JPMorgan emerges as world’s biggest currency trader

Bloomberg

JPMorgan Chase & Co. won the title of world’s largest currency trader by market share, ending Citigroup Inc.’s four-year run at the top, according to a Euromoney Institutional Investor Plc survey that featured a new methodology.
JPMorgan took a 12.1 percent share, up from 10.3 percent last year. UBS Group AG came in second with 8.3 percent, and XTX Markets placed third, with 7.4 percent. XTX, a computerised trading firm, made waves by vaulting into the top 10 in 2016. In this year’s survey, XTX was ranked second in Western Europe by regional market share and globally was only surpassed by JPMorgan in overall electronic trading.
Citigroup dropped to fifth place with 6.2 percent, although it would have ranked second if the methodology hadn’t changed to remove short-dated swaps volumes from the annual list, according to Euromoney data.
Among the top 10, only three firms retained their 2017 positions, the survey showed.
The results come against a backdrop of a broad shift towards electronic trading.
For example, JPMorgan’s investment banking arm, which saw the total notional volume of currency transactions globally grow by 16 percent from 2016 to 2017, trades more than 93 percent of its notional spot FX volume electronically. In forwards, that share is around 80 percent, up from 70 percent in 2016.
“This growth has been largely driven by our electronic trading business,” Troy Rohrbaugh, global head of macro trading at JPMorgan, said in an interview at his office in Manhattan.
“We’ve consistently invested in our electronic and mobile offerings year after year.”
XTX’s client volumes rose by more than 60 percent in 2017 and have continued climbing this year, according to Zar Amrolia, the company’s co-chief executive officer. He credited some of the shift to investors’ preference for market makers who limit the use of last look, a controversial practice that allows dealers to back out of losing trades. “It’s great to know that clients have voted with their feet and rewarded good behaviour,” he said in an email.

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