September: US corporate bond ADNV hits $54bn, up 46% YoY 

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The average daily notional volume (ADNV) for US corporate bonds hit a new high of US$54 billion in September 2024, a 46% increase compared to September 2023.

The increase in volume was driven by the Federal Reserve’s rate cut and a surge in new issuance of investment-grade (IG) and high-yield (HY) bonds, with US$186 billion of new IG bonds and US$38 billion of HY hitting the market, the total of which was the highest since February.

“The Fed rate cut and new issuance activity both played a huge part in the secondary market volume jump, with borrowers now more excited about declining interest rates,” Coalition Greenwich noted in October Data Spotlight report.  

Kevin McPartland, Coalition Greenwich (photo courtesy Richard Hadley)
Kevin McPartland, Coalition Greenwich (photo courtesy Richard Hadley)

Electronic trading played a significant role, the report suggests, with 50% of IG volume traded electronically in September. The combined IG and HY market saw US$26.6 billion traded electronically per day, representing a 61% increase year-over-year.

Amid the bonanza, trading platforms Bloomberg, MarketAxess, Tradeweb, and Trumid all set records for electronic volume. MarketAxess approached US$10 billion in daily electronic trading volume, followed by Tradeweb with nearly US$9 billion and Trumid with more than US$3.4 billion.

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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