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

Talking Intelligent Trading with Andrew Delaney: A Symphony of Paper Tigers

Subscribe to our newsletter

Some of us were encouraged – relieved, even – to read on various non-value-added news ‘services’ (PR wires?) about the success of the Symphony trader messaging collaboration in securing financial support from Google Alphabet, the new incubator-type funding organisation supported by You Know Who.

We were pleased because Google’s support clearly indicated to us that Symphony was no paper tiger.

Like many in the industry, we’ve long been perplexed by Bloomberg Chat and it’s ability to cast a spell of stickiness over the perhaps over-dimensioned, over-priced and over here Bloomberg Terminal. We love the Bloomberg Terminal but chat should be free and ubiquitous, to our minds. Like Skype, and stuff, right? We are all millennials now, after all.

Symphony, obviously, is the industry’s response to Bloomberg messaging. It’s only taken a decade or two but hey, we are here and we have funding to break the lock on trader desktops the world over. Certainly nothing wrong in that.

But until we heard the news of Google’s commercial involvement, we had been concerned that Symphony would hit a flat note, so to speak. That it was nothing more than the latest in a long-running series of industry initiatives designed only to break suppliers’ locks on mission-critical functionality, only to disappear back into some or other back water.

In other words, a paper tiger.

Our fears may not have been as unfounded as some might think. Here are some examples of paper tigers that have impacted our lovely industry:

EJV Partners. The Electronic Joint Venture of major investment banks that aimed to break the stranglehold of the Bloomberg Terminal by contributing key analytics and data into a competitive service. Salomon Brothers YieldBook was a key component. EJV ended up as part of Bridge Information Systems, then Reuters, then Thomson Reuters, where YieldBook I believe can still be found.

Turquoise. The dark pool designed to break the stranglehold of the London Stock Exchange over exchange and transaction fees as part of the MiFID I initiative. Now part of, erm, the London Stock Exchange.

Boat. An industry initiative designed to demonstrate the industry could do trade-reporting for themselves – and the reguators thus didn’t need to impose. After an initial hubbub, Boat was acquired by Markit, under the latter’s remit to streamline all industry process for its then-owners, all industry practitioners. Last I heard it was sold off by Markit and now features as a line item on somebody’s web site. You tell me.

Govpx. Contributed US government bond price feed aimed at smashing Telerate’s and later Bloomberg’s dominance. Ended up dominated by a single IDB (ICAP), thus contributing to the latter’s dominance of the wholesale government bond pricing marketplace.

TradeWeb. A multi-dealer platform aimed at breaking the dominance of Bloomberg in the fixed-income transaction space. Made a dent; reduced fees; ended up with Thomson, then Thomson Reuters, where it resides to this day.

Electronic Broking Services (EBS). Perhaps the closest to a successful case of industry collaboration that broke the mould. Founded out of the FXnet ‘netting by novation’ initiative set up by Chase Manhattan’s Peter Bartko, EBS gave Reuters Dealing – specifically Dealing 200-2 matching – a true run for its money. Once its job was done, it nestled nicely at ICAP, where it remains to this day (data centre in Slough, natch).

We remain optimistic that Symphony will be more EBS-like than some of its peers. With Google behind it, we are doubly optimistic.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Navigating the Build vs Buy Dilemma: Cloud Strategies for Accelerating Quantitative Research

For many quantitative trading firms and asset managers, building a self-provisioned historical market data environment remains one of the most time-consuming and resource-intensive steps in establishing a new research capability. Sourcing data, normalising symbologies, handling corporate actions and maintaining infrastructure can take months and absorb significant budget before a single model is tested. At the...

BLOG

What an Actimize Sale Might Mean for Surveillance and FinCrime Technology

When news emerged that NICE is preparing to sell its Actimize division – long regarded as one of the most established full-stack platforms for financial crime, fraud, and surveillance – the immediate headlines focused on valuation. With reports suggesting a price in the range of US$1.5–2 billion, the deal would be one of the RegTech...

EVENT

Data Management Summit London

Now in its 16th year, the Data Management Summit (DMS) in London brings together the European capital markets enterprise data management community, to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2026

AI adoption in capital markets has moved into a more disciplined phase. The priority is now controlled deployment: where AI can be used safely, where it can deliver measurable value, and how outputs can be governed, monitored and evidenced. The 2026 edition of the AI in Capital Markets Handbook examines how AI is being applied...