FiNETIK – Asia and Latin America – Market News Network

Asia and Latin America News Network focusing on Financial Markets, Energy, Environment, Commodity and Risk, Trading and Data Management

Brazil, Mexico and South Korea; Emerging Market exit Bear Market with 23% From Low in 3 days.

Emerging-market stocks climbed out of a bear market after surging more than 20 percent in three days, while bonds and currencies climbed, as the U.S. agreed to pump as much as $90 billion into Brazil, Mexico and South Korea and the International Monetary Fund approved an emergency loan program.

Russia’s benchmark stock index jumped 16 percent today, giving it the biggest gain among 25 developing nations tracked by MSCI Inc. Korea’s Kospi stock index rose a record 12 percent and the won jumped the most since December 1997. Stock indexes in the Czech Republic, Turkey, Taiwan and Thailand jumped more than 6 percent. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index increased 9.2 percent, bringing its gain since Oct. 27 to 23 percent. It has still plunged 55 percent in 2008.

The Federal Reserve agreed to provide $30 billion each to central banks in Brazil, Mexico, South Korea and Singapore through “liquidity swap facilities,” as emerging market stocks headed for their worst year on record. The IMF’s plan doubles borrowing limits for emerging-market countries and waives demands for economic austerity measures, and follows interest-rate cuts in the U.S., China, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

Full article see: Bloomberg 30.10.2008

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ACTIV Financial and Marco Polo Network unite to simplify and speed inter-market trading in Brazil

ACTIV Financial and Marco Polo Network will deploy a joint solution to enable high-frequency trading in the Brazilian markets.   Leveraging ACTIV’s low-latency ticker plant in Brazil, Marco Polo can now provide a single supplier trade execution and market data solution.

“We chose ACTIV to grow our Latin American market presence based on the company’s reputation for providing fast, accurate and reliable market data around the world,” said David Meredith, chief technology officer of Marco Polo Network.  “Working with ACTIV enables us to react to demand by quickly deploying solutions to broker-dealers in these emerging capital markets as needed.  We’ve already received interest from other emerging markets for this offering and look forward to working with ACTIV to support our further expansion in growing financial centers.”

“With the rapid changes enveloping the global financial markets, the winners will be the broker-dealers and traders who can quickly seize new opportunities,” said Frank Piasecki, president of ACTIV Financial.  “As the ninth-largest economy in the world and a growing force in the futures industry, Brazil has become a hotbed in capital markets, attracting top-tier institutional investors and traders alike.  ACTIV’s technologies had been built from the ground up for rapid deployment and maximum cost effectiveness. This relationship with Marco Polo gives our customers the head start to capitalize on evolving markets and industry dynamics as they emerge.”

Source: ActivFinancial 28.10.2008

Filed under: Data Management, Data Vendor, Latin America, Market Data, News, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , ,

Corporate Actions and Straight Through Processing IDC

Download: IDC Corporate Action and STP

Source: IDC October 2008

Filed under: Corporate Action, Data Management, Data Vendor, Library, News, Reference Data, Risk Management, , ,

Boston Consulting: A Wealth of Opportunities in Turbulent Times

BCG: Global Wealth 09.2008: A Wealth of Opportunities in Turbulent Times

Source: The Boston Consulting Group, September 2008

Filed under: Asia, Latin America, Library, Risk Management, Services, Wealth Management, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Global funds industry shifting to Asia

More than ever, fund management companies of all stripes need to build distribution into Asia and the Middle East, says Strategic Insight.

New York-based consultancy Strategic Insight says in a new report that the credit crunch has revealed the essential need for fund management companies to have a distribution into Asia – and predicts many more will build it.

Source: AsianInvestors, 27.10.2008 by Jaime DiBiaso

Funds under management in Asia as well as the Middle East and Latin America will grow much more quickly than those in the United States and Europe over the next five years, says Daniel Enskat, managing director and head of global consulting.

Fund companies that lack an Asian reach have suffered the most in the credit crunch, he suggests – not only because they missed out on last year’s asset-gathering bonanza, but because redemptions in Western countries, particularly Europe, have been most severe.

Such companies with only European clients, even if they have great performance, are nonetheless suffering acute redemption pressure, because investors are panicking and dumping anything to move to cash.

Strategic Insight says mutual funds in Asia have enjoyed net inflows of $60 billion from January to August, versus a net outflow of $360 billion in Europe.

