Clarus Financial Technology

SOFR Options – How Healthy Is The Market?

With LIBOR now a distant memory, is options activity in USD rates markets back to pre-cessation levels? Let’s tour the data….

Futures – Exchange Traded Options on SOFR contracts

Options on Exchange Traded Derivatives are the “standardised” version of non-linear liquidity, with standardised expiries (quarterly, monthly and even weekly for certain underlyings) and strikes in standardised increments (6.25bp-25bp depending on the underlying futures contract and time to expiry).

CCPView collects data daily on the traded volumes, and has a rich history going back to at least 2017. That means we can look at how volumes in USD options contracts have behaved before, during and after USD LIBOR cessation:

Monthly volumes of USD STIR options in $m notional equivalents. Source: CCPView

Volume Ratio

It doesn’t really make sense to look at these volumes in isolation, so I combine the data with the traded volumes of the underlying to examine the relative amount of Options activity each quarter:

Source: CCPView

Showing;

Open Interest Ratio

What about the same ratio but expressed in terms of Open Interest? Because different strikes & expiries cannot offset each other, Open Interest in options tends to be higher than in the underlying:

Source: CCPView

Showing;

OTC – Options vs Swaps

Having blogged recently on Swaptions, it seems only right to run this same volume ratio in OTC markets as well. From SDRView;

Source: CCPView

Showing;

In Summary

Stay informed with our FREE newsletter, subscribe here.

Exit mobile version