Finance

Trading volume is up from 2020’s breakneck pace as retail investors jump in

Traders work on the floor of the NYSE.

NYSE

Stock trading volumes are through the roof. 

It’s not just equity prices that are hitting new highs in 2021. Trading volumes for stocks and options are at records as well. 

“For trading volumes, the new year starts at a consistent, unprecedented strong & record pace,” according to Rich Repetto, who tracks trading volumes at Piper Sandler.

Much of it is being driven by retail investors, who are continuing the high level of engagement that began in 2020. The increased volumes are pushing electronic brokers like Interactive Brokers and Charles Schwab to new highs, along with exchanges like ICE and Nasdaq

When will the mania for stock and option trading subside? “Everybody has said it’s going to subside, but they have been saying that for six months,” Steve Sosnick from Interactive Brokers told me.

Volumes are way up: is it all retail?

Stock volumes exploded in 2020, and have increased even more in the early days of 2021:

Equities: Average daily volume

  • 2019:             7.0 billion
  • 2020:            10.9 billion
  • 2021 so far:  14.7 billion

Source:  Piper Sandler

Year over year, January volumes are up 92%.  Compared to December, volumes are up 33%.

What accounts for these gains? Repetto believes the majority of the gains are due to increased retail participation, for several reasons:

1) There is record volume on the Trade Reporting Facility (TRF). The TRF is the “tape” that reports trades not done on the exchanges.  It includes retail trades that are routed to market makers, as well as dark pools.   The vast majority of retail trades (90%) are reported to the TRF. TRF volume this month reached 48.6% of all trading, a record. Repetto believes most of this is due to an increase in retail trading.

2) Trades at retail brokers are way up. The average daily volume of the largest e-brokers in December 2020 was 6.6 million shares, a record.  In January so far, average trades are at 8.1 million, a 23% increase.

3) Equity option trading is way up. December saw an average of 32.7 million contracts trade on all the equity option exchanges, also a record. In January so far, 39.8 million contracts a day are trading. Repetto also cites data from CBOE indicating trading in single contract options have doubled in market share (4% to 8%) and tripled in volume in contracts per day.

“You don’t see an institution buying one contract,” Repetto told me.

Put it all together, Repetto says, and the evidence points to increased retail trading as the primary culprit in the overall increase in volume.

What is retail buying?

While attention focuses on big names like Tesla as a target of retail interest, Sosnick believes that much of the real volume increase is coming from obscure names on the low end of the trading universe.

“There is a lot of volume in low-priced stocks, $2 or $3 obscure stocks where volumes have exploded.  That tells me people are chasing momentum. They move because they start moving.  People start talking about them [in chat rooms] and they move,” he said.

As for options trading, Sosnick notes that the same phenomenon — buying out of the money call options that was so popular in 2020 — continues. 

“There is still a phenomenal interest in options, particularly short-dated calls,” he told me. “Those are the options with the longest odds against the buyer because they decay so rapidly, but they keep working as long as markets and individual stocks keep going up.”

Is there any sign retail traders getting more cautious? Interactive Brokers CEO Thomas Peterffy, in a December 30 interview on CNBC, said his clients at that time were net short the market.

“Our clients always make money when the markets go up and lose money when the market goes down, but for the past 5 days or so, it’s been the other way around,” he said.

But it’s not clear if that trend has continued in 2021, particularly since the markets have continued to move into record territory.

“The two natural options trades are call writers [sellers] and put buyers because that’s the way of insuring your portfolio,” Sosnick told me. “That has been turned on its head. Put buyers still exist, but they are being swamped by the people buying calls.”

When will this end? Sosnick doesn’t know, but looks for signs in another very speculative venture: ”While I never want to dismiss retail investors, there is a level of speculation that seems unsustainable.  When I look at Bitcoin potentially rolling over, that doesn’t bode well because I consider that the bellwether for speculative fervor.”

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