Protecting liquidity in options markets

Market structureLiquidity Protection

In a series of articles, we’re exploring liquidity protection – the measures offered by exchanges to ensure that market makers are able to quote without taking excessive risk. Effective liquidity protection is, in our view, fundamental for facilitating price discovery in liquid, electronic options markets.

protecting liquidity rich text

Interest in options has rarely been as high as it is today. Volumes in single-stock and index contracts continue to soar in parts of the world, while new options products are rolled out regularly. An often-overlooked reason for this is the

 that’s available to options traders, which has allowed these instruments to become global barometers for investor sentiment.

This liquidity doesn’t happen by magic. 

 in options post consistent two-sided quotes in thousands of instruments, an effort that involves considerable investment in technology, pricing capabilities and thorough risk management, as well as the liquidity protection mechanisms available at exchanges.

In a series of articles, we’ll explore the different types of liquidity protection offered by exchanges to market makers, with the goal of educating market participants about these measures. We conclude that liquidity protection improves options markets – and that a combination of these measures is the most effective way to ensure our markets continue to function smoothly for the benefit of all.

What is liquidity protection?

Liquidity protection aims to address the structural disadvantages faced by liquidity providers in the options market. It does so by safeguarding market makers against excessive risk. Because liquidity providers maintain hundreds of quotes on a given underlying at any one time, a sudden market move can leave them vulnerable to showing stale, or outdated, quotes. So-called liquidity takers can target stale quotes via multiple paths, with limited risk should they fail. Liquidity providers on the other hand can often send only a single cancel or amend message at a time, putting them at a disadvantage and exposing them to potentially major losses if they’re unable to amend or cancel quotes before they get executed.

Without robust liquidity protection mechanisms to protect against these risks, market makers may be forced to widen their spreads, show less liquidity or simply exit the market. Overall market quality can deteriorate as a result, and investors suffer when it becomes too expensive to transact or they’re prevented from transacting altogether. In sum, liquidity protection mechanisms are vital for achieving a healthy balance between liquidity providers and liquidity takers in the options market.

What tools are available?

Many options exchanges have already responded to this situation by putting in place market maker protections for post-trade risk management. Market maker protections (MMPs) allow liquidity providers to set limits on the amount of executions they receive as a way to help them manage the aggregate risk of their positions. In addition to MMPs, there are a handful of complementary measures that we believe to be effective at levelling the playing field between liquidity takers and liquidity providers:

  • Mass cancellations, which allow liquidity providers to simultaneously cancel (a subset of) resting orders, which we believe should apply across sessions
  • Purge ports, which physically provide a dedicated path to the matching engine to simultaneously cancel resting orders
  • Asymmetric speed bumps, or a defined time delay on all aggressive orders, which in certain contexts or markets can prove effective

In October 2022 we 

 in support of Eurex’s passive liquidity protection (PLP) mechanism in EURO STOXX 50 Index Options. Since then, PLP has been shown to improve price setting competition and top of book liquidity at the exchange. PLP and similar liquidity protection measures are being more widely embraced, as demonstrated in 
Acuiti’s Proprietary Trading Report
.

Effective liquidity protection is, in our view, fundamental for facilitating price discovery in liquid, electronic options markets. We believe a combination of these measures – including MMPs, purge ports and mass cancellations, and in specific cases asymmetric speed bumps– will help ensure that options markets remain healthy and liquid on screen.

Read next: 

Download and signup link block

DISCLAIMER

To discuss this paper – or any other market structure topic – reach out to the Optiver Corporate Strategy team at 

AMS_CorporateStrategy@optiver.com

DISCLAIMER: Optiver V.O.F. or “Optiver” is a market maker licensed by the Dutch authority for the financial markets to conduct the investment activity of dealing on own account. This communication and all information contained herein does not constitute investment advice, investment research, financial analysis, or constitute any activity other than dealing on own account.

Insights Related Articles

In a series of articles, we’re exploring the development of single-stock options markets across the APAC region. Our aim is to highlight the many uses of the products as well as factors that may be acting as barriers to growth.

For the past several years, US stock investors have hedged their portfolios largely by looking at their calendars. Fed meetings, CPI prints, elections – whenever an event appeared on the horizon, investors would look to short-dated options to protect against the possibility of volatility.

While Brazil’s securities borrowing and lending framework has its strengths, it still trails global peers. In this paper, we propose steps to modernize the country’s SBL system, without compromising safety.

Why trade execution still matters

Market structure

UK and EU regulators are set to reverse historic ‘unbundling’ rules. But while the rules were imperfect, we believe real strides were made in getting investors to pay attention to trading costs. Now more than ever, traders need to carefully choose the right execution partners and strategy.

More abundant and deeper liquidity in cleared swaps markets is achievable with incremental changes and targeted adjustments to rules governing swaps trading. This paper explores practical policy recommendations to achieve this goal.

PFOF is going away, but the problem isn’t

Market structure

Ahead of upcoming MiFID rules that ban PFOF, some firms are introducing new structures that directly link single market-maker venues with affiliated brokers. These structures offer even less competition for retail order flow than their predecessors.

Click below

Learn more about Optiver