Finally, for fund companies around the world, Asia is the most likely source of business to pull them out of the slump, due to its demographics, its economic growth prospects, the low penetration of investment products and the youth of the domestic fund industries.

Enskat cites China as an example. He compares China’s investors today to European ones in the run-up to the 2000 tech bubble collapse. In both cases, many first-time investors got burned. In Europe, investors generally switched to low-risk savings products and capital guarantees. So far, however, Chinese investors don’t seem to be in full retreat.

“Distributors don’t want to make the same mistake in China,” Enskat says. “They want to educate investors about having a longer-term framework.” He notes that regulators have taken a proactive stance against mis-selling and improving products, which is why the industry hasn’t suffered the kind of mass redemptions that have taken place this year in markets such as Germany and Italy.

Enskat reckons there is also a cultural factor. He says Asian societies, lacking a welfare state, have instilled a sense of self-reliance. First-generation entrepreneurs are relatively young and willing to take risks with their money, while Westerners, already wealthy, are more interested in capital preservation. “Asian investors are proactive, not defensive,” Enskat concludes.

He says the credit crunch, and blow-ups such as the Lehman Minibond fiasco in Hong Kong and Singapore, is an opportunity for the mutual-funds industry to argue its case: that funds are the most transparent, liquid and straightforward investment products that investors will find.

“Distributors want a simple story told with conviction for a transparent product,” he says.

The challenges are how to convey this message to investors (and to distributors’ sales teams). High management fees and front-end loads can be a problem during bear markets, although Enskat believes investors are willing to overlook these when times improve; eventually Asia will need to shift to an American model in which asset managers force their brokers to sell on the basis of advice, rather than commission for pushing products.

Today it seems nearly all the big global names in asset management are already on the ground in Asia. But Enskat observes that there are many small- and mid-sized fund managers in Europe and Asia that have yet to set up a presence in the region. Should this matter?

Consider, Enskat suggests, that two-thirds of today’s top 50 global houses would not have been ranked 10 years ago. Names like AllianceBernstein, BGI, Janus, Pimco, SSgA and T. Rowe Price would not have figured.

Now consider the coming regulation of the hedge fund industry. The biggest hedge funds will find themselves going public and competing for assets from sovereign wealth funds and other institutional investors, rather than rely on family offices and endowments. How many of these will be in the top 50 in another decade’s time? And how many of them have distribution networks in Asia now?

And the traditional funds world will also throw up new winners that are relatively unknown today, Enskat argues. He notes that fund companies can become major players on the back of a single product, citing Kokusai’s income bond fund (sub-advised now by Western Asset), Pimco’s total return bond fund, Pictet’s utilities fund, BlackRock’s global allocation fund and some of Schroders’ global balanced funds for UK pension clients.

There are plenty of mid-sized players in America and Europe with similar products, some of which will become the blockbusters of the future – but these companies have no exposure to the world’s new growth markets. Which means they will be looking to set up distribution arrangements. The pain of the credit crisis is going to accelerate this process.

Filed under: News, , , , , , , , , , , , ,

KRX:Korea Exchange finds big opportunities in small markets.

In a region where securities exchanges are nationalistic and wary of consolidation, the Korea Exchange (KRX) has burst past its own borders. Offering expertise, experience and reliable technology to smaller exchanges, KRX is building a global brand. With that it is bringing new opportunities for both international investors and emerging economies.

By Waters 23.10.08 by Laura Hilgers

Countries like Mongolia, Cambodia and Laos are hoping that a relationship with the larger exchange will attract more liquidity, more foreign investment and ultimately help build more robust capital markets. In turn, as the KRX moves into Asia’s smaller economies, experts say investors will begin to see easier access and improved trading platforms on these smaller exchanges, which will offer a new range of investment opportunities.

Korea itself faces challenges on the home front,  where
a decline in the nation’s growth rate could limit investment
opportunities. “It makes a lot of sense to look abroad for growth
opportunities,” Katkov says. “Korea is shaping up to play a very big
role in emerging South East Asia, and not just in the financial
industry.”

BIG OPPORTUNITIES IN NEW MARKETS

In Cambodia and Laos in particular, the KRX is getting into the game
early. The two countries are looking to Korea for assistance in
creating entirely new exchanges, to be launched in 2009 and 2010,
respectively.

