Exclusive: Fund giant Vanguard bypasses banks with forex
algos
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[February 04, 2020] By
Tommy Wilkes
LONDON (Reuters) - Vanguard, the $5.6
trillion asset manager, plans to start using computer-run algorithms
this year to trade FX directly with other funds, depriving banks of some
of the fees they earn as the middlemen in currency deals.
The head of FX trading at U.S.-based Vanguard, which trades about $225
billion in currencies each month, told Reuters the fund giant was in
talks with several forex platforms about launching specialist algorithms
designed to seek out and trade with other asset managers.
It plans to start trading with such "algos" later in the year, Andy
Maack, Vanguard's FX trading head, said.
Vanguard is also one of three institutional investors that last week
executed the first transactions on a new facility, FX HedgePool, that
lets managers trade FX swaps directly with each other for their
end-of-month currency hedging needs.
"It is going to reduce some dependency on the banks. It's not going to
replace the banks, but give real money managers new sources of
liquidity," Maack said in an interview.
FX HedgePool co-founder Jay Moore said that the new swaps facility went
live on Friday - executing several euro/dollar trades - but declined to
comment on the names of the first managers to transact.
Banks play a central role in oiling the $6.6 trillion-a-day forex
industry by using their balance sheets and technology to link buyers and
sellers, earning a "spread" on transactions. The biggest banks, which
hold nearly half of worldwide forex trading, earned a combined $16.3
billion in revenue from FX trading in 2018, data from Coalition showed.
But many investors worry that putting all their orders through banks
requires them to give out too much information. The fear is that banks
can read trading patterns and use that knowledge to trade against them
or offer them worse pricing.
Fund managers therefore are keen to reduce their "market impact" by
spreading their dealings among different counterparties. They can also
lower transaction costs by slashing the spread paid to banks.
Previous attempts to get managers trading directly have struggled
because investors have been reluctant to join new venues until there was
sufficient trading already happening.
But Vanguard's move is a sign that peer-to-peer trading is gaining more
traction. Improvements in technology and the growing concentration of FX
turnover among a handful of banks is encouraging players to test new
models.
New regulations such as Europe's MiFID II also require managers to
demonstrate deals were done at the best price.
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U.S. dollar banknote is seen in this picture illustration taken May
3, 2018. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Industry executives say Vanguard's model, which sees it make regular,
predictable transactions to hedge its vast passively-managed stock and bond
portfolios, is better suited to the peer-to-peer model. Investors that take
directional bets on currencies will be likely to find it harder to match with
other fund managers.
MORE ALGOS
Algorithms play a growing role in the forex spot market - fund managers have
doubled the share of their trading using algos over the past six years to 27%,
Greenwich Associates found.
Maack said Vanguard already uses algorithms that search for other buyside
players when trading on bank-run platforms but would now use them on
multi-dealer platforms, which include EBS, 360T and Refinitiv's FxAll, and where
asset managers are active.
He declined to provide data on the share of Vanguard's forex trading transacted
with other funds but added: "It's definitely growing. It didn't exist a couple
of years ago."
Aside from funds' own efforts, several start-ups are trying to break banks'
hegemony.
London-based Siege FX, for example, is building a matching system to check when
one manager's currency needs can be "netted" against another's.
FX HedgePool focuses on low-margin swaps that investors use for hedging their
passively-managed portfolios. The members-only facility was co-founded last year
by New York-based Moore, an ex-Brown Brothers Harriman and State Street
executive.
Moore said that its focus on end-of-month swaps meant that attracting an array
of asset managers to its facility before launching was not necessary.
"We don't need critical mass. We need a small number of the right users," Moore
said.
But the banks' ability to offer better liquidity and pricing will help them
retain their dominance in the forex business.
They will also keep a crucial function in peer-to-peer deals by acting as credit
counterparty, given FX is traded bilaterally rather than on exchanges. Standard
Chartered Bank is FX HedgePool's initial credit provider.
"Banks will always play a role," Vanguard's Maack said. "[But] We want to
customize our liquidity sources," so it can "toggle" between different groups of
buyers and sellers and better disguise what it is doing.
(Editing by Sujata Rao and Jane Merriman)
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