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Euronext does not see outages as barrier to Borsa Italiana deal

Stéphane Boujnah, CEO, Euronext
Stéphane Boujnah, CEO, Euronext
Stephane Boujnah, CEO, Euronext.

Euronext has denied that a series of technical failures last month that halted trading on the exchange will hinder the group’s chances of securing regulatory approval to buy Borsa Italiana for €4.3 bn from the London Stock Exchange next year.

Speaking to journalists after the release of the company’s third-quarter results, CEO Stephane Boujnah said he has had “extensive conversations with regulators and it has been put in perspective”.

“The unfortunate incident has been discussed with the relevant stakeholders but doesn’t challenge the need or the model to create the backbone of Europe’s market infrastructure,” he added.

A series of glitches disrupted trading on Euronext on 19 October for three hours and ended with the abandonment of the crucial end-of-day auction. Only Oslo Bors, which runs on a different technology system, escaped unscathed.

There was another incident on Monday, 2 November further prompting concerns about the risks of one operator responsible for so many platforms.

Euronext runs the main exchanges in Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin and Lisbon as well as has a majority stake in Oslo Bors. Once the Milan bourse is added in the first quarter 2021, pending regulatory approval, Euronext would account for roughly a quarter of all equities trading in Europe.

This has prompted industry group Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) to voice its concern about the unnecessary risks posed to the markets by this stronghold.

Boujnah defended the integrated platform approach, saying it is in line with the plans for a Capital Markets Union in the European Union.

“Euronext has invested heavily in technology, capacity, latency and processes,” he added. “This has allowed us to deliver a platform which is cutting-edge that has been extremely stable and resilient since it was released.”

He added that the “platform did an amazing job during the peak of volatilities and volumes in March, April and May. And we believe that it is the backbone of the Euronext project, which is all about building a single liquidity pool, enabled by a single order book, empowered by a single technology platform.”

Euronext reported third quarter revenues of €204.8m, up 12.7% from the same quarter in 2019. Net income rose 10.6% to €70.2 m.  The group continued to diversify earnings with non-volume related revenues currently at 54% of the total compared to 52% last year.

©BestExecution 2020

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Digital Transformation: Client Services Models

Digital Transformation: Client Services Models

The Fraught Hunt for a Best Practice Model

This report presents an analysis of a subset of the datapoints garnered from GreySpark’s annual Trends in E-commerce Survey, which – in 2020 – was carried out over the first half of the calendar year. Contained within the sub-set of survey data was a series of questions posed to more than half of the world’s top-30 Tier I and Tier II Commercial & Investment Banks (CIBs) focused on the digital aspects of their global client services models, from which 15 institutions provided a number of meaningful quantitative and qualitative responses.

https://greyspark.com/report/digital-transformation-client-services-models/

Update on U.S. Equity Market Structure

Ray Ross and Joe Wald, Co-Heads of Market Structure at BMO Capital Markets, discuss current developments in U.S. equity market structure with GlobalTrading Editor Terry Flanagan.


Included in the conversation was an update on SEC Rule 606(b)(3), about which Greenwich Associates recently published a report

Markets steady as US election on knife edge

Colin Moore, CIO, Columbia Threadneedle.

The outcome that many on Wall Street had feared emerged as Election Day failed to produce a clear winner in the US presidential race. However, investors are holding their nerve as the counting continues and President Trump is launching multiple lawsuits in key battleground states including Pennsylvania and Georgia.

After a bout of volatility, US markets closed with a rally on Wednesday, with the S&P 500 finishing 74.28 points higher, or 2.2%, to 3,443.44 while the technology-heavy Nasdaq rose 430.21 points, or 3.85%, to 11,590.78. In Europe, the region-wide Stoxx 600 gained 0.6 % in early trading today, as tech stocks led the way. Germany’s Dax rose 0.8% while London’s FTSE 100 was up 0.1%.

The final result hinges on the final tally in the states of Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

Analysts and fund managers in the US attributed the rally to relief that a ‘Blue Wave’ – the Democrats winning the presidency and Senate – did not happen which means a lower chances of tax hikes and increased regulation being implemented.

Chris Iggo, chief investment officer, AXA Investment Managers.