The KRX is taking an undisclosed stake in each exchange, through
joint ventures with the Cambodia Ministry of Economy and Finance, and
the Bank of Lao PDR. “The KRX has been searching for the business
opportunities with those emerging economies since its inauguration in
January 2005,” says Pat Gil-Soo Shin, senior vice president of global
business development at the KRX. Investment in Cambodia came first in
May 2006, with the Laos venture close on its heels in early 2007.

In Cambodia, the KRX is also providing a grant of $1.8 million for
the securities market project. In exchange, Cambodia and Laos will
benefit from the KRX’s experience and reputation among foreign
investors. “Smaller economies usually lack ability to build their own
capital market in both human and IT resources,” Shin says. “Even with a
stock exchange, they usually face difficulty in promoting the market to
have enough liquidity and trustworthy infrastructure, including IT and
rules and regulations.”

In the first stages of the joint ventures, the KRX is engaged
primarily in education and advisory programs. Currently, the two
countries are still in the process of designing rules and regulations
and considering what they will need in terms of IT infrastructure, Shin
says. “For the Cambodian and Lao markets, we are discussing the scope
of the IT infrastructure development,” he says. “We will consider both
the market’s need and the economic aspects of the country.”

While it is still unclear what these trading platforms will look
like, Katkov says that simply inviting Korea’s involvement indicates
the exchanges have the ambition to attract international investment. “I
think it’s a very good move for the local exchanges, and a way of
putting in technology for the first time in a world-class manner,” he
says.

BUILDING UP MONGOLIA

Unlike Cambodia and Laos, Mongolia has been running its exchange for
17 years.
In a country better known for its grasslands and ponies than
its financial markets, the Mongolian Stock Exchange (MSE) still ranks
among the world’s smallest. The MSE remains, at least for now, far from
the minds of most international brokerages as they move into Asia. The
exchange, however, is looking to do better. That is where Korea enters
the picture.

“The Mongolian government and the Mongolian stock exchange asked the
KRX to support them to modernize the stock market via educational and
advisory programs,” Shin says. “We are now discussing revising the
rules and regulations to help revitalize the securities market and pull
liquidity.”

At the MSE, revising the regulatory structure updating the
exchange’s trading platform will be the first of many steps in
attracting international investment. “The current system that is
running is way too old,” says Temuulel Lkhegza, international relations
officer at the MSE, of the exchange’s trading platform. “The main aims
of this project are to get everything automatically done and get
everything online.”

The MSE was originally started to enable the privatization of the
Mongolia’s state-owned businesses. In theory, every Mongolian citizen
was to get shares in the newly tradeable Mongolian companies. Over the
years, however, stock ownership has sifted down to only a select few.
Partly due to its unusual history, Lkhegza says, many of the 380
companies listed on the exchange are not actively traded.

“Most of the stocks in these companies are concentrated in a few
hands,” Lkhegza says. “That is why the stock market is not very
active.” As part of reforms, the MSE is looking at de-listing some of
the companies that don’t match its standards.

By the end of 2009, Lkhegza hopes to see an exchange on which
investors can participate and trade remotely through the Internet, and
where liquidity is building. The MSE is currently putting together the
financing for the project, which is expected to cost $7 million. “The
training phase of the project has been completed,” Lkhegza says. “We
have negotiated the system overview and the structure of the system; we
are waiting on the next stage.”

THE TECHNOLOGY EDGE

While Shin says the advisory role that the KRX is playing in these
tie-ups is important, it is the exchange’s technology, he says, that
seals the deal.

“The IT investment in those developing markets enables the KRX to
secure stakes of those markets,” Shin says. “It helps the KRX to own
interest in the regional stock exchanges.”

It accomplishes most of this through the Korea Securities Computing
Corp. (Koscom),
which was established in 1977 by the KRX and Korea’s
Ministry of Finance. Koscom was originally created to serve securities
firms, and also sells back-office systems and market information
systems. “That’s 40 percent of the market for securities firms in
Korea,” Katkov points out. In addition, Koscom has been operating the
KRX trading system since 1988.

More recently, Koscom inaugurated a bond-trading platform developed
for Bursa Malaysia in February. “Bursa Malaysia put an international
auction to build an electronic trading platform for the bond market in
2006,” Shin explains. “The KRX won the auction.”

From the perspective of Bursa Malaysia, it makes sense for the two
exchanges to collaborate, says K. Sree Kumar, head of market and
product development at the Bursa Malaysia. “Bursa Malaysia does not see
KRX as a competitor,” he says. “In fact, it is in the best interest for
both Bursa Malaysia and KRX to exchange information and experiences for
the further development of the capital markets.”

