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

What’s to Come in 2020: Advanced Trading Technology Opens Door to Highly Individualized and Agile Strategy

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Chris Hollands, Head of European and North American Sales, TradingScreen

Farewell to the 2010s, the decade of pure speed. The period when automated trading shot up the curve, ascending from a tool of the early adopters to a cross-asset industry norm. We embraced algorithms as our trump card, so much so that they now account for the lion’s share of buy-side equities orders and FX trades, and have growing importance in fixed income and other traditionally high-touch workflows.

Electronic trading will continue to shape our industry’s future, delivering the speed, scale and embedded compliance that provides a competitive edge. But from hereon in, it’s not only the automation that will shape the future. In the 2020s, the broader application of newer, more advanced technologies will underpin the endeavours of the buy-side trading desk.

Thanks to the exponential advances in machine learning and analytics visualisation, algorithmic trading technology has almost reached an infinite level of customisation. Savvy brokers and their algo development partners can create increasingly sophisticated and high performing execution strategies in an agile manner. With or without high touch, the era of bespoke broking is back, but with much greater efficiency.

So how does the buy side best equip itself to leverage these solutions? Today’s SaaS trading tools provide the most robust and scalable option to facilitate the following capabilities:

  • Plan, back-test and analyse: Next-generation tools and platforms enable traders to efficiently extract vast samples of historical tick data, and even real-time analytics for back-testing and research. It is therefore possible to predict how a proposed trading strategy behaves over different market cycles to help determine long term profitability. Such insights can help generate custom and interactive real-time visualisations to reveal opportunities more intuitively.
  • Design, develop and deploy: With open source APIs, traders can convert their trading insights into custom strategies and connect their unique algorithms to a SaaS deployed trading network such as TradeSmart, and trade across all markets and asset classes via one connection. Through integrated compliance engines, the challenges of an increasingly complex regulatory landscape can be swiftly navigated allowing order flow to reach the desired counterparty, liquidity provider or venue as seamlessly and efficiently as possible.
  • Monitor, adapt and execute: A flexible workflow, supporting both solicited and unsolicited order generation requires a fluid interconnection between the OMS and the EMS, which often has not been the case. This interplay not only enables engagement with disparate and diverse data sources and multiple trading protocols, but also real-time execution reporting and analytics which can be fed into the pre-trade decision-making loop.

In summary, all-asset-class connectivity, open SaaS architecture and a fully integrated data model are the essential ingredients for optimal execution for the buy side. Access to pre-canned referential data, a flexible range of live market data and streaming price feeds, together with an out-of-the-box historical database that generates its own custom indicators and proprietary trading strategies, cannot be understated.  These content and functionality rich capabilities all contribute to the buy-side’s central objectives of best execution, the maximisation of operational efficiencies and the reduction of TCO.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best practice approaches to trade surveillance for market abuse

Breaches of market abuse regulation can lead to reputational damage, eye-watering fines and, ultimately, custodial sentences of up to 10 years. Internally, market abuse triggers scrutiny of traders and trading behaviours; externally it can undermine confidence in markets and cause financial instability. This webinar will discuss market abuse of different types, such as insider trading...

BLOG

As Good as it Looks: Why UI/UX Design Has Become a Crucial Ingredient in Retail Platforms’ Success

By Matt Barrett, CEO of Adaptive. We are told not to judge a book by its cover. Yet we are naturally drawn to content and platforms that, on the surface, stand out from the crowd. When quality design is the norm, as is increasingly the case in our digital world, customers’ expectations of exceptional user experience...

EVENT

ESG Data & Tech Summit London

The ESG Data & Tech Summit will explore challenges around assembling and evaluating ESG data for reporting and the impact of regulatory measures and industry collaboration on transparency and standardisation efforts. Expert speakers will address how the evolving market infrastructure is developing and the role of new technologies and alternative data in improving insight and filling data gaps.

GUIDE

The Reference Data Utility Handbook

The potential of a reference data utility model has been discussed for many years, and while early implementations failed to gain traction, the model has now come of age as financial institutions look for new data management models that can solve the challenges of operational cost reduction, improved data quality and regulatory compliance. The multi-tenanted...