currency. In turn, the banks
make a market amongst themselves in multicurrency
By the end of this section you will be able to: funds - banks short of one currency borrow or buy it from
banks that are long (have a surplus) in that currency. FX
Identify the major currencies traded in the FX involves the debit of a bank call deposit in one currency
markets and the simultaneous credit of another deposit
denominated in a second currency.
Describe the key market players and regulators, and
how they interact Comparable sums of investment funds cross borders every
day in search of higher returns, safe havens or both.
Keywords Whenever a debt instrument matures, the beneficiary has
the option of reinvesting the money in another instrument
Over the counter (OTC) markets
bearing a different currency denomination, and this gives
Exchange-traded markets
rise to a foreign exchange transaction. Through a network
Market maker
of correspondent relationships, banks transfer payments
Inter-bank broker
from importers to exporters, and exchange the currency of
Spot fx
those payments. Modern communications allow the almost
Forward fx
instantaneous transfer of funds almost anywhere in the
Federal Reserve
world.
Bid and offer rates
A pip
However, the great bulk of FX operations nowadays is not
Herstadt risk
directly related to either international trade or to
ACI The Financial Markets Association
investment. Approximately $1 trillion worth of currency
ISO codes
changes hands every day1. This suggests that perhaps
SWIFT
most FX transactions within the inter-bank market might
be of a purely speculative nature2.

Estimated completion time: 30 minutes

1
London remains by far the largest FX trading centre and
the majority of trades involve the USD as one of the
currencies see the largest latest Triennial Central Bank
Survey of the FX markets published by the Bank of
International Settlements (http://www.bis.org)

2
In fact, many apparently speculative FX deals between
banks reflect the market's way of digesting lumpy
corporate or institutional business. A dealer buying
hundreds of millions of dollars from a customer will cover

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 1


An OTC Market Currency Pair Notation

The FX and the associated money markets are primarily Throughout this course we shall follow the ACI5 convention
over-the-counter (OTC) markets, as opposed to of denoting a currency pair in the following format:
exchange-traded markets. In other words, currency Base currency / Counter-currency
denominations, amounts, settlement dates and price are
all negotiable between the two parties and there are no Thus, US dollar-Swiss franc would be expressed as
pre-defined contract specifications or exchanges that USD/CHF, where the dollar is the base (or unit) currency;
regulate how trading is performed3. Trading information sterling-dollar (known as cable) would be expressed as
is confidential to the parties concerned and there is no GBP/USD, where sterling is the base currency, and so on.
obligation to disclose it. There are no pre-specified
delivery dates, as in futures exchanges, although for Most FX dealers specialise in one or a small group of
indication purposes market makers quote rates for closely related currencies. In fact, there is not just one FX
various fixed dates, such as spot delivery, 1, 2, 3 and 6 market, but groups of more or less interrelated currency
months forward delivery, etc. pairs. Some of the main 'traffic' routes are:

FX dealers are linked round-the-clock via telephone, EUR/USD


computer networks and, increasingly nowadays, the USD/JPY
Internet. There is no physical marketplace, but there is USD/C|HF
always at least one financial centre open for business at GBP/USD
any time somewhere in the world. The Scandinavian currencies
The Asian currencies
Currency Composition The Middle Eastern currencies
Exotic or emerging market currencies
Since the end of World War II, most countries have
The overwhelming majority of FX transactions include the
settled their trade debts by purchasing or selling
USD as one of the currencies6, which is not surprising
currencies against US dollars (USD4).
considering the popularity of the dollar as the worlds
preferred currency of invoicing and investment.

In the 1950s, an inter-bank dealer in London or New York


would have typically quoted a rate of exchange in a major
currency pair in an amount of USD 10,000. By the end of
the 1960s the normal market size was USD 1,000,000
("one dollar" in dealers' jargon). Today one dollar is the
minimum amount quoted, with deals of USD 3 - 10 million
being the norm. Deals of USD 200 500 million at a time
are not uncommon in todays market. Liquidity in the
major currencies is extremely high, but the more exotic
his risk by laying off some of the currency with other currencies can be very thinly traded at times, which can be
market makers. treacherous for the inexperienced trader.

