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

Reuters Testing Equity Derivatives Pricing Capability, Will Make Prices Available to All Clients in Q3

Subscribe to our newsletter

In a bid to keep up with customer requirements for prices across a broader range of instrument types, Reuters is currently testing a capability to price equity derivatives, with a view to making equity derivatives prices available to all clients in the third quarter. Increasingly, consumers of evaluations have a growing abundance of sources to choose from when it comes to pricing more “vanilla” derivatives. In response, Reuters is constantly looking to flesh out its coverage of the less vanilla markets, according to Fabien Bulabois, a senior fixed income evaluator at Reuters in London. “Reuters is exploring many less developed markets such as derivatives and structured finance transactions,” he says.

One of the new battlegrounds for providers of evaluated prices is set to be collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). These are among the instruments for which funds and administrators are struggling to find prices today, and we are likely to see a number of the evaluated pricing suppliers coming to market with CDO offerings in the coming months. Bulabois says while “currently Reuters does not offer CDO tranche pricing”, it “does provide evaluated and contributed pricing on underlying collateral that backs the tranches”. Asset-backed securities have also been a focus for Reuters which, he says, provides terms and conditions and pricing coverage for ABSs. Pricing for credit default swaps (CDSs) is also available, Bulabois adds. “Reuters provides both CDS credit curves from broker contributions and net present values from the evaluation team,” he says. “Reuters currently has access to over 15 dealers for this information.”
Reuters is also responding to the growing requirement from clients to provide additional data around the prices, to enable them to validate prices in their own shops, Bulabois says. “Reuters provides all data and assumptions with the price. Some of this data includes coupon, maturity, benchmark curve point and spread.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: How to organise, integrate and structure data for successful AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being rolled out across financial institutions, being put to work in applications that are transforming everything from back-office data management to front-office trading platforms. The potential for AI to bring further cost-savings and operational gains are limited only by the imaginations of individual organisations. What they all require to achieve...

BLOG

Arcesium Warns of Data Crunch as US Pension Funds Boost Private Market Bets

Blackstone’s launch of a business unit dedicated to the creation of products that give US pension funds access to private markets has raised the data challenge for many established investment managers. Blackstone is seeking to win pension trustees over to an investment space they had traditionally been wary of or have been restricted from entering...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

Now in its 2nd year, the AI in Capital Markets Summit returns with a focus on the practicalities of onboarding AI enterprise wide for business value creation. Whilst AI offers huge potential to revolutionise capital markets operations many are struggling to move beyond pilot phase to generate substantial value from AI.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2025 – Thirteenth Edition

Welcome to the thirteenth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a unique and practical guide to capital markets regulation, regulatory change, and the data and data management requirements of compliance across Europe, the UK, US and Asia-Pacific. This year’s edition lands at a moment of accelerating regulatory divergence and intensifying data focused supervision. Inside,...