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

Exberry Launches Cloud-Native Exchange Platform

Subscribe to our newsletter

Exchange and trading technology company Exberry has launched what it claims to be the first cloud-native exchange platform to support any asset. Nebula by Exberry provides a full exchange and marketplace solution, centred around a central limit order book (CLOB) and matching engine designed to support both traditional asset classes and digital securities.

The asset-agnostic Nebula platform is built on cloud-native architecture, which according to the company is not only elastic and scalable, but also revolutionises time to market, allowing exchanges and market operators to define, configure and launch a market in a matter of days.

“By enabling the industry to progress and overcome legacy barriers with their matching and trading tech, Nebula by Exberry allows new players to join the business arena without any tech, operational and capital hurdles,” says Exberry Co-founder and CEO Guy Melamed.

“Similar to all Exberry solutions, this is a cloud-native system, delivered as SaaS (software as a service), so clients can focus only on establishing their business and operate their markets while trusting the tech side to Exberry,” adds Melamed.

Cloud-based exchange platforms are on the rise. Indeed, we cited exchanges on the cloud as one of the “Five Trading Tech Trends to Watch in 2022” back in January. Late last year, both CME and Nasdaq announced major partnerships with Google and Amazon respectively.

The Nebula platform is designed to support all asset classes, from traditional assets (on exchange-traded financial instruments including stocks, equity, futures, and commodities) to digital assets, including alternative assets, gaming, real estate, crypto, and NFTs.

The solution, which comes with onboarding functionality, a configurable trading UI, advanced tracking capabilities, reporting, and wallet capabilities, can be based on either distributed ledger technology or on an internal ledger. This makes it appropriate for both existing market operators wishing to introduce new asset types and progress to new infrastructure, and for new players that wish to launch an exchange for any asset in an advanced, scalable, reliable, and cost-efficient way, according to the company.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Re-architecting the trading platform for interoperability, resilience and profitability

Trading platforms have come a long way since the days of exchanging paper certificates and shouting across trading floors, pits and desks in the early 2000s, but there is progress still to be made as firms strive to reduce risk, increase profitability, and make their mark in digital assets trading. This webinar will review the...

BLOG

The Key to Unlocking Alpha: The Data You Didn’t Know You Needed

By Brandon Tepper, Senior Vice President and Global Head of Data at Nasdaq. Markets can be up or down, volatile or steady, good or bad. But what is consistent is that companies and investors need to make important data-driven decisions to properly navigate them. The difference between success and failure lies in what types of...

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

Enterprise Data Management, 2009 Edition

This year has truly been a year of change for the data management community. Regulators and industry participants alike have been keenly focused on the importance of data with regards to compliance and risk management considerations. The UK Financial Services Authority’s fining of Barclays for transaction reporting failures as a result of inconsistent underlying reference...