3
There are currency futures traded on various futures Market liquidity
and options exchanges, but the size of these markets is The ease with which a large trade may be executed without
small in relation to the size of the OTC FX markets. causing a significant movement in the price.

4
Throughout this section we refer to currencies by their
codes specified by The International Organisation for
Standardisation (ISO), a body based in Geneva 5
ACI The Financial Markets Association, see below.
responsible for, among other things, designating a
6
common language of currency codes. For a full listing of An FX transaction that does not involve the USD as one of
ISO codes, see the Appendix below. its currencies is known as a cross trade or just a cross.

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 2


Commercial and Investment Banks

Market Participants Commercial banks provide integrated FX, deposit and


payments facilities for customers. They also make an
Central Banks active market amongst themselves in currencies and
deposits. They represent the bulk of the inter-bank market.
Central banks play two key roles in the FX and money Banks acting as FX market makers continuously alter their
markets: rates of exchange so as to balance the supply and demand
for each currency within their own books, hopefully for a
They oversee the maintenance of an orderly and profit.
ethical market
Market Information Vendors
They control the domestic money supply and interest
rates In London there are over 500 banks from all over the world
involved in FX operations, although less than 50 of these
Central banks intervene to smooth out fluctuations in the
are active market makers. This is still a sufficiently large
markets by using their stock of official foreign currency number to cause market users a problem in deciding which
reserves or by influencing interest rates through money of the major dealing banks is quoting the best rate of
market operations. Among the most active central banks exchange. One solution is provided by the market
are the Federal Reserve System (the Fed), the European information vendors, who may not be considered market
Central Bank (ECB), Bank of Japan, Bank of England, and participants as such but nonetheless play a vital role in the
Banque Nationale Suisse. Where there are exchange whole process. Terminals supplied by companies such as
controls, central banks fix the official rates of exchange Reuters, Telerate, Bloomberg and other vendors show the
and act as the obligatory counterparty in any FX latest rates of exchange being quoted by the major banks
transaction. and brokers.

FX Rates on Telerate Page 256


Source: Dow Jones Telerate.
For an explanation of the rates shown on this page see module Spot FX in
Magellan.

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 3


Inter-bank and electronic Brokers The banks feed their buying and/or selling prices to the
broker using a dedicated communications line. The broker
Inter-bank brokers relay prices received from banks via a assembles the rates received and broadcasts the best bid
telecommunications network to all the other banks and and the best offer, together with the amounts available for
some large market users via voice broadcasting7 and trading, if relevant.
electronic systems. These are live rates at which the
quoting banks must be prepared to deal, usually for an A subscriber wishing to trade at one of the prices broadcast
accepted market amount. The brokers themselves are simply calls the broker using the dedicated communications
not allowed to take FX positions. line and hits the bid or lifts the offer. The broker will not
disclose the names of the two parties until a positive
A broker broadcasts to all its clients the highest rate commitment has been made by both sides. By accessing
currently paid by banks buying a currency (the bid) and the market through a broker, smaller banks can transact at
the lowest rate asked by banks selling the currency (the prices which they might never be quoted if they went
offer). directly to the market maker.

The broker and its Clients


The currency is spot EUR/USD and the current spot rate is around 0.92:

Bank A bids euros at 0.9217 but does not specify the amount
Bank B bids at 0.9218 for EUR 5 million
Bank C offers EUR 10 million at 0.9222
Bank D offers EUR 16 million at 0.9226

The broker takes the highest bid (0.9218) and the lowest offer (0.9222) and
broadcasts back to all clients the current market rate of 0.92 18/22, with
EUR 5 million on the bid side and EUR 10 million on the offer.

7
The little box that sits on the dealers desk and
continuously broadcasts the brokers prices is affectionately known as the hoot-n-holler or the squawk
box.

