OEMS Integration Saga Continues
Traders: ...according to a recent study by Coalition Greenwich, 41% of buy-side firms in Q4 2021 used a single OEMS, compared to only 30% the year before.
Traders: ...according to a recent study by Coalition Greenwich, 41% of buy-side firms in Q4 2021 used a single OEMS, compared to only 30% the year before.
Global Banking & Finance Review: A recent report by Coalition Greenwich found that while 44% of equity trading volume is automated, there remains a wide gap in the degree of automation.
Waters Technology: According to a 2020 Market Structure and Trading Technology Study from Coalition Greenwich, only 10% of buy-side firms already outsource their trading.
Euromoney: Eric Li describes commodity trade finance as a key driver of growth for transaction banks in 2022.
IFR: “Retail structured products were the main driver of revenues in [equity derivative] exotics last year,” said Youssef Intabli.
S&P Global Market Intelligence: S&P Global Market Intelligence recently collaborated with Coalition Greenwich to better understand trends in credit investing, particularly in the growing alternative credit market.
The Desk: “To put these figures into context, it’s important to understand the demographics of the respondents,” writes report author Brad Tingley.
Markets Media: According to a recent survey from Coalition Greenwich: in credit markets, features allowing for workflow automation were second most important after order management functionality.
ValueWalk: “Asset managers have been renegotiating their back office agreements, asking for lower fees and consolidating providers to achieve deeper discounts,” says Stephen Bruel.
Markets Media: Data aggregation and normalization was the second largest cause of frustration in the 2022 OTC Credit Investor Study from consultancy Coalition Greenwich.