About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

RDUG Joins ISITC, FPL, FISD To Forge MiFID Working Group

Subscribe to our newsletter

The Reference Data Users Group (RDUG) has thrown in its cards with three other industry lobby groups to form a joint working group to address compliance issues spurred by the European Union’s Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), whose implementation date of early 2007 is causing ructions within the securities industry operations community.

Writing exclusively for Reference Data Review, RDUG founder Tony Kirby describes the MiFID as “not just the Investment Services Directive on steroids. The directive is likely to introduce fundamental shifts at a market level right across the EU-25 member states, whether trading occurs on-exchange or off-exchange.” (See Article, Page 8.)

MiFID, issued as a directive a year ago, is aimed at improving market transparency to raise the likelihood of investors achieving best execution. As such, the directive will require financial markets participants of all kinds, including data vendors, to adapt their business processes and IT structures.

The new working group sees RDUG team up with ISITC Europe, part of the International Standardization for Institutional Trade Communication group, the Software & Information Industry’s Financial Information Services Division (FISD) and FIX Protocol Ltd. (FPL). The group has selected Radianz’s Chris Pickles, co-chair of the FIX Protocol Global Education & Marketing Committee, to act as chairman of the new joint working group.

The four member groups plan to pool their resources “to develop best-practice recommendations, appropriate standards and increased industry awareness to help market participants achieve MiFID compliance.” The joint working group will hold its first meeting early next month.

The activities of the participating trade groups reflect the various stages of the trade life cycle, from the descriptive entity and instrument reference data (RDUG), through market data (FISD) and transaction messaging (ISITC and FPL). Kirby says the group will bring “greater focus and commonality as to how market and reference data should be managed in readiness for the rollout of MiFID.”

Gary Wright, managing director of London-based consultants City Compass, also writing in these pages, says: “The changes in both business practice and the technology that supports the business will be almost unprecedented.

Probably the closest comparison in size to the technology impact of MiFID is that of Y2K.” (See Article, Page 6.)
Wright expects MiFID, finally details of which were being thrashed out by politicians in Brussels, to spark a spike in demand for IT staff that could last for several years beyond the MiFID implementation deadline, as institutions and vendors scramble to achieve compliance. The Committee of European Securities Regulators (CESR) is consulting with the financial industry as a whole to define precisely how participants will comply with the new regulations. CESR and the EU have been urging the industry to come recommend standards for implementing the changes necessary for compliance. The new joint working group is clearly a step in this direction.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Are you making the most of the business-critical structured data stored in your mainframes?

Fewer than 30% of companies think that they can fully tap into their mainframe data even though complete, accurate and real-time data is key to business decision-making, compliance, modernisation and innovation. For many in financial markets, integrating data across the enterprise and making it available and actionable to everyone who needs it is extremely difficult....

BLOG

Nasdaq Suspends High-Speed Trading Service Amid Regulatory Scrutiny

Nasdaq has halted a high-speed trading service following concerns raised by competitors and regulatory scrutiny from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The service, which offered select clients access to lower-latency hollow-core fiber optic cables, was not publicly disclosed and had not undergone the SEC’s rule-filing process. Low-latency network provider McKay Brothers brought the...

EVENT

Data Management Summit London

Now in its 16th year, the Data Management Summit (DMS) in London brings together the European capital markets enterprise data management community, to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets: Practical Insight for a Transforming Industry – Free Handbook

AI is no longer on the horizon – it’s embedded in the infrastructure of modern capital markets. But separating real impact from inflated promises requires a grounded, practical understanding. The AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2025 provides exactly that. Designed for data-driven professionals across the trade life-cycle, compliance, infrastructure, and strategy, this handbook goes beyond...