There are advantages to choosing a technology partner from another
Asian exchange, Kumar says, including a minimal level of currency risk,
effective cost and similarities in working culture. “Each exchange
plays a different role in the global markets,” he says. “As such,
linkages like Bursa Malaysia and KRX can capitalize on each other’s
strengths.”

The KRX is claiming space in Asia before competition heats up from
international IT vendors, particularly those connected to other
exchanges worldwide. “They’re there first,” says Katkov. While the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) has sold technology in Tokyo, it has not
pressed further into Asia. By moving in early, the KRX can get toeholds
in the security exchanges as well as with the brokerages that trade on
those exchanges.

In Malaysia, Katkov says, “the number of securities firms is growing
and it is growing quickly.” Whereas there are local vendors already
selling back-office technology, the expansion of the industry is
providing opportunities for other vendors to step in.

And the more opportunity, the better, says Shin. From Mongolia in
the North to Malaysia in the South, Korea’s investments will secure the
country’s place as a global player, he says. Through technology sales
and strategic tie-ups, he says that the KRX is moving to become “a
financial hub in the Asian capital market.”

Filed under: News, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

HKEx And Shanghai Stock Exchange Subsidiaries Sign Market Data Collaboration Agreement

HKEx Information Services Limited (HKEx-IS) and SSE Infonet Limited, the information business subsidiaries of HKEx and Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE), today (Monday) signed an agreement for a market data collaboration programme.

The agreement was signed by SSE Infonet Chief Executive Officer Wang Yong and HKEx-IS Director Bryan Chan in the presence of SSE General Manager Zhang Yujun, HKEx Chairman Ronald Arculli and Chief Executive Paul Chow. Other senior officials from both parties also attended the signing ceremony.

The objective of the collaboration programme is to assist investors who have interest in shares of issuers that have listed in both Hong Kong and Shanghai by raising the transparency of the securities trading in the two markets.

Under the programme, both parties are entitled to redistribute the other party’s basic real-time market data for the companies with listings in the two markets to their own authorised information vendors (IVs) for onward transmission to the IVs’ subscribers for internal display purposes.

The collaboration programme will come into effect on 1 January 2009 and will be subject to a review in two years. The usual exchange fees for market data are waived for the two parties, their IVs and their IVs’ market data subscribers under the collaboration programme.

The programme is expected to benefit investors in both markets and help increase the transparency of the securities trading in the two markets. At the end of September this year, there were 48 companies listed in both Hong Kong and Shanghai, and the group’s Hong Kong-listed shares collectively represented 29 per cent of the Stock Exchange’s turnover and 23 per cent of its market capitalisation.

“The agreement will increase the transparency of the Mainland and Hong Kong markets further, enhance the market data service quality of the two exchanges, provide more complete market information and better service to investors and also further promote the cooperation between the two exchanges,” said SSE General Manager Zhang Yujun.

“The market data collaboration agreement that we entered into today with SSE marks another step towards the closer integration and cooperation of the Mainland and Hong Kong markets. We believe the collaboration programme will benefit investors of the two markets and will be welcomed by them,” said HKEx Chief Executive Paul Chow.

Programme information is posted in the Investor section of the HKEx website under Real-time Data.

Source: HKEx 20.10.2008

Filed under: Asia, China, Data Management, Data Vendor, Exchanges, Hong Kong, Market Data, News, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Pan-European Platforms Form Symbology Working Group

Chi-X Europe, Nasdaq OMX Europe and BATS European Markets Division have formed a working group to create a uniform symbology for European equities. The three companies said today that the initiative will allow market data to be more easily consolidated across trading venues and facilitate smart-order routing.

“A common symbology will ease navigation between market centers and ultimately provide a better experience to investors,” said Todd Golub, head of markets development at Nasdaq OMX Europe, in a statement. “This move will also reduce the back-office complexities” related to the European Union’s Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), which went into effect about a year ago. Nasdaq OMX Group’s multilateral trading facility (MTF) began limited operations Sept. 26.

“Customers will now only need to manage one common list” of symbols, Golub added in an interview. “It will also drive down the cost of trading in Europe and help liquidity move from the primary exchanges.” Participation in the effort is open to all European venues–both exchanges and MTFs–said the companies.

