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

OpenFin Offers Low-cost OS to Start-ups and Initiates Services Framework

Subscribe to our newsletter

OpenFin continues to build out its interoperable financial desktop with the offer of its Enterprise Edition OpenFin operating system at a ‘dramatically’ reduced rate for early stage fintechs and start-ups. The initiative is designed to allow emerging businesses to build applications on the OpenFin OS alongside larger players, accelerating innovation and collaboration, and delivering additional desktop applications. OpenFin already offers the Community Edition of its software for free. The Enterprise Edition for start-up firms includes support, controlled runtime upgrades and workspace management features.

The company’s invitation to start-ups to join the ecosystem of firms already building applications on its OS, follows a hectic few months during which FlexTrade partnered OpenFin to provide buy-side traders with interoperability and improved workflows between the FlexTrader execution management system, FlexNow cloud-based trading system and other OpenFin third-party applications; KRM22 deployed its market surveillance desktop application Irisium on the OpenFin OS, making it the first compliance vendor to join the ecosystem; and OpenFin moved into the cloud with a turnkey solution allowing firms to build their own app store, store workspace configurations so that users can switch computers or work remotely, and create and manage user accounts and single sign-on for third-party apps.

Over the past year, the company has increased the number of desktops licensed to use OpenFin OS from about 140,000 to 200,000 and the OS is being used to deploy more than 1,000 financial applications to more than 1,500 banks and buy-side firms across 60 countries. Adam Toms, CEO at OpenFin Europe, puts OpenFin’s success down to offering an app agnostic platform that is open and encourages collaboration and inclusivity, and the fact that the company doesn’t compete in terms of building apps or selling data. It also lucked-in on timing, providing support for HTML5 apps, among others, when firms began to move to web technologies.

The company was set up in 2010 to solve the industry problem of installing numerous ‘thick’ applications on financial desktops. While integrating one or two apps was manageable using bespoke bilateral integration, scaling app integration was complex, time consuming and not very cost efficient. OpenFin took seven years to engineer OpenFin OS and, with other industry players, develop the Financial Desktop Connectivity and Collaboration Consortium (FDC3) to bring connectivity and standards to the industry, now under the umbrella of the Fintech Open Source Foundation (FINOS), a non-profit organisation promoting open innovation in financial services.

Its first client was an investment bank that identified with the product and its intent to innovate the desktop and reduce costs. Since then, interest in OpenFin OS has snowballed and the company says all 15 of the top 20 global banks are deploying and building on the platform to develop desktop strategies.

As well as app interoperability among both new and ‘thick’ apps, which are connected using adapters and the OS message bus, and vendor and in-house apps, OpenFin OS provides a layer that supports multi runtime of different versions of apps, ensuring that they can all work together on the desktop.

With a large number of apps built on the OS, OpenFin is starting to build out services that the apps can subscribe to. The first service integrated with the platform comes from MDX Technology and allows OpenFin users to connect their desktop apps to a range of MDX real-time market data feeds via a single application programming interface (API). More services are expected to follow and the company hopes the industry’s big data vendors will join the framework. Meantime, the company’s goal is to make OpenFin available on every financial desktop. Loner term, it is considering its potential in other sectors.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Trade the Middle East & North Africa: Connectivity, Data Systems & Processes

In Partnership With Date: 20 May 2024 Time: 11am London / 1pm Egypt & Saudi Arabia / 2pm United Arab Emirates / 6am CET Duration: 50 minutes As key states across the region seek alternatives to the fossil fuel industries that have driven their economies for decades, pioneering financial centres are emerging in Egypt, United...

BLOG

Unpacking the FCA Wholesale Data Market Study: Insights from Industry Insiders

Market participants were left scratching their heads in response to the UK Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) decision not to act to address the high cost of data following the February 29 release of its Wholesale Data Market Study. The study was the end result of a process launched in March last year amid concerns that...

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

FRTB Special Report

FRTB is one of the most sweeping and transformative pieces of regulation to hit the financial markets in the last two decades. With the deadline confirmed as January 2022, this Special Report provides a detailed insight into exactly what the data requirements are for FRTB in its latest (and final) incarnation, and explores what needs to be done in order to meet these needs on a cost-effective and company-wide basis.