According to David Page, head of macro research, and Chris Iggo, chief investment officer, at AXA Investment Managers, “President Trump has done much better than polls suggested, but as yet the Presidential election outcome is unknown and appears on a knife-edge. The close outcome raises fears of a contested election as late-counted, mail-in votes are likely to skew towards Democrats.”

They believe that Treasury yields are likely to remain stable, or even move lower, as stimulus expectations are tempered and in response to any risk-off sentiment. Meanwhile, defensive growth stocks in the large-cap technology sector could continue their outperformance against a backdrop of stable yields and a lesser threat from the higher taxes and tighter regulation a Democratic sweep might have introduced.

Columbia Threadneedle CIO, Colin Moore advises patience. “While this isn’t ideal, it’s not unprecedented,” he says. “It is not unusual to not have all votes counted on election eve, but this year is especially challenging because of the large number of mail-in and absentee ballots. The difference in voting preference between mail-in/absentee (leaning Democrat) and in-person (leaning Republican) is quite dramatic and complicates predicting the outcome in a few states regardless of current tallies.

He adds that if there is a stalemate, there are constitutional backstops that address inconclusive results. “Indeed, Federal law requires that we have a president on Inauguration Day, which should give investors some degree of comfort in what is likely to be a volatile period,” he says.

©BestExecution 2020
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MeTheMoneyShow – Episode 24 (Open Sourcing and Cloud Technology)

Dan Barnes and Shanny Basar discuss open sourcing and cloud technology (and avoid the US election).

Me The Money Show Episode 24 from Markets Media on Vimeo.

©Best Execution & TheDESK 2020

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European Women in Finance : Sabrina Wilson : Taking calculated risks

Sabrina Wilson’s role as Global co-Head of Futures, Clearing and FX Prime Brokerage at Citi revolves around risk management. So, it is appropriate that she credits her career progression to taking calculated risks. Shanny Basar reports.

After completing a post-graduate Master’s degree in Economics and Finance from the Université Panthéon Assas (Paris II), Wilson joined JP Morgan in 1999 and moved to New York, where she did not know anybody. As Wilson says, when the opportunity to move to New York arose, “I put up my hand…, drove the move to electronification when it was a nascent product and moved out of my comfort zone.” Her vision that the electronification of trading would be the future of the industry has proved to be prescient.

After a move to Deutsche Bank, Wilson then joined Citi in September 2017. “Citi’s leading position in clearing, the size of its network and breadth of its products were very appealing,” she said. “I could see that Citi had a plan to continually invest, and understood the importance of clearing as an important ingredient of its markets business.”

Wilson continued that the bank has made a huge investment to improve global execution and algorithmic platforms in futures over the last three years, which has been somewhat acyclical as rivals have been cutting investment.

The expansion was necessary because in the EU, MiFID II expanded best execution requirements beyond equities to encompass all asset classes including fixed income and commodities.

“This has been a contributor to the growth in algo usage and the recent Covid-19 crisis has precipitated the increase in electronification,” added Wilson.

Regulation
The extreme volatility caused by the pandemic in the first quarter of this year caused a dramatic increase in margin requirements at derivatives’ clearinghouses according to a white paper from the FIA, the global trade organization for the futures, options and centrally cleared derivatives market.

The amount of initial margin held by the 10 largest derivatives clearinghouses rose 48% during the first quarter to $833.9bn. In addition, customer funds in futures and swaps accounts at US clearing firms jumped by a record $138bn between February and March.

Wilson said the increase in futures margins during the extreme volatility aggravated stress in the markets. “The pro-cyclicality of margin levels on the futures side is the topic of an important industry debate,” she added.

Market participants sell liquid assets in order to fund increased margin requirements, which can spill over to other financial markets and increase systemic risk. The FIA’s white paper has suggested changes to the margin framework to reduce this pro-cyclicality.

After the financial crisis in 2008, regulators acted to shift over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives into central clearing. As a result, the uncleared margin rules have been implemented in phases since 2016, which require the exchange of collateral for bilateral derivatives that are not centrally cleared.

As a result there has been an increase in central clearing for non-deliverable forwards (NDFs) in foreign exchange. NDFs are derivatives that are used to hedge or speculate against currencies where exchange controls make it difficult for overseas investors to make a physical cash settlement, for example, the Chinese renminbi.

Wilson said dealers are already largely clearing NDFs but there is room for further development.

