A widely used pricing reference in FX markets is under fresh scrutiny as the Foreign Exchange Professionals Association (FXPA) moves to clarify how traders should interpret spread grids. The industry body has published new guidance to address persistent misunderstandings that can distort execution expectations and strain relationships between market participants.

A Push for Clarity in Pricing Tools

FXPA developed the paper through its Buy Side Working Group, drawing input from participants across the global FX market. The group focused on a long-standing issue: while spread grids help frame expected trading costs, firms often interpret them in inconsistent ways.

The association states that spread grids serve as indicative tools. They provide context on expected costs across currency pairs, trade sizes, and market conditions. They do not represent firm quotes or contractual obligations.

This distinction sits at the center of the new guidance. FXPA warns that treating spread grids as executable pricing benchmarks can lead to mismatched expectations between liquidity providers and clients.

Richard Turner, Senior Trader at Insight Investment and Chair of FXPA’s Buy Side Working Group, pointed to changes in market structure as a key driver behind the initiative.

“Spread grids have been a longstanding feature of the FX market, providing valuable context around expected trading costs and liquidity conditions,” Turner said. “However, as execution workflows become increasingly data-driven and sophisticated, it is important that market participants understand both what spread grids can tell us – and what they cannot.”

Industry Perspective on Evolving Execution

He added that the guidance aims to support better execution decisions and improve dialogue between counterparties. The paper places strong emphasis on transaction cost analysis and execution data. FXPA argues that firms should rely more on observed trading outcomes, RFQ histories, and analytics rather than static reference grids.

Market conditions also play a central role. The guidance highlights how volatility, liquidity shifts, and trade size can all influence execution outcomes in ways that spread grids cannot fully capture. By combining spread grids with real execution data, firms can build a more accurate picture of pricing quality.

Reducing Friction in FX Markets

FXPA expects the guidance to improve alignment between buy side and sell side participants. Misinterpretation of spread grids has often led to disputes over pricing and execution quality.

Continue reading: When the Spread Stops Pricing Risk

The association believes a shared understanding of these tools can reduce friction in pricing discussions and strengthen evaluation frameworks across the market.

At a time when FX trading continues to shift toward data-driven decision-making, the guidance signals a broader industry push to refine how participants measure and communicate execution performance.

Tight spreads no longer reflect real risk. When the spread stops pricing risk, volatility doesn’t disappear – it shifts into balance sheets, inventory swings, and execution quality, making the true cost of trading visible only in realised entry and exit prices.

This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.Institutional FXRead More

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