Source: Securities Industry News, 22.10.08

Filed under: Data Management, Exchanges, Market Data, News, Reference Data, Standards, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Corporate Actions Report Sept 2008 – Reference Data Review

Download: Reference Data Review: Corporate_Actions Report Sept 2008_A-TEAM

Corporate actions automation has languished on the STP to do list for some time and significant challenges remain to be tackled, not least of which is the adoption of the same set of standards by all market participants.
Even though corporate actions data does ultimately reach the end investor, the process involves a high degree of manual intervention, which incurs operational risk and cost for all involved. Globalisation has not helped matters as investors are actively investing a large proportion of their business outside of their home markets and corporate actions are often categorised differently from market to market.
Furthermore, as market offerings become more complex, the ability to apply set standards to existing processes is often tricky. Based on the terms, conditions and options provided by the companies and their agents, custodians can find themselves falling into a more manually intensive review of processes they have already automated, as the offers do not fit well into event templates.

Source: A-TEAM Group 13.09.2008

Filed under: Corporate Action, Data Management, Library, Reference Data, Risk Management, Services, Standards, , , , , ,

Central America Exchanges meet to agree on comon platform; Costa Rica, El Salavador and Panama

Today, in Panama, the stock exchanges of Costa Rica (BNV), El Salvador (BVES) and Panama (BVP) started working with the aim of advancing an integration plan. During today and tomorrow, the exchanges’ managers will discuss the establishing of a common trading platform, the single order book, remote membership and the necessary legal and regulatory infrastructure.

“We are giving all our support and pressing the accelerator on this project because it is a plan that concerns us all in Central America,” said Rolando Duarte, president of the BVES. In an effort to incorporate in the process the stock market participants from the region, Duarte said that each country will hold meetings with their house brokers, to push their players closer to the remote model.

The countries are working according to schedule. It only remains to agree on and purchase the trading system. To find the best option at a global level it will be put out to tender. The details of the tender are not defined yet but it will be given to the company that can provide a platform that allows real-time connection with the three stock exchanges. The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), that sponsored the first part of the process, will be asked again to support the purchase.

Duarte said that the set up of AMERCA is progressing according to schedule, and the first results of the integration will be seen in June 2009. This week’s meeting is also expected to discuss the expansion of the Panama Canal, with the idea that local markets are taken into account in the financing plan for the project.

Source: MondoVision 13.10.2008

Filed under: News, , , , , , , , , , , ,

CME upgrades market data application

CME Group, the world’s largest and most diverse derivatives exchange, today announced the launch of the latest version of CME E-quotes, a premiere real-time streaming market data application offering quotes, charting, advanced analytics and news on CME Group traded products.

E-quotes will enable users to access prices for all CME Group listings, including interest rates, equity indexes, foreign currencies, commodities, energy, metals and alternative investments. In addition, there is also access to prices for products listed on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange and the Kansas Board of Trade, which are available for electronic trading on CME Globex(R).

“CME Group partnered with Chicago-based Computer Voice Systems Inc. to transform their data system into a platform that will provide market participants a sophisticated and intuitive tool to reliably engage the latest news, analytics and quotes,” said Brian McElligott, CME Group Director of Information Products Management. “This is another example of our continued focus on providing our customers with the latest market data technology at a significant value to view and analyze our markets and to better reach more informed decisions.”

The E-quote Basic, Advanced and Professional editions enable users to track the markets with customizable features including quote monitors, market depth, advanced charts, time and sales and more. E-quotes supports Simplified Chinese, Russian and Japanese languages and is expandable to add additional languages.

Features of E-quotes include:

  • Free bundled delayed quote/chart access to all CME Group exchanges
  • Bundled Dow Jones News Select news in E-quotes Advanced and Professional editions
  • Cutting edge technology and a robust, growing feature set
  • Advanced edition is packed full of top analytics and powerful quote display features plus bundled news and free agricultural weather maps
  • Professional edition is everything obtained in Advanced plus sophisticated new quote views and options analytics
  • All new Wireless edition to track the markets on the go; around the world
  • The best market combination of sophistication, usability, performance and price for accessing CME Group products

Source: CME 06.10.2008

Filed under: Data Management, Exchanges, FIX Connectivity, Market Data, News, Standards, , , , , , , , , , ,

