The listed equity options markets are entering a demanding and challenging phase, with 2007 contract volume growth at 41%, penny pricing implementations, new maker-taker models, and greater institutional buy side interest. Lower latency trading and enhanced matching and order routing systems at exchanges, along with customized algorithms and multi-asset trading, will significantly alter the landscape between 2008 and 2012.
Liquidity, book depth, latency, and price improvement will
come into greater focus as the US equity options
market structure changes in the next few years. Already, new
pricing and market models have been rolled
out, including the maker-taker model, an equities market import.
Electronification, once rare on the
crowded options exchange floors, is now the dominant method of
execution, although open outcry volumes
are still estimated to be 29% of overall listed options volumes.
In a new report, Electronic Equity Options Trading: A
Technology Transformation for a New Market
Structure, Celent predicts that electronification rates of US
exchange-traded options will reach 85% of
overall volumes in 2012 from 71% in 2008, as more institutional
block and complex orders move to automation.
Listed equity options contract volumes are projected to grow at
a rapid CAGR of 25% until 2012,
due to increasing traditional investment manager interest,
growing buy side utilization of option algorithms,
the benefits of portfolio margining, and decimalization. Greater
messaging volumes, quotes, and option
strikes will mandate technological enhancements from all market
participants, including brokers,
exchanges, specialists, market makers, and the buy side.
“Options markets are still comparatively fragmented in
liquidity and see a greater volume of messaging
and quote updates than cash equities. With a market structure
which effectively only allows trades to be
executed on exchanges, systems enhancements have been
historically concentrated on these
exchanges,“ says David Easthope, senior analyst with Celent's
Capital Markets group and coauthor of the
report. “Technological responses to the trading arms race will
be widespread and come in the form of direct market access (DMA), multiasset trading capabilities,
algorithmic trading, hardware and software
upgrades, and colocation offerings.

Moreover, consolidation and convergence will be key trends in
the industry as less adept players are sidelined in an increasingly tougher technological game. “Seven
independent exchanges have now been
reduced to five, but market practice and uncertainty have kept
the old models alongside the new for now,”
says Chermaine Lee, analyst with Celent's Capital Markets group
and coauthor of the report.
To date, exchange platform technologies have been
consolidated in parallel both between and within
exchanges. Going forward, competition in the lucrative options
sphere will force more technology transformations
in order to satisfy a broader and growing investor class
appetite for this asset class that was once
untouched and sometimes considered too risky. Technology will be
a clear differentiator for participants
who seek to stay ahead in the shifting equity options market
terrain.
This 60-page report contains 23 figures and 13 tables. A table of contents is available online.
Members
of Celent's Capital Markets research service
can download the report electronically by clicking on
the icon to the left. Non-members should contact info@celent.com
for more information.
Celent is a research and advisory firm dedicated to helping financial institutions formulate comprehensive business and technology strategies. Celent publishes reports identifying trends and best practices in financial services technology and conducts consulting engagements for financial institutions looking to use technology to enhance existing business processes or launch new business strategies. With a team of internationally experienced analysts, Celent is uniquely positioned to offer strategic advice and market insights on a global basis. Celent is a member of the Oliver Wyman Group, which is part of Marsh & McLennan Companies [NYSE: MMC].
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