"We are passing efficiency gains on to our customers and thus supporting growth in the industry as a whole. We want to attract groups of participants and trading strategies that are futures-typical, and thus further enhance turnover and market quality," said Rudolf Ferscha, member of the Executive Board of Deutsche Börse and Eurex CEO.
The new fee structure is based on a six-step price scale ranging between 0.55 and 0.45 euros per transaction; up to now, there were four steps ranging between 0.58 and 0.49 euros. The price reduction is made possible by the high acceptance for the central counterparty in equities trading, which allows positions to be netted for the most part. Less than five percent of all transactions actually need to be settled after netting - the so-called netting efficiency amounts to 95.5 percent. The CCP also allows participants to achieve substantial savings due to the improved quality of settlement and the lower number of so-called failed trades.
The central counterparty for equities trading in Xetra and on the Frankfurt trading floor was introduced at the end of March 2003. Since that time, the liquidity on Xetra, measured in terms of the Xetra Liquidity Measure (XLM), has risen 27 percent across the board in the market as a whole. This results in lower trading costs for the participants by some 20 million euros per month. The risk reduction achieved through the central counterparty as well as the so-called post-trade anonymity attract new futures-typical participant groups and trading strategies. For example, larger orders which would have been traded off the exchange in the past can now be executed anonymously in several trades through the exchange's order book and thus contribute to enhancing market liquidity just as much as the growing number of short-term and intra-day strategies by international arbitrageurs.