メタビット、バイサイド向けコンプライアンス機能および投資助言ルーティングを直観的DMAプラットフォーム「XiliX」に搭載

メタビット(東京)は、マルチブローカー、マルチアセットクラス対応の直観的DMAプラットフォームであるXiliXに、バイサイド向けコンプライアンス・チェック機能と投資助言ルーティング機能を搭載したと発表しました。今日の市場環境においては、どのバイサイドにとっても非常に重要であるこれら一連の機能を、ヘッジ・ファンドのインキュベーターのパイオニアとして、もっとも成功している会社のひとつであるBridge Capital証券と共同で開発しました。

XiliXコンプライアンス・チェック機能は、投資アドバイザーからトレーダーへの投資助言のスマート・オーダールーティングとのコンビネーションで利用されます。投資アドバイザーおよびトレーダー双方が、社内および社外のコンプライアンス規制に効率的な方法で順守できるような機能となっています。これによりバイサイドに課される、より高水準の運用ファンドのリスク管理と取引エクスポージャーへの対応の一方、ハイパフォーマンスDMAやアルゴリズム注文ストラテジーへの高まる要求を損なうことなく実行できます。新しいXiliXの機能は、トレーディング・エラーとトレーディング・リスクを最小化するものとなります。

Bridge CapitalのCEO、藪内太嘉司氏は、「私たちは、現在XiliXが、日本の金融市場向けのバイサイド・トレーディングツールの中でもっとも包括的なコンプライアンス・チェック機能を有していると考えています。一連の機能は、私たちからのデザインと強化された規制に対する法令順守のための法的要求事項がベースになっています。Bridge Capitalにとって、投資助言ルーティングとプリトレードの際のコンプライアンス・チェックを統合することにより、ファンドを管理するための厳格なコンプライアンス・ルールを絶え間なく検証する一方で、拡大するトレーディング・ヴォリュームをスピーディに執行していくことが可能になります。」と述べています。

メタビットCEOのダニエル・ブルギン氏は、「Bridge Capitalの持つ卓越した専門知識をこの新機能開発のためにメタビットに貸していただいたことを大変光栄に思っております。これらの包括的なリーガル・コンプライアンス・チェックのデザインのために費やされた多大な努力は、アセット・マネジャーやトレーダーを保護するものとなります。助言や注文のヴァリデーションは、投資アドバイザーレベルとトレーダーレベルの双方向で行われます。コンプライアンス・チェックの実行の結果は、直観的で透明なレポート機能を通して、各項目チェックの成否を表示します。警告レベルから取引不可までのアラートの範囲を設定しています。」と述べています。

昨今の困難なマーケット状況を考えると、XiliXのコンプライアンス・チェックは、アセット管理に対する法的責任において、バイサイドをサポートする極めて重要な価値の付加を提供するものとなります。

Source: 09.10.2008

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Buy Side Compliance Validations and Advisory Order Routing released in MetaBit’s DMA-Trading Platform

Tokyo, 9 October 2008 – MetaBit announces the release of Buy Side Compliance Validations and Advisory Order Routing within its intuitive XiliX trading tool, a multi-broker and multi-asset class DMA trading platform into Japan and Asian markets.  In today’s market environment, the new release is of critical importance for any buy side and was closely built with Bridge Capital Securities Limited, Tokyo – one of the most successful pioneers in the area of incubating hedge funds.

XiliX’ compliance checks come in combination with smart order routing from fund advisors to traders.  The functionality helps both, advisors and traders to efficiently comply with their internal and external compliance regulations in a highly efficient manner that does not jeopardize the demand for high-performance DMA and algorithmic trading strategies whilst empowering buy sides to better manage a fund’s risks and trading exposure.  The new XiliX functionality will minimise trading errors and trading risks.

“We believe that today, XiliX has the most comprehensive compliance checks amongst buy side trading tools for Japan’s financial markets,” comments Takashi Yabuuchi, CEO of Bridge Capital.  ”The functionality was built based on our firm’s input on design and legal requirements to ensure compliance with the regulatory environment.  It is the ease of use that combines fund advisor routing with pre-trade compliance checks that enable Bridge Capital to process its expanding trading volumes at high execution speed, yet, continuously validate against tight compliance rules that govern our fund management.”

“MetaBit is particularly pleased that Bridge Capital Securities has lent its outstanding expertise to build this new functionality,” says D Burgin, CEO, MetaBit. “Much effort was spent to design these comprehensive legal compliance checks to protect asset managers and traders alike.  Validations take place interactively, both on an advisory level and on a trader level.  Results of compliance checks performed are delivered through an intuitive and transparent reporting method showing success, or failure.  Alerts range from warnings to trade prevention.”

