Submitted
by Tyler
Durden on 07/14/2014 21:53
-0400
The
UBS trading floor in Stamford, CT was dubbed (by Guinness World Records) the
largest in the world. But now... as the
WSJ reports, there are virtually no traders shouting into their
phones or staring at terminals. UBS's cavernous floor is taken up mostly by
back-office, legal and technology staffers, according to people familiar with
the bank. Simply put, a deep slump in trading activity in everything from stocks
and bonds to currencies is changing the face of Wall Street. Today's markets
are "boring," rants a senior credit trader; "It's been absolutely dead,"
warns another adding, "When you go a day or two and don't have a trade on the
tape, it's frustrating," as stock trading in the second quarter fell 43.6%
from second-quarter 2009 levels to their lowest level since
2007.
"You
go through lulls," he said. "If you're going through this for the first time,
you have no context."
UBS's
trading floor in Stamford, Conn., once teemed with traders occupying a space
equal to two football fields.
The Guinness World Records recognized it as the biggest such facility on the
planet. And the Swiss bank used it to showcase its Wall Street
credentials.
Today,
there are virtually no traders shouting into their phones or staring at
terminals.
UBS's cavernous floor is taken up mostly by back-office, legal and technology
staffers, according to people familiar with the bank.
The
reason...
A
deep slump in trading activity in everything from stocks and bonds to currencies
is changing the face of Wall Street. Businesses
that once contributed disproportionately to the revenues of the world's largest
banks are now bleeding jobs and sparking fears of a permanent
decline.
Today's
markets are "boring,"
"This
is affecting the opportunity to make money, and ultimately the earnings these
[trading] businesses can provide."
Global
revenue from trading in fixed income, currencies and commodities, or FICC,
dropped to $112 billion last year, down 16% from a year earlier and 23% from
2010,
according to Boston Consulting Group.
"It's
been absolutely dead," said
Jarrod Dean, a municipal-bond trader at Sierra Pacific Securities in Las Vegas.
Municipal-bond trading volumes are down about 30% since last August, he said,
while profits are down more than 70%.
Equities
trading volumes also have taken a beating of late.
Stock trading in the second quarter fell 43.6% from second-quarter 2009 levels
to their lowest level since 2007, according to Credit Suisse Group
data.
Bill
Nichols, head of U.S. equity trading at Cantor Fitzgerald LP, said low volumes
have taken a toll on traders' psyches.
"When
you go a day or two and don't have a trade on the tape, it's frustrating,"
he
said.
*
* *
Sounds eerily familiar to the total and utter collapse of Japanese bond markets - described as "dead" by traders with days going by with no trading... stunning!!
Sounds eerily familiar to the total and utter collapse of Japanese bond markets - described as "dead" by traders with days going by with no trading... stunning!!
Donald Hank comments: To put it succinctly: Lack of trader confidence due to a lack of trust, due to a lack of responsible behavior by "leaders." Don
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