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

Fixed-Income Trading Operations Catch Up

Subscribe to our newsletter

Fixed-income trading operations may be as much as 15 years behind equities trading operations, but they are catching up quickly, according to executives in the field who spoke at the FIX Trading Community’s Americas Trading Briefing in New York on April 26.

“All the advancements in technology, the transfer of information and the execution of orders electronically are all in place, so it will naturally progress quickly,” said William Vulpis, managing director and head of KCG BondPoint.

The key elements for improving FICC (fixed-income instruments, currencies and commodities) trading operations are infrastructure, protocols and algorithms. Offering services for multiple asset classes creates more opportunities for firms, according to Benjamin Grizzle, managing director and head of multi-asset platform sales at Goldman Sachs.

“Creating a holistic ecosystem where customers can operate fully, you will pick up incremental opportunities from being not just a specialist, but a ‘stickier’ provider who provides everything,” he said.

Just as firms can handle more asset classes, they can also expand their stock of services, including research tools, order creation tools, order management system tools for pre-trade compliance checks, and execution management systems. Streamlined and consolidated supermarkets of service offerings can produce efficiency and cost benefits.

Still, firms must evaluate whether trading operations protocols are a help or a hindrance. Voice trading tends to be value-added, said Vulpis, and when traders spend more time on a trade that is manual, conducted by voice rather than electronically, the result should be “creating added revenue or alpha,” he said. In fixed-income, protocols dictating whether a trade is conducted by voice or electronically “are probably a bigger hurdle,” Vulpis added.

For firms to think about algorithmic trading of FICC, more infrastructure and development may still be needed, however. “You need to be able to book trades electronically — even voice trades — before you can quote them electronically and get enough liquidity so that it makes sense to have an algorithm,” said Grizzle. “In markets where liquidity is more elusive, figuring out how to bring together buyers and sellers in a way that benefits all market participants is one of the real challenges.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: From 24/7 to Event-Driven: Engineering the Next-Generation Exchange Platform

What digital asset and prediction markets are teaching traditional exchanges about availability, agility and time-to-market. New market structures and regulatory changes are forcing exchange operators to rethink the foundations of their technology stacks. Digital asset exchanges, prediction markets and retail-driven platforms have normalised 24/7 trading, continuous availability and rapid product iteration. In contrast, many traditional...

BLOG

ThetaRay Extends Agentic AI into AML Investigations with Ray

As regulatory expectations around anti-money-laundering (AML) effectiveness continue to rise, many financial institutions are finding that the greatest operational pressure now sits in investigations rather than detection. While transaction monitoring models have advanced, the downstream work of reviewing alerts, assembling evidence and documenting decisions remains labour-intensive and difficult to standardise. ThetaRay is addressing this challenge...

EVENT

Eagle Alpha Alternative Data Conference, London, hosted by A-Team Group

Now in its 8th year, the Eagle Alpha Alternative Data Conference managed by A-Team Group, is the premier content forum and networking event for investment firms and hedge funds.

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...