“We expect more buyside interest as firms become subject to uncleared margin regulations in 2021,” she said. “Citi is well positioned as a leader in the FX clearing space and due to the strength of our FX franchise.”

She continued that Chris Perkins, her co-head, has been at the forefront of driving innovation in partnership with CCPs as this asset class makes a gradual transition to clearing.

Wilson said her aims are to maintain Citi’s dominance in OTC clearing and FX prime brokerage.

“We will continue to invest in the futures business to increase client penetration with our low-touch execution proposition and we are evaluating important opportunities in the environmental, social and governance product segment,” she added.

Diversity
Wilson’s advice to other women is to think about their careers strategically.

“You need to have a view on what you want to achieve, the type of culture you want to work in, what you are interested in and to be systematic in your approach,” she said.

She added that financial firms also have to be systematic in setting targets and measuring performance In order to improve diversity.

“Increasing diversity takes a conscious effort in recruiting, retention, promotion, mentoring and there is no magic potion,” added Wilson.

Michael Corbat, chief executive of Citi, said in a recent presentation that the bank analysed its gender pay gap two years ago and set representation goals for women and U.S. minorities.

“You are what you measure,” Corbat said. “You need to come to terms with painful facts in order to make progress.”

Corbat is retiring in February next year and will be succeeded by Jane Fraser, currently Citi’s president and chief executive of global consumer banking. Fraser will become the first female chief executive of a major Wall Street bank.

“We are moving in the right direction,” said Wilson. “In the UK, Citi has signed up to the Women in Finance Charter to improve diversity which is a significant step.”

©BestExecution 2020

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Assessing CAPE Ratios Amid COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a significant impact to financial markets and sectors around the globe. The new report from the Barclays Quantitative Investment Strategies group explores the effect of the pandemic on CAPE® ratios across five major equity markets and examines their usefulness as a model-based forecasting tool during such volatile periods.

The report looks at what has happened to the CAPE® ratios of five regional economies – the US, UK, Europe, Japan and China – over the course of 2020, and examines the sectors that have played a key role in their recovery from the initial turbulence of the pandemic, such as healthcare, communication services and technology sectors, which have all seen a boost, likely as a result of the “work from home” and “home improvements” narratives that are leading to a change in people’s day-to-day behaviours. It also identifies those that are still suffering from the negative effects of local and global economic slowdowns, such as the finance, energy and industrial sectors.

In addition to demonstrating that CAPE® ratios remain relevant, the report also introduces a new measure: the Excess CAPE® Yield. As interest rates remain low globally, rather than valuing equities in isolation, Barclays Quantitative Investment Strategies used the conditions created by the COVID-19 pandemic to develop a way to consider equity valuations relative to other investment opportunities, such as long-term bonds, in order to inform expected returns.

The report finds that there are multiple reasons why equities are currently highly attractive relative to bonds, which despite the on-going pandemic, may be driving the speed of the recovery in certain markets, and for certain sectors in particular. 

To read full report please click HERE.

Volatility and the U.S. Presidential Election (VIDEO)

Henry Schwartz, Head of Product Intelligence at Cboe Global Markets, speaks with Traders Magazine about the market volatility seen so far in 2020, and what the Nov. 3 U.S. Presidential Election may mean for the remainder of the year. Schwartz also explains what intelligence market participants can glean from the TradeAlert and LiveVol platforms, two of Cboe Information Solutions‘s data and analytic offerings.

GT Podcast Episode 9: Data and Quantitative Models in Emerging Markets Equity Trading

Ed Duggan, Global Head of Electronic Trading & Head of Execution Services APAC at HSBC, and George Molina, Head of Global Emerging Markets Equity Trading at Franklin Templeton, discuss data and quantitative models in emerging markets equity trading with GlobalTrading Editor Terry Flanagan.

Velox Reimagines Front Office Technology

During his decade as head of technology for Goldman Sachs’ cash equities business, Jon Butler grew disillusioned with the state of sales & trading technology and its ability to support the front office of the future.

Butler describes this ideal as a fully integrated front office that maximizes the value of data; interacts and collaborates seamlessly with colleagues and clients; and gives the new generation of tech-savvy traders the ability to rapidly & safely customize platforms themselves.

