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

Bloomberg Offers Cautious Welcome to European Commission Decision on Thomson Reuters’ RICs

Subscribe to our newsletter

Bloomberg has responded to the European Commission’s decision to accept proposals from Thomson Reuters that open its Reuters Instrument Codes (RICs) to greater market use, by welcoming the change, but warning that compliance is critical if an open market for consolidated real-time data feeds is to be created.

The company stated: “In a press release issued today [20 December 2012], the European Commission announced that it has adopted a decision to implement commitments intended to remedy competition concerns relating to Reuters Instrument Codes (RICs). While details will have to be reviewed when the commitments themselves are published, we welcome the Commission’s efforts to promote competition and transparency in what has been a non-competitive market. As Thomson Reuters’ two prior proposals to the Commission fell far short, we hope that today’s order creates an open market, and that the appointment of an independent trustee ensures compliance.”

Bloomberg would not be drawn further on precisely how it considered the previous proposals “fell far short.” But like Thomson Reuters and despite its existing commitment to open symbology, it is most likely back at the drawing board considering how the change to RICs licences will impact its position in the market and its competitive stance vis-à-vis Thomson Reuters. 

While Thomson Reuters spent this year working with the Commission to reach an agreement on RICs licences that would open the market for consolidated real-time data feeds, Bloomberg has spent the year extolling the virtues of open symbology and set down markers that other market data vendors will find it difficult to contest if they too are too offer true open symbology solutions.

An example of Bloomberg’s commitment to open symbology and its adoption in the market is the early 2012 addition of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (Finra) to a growing list of organisations recognising and using Bloomberg open symbology. The nod from Finra was seen by financial firms as another step along the way to using open rather than proprietary symbologies designed to improve market connectivity and transparency, while reducing users’ costs.

At the time of the Finra agreement, Peter Warms, head of Bloomberg’s open symbology group, described his role as ‘spreading the gospel of open symbology’. He said: “Finra was among the organisations at the top of the list to approach. The market was keen to use open symbology to report to Finra and conversations with the regulator soon made clear the benefits of including it. This is a significant splash for us in terms of gaining traction in fixed income markets and we hope to see a ripple effect beyond fixed income as other organisations see the step Finra has taken.”

Warms described hundreds of clients using Bloomberg Global Identifiers (BBGIDs), which are part of the Bloomberg Open Symbology (BSYM) campaign, including exchanges such as NYSE, ACE, FTSE, Osaka and Bermuda, and third parties such as Asset Control, Flextrade, GoldenSource, Imagine Software and Murex.

No doubt the list has lengthened through the remainder of the year, giving Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters and others in the market data community much to think about following the Commission’s decision on RICs and ahead of a year when regulatory, cost and practical implementation issues will lead many market participants to increase their scrutiny of market data.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Streamlining trading and investment processes with data standards and identifiers

3 June 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes Financial institutions are integrating not only greater volumes of data for use across their organisation but also more varieties of data. As well, that data is being applied to more use cases than ever before, especially regulatory compliance and ESG integration....

BLOG

GLEIF Begins a New Decade in Growth Mode

The Global Legal Identifier Foundation (GLEIF) enters its second decade this month with its novel system of identifiers for everything from companies and their financial instruments to real assets fast becoming a global standard. While the next five years are expected to see yet more entities join the GLEIF’s open data project, the organisation’s immediate...

EVENT

TradingTech Briefing New York

Our TradingTech Briefing in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

FATCA – The Time to Act is Now

The US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act – aka FATCA – raised eyebrows when its final regulations requiring foreign financial institutions (FFIs) to report US accounts to US tax authorities were published last year. But with the exception of a few modifications, the legislation remains in place and starts to comes into force in earnest...