Asset Management
Europe's Structured Products Feel Market Chill

These entities remain an important part of the private bank and wealth management toolkit in Europe.
Structured products' turnover in Europe dipped 1 per cent in the
third quarter of this year from the previous three-month period,
and fell 10 per cent on a year ago, reaching €31 billion ($32.9
billion), pointing to weaker financial markets and depressed
activity.
The data came from the European Structured Investment Products
Association and was analysed by Avaloq Evolution. The EUSIPA data
includes material from Austria, Belgium, Germany, France, Italy,
the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and Luxembourg.
(WealthBriefing has asked the UK Structured Products
Association for its latest data and it may update this article in
due course.)
Covering a variety of strategies, a structured product is a term
covering a pre-packaged structured finance investment strategy
based on a single security, a basket of securities, options,
indices, commodities, debt issuance or foreign
currencies and, to a lesser extent, derivatives. The sector
has waxed and waned within the private banking/wealth management
space, suffering in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crash and
a period of ultra-low interest rates.
Third-quarter turnover in investment products on European trading
venues reached €8 billion, 25 per cent of total traded volume,
the data showed. Investment product turnover decreased by 16 per
cent quarter-on-quarter and by 39 per cent
year-on-year.
Turnover in leverage products, such as warrants and constant
leverage certificates, reached €23 billion in the period from
July to September, representing 75 per cent of total turnover.
Turnover in leverage products increased by 6 per cent
year-on-year and by 4 per cent from Q2 2022.
At the end of September, trading venues located in EUSIPA markets
were offering 414,250 investment products and 1,641,658 leverage
products.