BLBG:Citigroup Cuts Deutsche Bank Currencies Lead on Asia Trade
Citigroup Inc. cut Deutsche Bank AG (DBK)âs lead as the biggest currency trader in a Euromoney Institutional Investor Plc (ERM) poll, boosted by its larger share of emerging-market transactions.
Citigroup came second in the annual rankings with a 14.90 percent market share, trailing that of Deutsche Bank (DB) by 0.28 percentage point, the second-slimmest margin since the poll began in 1976, Euromoney said in an e-mailed statement. The New York-based lender had a 15.64 percent share of emerging-market foreign exchange, versus Deutsche Bankâs 13.46 percent. The top nine held their overall positions from last year and Bank of America Merrill Lynch took Goldman Sachs Group Inc.âs 10th spot.
The Asia-Pacific region accounted for 26 percent of currency markets last year, the survey showed, up from 21 percent in 2012, as Japanese policies that debased the yen ignited trading interest and investors sought higher-yielding assets. The share for Europe, the Middle East and Africa fell to 44 percent from 49 percent.
âAsia is a hot growth center, no question about that, but we saw volume and market-share gains across the world,â said Jeff Feig, global head of Group-of-10 foreign exchange at Citigroup (C) in New York. âOur volumes were up significantly in a market where volumes were flat-to-down. Our goal is definitely to be widely recognized as the top foreign-exchange provider.â
Barclays, UBS
Barclays Plc (BARC) was the third-largest trader, with a 10.24 percent overall share, and Switzerlandâs UBS AG (UBSN) was fourth with 10.11 percent, according to the survey. HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA) held its place in the top five for a second year at 6.93 percent.
The poll is drawn from a survey of traders in the foreign-exchange markets and was based on 16,298 responses, representing $225 trillion of turnover, Euromoney said. Volumes covered by the survey declined 3 percent from last year on a like-for-like basis, Euromoney said. Electronic trading accounted for 45 percent of flows, up from 38 percent in 2012, it said.
âWeâre obviously putting in a huge effort in Asia,â said Kevin Rodgers, global head of foreign exchange at Deutsche Bank in London. âWeâre keeping the technological engines brand new and sparkling. Our target areas for growth are mainly in the corporate and real-money sectorsâ as well as electronic trading, he said.
DB Share
Deutsche Bankâs market share climbed from 14.57 percent last year and the top five banks grew their combined share, accounting for 57 percent of trading from 55 percent in 2012.
The yen sank almost 20 percent against the dollar in the past six months, the most among 16 major currencies tracked by Bloomberg, as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called for expanded monetary easing and Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda pledged to double monthly bond purchases. It traded at 98.77 yen at 8:28 a.m. London time.
The Japanese currency has been âprobably the biggest single growth factor in the foreign-exchange market both in terms of options and the cash product,â according to Citigroupâs Feig.
Currency volumes jumped at the start of this year after a drop in the fourth quarter. Traders had the best month in almost three years in January, according to a Deutsche Bank index of currency returns as a weakening yen and resurgent euro boosted volatility in foreign-exchange markets from a five-year low.
âProactive Stepsâ
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)âs Group of Seven FX Volatility Index, a measure of currency fluctuations, has climbed to 8.8 percent from 7.06 percent on Dec. 18, the least since 2007. New Zealand announced it sold the kiwi yesterday, joining a growing band of countries from South Korea to Israel in escalating its response to a strengthening currency.
âVolumes have increased because of the proactive steps taken on the monetary-policy side by central banks across the globe,â said Adrian McGowan, head of foreign-exchange trading for Europe at Barclays in London. âYen crosses have seen the biggest increase and weâve also seen a very large increase in euro trading,â said McGowan, who also heads foreign-exchange forwards and options at the bank.
A survey by Greenwich Associates published in March also showed Deutsche Bank had the biggest share of the global foreign-exchange market as of November. The Frankfurt-based bank had a 10.7 percent share of the foreign-exchange market, according to a survey conducted between September and November.
HSBC narrowed the gap with fourth-placed UBS as its market share rose from 6.72 percent last year. Each of the top-four banks in the survey command more than 10 percent of traded volumes, according to Euromoney.
âWe are keen to progress and reduce the gap but at our own pace,â said Frederic Boillereau, global head of foreign exchange and commodities in London. âItâs a balance between the market share and the quality but more than anything itâs the sustainability of our revenue.â
The survey was the first for which Euromoney collected emerging-markets data. That represented 9 percent of all client transactions, it said.
Following is a table of Euromoneyâs rankings for foreign-exchange market share (all products).
Bank 2013 2012
Rank Share (%) Rank Share (%)
Deutsche Bank 1 15.18 1 14.57
Citigroup 2 14.90 2 12.26
Barclays 3 10.24 3 10.95
UBS 4 10.11 4 10.48
HSBC 5 6.93 5 6.72
JPMorgan 6 6.07 6 6.60
RBS 7 5.62 7 5.86
Credit Suisse 8 3.70 8 4.68
Morgan Stanley 9 3.15 9 3.52
BofA Merrill Lynch 10 3.08 12 2.41
To contact the reporter on this story: Lucy Meakin in London at lmeakin1@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Dobson at pdobson2@bloomberg.net.