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

Corvil Plans Next-Generation Predictive Trade Execution Analytics

Subscribe to our newsletter

Corvil will introduce its next generation of predictive trade execution analytics later this year, in a bid to exploit what it sees as a growing need for more advanced analysis of execution amid an increased as a growing tendency among buy-side firms to use sophisticated tools to analyse broker execution performance.

The Dublin-based trading data analysis specialist reckons buy-side firms are reallocating equity order flow among broker/dealers as a result of increased scrutiny of execution performance, putting increased pressure on sell-side firms to analyze their execution. Corvil cites research from Greenwich Associates that suggests buy-side firms are reallocating order flow between brokers based on execution performance.

The report, Customer Retention in the Age of Electronic Trading, notes that between 2017 and 2018, the median institutional client was reallocating a third of its US equity trading volume among brokers, and that median volume reallocation increased by 50% between 2014 and 2018.

This development coincides with the buy side’s take-up of sophisticated tools to assess broker performance. Data from the widespread use of Transaction Cost Analysis (TCA) in the investment process is being used by trading firms to determine execution quality and to reallocate their flow accordingly. The research found that firms consider fill rates to be the most important factor in profitability, eclipsing both latency and cancellation rates.

Corvil plans to add more sophisticated capabilities to its infrastructure monitoring and performance analytics systems later in the year to meet this growing appetite for analysis tools. The company believes that applying machine learning and artificial intelligence to machine-time data can provide insights into the quantitative relationship between trading systems performance and trade outcomes. By identifying performance factors that reliably predict outcomes, such as latency, the type of order, or symbol the system is trying to trade, Corvil’s order execution analytics can show where improvements should be made to ensure favourable trading results.

Greenwich Associates examined 2,200 pairwise broker-client relationships and found old alliances shifting, with significant and increasing levels of order flow reallocation. It says that firms looking to either defend themselves against reduced client loyalty or to leverage it to capture share, should monitor their own messages and executions, and use error detection and machine learning to address issues before they rise to the level of being detectable by clients.

Corvil says the Greenwich Associates study echoes sentiments expressed by many of its sell-side customers on the nature of performance transparency requests from investors. This now extends beyond fill rates of orders to monitoring execution, with firms requesting analysis by order type, symbol and/or broker, and identification of anomalies across venues.

In response to this demand, Corvil has added AI-powered data analytics to deliver trading intelligence to optimise execution quality, client experience and operations. Its real-time visibility into client order activity and outcomes helps brokers identify strategies and services to ensure clients achieve their goals as well as service differentiation by providing much demanded transparency around service execution.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Unlocking Competitive Edge with Outsourcing and Managed Services in Trading Technology

30 April 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes Outsourcing has emerged as a strategic solution for capital markets firms as trading technology infrastructures become more complex, data volumes grow exponentially, and regulatory pressures intensify. .By leveraging third-party expertise, firms can optimise operations, reduce costs, and focus on innovation in...

BLOG

Beyond the AI Hype: Six Trading Technology Trends to Watch in 2025

The trading technology landscape is heading into 2025 with unprecedented momentum, driven by a convergence of regulatory changes, market structure reforms, and advances in core infrastructure technologies. While artificial intelligence dominates much of the conversation around fintech, the year ahead will also be shaped by broader, practical shifts—from faster settlement cycles and rising data costs...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

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

GUIDE

Institutional Digital Assets Handbook 2024

Despite the setback of the FTX collapse, institutional interest in digital assets has grown markedly in the past 12 months, with firms of all sizes now acknowledging participation in some form. While as recently as a year ago, institutional trading firms were taking a cautious stance toward their use, the acceptance of tokenisation, stablecoins, and...