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

The Consolidated Tape Iceman Cometh

Subscribe to our newsletter

We read the latest CESR advice on transaction reporting with alarm. In short, it suggested that the market had failed to find its own solution to the challenge of transaction reporting in a fragmented liquidity environment.

But has it?

Since the implementation of MiFID in 2007, the market has seen the launch of a specific, market-supported trade reporting service in the form of MarkitBoat – which, you’ll recall, was set up by a group of investment banks before it was offloaded to Markit. Market data vendors like Thomson Reuters and Bloomberg have introduced consolidated trade data services. And large banks and brokerages have used software from a variety of providers to build their own consolidated post- (and pre-) trade views.

Yet, CESR says: “Since MiFID implementation many data vendors have been delivering consolidated data. However these services are not of a standard that fully satisfies market participants.”

How so?

CESR elucidates thus: “A recurring theme in the analysis of why consolidated data is not being delivered to the market to the standard it needs is the inadequate quality and consistency of the raw data itself, the inconsistencies in the way in which firms report it for publication, and the lack of any formal requirements to publish data through bodies with responsibilities for monitoring the publication processes.”

Fair enough, but CESR goes on: “CESR and market participants generally agree there is a need for an affordable consolidation of post-trade information … “

Yes, in essence, consolidated data is available, but it does cost. And cost seems to be the crux of the issue here. The data is available if you want to pay for it.

In its advice paper, CESR makes recommendations on how to “ensure the quick development of a European consolidated tape for transparency information at a reasonable cost.” CESR is calling for the creation of so-called Approved Publication Arrangements (APAs), which could be an exchange, an MTF or some other entity.

Pre-MiFID, exchanges were in essence APAs. Will more of them boost post-trade transparency? We wonder.

Some have called for the market participants to address this specific sharpish, before the New Regulators come in and create a US-style consolidated tape. FIX Protocol Ltd. has been put forward as a body that could step in and fix things, no pun intended.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: The Role of Data Fabric and Data Mesh in Modern Trading Infrastructures

The demands on trading infrastructure are intensifying. Increasing data volumes, the necessity for real-time processing, and stringent regulatory requirements are exposing the limitations of legacy data architectures. In response, firms are re-evaluating their data strategies to improve agility, scalability, and governance. Two architectural models central to this conversation are Data Fabric and Data Mesh. This...

BLOG

From Noise to Signal: How AI is Revolutionising Data Discovery for Traders and Investment Managers

The financial markets have never suffered from a lack of data. If anything, the challenge for modern traders and investment managers is quite the opposite: they are drowning in it. From real-time pricing and news feeds to unstructured earnings call transcripts and social media sentiment, the volume of information is immense. The critical differentiator in...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit New York

Our TradingTech Summit in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

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,...