
More than a month after completing its acquisition of OpenGamma, Trading Technologies is beginning to articulate how the deal is intended to change the way firms think about margin, capital efficiency, and trading decision-making. Rather than positioning margin as a downstream risk or treasury concern, TT is now framing capital efficiency as a front-office variable that can be assessed and acted upon in real time.
The acquisition brought OpenGamma’s margin and capital optimisation analytics into the TT platform, with the aim of embedding economic intelligence directly into execution and position-management workflows. The strategy reflects a broader shift in derivatives markets, where margin requirements and liquidity constraints increasingly influence how, where, and when firms trade.Margin moves upstream
Peter Rippon, EVP and Head of Margin and Analytics at Trading Technologies, tells TradingTech Insight that the industry is still grappling with the unintended consequences of post-crisis regulatory reforms.
“For over a decade following the financial crisis, there has been a consistent regulatory push to reduce the leverage provided by derivatives,” he says. “When we entered the sudden volatility of 2022, however, we saw the result: a new type of massive liquidity squeeze where cash became trapped in margin requirements.”
According to Rippon, this dynamic has materially increased the capital and liquidity burden on firms, forcing them to reconsider how execution decisions interact with capital usage. “We have been watching this issue bubble in the background, seeing how it increases trading costs for the firms we work with,” he says. “Now, firms are realising that capital efficiency is dictated by how they trade.”
While this awareness began in the back office with operations and treasury teams, it is rapidly moving to the front office, notes Rippon. “Ultimately, traders must now care about capital in a way they never had to prior to the financial crisis.”
From analytics to action
Alun Green, EVP and Managing Director, Futures and Options at Trading Technologies, highlights how the strategic value of OpenGamma lies in its ability to analyse margin at a portfolio level rather than in isolation.
“While TT already provides margin calculation at the trade level, OpenGamma goes significantly further by recognising that a portfolio is often fragmented across different brokers, cleared markets, and OTC positions,” he says. “The value lies not just in analysing a single trade, but in optimising how that entire portfolio is allocated to realise significant capital savings.”
Crucially, Green positions the acquisition as a way of connecting analytical insight directly to execution. “The real synergy here is the bridge between intelligence and action,” he says. “OpenGamma provides the ‘what-if’ capability to ask: ‘How do I optimise my existing portfolio based on where the market is going?’ The answer might require moving positions between exchanges or brokers. That is where TT fits in – providing the execution platform to turn those optimisation suggestions into reality. We are effectively moving this decision-making upstream, empowering Portfolio Managers and Treasurers to assess the capital impact of a venue or counterparty before they trade.”
One platform, multiple personas
Green also emphasises that the combined platform is being designed to reflect the different ways market participants interact with trading and capital decisions.
“We recognise that different personas interact with the market differently; a portfolio manager does not need the same tools as an execution trader or a treasury desk,” says Green. “Therefore, we are not taking a ‘one size fits all’ approach. While the platform is unified at its core, it offers tailored views and specific toolsets designed for each unique role. This flexibility extends to how clients adopt the technology.”
He continues: “We are building a fully integrated suite – spanning execution, clearing, surveillance, and capital optimisation – but we are not forcing clients to adopt the entire package. It is modular by design. Ultimately, the customer buys only what they need, ensuring they get a solution that fits their workflow without paying for redundancy.”
Reducing friction at the point of entry
Rippon frames success less in terms of new functionality and more in terms of shifting decision-making earlier in the trading process.
“For us, success is defined by unlocking capital efficiency for our clients,” he says. “When this workflow operates correctly, we lower the barrier to trading efficiently. Currently, treasury teams often sit in the background, reacting to problems created by inefficient execution and fixing them post-trade. There is no reason for this to happen after the fact; it can be solved at the point of entry. This is simply a more efficient way to trade.”
Rippon positions automation as a way to improve both efficiency and control, rather than trading one off against the other. “We are removing friction by eliminating the need for re-keying data and manual phone calls to brokers,” he says. “By automating these steps, we ensure that rigorous risk controls are in place without the operational vulnerability that comes from manual intervention. Technology should make the process easier, not just faster.”
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