Improving transparency

Norges Bank’s latest paper in its Asset Manager Perspective series examines the feature of “last look” in foreign exchange markets. The paper, which focuses on the impact of financial innovations on long-term investors, outlines the metrics that Norges Bank has put in place to monitor liquidity providers.

 

“Last look” is a unique feature of foreign exchange markets that gives liquidity providers the option to reject orders received from liquidity takers in response to the provider’s quote.

Norges Bank believes that while it provides a legitimate need for liquidity providers, and can help improve available liquidity to investors, there is also room for improvement.

For one, there are intrinsic conflicts related to the asymmetry in optionality that last look introduces, as well as the potential for misuse of private information.

The paper says that last look is one approach to handling the potential of aggressive latency arbitrage in a fragmented market. It preserves quote depth at tight spreads, but introduces execution uncertainty, in contrast to the equity market which preserves execution uncertainty but reduces quote depth.

Sponsored Content

Norges Bank Investment Management advocates for greater transparency in the application of last look.

“Monitoring of liquidity providers’ behaviour will continue to be a critical element in maintaining fair implementation of Last Look,” it says.

Norges has developed a set of metrics to monitor liquidity providers’ behaviour, and believes other investors should do the same. This looks at rejection thresholds, the maximum evaluation periods permitted and the symmetry of the thresholds. It also looks at quoting and rejection behaviour of counterparties, and the price action in a currency pair following the rejection of an order through last look, and the quoting behaviour of the counterparty that rejected the order.

The paper concludes that there are three areas that Norges believes would benefit from greater transparency. They are:

The evaluation period should be limited to price comparisons only. “We believe more prescriptive codes of conduct for liquidity providers are needed in this regard.”

Over the counter dealers as liquidity providers need to be more transparent about their implementation of last look thresholds.

The reasons for the order rejection need to be more transparent.

 

The paper can be accessed here

Leave a Comment

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

Singapore’s two largest asset owners, GIC and Temasek, see attractive opportunities in climate adaptation solutions – a relatively underfunded area compared to decarbonisation. The former has already made selective adaptation investments and said the opportunity set across public and private debt and equity could increase to $9 trillion by 2050.

Sort content by

Adveq Private Equity Market Assessment and Outlook

Over the last 12 months global financial markets have undergone major corrections following, fundamentally, a break-down in the confidence and trust in the financial system as practiced by the Western world. Along with this break-down we experienced a steep fall in US housing prices, the nationalization of financial institutions, the forced merger and/or failure of

Activist Investing

Activist investing is an investment approach whereby an investor seeks to influence the strategy of a company. Strategy may be very broadly defined to include acquisitions, divestitures, capital structure, dividend policy and board composition, inter alia. We see two broad aspects of this strategy that may exist separately or together. First, activist investing may seek

Is Alpha Just Beta Waiting to be Discovered? What the rise of hedge fund beta means for investors

Alpha is shrinking, and it’s good news for investors. This idea may seem paradoxical. But alpha is really just the portion of a portfolio’s returns that cannot be explained by exposure to common risk factors (betas). With the emergence of new betas, the unexplained portion (alpha) shrinks – alpha gets reclassified as beta. The rise

Basis Risk in Liability-Hedging Strategies

Recent pricing dislocations in U.S. fixed-income markets have illustrated there is more to hedging a liability’s interest rate risk than simply matching its duration. Basis risk – in the context of liability hedging – is the risk that the changes in the market value of assets, designated as a hedge, will deviate from the changes

Diversification With Attitude, parts A and B

Diversification is one of the few reliable ‘free lunches’ in asset markets. Nevertheless, investors do not always extract the best from the available benefits. Many portfolios still carry some concentrated risk exposures. And when diversification is pursued, it often occurs under the shotgun approach of increasing the number of return sources, albeit guided by a

Previous