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 4


normally concerned with covering or hedging their foreign
Brokers operate on a commission basis, which is related
currency exposures. However, the distinction is blurred
to the amount, size and complexity of deal required.
because some companies - and of course some investors
as well - are aggressive speculators in their own right and
Typical FX brokerage in major currencies can range from
8
actively take positions in currencies. Many of the large
$10 to $50 - up to a pip - per $1 million dealt. This is
multinationals have set up their own in-house banks,
a small cost for the infrequent dealer, but not for banks
complete with dealing rooms and sophisticated risk
turning over tens of billions of dollars daily. Large clients
management departments.
typically negotiate volume discounts on their brokerage
and this makes their business more cost-effective.
Government and quasi-government agencies may also be
major players, particularly those of developing countries or
The market is dominated by a small number of London or
centralised economies, where the traditional import and
New York-based broking groups operating locally through
export business is often channelled through government
wholly- or partly-owned subsidiaries. The market is also
monopolies. These bodies can enter the FX markets in very
serviced by several electronic deal matching systems:
large amounts.
EBS, which is owned by a consortium of large commercial
banks, and Instinet which is owned by Reuters. Under
Margin Traders
these systems, market makers input their bids and offers
into special terminals at their offices and the whole Buying foreign currency through the retail branches of
function of matching bids with offers is handled by a
banks has no effect whatsoever on the market. Private
central computer, making the whole process of dealing
investors can speculate on the currency markets using the
very simple and quick, without the need for an
currency futures markets or through their banks by placing
intermediary.
collateral into margin accounts.

The market share previously captured by inter-bank


The currency futures markets are tiny in comparison with
brokers (over 40% of all FX business) has been adversely the traditional OTC markets. However, many inter-bank
affected by the growth of these systems. Some 30% of dealers monitor the futures markets closely and often react
all FX business is now channelled through electronic to movements there. Occasionally, small futures
systems, although most dealers will not rely exclusively speculators can provoke a stampede in the OTC market - a
on them because they still want to sense the mood of classic case of the tail wagging the dog'.
their brokers or counterparties.

Corporations and Institutions A Zero-Sum Game?


These are the main end-users of the FX and money
markets. Companies use these markets to manage their If someone wins, must someone else necessarily lose in
cash flows in the same or different currencies. the FX market? Looking at the different players, it is true
Institutional investors, which manage a very large part of statistically that commercial banks tend to win out over all
the domestic and international financial assets, use the the others. They tend to be net gainers because they know
FX markets to structure their portfolios across a range of the markets better; they are after all the market makers.
currencies. Changes in the patterns of corporate and They also win over central banks simply because profit is
institutional cash flows have profound and often lasting not the principal criterion of central bank intervention.
effects on currency trends, and the banks which detect
these changes early stand to make large profits on that
information.

Traditionally, banks take on currency risk, while


corporate and institutional users of the FX markets are

8
A pip on a EUR/USD rate is 100th of a USD cent.

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 5


The inter-bank market has its own league table of MARKET REGULATION
banks.
The FX and associated Eurocurrency markets have never
Division 1: commercial (money-centre) banks been greatly regulated. Governments have always feared
which handle large flows of corporate, institutional that without controls a relatively minor accident could
and personal business and are very active market easily snowball into global financial chaos. This almost
makers. happened in July 1974, when Herstadt Bankhaus, a small
family bank in West Germany, overtraded in the FX market
First division banks can build up large positions which forcing the Bundesbank to freeze its operations right in the
can move the markets. They can, for example, middle of the day, when payments to and from Herstadt
execute deals of USD 100-500 million or equivalent in were still being processed.
the major currencies in a matter of seconds.
Panic spread throughout the dealing rooms. Large
But their main asset is not financial muscle: it is depositors decided to deal only with the world's top ten or
information. The more active a bank is in the markets fifteen banks, whose balance sheets were comfortably
the more business it wins and the more market large. The problem was that those banks being offered
intelligence it gathers - about who is in the market deposits had no place to invest them, and those - the vast
and the size of the flows. The price to pay for this is a majority - who were not offered the deposits, were
willingness to be a competitive buyer or seller under desperate for funds. The crisis occurred at a time of high
any market conditions - sometimes at a loss. inflation and soaring interest rates. Loan maturities right
across the board shortened dramatically and FX volume
Division 2: the smaller European banks, US regional contracted.
banks, Middle Eastern banks and Far Eastern banks.
Central banking authorities, especially in Germany, have
Second division banks tend to be more customer- since taken steps to prevent a repetition of the Herstadt
driven. They make prices for their customers, but any incident, but that banks name has now been immortalised
significant positions will be quickly covered in the in the technical vocabulary to denote a specific type of risk.
market. Sometimes they will line up a third party in
the market before giving the customer a price, with a Herstadt Risk
built-in profit margin.
The risk of loss arising from the settlement of an FX
This arrangement may sound like easy money for operation, whereby one of the counterparties to the trade
these banks, but the customer may not be a known fails after the other one has issued payment instructions.
name in the market. By intermediating between the Also known as: Settlement risk, Clean risk.
customer and the money centre banks, these smaller
banks provide a valuable service to their customers. In module Risk Management we examine how FX risks,
including Herstadt risk, are managed in the dealing room.
In Britain, major banks that participate in the Eurocurrency
markets must work within guidelines set by the
Supervisory Office of the Bank of England. They have to
report on a daily basis their outstanding foreign currency
positions and projected treasury cash flows. They must
also satisfy the central bank that they have the internal
systems necessary to process the volume of business and
monitor the risks involved.

