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SEC enforcement director Gurbir Grewal steps down

Gurbir Grewal, director of division of enforcement, SEC
Gurbir Grewal, director of division of enforcement, SEC

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) director of the division of enforcement, Gurbir Grewal, is stepping down on 11 October after three years in the role.  

Sanjay Wadhwa, the division’s deputy director, will serve as acting director, and Sam Waldon, the division’s chief counsel, will serve as acting deputy director.

SEC chair Gary Gensler said: “Every day, he has thought about how to best protect investors and help ensure market participants comply with our time-tested securities laws. He has led a division that has acted without fear or favour, following the facts and the law wherever they may lead.”

Gurbir Grewal, director of division of enforcement, SEC
Gurbir Grewal

Grewal said: “From recalibrating penalties and remedies to confronting emerging risks to holding issuers, insiders, and gatekeepers accountable, I am incredibly proud of all that we’ve accomplished as a division during my tenure.”

Before joining the SEC, Grewal was the attorney general for the state of New Jersey from 2018 to 2021. Prior to that, he served as the Bergen County Prosecutor, the chief law enforcement officer for New Jersey’s most populous county. 

This year alone, Grewal worked to fine 12 firms over electronic communication recordkeeping failures; in August, twenty six broker-dealers, investment advisers, and dually-registered broker-dealers and investment advisers were fined a combined US$392.75 million by the SEC over widespread recordkeeping violations; and the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) paid a US$10 million penalty to settle charges that it caused nine wholly-owned subsidiaries to fail to inform the SEC of a cyber intrusion in 2021.

Optiver boosts ETF unit with Capasso hire

Optiver has hired Pasquale Capasso for its European institutional sales team, with a focus on ETF business development and institutional counterparty relationships.

Pasquale Capasso

Capasso, who will be based in London, reports to Jean-Marie Tine, head of Delta-1 institutional sales for Europe. He begins his role on 14 October.

Optiver’s institutional sales team provides liquidity directly to counterparties across cash equities, derivatives and ETFs, with Optiver offering two-way pricing across major request-for-quote (RFQ) platforms and exchanges. In his new role, Capasso will focus on growing Optiver’s presence across these platforms, as well as business development and sales off-platform directly to institutional counterparties across Europe.

Capasso spent nearly a decade at Invesco, where he was most recently head of ETF capital markets for Southern Europe and LatAm.

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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Man Group Gains FX Trading Benefits from Aeron®

In today’s electronic FX markets, speed is important. As liquidity can deepen or thin in real time, trade orders must be sent immediately to minimize execution risk.

Man Group, an active investment firm with $178 billion under management, was looking for faster and more reliable technology. Specifically, the global hedge fund wanted more control over its functionality and roadmap, as well as predictable, ultra-low latency even under the highest data loads. This could be achieved, amongst other ways, by building a fully fault-tolerant, low-latency messaging layer.

By leveraging Aeron’s open source technology, Man Group was able to build this high-performance messaging layer, gaining the following benefits:

  • Improved latency statistics and predictability;
  • Higher resilience to spikes of messages and instant recovery in case of failures;
  • Future-proofing of its FX execution system; and
  • Built-in system resiliency so reporting processes do not interfere with trading.

After a successful rollout, Aeron is in Man Group’s toolkit of approved technologies for projects with low-latency requirements. Man Group’s technology team subsequently integrated Aeron technology into an equities and futures trading platform for communication signals to algo execution engines.

Access the full case study, including architecture and latency profiles, here.

This article was first published on sister publication Traders Magazine

ASX CRO Hamish Treleaven to retire

After a difficult year of regulatory fines and lawsuits, the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) is parting company with chief risk officer (CRO) Hamish Treleaven, who is set to retire.

Treleaven was appointed CRO in March 2017 with responsibility for designing and implementing the firm’s risk management frameworks. Potential candidates to replace Treleaven are being sought from both within and outside of ASX. 

Treleaven departure follows a AUS$1.1 million fine levied against ASX in March by Australia’s corporate regulator over pre-trade transparency rule breaches. 

In August, ASIC sued ASX for allegedly misleading statements made about its Clearing House Electronic Subregister System (CHESS) replacement project.

