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

Euromoney Limited, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 15236090

4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Euromoney Limited 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

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

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

Full results

Trading: the future

Who and what we asked

Methodology


Debt poll of polls: Customer votes reveal the new big three


Alex Chambers weighs up the data.


YOU MIGHT NOT have noticed it but the old Eurobond trader is dead. Not physically but in spirit. In the space of six years, European debt market trading has mutated from the straightforward high-grade Eurobond into a credit-intensive, derivative-led sector that bears little resemblance to its precursor.

The new bond trader is a completely different animal, and should be able to far better understand credit, capital structures and balance sheets than any of his or her predecessors were if he or she wants to remain competitive. The fact is that the traditional hunting ground for bond traders is now a commoditized backwater and is shifting to electronic execution, and also price discovery.

“Remember back to the old Eurobond days when the five-year double-A rated bond was the key product? Back then there were far fewer players. Those days are long gone,” says Henrik Raber, co-head of investment-grade trading at UBS.

As a result of this transformation, dealers have ignored innovations like credit default swaps and indices at their peril, because what once seemed so esoteric and funky is now simply part of the flow.




Gift this article