Heightened Uncertainty Drove More Interest Rate Trading in 2023
By Eric Leininger
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Current U.S. Debt Issuance Focused on the Short End

More immediately, the U.S. Treasury has been issuing more T-bills while only modestly increasing the size of coupon issuances. This is seen via the CME Group TreasuryWatch Tool. The considerable size of T-bill issuance of $400 to $600 billion a quarter helped to drive net borrowing by $350 billion in the third quarter of 2023. Net coupon issuance is expected to grow slightly, but remain around $300 billion per quarter. Currently, the U.S. Treasury is favoring T-bill issuance over coupons. A big question for 2024 is whether that will continue to be the case.

Economic Data Continues to Drive Market Expectations

Higher frequency economic data seems to have a part in repricing market expectations. CPI has come down from its highs. ISM Services is now at a level that is lower than before the pandemic, while ISM Manufacturing has been below pre-pandemic levels throughout 2023 and recently turned back down. With a deeply inverted yield curve for most of 2023,  the market is now looking closely at whether the U.S. economy might be slowing in the face of the historically unprecedented rate rises of the last 12 months.

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Uncertainty Drives Volatility Higher

The substantial volatility in rates we’ve seen in 2023 drove record levels of risk management at CME Group as participants hedged their positions with futures and options. Over the prior two years, interest rate volatility has moved to a higher regime. That is seen in how the level of 10-Year CVOL has tripled from 50 basis points to 150 basis points.

10-Year Treasury Futures CVOL
Source: CME Group

Markets have responded by risk managing this elevated level of volatility. Volumes for options on Treasury futures reached an all time high and volume for options on SOFR futures is now higher than volume on options on Eurodollar futures ever were. 

Interest Rate Options ADV

As we shift through the cycle,  the complex interplay of increasing debt issuance, quantitative tightening, and the Fed’s difficult balancing act on inflation and the economy mean that risk management is likely to  be just as important in the year ahead.

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About the author

Eric Leininger
Eric Leininger

Eric Leininger is Executive Director of Financial Research and Product Development at CME Group. He is based in New York.

 

 

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