The TRADE 61 - Q3 2019 | Page 54

[ I N - D E P T H | P O R T F O L I O You might consider request for quote (RFQ), but this trade is potentially market moving, so adopting the RFQ model to trade multiple bonds at once could materially impact price. More- over, unless they are structured as a package trade, where risk can be mitigated across more liquid bonds, broker-dealers will find it almost impossible to price the illiquid bonds. Purely from an efficiency standpoint, a portfolio trade for this type of transaction makes sense. Tradeweb claims to be the first electronic trading platform to roll out portfolio trading func- tionality for institutional clients looking to streamline executions into fewer, larger trades to lessen both market impact and cost. The platform went live in January, with Tradeweb’s latest figures showing that as of August this year, more than $18 billion has been traded on the platform so far, accounting for 5.5% of TRACE volume. Typically, a portfolio trade consists of a basket of between 10-100 bonds that can be either one or two-sided and executed in a single transaction with a single liquidity provider. More commonly recognised as basket or program trading, the protocol has been part of the landscape for a while, but with the electronification of global bond markets and a surge in fixed income exchange-traded funds (ETFs) – which in June surpassed $1 trillion in assets – portfolio trading is tipped to become one of the most efficient ways to deal with large, complex and multi-faceted bond transactions. “Portfolio trading used to be laborious and complicated,” says Chris Bruner, managing director and head of US credit at Tradeweb. “Even if you wanted to do a port- folio trade with a single coun- 54 // TheTrade // Fall 2019 T R A D I N G ] terparty, it would require lots of back and forth with spreadsheets and phone calls to generate those prices and decide which bonds you may or may not want to include in the portfolio.” Order routing, pricing and negotiation There are various reasons why a portfolio trade could be on the cards for a buy-side trader. Perhaps large outflows in a fund has forced the need to raise cash quickly, or a transition management agenda means that you’re now selling investment grade and buying high-yield. Maybe a credit analyst has recently gone negative on a ticker, or a large portfolio of illiquid bonds are being asked to buy or sell. Traders can complete a portfolio trade much like they would a regular RFQ on Tradeweb’s platform without changes to pre- and post-trade workflow, according to the vendor. When choosing a portfolio trade on the platform, orders are routed to the right person at a liquidity provider - such as a designated “We’ve been surprised by how consistent the portfolio trading has become in such a short time frame. The nature of portfolio trading is that it can be big and chunky, which sometimes means it’s also sporadic.” CHRIS BRUNER, TRADEWEB bank portfolio trader who will likely have more expe- rience in the fixed income ETF ecosystem than a line trader - so that baskets of risk can be priced leveraging the create/redeem process. Order routing is key here when it comes to pricing risk, and it can vary by each potential counterparty according to whether they dis- tribute pricing across the whole desk or, in some cases, have a dedicated team of portfolio traders. Once the trade is on the system and routed to a suit- able liquidity provider, a bank portfolio trader prices the individual line items with aggregate basket port- folio-level statistics, which are displayed by Tradeweb to guide both sides towards the right price, and to provide pricing for the portfolio trade in its entirety, rather than at the individual CUSIP level. The buy-side and dealers then negotiate and counter on individual bonds within the portfolio, and if it doesn’t suit, the buy-side trader can remove individual CUSIPs from the negotiation before executing the approved items all at once.