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Broadridge to Acquire CQG, Strengthening Execution Layer in Futures and Options

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Broadridge has agreed to acquire CQG, in a move that significantly deepens its front-office trading technology capabilities in listed futures and options and strengthens its ambition to deliver an end-to-end, multi-asset execution platform.

The acquisition brings CQG’s execution management, algorithmic trading, analytics and exchange connectivity capabilities into Broadridge’s Trading and Connectivity Solutions business, complementing Broadridge’s existing order management and client connectivity infrastructure. Together, the combined offering is positioned as a unified trading suite for global futures and options markets.

Moving closer to the trader

For Broadridge, the transaction represents a clear step closer to the point of execution. While the firm has long played a central role in post-trade processing, connectivity and operational infrastructure, acquiring CQG adds a mature and widely deployed execution management layer to its front-office stack. This strengthens Broadridge’s ability to support trading workflows across the full lifecycle, from inbound connectivity and order management through to execution, analytics and outbound connectivity.

“At the highest level, the acquisition of CQG is a natural extension of our strategy,” Frank Troise, President of Broadridge’s Trading and Connectivity Solutions business, tells TradingTech Insight.  “It aligns directly with where we have been heading in futures and options. CQG brings exceptional execution management, analytics, connectivity and algorithmic trading, which complements our strengths and continued investment in order management. We see this as a significant step forward and a clear signal of our long-term commitment to becoming the standard of excellence in front-office capital markets trading solutions.”

The deal also reflects a broader industry trend toward consolidation in listed derivatives technology, as market participants seek tighter integration between OMS, EMS and connectivity components, alongside fewer vendors and clearer accountability for performance and resiliency.

“The products are highly complementary,” says Troise. “Together, we can deliver a true end-to-end experience – from inbound connectivity, through execution management and order management, to outbound connectivity, algorithms and analytics. The shared mindset is very much about delivering the best possible client experience across the entire workflow.”

OMS & EMS workflows

CQG’s technology footprint spans futures, options and related markets, serving a diverse client base that includes futures commission merchants, institutional investors, retail brokers, proprietary trading firms, CTAs and hedge funds. Broadridge expects the combined capabilities to support clients seeking scalable, globally consistent trading infrastructure across futures, options, FX and adjacent asset classes.

“If you look at the OMS and EMS workflows separately, there is historically a hand-off between the two – typically through an API integration,” notes Ryan Moroney, CEO of CQG. “While that initial hand-off can be well planned, the ongoing back-and-forth between systems introduces friction. Users often have to move between different interfaces to manage related tasks, which creates inefficiencies.”

By combining CQG’s execution and analytics strengths with Broadridge’s global scale and operational reach, the firm is positioning itself to deliver a more tightly integrated trading experience for both institutional and professional retail market participants.

“What we are aiming for is something more deeply integrated than a traditional OMS-EMS API connection,” says Moroney. “The goal is a single, unified solution where workflows are mapped end-to-end and the components are fully integrated, not loosely connected. That means the same interface can be used by the order desk and the executing broker, removing the need to manage multiple systems. It reduces friction and eliminates the disjointed experience that often exists today.”

Strategic implications beyond derivatives

While the primary focus of the acquisition is listed futures and options, Broadridge also frames the transaction as part of its broader innovation strategy across asset classes, including FX and digital assets. CQG’s exchange connectivity and execution architecture is presented as complementary to Broadridge’s ongoing work in emerging market structures, including tokenisation and distributed ledger–based workflows.

“We are taking tools that institutional traders take for granted in futures or fixed income – such as basis trading – and applying them to crypto markets and digital assets,” says Moroney. “As institutional adoption accelerates, these execution and aggregation tools become increasingly important. We have focused on expanding connectivity, handling crypto-specific market characteristics such as fractional trading, and integrating these into institutional-grade execution workflows.”

Troise adds: “Beyond that, we see strong alignment with our work in tokenisation. As tokenisation continues to evolve, CQG’s technology can complement and enhance our efforts. We view crypto, tokenisation and distributed ledger technology as opportunities to address complexity across the market ecosystem – from inbound connectivity through order and execution management to access to liquidity pools.”

The transaction is expected to close early in Broadridge’s fiscal fourth quarter, subject to customary regulatory approvals. Financial terms were not disclosed, and the acquisition is not expected to have a material impact on Broadridge’s financial results.

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