Clarus Financial Technology

MXN Swaps – What’s New?

I have not written about MXN Swaps since January 2020 – nearly five years! This blog couldn’t come at a more opportune time, with the MXN market undergoing a big change this week.

CME Conversion

Why the sudden interest in MXN after five years? It is those pesky Risk Free Rates (RFRs) again. MXN was not one of the eight currencies that we monitored in the RFR Adoption Indicator, but that doesn’t stop it from having its own reform agenda! And CME have just kicked off the job of converting outstanding 28-Day TIIE swaps:

This is a particularly interesting conversion exercise as, prior to this week, we haven’t seen much F-TIIE (the MXN RFR) reported to SDRs. Given there are so few trades, it is super helpful that CME have published the market standards for these new OIS trades. Summarising the new standards:

It looks like the market has chosen to persevere with the 28 day “lunar” calendar. Are they just trying to keep quants and vendors of 50-year lunar calendars happy? I have no idea why the MXN market is so tied to this convention, but Swaps traders must now associate Mexico just as strongly with lunar calendars as they do big hats and the Day of the Dead!

This first wave of conversion has seen trading in MXN OIS commence, with over 80% of trades reported versus F-TIIE so far this week:

Trade counts of MXN IRS and MXN OIS. Source: SDRView

In terms of the conversion, I am trying to make sense of the data as we go to press. The Open Interest at CME in MXN IRDs across both IRS and OIS appears to have increased by $1.4Trn last week (as opposed to being converted). So, pending an update, let’s just all be aware that the conversion exercise has taken place and that we now have a market in MXN OIS for the first time.

MXN is the 8th Largest Swaps Markets

Why should we care about conversion in MXN? Because it is a really significant market:

Notional Volumes of Cleared Interest Rate Derivatives. Source: CCPView

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CME Dominates the MXN Market

CME enjoys a dominant market share in the cleared MXN Rates market, but Asigna/Mexder, a domestic CCP, has made in-roads in the past five years:

Cleared MXN IRS and OIS Volumes in Notional ($m). Source: CCPView

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Is Clearing Still Popular in MXN?

Notional volumes in MXN swaps reported to US SDRs ($m). Source: SDRView

The MXN market has always been characterised by a healthy appetite for clearing – maybe there are particular credit concerns for some local counterparties? Either way, we see clearing rates of nearly 95% in MXN swaps for 2023 and 2024.

Interestingly, the clearing rate dropped down to 75% in 2021 and 2022. It is not entirely clear why, but given that this was when MexDer started to see more volumes, and they were registered as a Foreign Board of Trade with the CFTC in May 2021, it may be related.

Such a healthy appetite for clearing should bode well for conversion exercises and for transition to the MXN RFR.

DV01 Traded

There has been significantly more short-end trading in MXN in 2024 than when we last looked in 2020:

DV01 MXN IRS by Tenor in 2024. Source: SDRView

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80% of Risk is Executed on-SEF

SEF trading, consistent with the standardised nature of the market and the strong appetite for clearing, is very popular in MXN Swaps. 80% of total risk reported to SDRs has been executed on-SEF so far in 2024. This doesn’t really change if you look at short-end or long-end swaps:

On SEF or Off SEF by Tenor. Data up to end October 2024. Source: SDRView

Welcome Tradeweb to the MXN market!

Looking at SEF market share, I noted last time that D2C SEFs were conspicuous by their absence. As we have seen in almost every other market, that has changed with increased adoption of MXN trading on Tradeweb:

SEF Volumes in MXN Swaps in $m. Source: SEFView

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In Summary

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