By Jacob Bunge 
 

Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. (NDAQ) is planning a revamp of its tiny U.S. futures platform to expand a global push into fixed-income trading, according to a senior executive.

The transatlantic exchange group may offer interest-rate futures on the Nasdaq OMX Futures Exchange, adding to the imminent launch of a new bond derivatives market in the United Kingdom and Nasdaq's agreed to purchase of an electronic market for U.S. Treasurys.

"We have made the strategic decision to move aggressively into the fixed income space," said Eric Noll, head of U.S. transaction services for Nasdaq, in an interview.

Nasdaq moves into bond markets as trading in U.S. stocks, historically Nasdaq's core business, has slumped for three years running. Investors have pulled money from mutual funds and stuck to the sidelines while financial crises flared in Europe and the U.S. economy has staged a slow rebound from the 2008 credit crunch.

The bond effort comes as part of a broader strategy to reorient Nasdaq's business away from the trading of shares by adding technology and corporate services. In December Nasdaq made a deal to buy an investor relations business from Thomson Reuters Corp. (TRI, TRI.T) for $390 million.

Nasdaq now is updating the technology that runs its U.S. futures market, Mr. Noll said. The platform offers gold futures contracts but trading is minimal, with no contracts reported to have traded so far this year, according to clearinghouse operator OCC, which processes trades on the market.

Nasdaq this week will mount a direct challenge to exchanges owned by NYSE Euronext (NYX) and Deutsche Boerse AG (DBOEF, DB1.Xe), launching a new platform Friday called NLX that will offer futures contracts linked to benchmark European interest rates. Banks and hedge funds use the contracts to shield against shifts in key rates, or speculate on future moves.

In the U.S. Nasdaq will look to develop new interest-rate contracts that do not duplicate those already offered on other exchanges, Mr. Noll said. CME Group Inc. (CME) dominates trading of U.S. rate futures, and NYSE has launched a competing market.

Nasdaq is evaluating whether to process trades in the new contracts through OCC or another facility, including those run by LCH.Clearnet Group or New York Portfolio Clearing, Mr. Noll said.

Write to Jacob Bunge at jacob.bunge@dowjones.com

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