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

How to Deliver Algo Performance through Enhanced Market Simulation

Subscribe to our newsletter

Sell-side firms struggling to gain ground in a highly competitive and regulated trading environment, where low-latency technology is a commodity and highly performant trading strategies and algorithmic models are the only differentiators, are looking at the potential of agent-based simulation (ABS) techniques that could optimise execution system performance and allow algorithms to attract and retain buy-side liquidity.

White Paper Download: Delivering Algo Performance through Enhanced Market Simulation

ABS goes hand-in-hand with agent-based modelling (ABM), which works by modelling micro-behaviours and interactions between different agents that lead to complex, macro-level outcomes. By understanding the interactions of behaviours of individual agents within a system, users can gain a far deeper insight into the causes of macro outcomes.

Using ABS, firms can circumvent the issues presented by traditional approaches to back-testing, such as bias and overfitting, and train their algos for an unlimited range of trading regimes. By running thousands of simulations for every positive regime, the optimal execution decision path can be chosen by the algorithm every time. This can be done on the fly during the trading day, ensuring algos are optimised for all trading situations.

A recent A-Team Group white paper, sponsored by Simudyne and based on a survey of 15 sell-side executives involved in algo trading, considers the challenges faced by sell-side firms, many the result of regulatory change in both the EU and US; the competitive nature of the market; potential differentiators; how firms are using algos and algo wheels to attract new business and order flow; and the operational limits on differentiating and optimising the performance of algos.

Countering these challenges, the paper discusses the detail and potential of ABS, and the many benefits it can deliver.

To find out more about Simudyne’s approach to agent-based simulation and its potential to offer competitive advantage, download the white paper.

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

Re-imagining the User Experience: LSEG’s Workspace Strategy

Earlier this year, the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) announced that it was on track to transition all Refinitiv Eikon clients to Workspace, LSEG’s next generation workflow platform, by the end of 2024, and that it intended to shut down Eikon in 2025. Over 50% of clients have now been migrated to the new platform,...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

The AI in Capital Markets Summit will explore current and emerging trends in AI, the potential of Generative AI and LLMs and how AI can be applied for efficiencies and business value across a number of use cases, in the front and back office of financial institutions. The agenda will explore the risks and challenges of adopting AI and the foundational technologies and data management capabilities that underpin successful deployment.

GUIDE

Impact of Derivatives on Reference Data Management

They may be complex and burdened with a bad reputation at the moment, but derivatives are here to stay. Although Bank for International Settlements figures indicate that derivatives trading is down for the first time in 10 years, the asset class has been strongly defended by the banking and brokerage community over the last few...