On Treleaven’s departure, Helen Lofthouse, ASX managing director and CEO, said: “Hamish has played a critical role in building out ASX’s risk management capability and driving the maturity of our frameworks, systems and processes. Over more than seven years he has been an integral part of ASX, supporting the group in navigating a period of significant change and progress, including continued uplift in risk management practices to meet evolving global standards.”

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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John Tierney promoted at Nomura

John Tierney, CEO, Nomura Europe Holdings and Nomura International
John Tierney, CEO, Nomura Europe Holdings and Nomura International

Nomura has appointed John Tierney as CEO of Nomura Europe Holdings and CEO of Nomura International, subject to regulatory approval.

Tierney has replaced Jonathan Lewis, who stepped down as head of Europe and chief transformation officer in March.

Tierney has been with Nomura since 2002, most recently serving as chief operating officer for Nomura Europe Holdings and Nomura International.

He joined the firm as an executive director and head of corporate reporting, later being named chief financial officer for Asia ex-Japan, based in Hong Kong, chief finance officer for EMEA in London and chief financial and administrative officer for EMEA.

Tierney’s appointment was confirmed in a press release. Nomura has not commented on Lewis’s departure, nor on Tierney’s replacement as COO of Nomura Europe.

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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ESMA group warns of increased settlement fails post-T+1

ESMA
ESMA

The European Securities and Markets Authority’s (ESMA) Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group (SMSG) has warned that the move to T+1 could result in increased settlement fails, particularly in bonds and ETFs.

The SMSG said the temporary increase in settlement fails could occur thanks to the complexity of the EU post-trading landscape and the specific features of certain asset classes. Europe is expected to move to a T+1 settlement cycle by Q4 2027, or early 2028.

For ETFs in particular,  trading at premiums to their fair value, volumes being determined by the day of the week, different prices for T+1 vs T+2 settling in the same ETF, and potential underperformance in UCITS (not just ETFs) due to the funding gap caused by misaligned settlement, will all be exacerbated as more countries move to T+1.

“Without additional measures to improve settlement efficiency, moving to T+1 could make the process more difficult to operate. The SMSG calls on ESMA to ensure that these operational challenges do not harm investors and market integrity,” the SMSG said in its advice to ESMA.

The group suggests the regulator should consult on the issue and that investors should be shielded from any negative impacts arising during the transition, such as increased costs, widened spreads, or liquidity shortages.

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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Female traders disproportionately disadvantaged by lack of flexible working

Duncan Higgins, CEO, Sustainable Trading
Duncan Higgins, CEO, Sustainable Trading

As Markets Media celebrated the best and brightest in the industry at the European Women in Finance Awards last night, a recent study from Sustainable Trading has found that female traders are four times more likely than men to leave their roles due to company culture and a lack of flexible work options.

Sustainable Trading, a membership network aiming to improve ESG business practices across the global markets trading industry, conducted the Trading Employee Workplace Experience survey in Q2 2024. A total of 270 trading professionals took part in the study, 97% being current employees and the majority (52%) disclosing that they were based in the UK. Most participants who disclosed their firm type worked at a bank or broker dealer, and the largest proportion (27%) disclosed that they were senior traders.

Long working hours and poor management make it difficult to maintain a work-life balance, the report noted. One respondent shared: “In the past I have felt the wrath and discrimination of a manager who expected me to be on call 24/7/365 to show up for the firm (including when I had a young child). As an industry we need to work much harder to accommodate parenting.” Accommodations for parenting were a particular priority for female respondents, who shared that long working hours and early starts impacted their parenting responsibilities.

On the results, Sustainable Trading said: “We are currently discussing these findings with our members and are considering together whether to explore this subject further and if there is additional research that should be undertaken to support these discussions.”

Although it was not directly covered by the study, 35% of survey participants stated that reduced market hours and shorter working hours would be the one thing they would change about the industry. The topic was referenced 60 times in the open-ended sections of the survey.

The impacts of long working hours ranged from the long-term ability to remain in the industry to the ability to manage a family and physical and mental health, they shared. Hybrid working and the implementation of breaks throughout the day to leave the desk would improve work-life balance and allow traders to take better care of themselves, the study said.

Currently, more than three quarters traders at investment management firms are using a hybrid working model, the survey found. By contrast, the group most likely to use flexible working was employees of exchanges and trading venues. Banks and brokers reported the smallest percentage of flexible or hybrid working model use.

