Cross-products find their feet

Cross-product trading is no longer just a "mantra" chanted by sell-side bankers, said Matt Desselberger, managing director, corporate structured products group at Deutsche Bank in London.

Speaking at RiskNews' sister publication FX Week’s congress last week, Desselberger said there is now some "genuine" cross-product trading being done.

The concept has also entered into a new phase, he said. Traditionally defined as a product with more than one underlying risk type, more recently cross-product trading is about repackaging traditional FX products to new audiences, Desselberger added.

One recent hybrid solution Deutsche Bank offered was for a UK corporate with a US subsidiary. The parent wanted to reduce earnings volatility, but under accounting regulations could not use earnings to hedge its long dollars position. The solution, said Desselberger, was to get the US subsidiary to enter into a strip of forward contracts to purchase sterling denominated bonds for a fixed US dollar price. "It’s a special accounting treatment that means it doesn’t have to be marked to market," Desselberger said.

Investors have different problems. One pension fund client liked the risk-return profile of an FX transaction, but under its mandate could not enter into an over-the-counter transaction. Deutsche Bank repackaged that FX view into note form, enabling the fund manager to buy it.

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