Monthly Market Report- May 2012

Jun 07 2012 - 16:48

7 June 2012

ETR – 56

MONTHLY MARKET REPORT – MAY 2012

London Stock Exchange Group (LSE.L) sits at the heart of the world’s financial community, offering international business unrivalled access to Europe’s capital markets.

In May a total of 34.1 million trades were carried out across the Group’s electronic equity order books, an increase of 10 per cent on April 2012. They had a combined value of £170.2 billion (€211.7 billion), up 10 per cent on last month (£154.3 billion).

The average daily number of trades across the Group’s electronic equity order books was 1.5 million, a 7 per cent decrease on last month. The average daily value traded was £7.7 billion, down 6 per cent on last month.

UK Equities Order Book

During the month, the average daily value traded on the UK order book was £4.3 billion (€5.3 billion), down 6 per cent month-on-month; the average daily number of trades decreased 4 per cent to 759,666.
The LSE’s share of trading in the total UK order book for May was 63.6 per cent.

Italian Equities Order book

On the Italian order book, the average daily value traded increased 5 per cent month-on-month to €2.5 billion (£2.0 billion) while the average daily number of trades was 258,754, a decrease of 11 per cent on last month.

Turquoise Cash Equities

The average daily value traded on the Turquoise integrated book in May was €1.6 billion (£1.3 billion) down 14 per cent on last month. The average daily number of trades was down 10 per cent at 487,045.
On the dark mid-point book, Turquoise traded an average daily value of €90 million (£72 million), down 3 per cent on April. The average daily number of trades was 21,917, up 4 per cent on month-on-month.
Turquoise’s share of pan-European trading for May was 5.3 per cent.

Derivatives

On the Group’s derivatives platforms, the average daily number of contracts traded was 377,667, up 17 per cent compared with April.

Exchange Traded Products

The average daily value traded in Exchange Traded Products across the Group’s order books in May was up 9 per cent month-on-month to £432 million (€538 million). The average daily number of trades was up 1 per cent at 16,083.

Fixed income

The average daily value traded on the MTS Cash markets during the month was unchanged month-on-month at €9.3 billion (£7.5 billion). On the MTS Repo market, the average term adjusted daily value traded increased by 11 per cent to €254.1 billion (£204.3 billion).
The average daily value traded on the Group’s retail bond markets was €917 million (£737 million), down 12 per cent on April. The average daily number of trades was down 6 per cent at 20,428.

–ends –

For further information, please contact:

Jonny Blostone                                                   +44 (0)20 7797 1222

Anna Mascioni                                                         +39 027 2426 212  

                                                  newsroom@londonstockexchange.com

 

Additional Information:

This release uses only electronic trading data; trades that are reported to the either London Stock Exchange or Borsa Italiana under their rules but executed away from their electronic order books are not included.
Figures for the UK and Italian order books include cash equity trades in domestic and international equities, Exchange traded products and Securitised Derivatives.
There were 22 trading days on the London Stock Exchange and Borsa Italiana in May 2012, and 23 trading days on Turquoise. In April 2012 there were 19 trading days on the London Stock Exchange, Borsa Italiana and Turquoise.
The May 2012 value traded figures use a € per £ exchange rate of 1.24. For April 2012 they use a rate of 1.22.


The Exchange accepts no responsability for the content of the website you are now accessing or for any reliance placed by you or any person on the information contained on it.

By allowing this link the Exchange does not intend in any country, directly or indirectly, to solicit business or offer any securities to any person.


You will be redirected in five seconds.