Management style is also a major contributor to workplace experience, Sustainable Trading noted. Although the majority of participants (80%) stated that they ‘strongly’ or ‘somewhat’ had positive experiences with senior management, others reported experiences of overworking, stigmas towards employees’ challenges and nonadaptive management styles. Open communication, accessibility and being a part of strategy and direction were highlighted as particularly important factors.

Overall, 40% of female participants and 21% of male participants shared that they had left a job within the past five years, primarily due to a desire for career progression. Female employees are more likely to engage with mentorship programmes than their male counterparts, the study found (38% versus 25%), with similar differences seen with sponsorship initiatives (11% versus 7%). A wish for such programmes to be extended to a wider range of employees was expressed by some participants, with one suggesting that “opportunities should be provided to senior traders to network, as you fall into a “trap” where you are not going to conferences because you are not the head trader. The focus is on retaining junior traders and employees.”

Almost two thirds of participants (71%) stated that their firms offering volunteer programmes is important to them and 72% believed that these initiatives met their values. The 28% who did not commented that charitable programmes were only approved when they resonated with the C-suite, and that their firms were focused exclusively on financial initiatives. One participant opined that US firms do not put as much as they could into such programmes in light of the “anti-woke” backlash.

“Understanding employees’ first-hand perspectives of their firms can catalyse better decisions around support and retention,” the report said. “By providing this in-depth analysis, the report enables employers to better understand and address employee needs, improve workplace conditions, and enhance overall job satisfaction.”

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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Kepler Cheuvreux loses US equity sales trading head

Kepler Cheuvreux
Kepler Cheuvreux

Luke Holmes has left his role as head of equity sales trading for US clients at Kepler Cheuvreux.

Holmes has held the position since November 2019, before which he was part of the equity sales trading teams at Sanford Bernstein (AllianceBernstein) and Goldman Sachs. He is based in the UK.

Speaking to Global Trading, Holmes confirmed the news and stated that he is joining a new financial firm at the start of 2025.

Kepler Cheuvreux did not wish to comment on Holmes’s departure.

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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Citi names Tokiya Kishie head of markets in Japan

Citi has appointed Tokiya Kishie as head of markets in Japan, effective 1 October.

Kishie will report to Paul Smith, head of markets for Japan, Asia North and Australia, and Robert Nakamura, Citi country officer and banking head for Japan.

Tokiya Kishie

Kishie has close to 20 years of global banking experience. He joined Citi in 2010 and has held various roles in the rates, FX, and X-Value Adjustment businesses across Tokyo, New York, and London. He was most recently head of fixed income structuring for Japan, based in Tokyo. Before Citi, he worked at Nomura, Lehman Brothers, and Tokyo Star Bank.

Robert Nakamura said, “With the rise of Japan’s inbound and outbound activity, our aim is to facilitate and enhance these connections for our clients, connecting our global clients to Japan and vice versa.”

Paul Smith said, “Tokiya brings extensive industry experience and a deep knowledge of Citi’s global markets business to our clients in Japan, having worked across global financial markets and products. We have ambitious plans to grow further with our clients in this important market for Citi and his experience will provide valuable support.”

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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BlackRock veteran Lyenda Simpson Delp joins NTAM

Lyenda Simpson Delp, head of the global institutional client group, NTAM
Lyenda Simpson Delp, head of the global institutional client group, NTAM

Northern Trust Asset Management (NTAM) has appointed Lyenda Simpson Delp as head of the global institutional client group, effective 3 December. She will report to Daniel Gamba, NTAM president.

In the role, Simpson Delp will lead the firm’s institutional businesses across EMEA and APAC, servicing pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, insurance companies, nonprofits, family offices, corporations and consultants. As of June 30 2024, NTAM held US$1.2 trillion in AUM, US$736bn of which consists of equities.

Simpson Delp joins NTAM from BlackRock, where she has spent half of her three-decade career. Most recently she was head of the financial institutions group for the Americas, and has held numerous senior roles during her time at the firm including managing director and head of FIG Americas client relationship management.

Prior to this, she was a client portfolio manager at Goldman Sachs and a manager at Deloitte Consulting.

©Markets Media Europe 2024

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