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

EMS Functionality, Increased Footprint are Key Drivers in Mantara’s Acquisition of UNX

Subscribe to our newsletter

Customer requests for increased desktop functionality, as well as the opportunity to increase the footprint for its pre-trade risk and connectivity services, were key drivers for Mantara’s acquisition of UNX, says president and CEO Michael Chin.

UNX’s installed base for its Catalyst EMS offers Mantara a “valuable desktop presence” says Chin, providing a ready platform for more widely deploying its own Navigator risk control desktop software. In addition, Catalyst provides functionality that Mantara’s customers were requesting be built into Navigator, such as the ability to add, amend and cancel trades manually.

Chin says that the open design approach – leveraging Microsoft’s .Net platform – adopted for Catalyst will make it straightforward to integrate Navigator with Catalyst. In addition, Chin is open to having functionality from other EMS vendors also integrate with Catalyst – via its Marketplace plug-in design – to provide more complete functionality where customers request it. He views Catalyst as a platform for integration, not necessarily as an EMS offering that is everything to everybody.

While Mantara was looking to build additional functionality into Navigator, it was not actively looking to make any acquisition to achieve it, Chin says. Conveniently, it received an approach from Broadhaven Capital Partners, acting for UNX, which was exploring strategic directions. UNX’s broker/dealer business is not part of the acquisition, and Mantara will remain broker neutral.

Chin declines to say how much Mantara paid for UNX, but says the deal was part cash, part equity. He expects cost savings from absorbing UNX’s infrastructure. All of UNX’s employees – which Chin says are mostly highly qualified engineers and developers – are expected to join Mantara.

The combination of Catalyst with Mantara’s Expressway pre-trade risk, market data and connectivity adds a low-latency element to the EMS, Chin Says, suggesting that this is a general market direction of combining speed with value-added functionality.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

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

Date: 20 May 2026 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes 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...

BLOG

LSEG and Anthropic Partner to Embed Financial Data into AI Workflows

The London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) has announced a significant collaboration with artificial intelligence firm Anthropic, aimed at embedding its vast reserves of financial data directly into Anthropic’s new “Claude for Financial Services” offering. The move marks a key development in LSEG’s AI strategy, dubbed “LSEG Everywhere,” which focuses on making its trusted, licensed data...

EVENT

TEST Event page 2

Now in its 15th year the TradingTech Summit London brings together the European trading technology capital markets industry and examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

What the Global Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) Will Mean for Your Firm

It’s hard to believe that as early as the 2009 Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh the industry had recognised the need for greater transparency as part of a wider package of reforms aimed at mitigating the systemic risk posed by the OTC derivatives market. That realisation ultimately led to the Dodd Frank Act, and...