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Wall Street & Technology October 23, 2006 Ivy Schmerken |
Buy-Side OMSs Face the EMS Threat Buy-side firms are beginning to question the future of the traditional order management systems. Should it take on more execution functionality or hand off execution to the execution management systems? |
Wall Street & Technology August 27, 2004 Larry Tabb |
Independent Aggregation: An Oxymoron Aggregation's time has come, but independent providers have gone. It is technology that the industry needs and brokers can't live without, but does the act of acquiring a platform devalue it? |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Algorithmic Trading Buy-side firms are gravitating toward rules-based systems that are often supplied by brokers. These mathematical models analyze every quote and trade in the stock market, identify liquidity opportunities and turn that information into intelligent trading decisions. |
Wall Street & Technology August 17, 2007 Richard Jones |
Broker-Neutral OMS/EMS Solution Can Address Rapid Change In Investment Industry The investment industry is experiencing an increasingly rapid pace of change in both the asset classes under management and the way in which they are traded. |
Wall Street & Technology July 26, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
The Buy Side Takes Charge Access to aggregators, crossing networks and algorithms is changing the buy-side trading desk. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Direct-Market-Access Trading The buy side is taking more control of its trading decisions while looking for faster, lower-cost and anonymous executions. Direct market access (DMA) tools permit buy-side traders to access liquidity pools and multiple execution venues directly, without intervention from a broker's trading desk. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Pre-Trade Analysis Brokers are developing pre-trade analytics in connection with their algorithms to help buy-side customers determine the best algorithms to use. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Brokers Bang on OMS Doors In the race to get their algorithms online and accessible to institutional customers, many brokers are eager to put their logos on the desktops of order-management systems (OMS). |
Wall Street & Technology June 22, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Algorithmic Alliances Buy-side firms take a page from the broker-dealers' book, paying to use their algorithmic-trading strategies via partnerships with order-management systems. |
Wall Street & Technology November 29, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Want an Algorithm With That? Major brokerage houses are franchising their algorithmic trading strategies to smaller firms that are feeling pressure to offer the service. |
Wall Street & Technology February 12, 2007 Cory Levine |
The Debate Over Execution Management Systems Vs. Order Management Systems Over time, the current debate over the value of execution management systems versus order management systems will become irrelevant to investment institutions. |
Bank Technology News November 2004 Shane Kite |
Trading: Direct Execution Players Get Beefy Banks and brokers are stocking up on tech and management tools, bundling direct access with algorithmic trading, as the industry gets more competitive than ever. |
Wall Street & Technology February 4, 2005 Maria Santos |
Attracting Order Flow Given the amount of trading activity hedge funds generate, competition for their order flow is heating up. |
Bank Systems & Technology February 1, 2007 Mark Sievewright |
Enabling Efficient Business Growth Three strategic themes will dominate the banking industry's 2007 IT agenda with the goal of enabling efficient business growth: leverage, integration and customer focus. |
Wall Street & Technology January 6, 2006 Anthony Guerra |
Excellence in Execution Despite the limitations of transaction cost analysis (TCA), most experts agree that trading and TCA now go hand in hand, and the buy-side's growing role in trading means TCA will be important to the sell-side of Wall Street, too. |
Wall Street & Technology July 1, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
The New Sell-Side Trader: Execution Consultant Brokers are morphing into execution consultants to advise the buy side on selecting algorithms and measuring performance. But how will the sell side reinvent the institutional sales trader? |
Wall Street & Technology June 21, 2004 |
Algo-Trading Meets Direct Access As buy-side firms take more control over executing orders, there is an increasing interest in algorithmic-trading strategies combined with direct-access trading platforms. |
Wall Street & Technology January 5, 2007 |
Thomson Launches New OMS Thomson Financial pulled the curtain off of its new order management system for asset managers and buy-side traders, TradeCentral. |
Wall Street & Technology April 26, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Broker Research: What's It Worth? The securities industry is hoping that the SEC will clear up the uncertainties surrounding soft dollars and determine once and for all who is responsible for placing a value on proprietary research. |
Wall Street & Technology January 4, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Get With the Program Sell-side desks are giving their buy-side clients access to program-trading tools so they can slice and dice large blocks and measure transaction costs. |
Wall Street & Technology June 21, 2004 |
Best Execution Drives Buy-Side OMS Suppliers Buy-side order-management systems are being impacted by demand for electronic trading, continuous compliance and new requirements to handle complex derivative instruments |
Wall Street & Technology January 24, 2006 Jessica Pallay |
The Buy Side Buys In In 2006, it will be impossible to ignore the enhanced productivity gained from algorithmic trading systems. As the buy side takes control of its own trading processes, automated trading frees up humans to focus on more-complex trading decisions. |
Wall Street & Technology January 22, 2008 Ivy Schmerken |
All Trading Desks Are Not Equal With all of the resources spent on giving traders an extra edge, asset managers are benchmarking their trading capabilities abilities to learn how they stack up against their peers. |
Wall Street & Technology May 25, 2005 Larry Tabb |
No Touching: Algo Trading Leaps Forward The leaders in the no-touch market are significantly ahead. They have the resources to push the technology out into the market and the support teams to train, customize and drive adoption (while at the same time, buy-side firms are reducing their broker ranks). |
Wall Street & Technology June 22, 2004 Larry Tabb |
Providing Service in an Increasingly Electronic World The way in which brokers traditionally manage their relationships with the buy side needs to change. |
Wall Street & Technology October 27, 2003 Anthony Guerra |
All I Want for Christmas ... No longer satisfied with the hand-me-down technology of equities; fixed-income traders are getting order-management systems of their very own. |
The Motley Fool October 3, 2006 Ryan Fuhrmann |
Are Analysts Worthless? Are sell-side and buy-side analysts worthless to investors, and what's the difference between the two? |
Wall Street & Technology August 22, 2007 Ivy Schmerken |
Goldman Sachs and Other Brokers Develop Alternative Research Platforms to Advise Buy-Side As the buy-side unbundles the cost of research and executions, brokers are partnering with alternative research providers. Could it cannibalize their own proprietary research? |
Wall Street & Technology February 5, 2007 Ivy Schmerken |
The Buy Side Jumps on Board the Push to Automate OTC Derivatives Now that traditional buy-side firms and hedge funds are increasingly investing in credit derivatives, the industry is focusing on automating post-trade processes to reduce operational risk. |
Wall Street & Technology June 29, 2005 Ivy Schmerken |
Reinventing the Relationship Technology and regulatory scrutiny have placed pressure on the buy-side traders to figure out how much it is paying for executions. |
Wall Street & Technology March 14, 2008 Ashok Hegde |
The OMS Dilemma: Speed vs. Intelligence While the drive on Wall Street has been for pure speed, firms are struggling with balancing speed versus intelligence in their order management systems. |
Information Today June 2, 2015 |
NFAIS Workshop Will Share Tips on Content Platforms Platforms That Perform: Taking Your Content to the Next Level is designed to offer strategies for selecting, adopting, and migrating to new platforms for hosting and disseminating research content. |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
Regulators Play Hardball with Soft Dollars Buy-side firms are facing more disclosure requirements and possible curtailment of soft-dollar commissions applied to investment technology. |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Ivy Schmerken |
New Kids on the Block Two new players are offering block-execution systems to buy-side institutions. Can they succeed in a crowded field? |
Wall Street & Technology May 18, 2009 Penny Crosman |
Wall Street IT Budgets Are Fatter Than You Think, Aite Says Reports of budget hemorrhaging are overblown; money is still being spent in financial firms this year on OMS, EMS, risk and compliance technology. |