                           Jon Butler, Velox

“The last burst of progress was over 15 years ago; innovation has stagnated since then. Yes, execution is now 80% electronic, but front-office tools that front office staff use have not evolved, and the majority of time is still spent operating rather than generating revenue,” Butler said. “Also, an Achilles’ heel of the front office, and capital markets generally, is that it has struggled to prioritize continuous technology investment, and now the gap is perceived as too big and too expensive to close.” 

Velox Financial Technology was founded by Butler and former Wall Street colleagues Jason Yan and Govind Jajoo, who between them have over 70 years’ experience managing front office technology. They realized that a major challenge of past approaches was an inability to introduce new systems, as there was no easy way to migrate from old technology to new. Velox was conceived to not only give clients cutting-edge tools, but to bridge the old and the new in an incremental, affordable away. In essence, Velox enables pragmatic technology evolution.

“They are a world-class team, and it’s exciting to see how they are shaping the next generation of front office software,” said Greg Tusar, former Partner & Global Head of Electronic Trading at Goldman Sachs and now Head of Institutional Product at digital currency exchange Coinbase.

Butler said most trading shops have a blend of in-house technology and vendor systems, many of which don’t work well together. Even if traders can plug the operational gaps in the workflow with manual copy and paste activity across Excel spreadsheets — every compliance and risk manager’s nightmare — they are still left with decade-old functionality and a business that can scale only by adding expensive people. The pressure to reduce costs and add products has been continuously building up — requiring modern systems and a new way of thinking and operating.

Velox solves this problem by empowering in-house innovation — critical if a firm is to stay competitive over the longer term. This is achieved not just with smarter tech but also with what Butler calls a front office-specific implementation of low code, and a rethink of the relationship between client and vendor. Said Butler: “Vendor relationships can often become adversarial with interests misaligned, which has stifled progress and forced firms to build too much themselves. At Velox we offer firms the ability to buy commoditized capabilities, blend them with the best of their existing systems, and build other key parts themselves in areas where they can differentiate and gain a competitive edge.”

Velox, whose name is shorthand for velocity trading, has as deep Wall Street or City experience as you’ll find at a fintech startup. They are advised by two industry heavyweights, Andrew Banhidi and Steve Grob, who have helped shape how Velox thinks about and partners with firms, Butler said. “The success of these projects really depends on overcoming firms’ idiosyncrasies, so you really need to have lived that life to see the shortfalls and a way out.”  

Horsepower and Know-how

The Velox team “has the horsepower and the know-how to reshape platforms,” said Steven Bayardelle, a former equity trading head at Deutsche Bank and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Velox focuses on client flow trading, which Butler describes as “the sum of all fears from a design perspective. At peak times, volumes can be huge, operational certainty needs to be guaranteed, and you probably have to do last-minute releases to accommodate a client or take advantage of an opportunity.”

Using legacy sell-side technology to manage this is like mining coal with a pickaxe, Butler said. The tools were never really fit for purpose. The technical and functional challenges are unique and require solutions built for the task. “Our application platform optimizes the entire lifecycle, from design-time to run-time, across applications that — with or without humans in the loop — need to aggregate, analyze and act seamlessly on real-time order flow and data.”

ETFS Capital, a strategic investment firm focused on growth opportunities in the ETF ecosystem, invested $2.5 million in Velox in June. ETFS Capital was created by veterans of the exchange-traded fund (ETF) space, an area – alongside indices – that Velox aims to streamline. “Front office technology simply has not kept pace with markets as they are today,” ETFS Capital Chairman Graham Tuckwell said in a June announcement. “We believe Velox has the solution, the experience and the ambition to fix this industry-wide problem.”

Some firms had been able to ignore the build-up of pressure from evolving technological and competitive forces, but Butler believes that the COVID-19  shock, and the heightened emphasis on the tech stack will make it impossible to keep ignoring. “Trading has always been an arms race: who can extract the most information from data, who can create the best products, who can provide the best services for clients?”  

Butler recalls Duncan Niederauer, Head of Cash Equities at Goldman Sachs and ex-NYSE CEO, describing capital markets trading as an “execution problem,” meaning that everyone knows what to do – the  question is who can get it done.

“That always stuck with me,” said Butler. “What is the solution that will maximize a trading firm’s ability to execute? Velox looks at all of these as different facets of the same problem – can you aggregate the data you need, analyze it effectively, and then seamlessly act on it? By shortening the innovation cycle around these types of problems, we are positioning firms to be tomorrow’s leaders.”

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