More recently, the Bank for International Settlements and


the EU have established clear guidelines for supervising the
capital adequacy of international banks. The aim is to
ensure that banks have sufficient capital resources to cover
the risks on their operations, including FX. The supervisors

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 6


dilemma remains one of imposing adequate controls to
eliminate market excesses without at the same time
stifling competition and innovation, which are the
hallmarks of the international markets.

ACI The Financial Markets Association

ACI was founded in France in 1955 by an agreement


between the Forex Associations in Paris and London.
Other national Forex Associations were soon formed and
there are now Forex Associations affiliated to the ACI in
54 countries with a membership totalling more than
25,000 people. ACIs aim is:

"To be regarded within the business community, financial


services industry and by the authorities and media as the
leading association representing the interests of the
financial markets and to actively promote the educational
and professional interests of the financial markets and
industry."

If you are a practitioner in the FX markets, you should be


both familiar with, and seek to uphold the ACI Code of
Conduct, which governs market etiquette9

REVIEW QUESTIONS

1. Which of the following groups do not normally take positions in the FX markets?

A Brokers
B Central banks
C Governments
D Commercial banks

2. If an inter-dealer broker quotes 20/22, 10 by 20, this means:

A There is a bid at 20 for 10 million and an offer of 20 million at 22


B There is a bid at 22 for 20 million and an offer of 10 million at 20
C There is a bid at 10 for 20 million and an offer of 22 million at 20
D There is a bid at 20 for 22 million and an offer of 20 million at 10

9
ACIs Code of Conduct is discussed in a separate
section. See also http://www.aciforex.com

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 7


Answers to Review Questions

1:A; 2:B

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 8


APPENDIX
SWIFT10 Currency Codes
Americas
Europe
Argentina ARS
Austria ATS
Bahamas BSD
Channel Islands GBP
Bermuda BMD
Croatia HRN
Brazil BRL
Czech Republic CZK
Canada CAD
Denmark DKK
Mexico MXN
Euro EUR
Panama PAB
Finland FIM
USA USD
Greece GRD
Asia Pacific Hungary HUF
Iceland ISN
Australia AUD
Israel ILS
China CNY
Luxembourg LUF
Hong Kong HKD
Malta MTL
India INR
Norway NOK
Indonesia IDR
Poland PLN
Japan JPY
Romania ROL
Korea (Republic) KRW
Slovakia SKK
Macau MOP
Slovenia SIT
Malaysia MYR
Sweden SEK
New Zealand NZD
Switzerland CHF
Pakistan PNR
UK GBP
Philippines PHP
Singapore SGD Middle East & Africa
Sri Lanka LKR
Bahrain BHD
Thailand THB
Jordan JOD
Kenya KES
Kuwait KWD
Lebanon LBP
South Africa ZAR
Tunisia TND
UAE AED

10
SWIFT (The Society for Worldwide Inter-bank
Financial Telecommunication) is a multinational facility
for the transfer of inter-bank funds based in Belgium and
the Netherlands. Payment instructions are transmitted
instantaneously by entering tightly formatted and
password-controlled messages into the SWIFT computer
network.

Copyright 2002 Chisholm Roth (Marketing) Ltd 9

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