Thinking further ahead, markets could move toward a more multilateral model. While all-to-all trading pools allow every flavor of market participant to act as both a maker and taker of liquidity\u2014regardless of their trading counterparty\u2019s firm type\u2014the resulting trade remains between two counterparties only (even when an agent sits in between).
\nThe corporate bond market is only now evolving to allow multiple counterparties to help fill a single large order, which has long since been the case in U.S. equity markets. New entrant LTX\u2019s offering is a good example of this.
\nA mechanism to allow this would do a few things. First and foremost, the order initiator could see price improvement with more than one contra-participant involved in the transaction. For example, think about a regional bank that can\u2019t bid on the $5 million block, but could offer the best price on $1 million. Combine that with similar bidders, and the seller could come out ahead by executing the full amount, potentially with price improvement due to increased demand. How this expected price improvement would stack up against other mechanisms, such as all-to-all and portfolio trading, remains to be seen.\n
Second, such a model could bring more liquidity providers to the table. Those able to offer quality prices but in smaller sizes could start to see higher hit rates and interactions with more customers, even if via a large dealer acting as agent. The corporate bond market has seen electronic liquidity jump in amount and quality over the past several years, as nonbank liquidity providers have entered the scene. We think this model could play a part in driving that further forward.
\nAnd third, this could help dealers rethink how they tap their client networks to unearth liquidity while simultaneously limiting their need to utilize scarce balance sheet. Systemically showing trading opportunities to other clients and then aggregating their offered liquidity back to the order initiator could ultimately create a better outcome for everyone, especially for larger orders that might be hard to execute on the screen today.