Digital Assets Report

Newsletter

Like this article?

Sign up to our free newsletter

Interactive Data launches Liquidity Indicators Service in Europe

Related Topics

Interactive Data, a provider of fixed-income evaluated pricing, and subsidiary of Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), has made its Liquidity Indicators Service available for European and Asia-Pacific corporate and sovereign securities. 

This represents an expansion of its North American services, and leverages the same fixed-income evaluated pricing and reference data content that supports pricing and trading functions at the world’s leading financial institutions and asset managers.

The launch of European Liquidity Indicators supports firms’ liquidity risk management needs across a range of market conditions. The indicators include estimates of the projected trade volume capacity of a fixed income security, which can be used in conjunction with information on a firm’s position to estimate the number of days to exit a position under various scenarios. In addition to expanding the range of securities available, the service includes a new feature that calculates the expected market price impact based on a firm’s target days to liquidate, as well as the projected days to liquidate when target price impact thresholds are set.

In addition to US corporates, Latin-American corporates, and municipal bonds which have been available since 2015, the coverage now includes TBA-eligible mortgage-backed securities pass-throughs (MBS PTs), agency debentures and European corporate and sovereigns, as well as Asia-Pacific corporates and sovereigns.

“Measuring liquidity in fixed income markets remains an area of intense focus in the industry, which is especially evident in Europe’s evolving regulatory landscape,” says Andrew Hausman (pictured), Interactive Data’s President of Pricing and Reference Data. “The expansion of our innovative Liquidity Indicators service plays a crucial role in supporting our clients’ ability to achieve their liquidity risk management goals.”

Like this article? Sign up to our free newsletter

Most Popular

Further Reading

Featured