Buy-side Perspectives Issue 6 | Page 23

Fixed income As in other asset classes, the shift towards passive investing is also a major issue in fixed income markets. Longer execution times, higher execution costs and increasing difficulty sourcing bond securities and completing large trades have driven investors to seek alternatives – including ETFs, according to research published in September by Greenwich Associates. The previous month, BlackRock reported that Australian investors increased their inflows to fixed income ETFs by 41% over the 12 months to August 2016. Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank stated that the Asian corporate bond market represents an opportunity for the development and trading of fixed income ETFs, due to the presence for the first time of “sufficient liquidity” in September 2016. The impact of central bank policies continues to be a significant factor in fixed income markets. Between 2008 and 2016, the major central banks have increased their combined total assets from $6.4 trillion to 17.6 trillion; some observers have questioned whether this may have a damaging effect on liquidity. Meanwhile, some buy-side firms have noted that they have as many as 16 different work streams to be compliant with the European Commission’s MiFID II regulation. Globally, bond markets are diverse; while in Europe and the US, there is an ongoing drive to push more trading onexchange, driven by the likes of Dodd-Frank and EMIR and the G20 agenda agreed in Pittsburgh in 2009. In other markets as much as 88% of the market is still traded OTC. Buy-side participants at the recent Asia Buy-side Forum debate in Singapore did not see any likelihood of that changing in the next five years; furthermore, there are significant concerns that the level of transparency surrounding exchange-trading would in any case be a bad idea for liquidity in parts of the Asian bond markets. October 2016 www.buysideintel.com 23