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

Cboe Europe Gets Go-Ahead to Join CME in Amsterdam for Post-Brexit European Trading

Subscribe to our newsletter

Cboe Europe, the most ‘pan’ of the pan-European equities exchanges set up in the wake of MiFID I, has received authorisation from the Dutch Ministry of Finance to operate its trading venues and MiFID II reporting mechanisms in the Netherlands, paving the way for it to go live with separate trading facilities for European clients if and when Brexit occurs.

Cboe Global Markets, owner since 2017 of Kansas-based BATS Global Markets (itself the former Best Alternative Trading System, founded by Tradebot CEO Dave Cummings and later run by Knight Ridder Financial, Bridge Information Systems and Thomson Reuters alum Joe Ratterman) is the latest exchange operator to secure fall-back arrangements for Brexit. It joins fellow Chicago-based venue operator CME Group in its selection of Amsterdam for location of its trading platforms.

Cboe Europe plans to operate a Regulated Market, Multilateral Trading Facility (MTF) and Approved Publication Arrangement (APA) in the Netherlands. It has stated that its planning has assumed a hard Brexit, worst-case-scenario stance. The venue operator has been testing its new facility since the beginning of February, and expects most of its clients to trade through its Dutch subsidiary. Tax revenues from transaction fees for Amsterdam-executed trades will go to the Dutch finance ministry.

Cboe will continue to offer its Recognised Investment Exchange (RIE) services in the UK, and will operate as Cboe Europe B.V. in Amsterdam, which is tentatively scheduled to open on April 1, depending upon political developments. A number of firms are already live in Brexit mode and Cboe is ready to make the cutover if needs be on a weekend towards the end of March.

Cboe Europe, a €7 billion a day European equities market, plans to operate its London and Amsterdam facilities in tandem, splitting trading for UK and European customers between the respective centres. That said, all order-matching will continue to be handled at Cboe Europe’s main data centre at Equinix’s campus in Slough, west of London, which will continue to offer trading in UK and Swiss stocks, valued at €3 billion a day.

For its part, CME has already announced plans to move its $15 billion-a-day EBS foreign exchange derivatives market and its €200 billion-a-day short-term financing market to Amsterdam, with trading scheduled to start March 18. That followed an earlier decision by CME’s BrokerTec fixed-income business to relocate its €200 billion-a-day European repo market, as well as its European government bond market, to Amsterdam.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Enhancing trader efficiency with interoperability – Innovative solutions for automated and streamlined trader desktop and workflows

Traders today are expected to navigate increasingly complex markets using workflows that often lag behind the pace of change. Disconnected systems, manual processes, and fragmented user experiences create hidden inefficiencies that directly impact performance and risk management. Firms that can streamline and modernise the trader desktop are gaining a tangible edge – both in speed...

BLOG

Interop.io Targets Secure AI Adoption in Finance with io.Intelligence Launch

Desktop interoperability specialist interop.io has today unveiled io.Intelligence, a new initiative designed to enable financial institutions to securely deploy and scale AI copilots within their existing technology infrastructure. The launch aims to bridge the gap between the powerful potential of AI and the practical realities of complex, highly regulated enterprise environments. The new offering provides...

EVENT

Data Management Summit New York City

Now in its 15th year the Data Management Summit NYC brings together the North American data management community to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

Entity Data Management

Entity data management has historically been a rather overlooked area of the reference data landscape, but with the increase focus on managing risk, the industry is finally taking notice. It is now generally agreed to be critical to every financial institution; although the rewards for investment in entity data management appear to be rather small,...