| French data terminal vendor Traderforce has
developed a means for broker-dealers to be able to communicate
their own prices to buy-side firms—with client-specific
margins where required—using the vendor's terminals.
The new service, dubbed Traderforce Open Publisher "enables
anyone to publish any kind of data within a network—not
just the Traderforce network—and disseminate it peer-to-peer
to end users," says Traderforce chief executive Jean-Michel
Blanco. "The idea is … to enable the financial
community to share proprietary data without needing contribution
solutions from vendors."
The advantage of this, he says, is that the data never
actually passes across a vendor's data platform or central
database before reaching the intended recipient, thus remaining
confidential, meaning that prices intended for specific
customers are not seen by other firms.
"We feel that the added value of a bank should stay
within the bank and its clients, whereas vendors can take
a contributed price and do whatever they want with it—for
example, create a composite best bid and offer," he
says.
Sell-side firms could use the service to distribute prices
with tailored spreads, margin requirements, research, security
lending deals data and indications of interest for OTC trade
offers, Blanco says. "It means that so long as the
dealer uses an underlying ticker [symbol], they can send
out prices, and a client can respond and trade over-the-counter
using the same Traderforce/ FlexTrade platform that they
use to trade listed equities via FIX," he says.
Confidentiality
If a client was using the Traderforce front end, these
notifications would appear like a news headline alert on
the platform with the logo of the firm that the message
is from. Open publisher could also be used by buy-side firms
to notify internal staff of confidential portfolio allocations
data, he says—in which case the message would contain
a link to a data file stored on the firm's intranet.
However, clients do not need to use the Traderforce front
end, so long as they have their own Microsoft .Net-compatible
front end to display the results table, he says, and a publishing
server installed on their premises with a .Net plug in to
extract and normalize the data and propagate the data into
tables for their users.
Blanco says the service is the result of three years' development,
partly in preparation for dealing with the upcoming MiFID
regulations in Europe. He says that while internalizers
and multilateral trading facilities will have to make quotes
more widely available, they will still be able to differentiate
prices according to different clients. "The whole community
will need a system to publish different kinds of prices…
while not wanting clients to see the different spreads they
are providing," he says.
"My understanding is that a firm can publish different
quotes with different spreads for different sizes of orders,
but that where the size of order is the same then the quotes
should be the same," says Chris Pickles, manager of
industry relations at BT Radianz and chairman of the Mifid
Joint Working Group. "We should also remember that
quotes are likely to be different between a data dissemination
environment and the firm's own electronic trading platform,
due to the structure of the underlying technology and intrinsic
differences in latency between different systems architectures,"
he adds.
Blanco says that three large international banks are testing
Open Publisher with pilot clients, but declines to name
the banks. |