May 2005
FX Poll 2005: The big get bigger - but is it for the best?
by Deborah Kimbell, David Skalinder, Andrew Newby
The sector is consolidating fast. And while major banks focus on securing a place in the top tier, smaller firms are left to contemplate a choice between white labelling and finding a profitable niche market.
Deutsche Bank is the big winner in Euromoney's 2005 FX survey, which has a significantly larger sample size of $40 trillion this year. It not only outstripped UBS but increased its market share to more than 16%.
SOARING FOREIGN EXCHANGE trading volumes are being handled by ever fewer players. The barriers to entry for full-scale FX providers are getting higher, resulting in widening gaps in market share. Euromoney's 2005 foreign exchange survey has confirmed that this trend is showing no signs of abating. Volume and market share are crucial for banks that want to make big profits in a market with highly compressed spreads.
"The name of the game in foreign exchange is to be one of the consolidators, which is arguably the top five or six," says Stuart Gulliver, co-head of corporate and investment banking at HSBC. "The market is tiering itself, so that a smaller number of banks...
More information on foreign exchange
The rest of this article is available to subscribers only
Please Subscribe or take a Free Trial below.
Already a subscriber? Log in here.
Subscribe online today
- Your print copy delivered every month
- Over a decade of archived content
- Daily news and updates
- Personalised email news feeds
- Unlimited online access
- Access to all our survey and award results
Subscribe
Free 48 hour access
- Online access to Euromoney.com
- In-depth analysis and comment of the international capital markets
- The best of our editorial comment by email
- Complimentary digital magazine sample
Start Trial
Questions about your subscription status?
Email us or call: +44 (0) 20 7779 8888