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

CGS and FOW Tradedata Launch Cusip Service for US Equity Options

Subscribe to our newsletter

Two months after the formal announcement of its partnership with UK-based futures and options specialist FOW Tradedata, Standard & Poor’s Cusip Global Services (CGS) business has launched its new Cusip Options Service for US listed equity options. The vendor began this year demonstrating an aggressive stance towards extending its reach into other areas of the entity and securities identification space and this launch is just one example of its ambitions put in practice.

CGS, which is managed by S&P on behalf of the American Bankers Association, indicated in May that it was planning to launch the new service by the end of June and has duly met its deadline. “Today’s announcement underscores CGS’ commitment to global investors to expand our coverage of asset classes to equity options. With the inclusion of option Cusips, investors now have a consistent nine character Cusip and 12 character ISIN to track options in their security masters,” says Jim Taylor, managing director of CGS.

The service contains over one million option Cusips with accompanying ISINs and related data elements such as strike price, contract name, exchange code and underlying symbol. Market participants can receive the Cusip Options Service directly from CGS or via a properly licensed vendor. FOW Tradedata’s Xymbology product, which maps option contracts to market data and proprietary vendor codes, will also contain option Cusips and ISINs.

The Cusip Options Service provides nine character Cusip numbers and 12 character ISINs for each contract strike price. FOW Tradedata is the source of the contract data covering all the major options exchanges in the US. The Cusip Options Service contains unique identifiers that will not conflict with other Cusips, says CGS. The letter C (call) and P (put) in the third position of the Cusip will be reserved for option Cusips.

“We believe this new coverage will greatly help with standardisation in the global options market and complement the Options Clearing Corporation’s (OCC) planned 21 character Options Symbology Initiative (OSI) code,” says Taylor.

The OCC was selected earlier this year to operate the new symbology allocation system, which is being introduced as an alternative standard to the Options Price Reporting Authority (Opra) code by 2010. Last year, the Financial Information Forum (FIF) estimated that the cost of its introduction would total around US$250 million.

The industry has a lot of work still to do to meet the requirements of the new system by next year. Currently, most firms are only able to store nine or 12 digit identification codes and in order to comply with OSI, they will have to create proprietary identifiers for listed contracts for purposes including client reporting and processing.

This release by CGS and FOW Tradedata should go some way to supporting their efforts around the OSI and, according to the results of the FIF survey, it is likely to get some traction in the market. According to the survey, which was published in October last year, 39% of respondents said at the time they would use codes created by CGS to help them meet their requirements. This was by far the most popular choice, as only 7% said they would use Interactive Data’s solution, 2% would use Symbol Management Clearing, 7% indicated they would use their current internal identifiers, 7% were uncertain and 24% declined to comment.

It should be more evident by the end of the year whether these figures will prove accurate.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Hearing from the Experts: AI Governance Best Practices

9 September 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes The rapid spread of artificial intelligence in the financial industry presents data teams with novel challenges. AI’s ability to harvest and utilize vast amounts of data has raised concerns about the privacy and security of sensitive proprietary data and the ethical...

BLOG

Being Prepared for Tomorrow Requires an Advanced Data Architecture Today

By Don Huff, Global Head of Client Services and Operations, Bloomberg and Maureen Gallagher, Head of Enterprise Reference Data, Bloomberg. Data has quickly become the hottest commodity in the financial sector: trading and investment teams are laser-focused on accessing the best, newest data to get an edge on the competition. While this arms race for...

EVENT

RegTech Summit London

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in London will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the European capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Enterprise Data Management, 2010 Edition

The global regulatory community has become increasingly aware of the data management challenge within financial institutions, as it struggles with its own challenge of better tracking systemic risk across financial markets. The US regulator in particular is seemingly keen to kick off a standardisation process and also wants the regulatory community to begin collecting additional...