Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Bank managers losing sleep as volatile cryptocurr­ency debuts on Wall Street

ANALYSIS

-

BITCOIN is coming to Wall Street tomorrow and some executives at the world’s biggest banks aren’t sleeping well.

With a few days left until Cboe Global Markets debuts futures contracts on the cryptocurr­ency, many banks are weighing whether to offer them to clients – and if so, how to handle the mechanics. In interviews, some executives and traders said their desks were eager to get in on the action – but most sounded cautionary notes, ticking off concerns and unanswered questions.

Bitcoin’s violent price swings this week have made the new market look all the more dangerous.

All of the people – speaking from a half dozen major firms – asked not to be named, in some cases saying they were worried about contradict­ing their bosses’ public statements. Others said it was still too early to take a position. These are a few of their top concerns:

Some bank CEOs and industry leaders have spent months deriding bitcoin publicly – “it’s a fraud”, “the very definition of a bubble” or an “index for money laundering” – and who knows what they’ve said privately. Now, what will it look like if firms help clients into investment­s that blow up? How might internal commentary over the futures sound if it ever spills into legal cases? One executive, for example, privately referred to the cryp- tocurrency as “sh*tcoin”.

Enthusiast­s say bitcoin is a currency. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission says it’s a commodity. So does Goldman Sachs Group. So it may seem natural for trading desks in those markets to handle the new contracts.

But one executive said there was an argument to be made that equities desks (and delta one traders specifical­ly) are used to the maths: bitcoin is like a volatile stock and futures, at least in some ways, are like the options that track it.

When asset prices are steady, it’s relatively straightfo­rward for banks to make markets: help a customer buy or sell an asset and then take some time to find another client who wants to take an opposite position. But bitcoin is too radioactiv­e for banks to hold – it swings wildly within minutes and there’s no establishe­d model to account for it on the balance sheet. So banks will try to clear the new contracts, matching one investor with another. That can be tough. A few traders, for example, said many clients are only interested in shorting. That can make for a pretty hard day at the office: without longs, the trades may be costly and hard to set up.

This was laid out in a letter this week from the Futures Industry Associatio­n, which said Cboe and larger exchange operator CME Group Inc were rushing the futures to market without proper considerat­ion of risks. The trade group, comprising some of the world’s largest derivative­s brokerages, said it was concerned about bitcoin’s extreme volatility leading investors to default if prices swing. This could sting firms that clear the contracts.

It’s going to be tough for big bureaucrat­ic banks to figure out all of these mechanics – and their own stomach for the business – on a tight schedule. A person close to Goldman Sachs said on Thursday that it would initially clear bitcoin contracts for certain clients on a case-by-case basis. Bank of America and Citigroup won’t offer clearing in the coming weeks. At other firms, executives said they may enter when ready. But will a small presence from big players give an advantage to nimbler, riskfriend­ly firms that embrace the new market out of the gate? – Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa