Secondary debt survey

Euromoney asks traders in debt around the world which banks and trading platforms provide the best liquidity for credit trading. Please find details of the survey below: 

Debt trading poll 2009
Balance sheet counts in debt trading
Market share Best for liquidity provision
Investment grade High yield
Credit Default Swaps Credit derivatives indices
Bank proprietary/Multi-dealer platforms -
Overall and service categories

Methodology




Debt trading poll 2009: Balance sheet counts in debt trading

December 2009

The top six firms in terms of market share are all universal banks which have been less impacted by the credit crisis than some of their more wholesale-focused counterparts. The message is clear: balance sheet counts.

Debt trading poll 2008: All change in secondary markets

January 2009

The liquidity crisis has contributed to a dramatic change in the trading of fixed-income securities. A year ago the curtailment of the liquidity to investors could be written off as a temporary state of affairs that would be rectified as soon as market conditions got back to normal.

Debt trading poll 2007: A year to separate the men from the boys

November 2007

The Euromoney debt trading poll is in its second year, and quite a year it has been. Twelve months ago credit houses were hosing their customers with liquidity in a market awash with happy traders. The action had moved out of the cash market and into a thriving derivatives sector. Structured products and indices were flourishing. "You are no longer a bond trader," Henrik Raber, head of credit trading at UBS, was saying to his staff. "You are a trader in multiple asset classes."

Debt trading poll 2006: Which firms are the best debt traders and why?

October 2006

Euromoney’s inaugural debt trading poll gives unprecedented insights into the increasingly complex derivatives-led world of debt trading.