Considering the difficult market environment, XiliX’ compliance checks deliver a vital value addition to support buy sides on their regulatory responsibilities for managing their assets.

Source: MetaBit Systems 09.10.2008

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TT links to Brazilian Stock, Mercantile & Futures Exchange

Trading Technologies International (TT) today announced that TT has linked its X_Trader derivatives trading platform to Latin America’s largest futures exchange, BM&FBOVESPA, via the CME Group’s Globex platform.

The new link to BM&FBOVESPA allows X_TRADER users to trade the main derivatives contracts listed on the exchange. These products include:

  • Interest Rates — One-Day Interbank Deposit, Long Term Interbank Deposit and ID x US Dollar Swap with Reset contracts
  • Equity Index Futures — Ibovespa, Mini-Ibovespa, Brazil Index-50, General Market Price Index and Mini General Market Price Index (pending regulatory approval)
  • Currency — USD Futures, Mini-USD and Euro Futures
  • Agricultural — Arabica Coffee, Robusta, Cotton, Real-Denominated Corn, Soybeans, Crystal Sugar, Feeder Cattle, USD Denominated Ethanol and Anhydrous Fuel Alcohol
  • Sovereign Debt Instrument (Bonds) — A-Bond Futures, Three-, Five- and Seven-Year Brazilian Sovereign Credit Default Swaps and Ten-Year US Treasury Notes
  • Metals — Gold Futures and Spot contracts

“By means of this connection, global investors can trade a complete and diversified range of Brazilian products and hedge their risks across the two Exchanges. The GTS order book will be transmitted in real time to the CME Globex users, and liquidity will be increased,” says Cicero Augusto Vieira Neto, Chief Operating Officer of the BM&FBOVESPA.

“Trading Technologies’ customers have expressed a strong desire to access the Latin American markets, so we are very pleased to be working with BM&FBOVESPA. Our BM&FBOVESPA connection has been thoroughly tested and is available to our customers,” said Harris Brumfield, CEO of TT.

TT clients have the option to host BM&FBOVESPA gateways internally or outsource connectivity to TTNET(TM), TT’s fully managed hosting solution.

BM&FBOVESPA is the world’s third largest exchange by market capitalization. The Exchange ranked as the world’s seventh largest derivatives exchange in 2007, with total volume of 426,363,492 contracts. This represented an increase of more than 50% over 2006 volume. The BM&FBOVESPA’s One-day Interbank Deposit futures contract ranked fifth among all exchange traded derivatives contracts globally in 2007.

BM&FBOVESPA and CME Group signed an agreement earlier this year that incorporates cross-investment, order routing arrangements and future business opportunities. As part of this agreement, CME Globex customers will have access to the order book of BM&FBOVESPA’s Global Trading System (GTS) platform via the Globex platform.

Source: TT International 06.10.2008

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Get your Dollars Out Now!

ICH Excerpt- As Argentine citizens, we have a huge advantage over other peoples including US citizens when it comes to understanding and coping with this kind of crisis. I say this because in our own lifetimes we have suffered in Argentina all of what is now happening globally – albeit on a much smaller scale in our case. We’ve seen this movie… We’ve been there, and done that…

The events of the last two weeks have clearly revealed that the global financial, monetary and banking system imposed on the world by the power structures promoting “globalization” is fundamentally flawed, unviable and immoral in its effects upon the most all of Mankind. After allowing a small cabal of shady characters to illegitimately accumulate vast amounts of wealth and power over markets, corporations, industries, media, armed forces and entire nations, like the World Trade Center towers on 9/11, this entire System is now in free-fall, collapsing into itself in one massive implosion.

The 4 Pillars of the Extreme Capitalist Model – In short the key factors described above, in the long-term all function together in a coordinated, consistent and synchronized manner, which means that, even if in the short- and medium-terms there are spates of high profits where money is sloshed around big time, in the long-term the whole system just doesn’t add up. That’s when you have periodic meltdowns like today’s. Usually, they are explained away by well-paid economic gurus writing brainy explanations in The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times or New York Times, who tell us that this is all just part of “the economic cycle”. For the most part, they can isolate sections of those downturns and localize them, so that they only affect a couple of emerging markets…

Like Argentina in 2001, or Brasil in 1999, or Mexico in 1997. In short, these four pillars are:

1. Programmed Monetary Insufficiency – Artificially generated by an “independent” central bank, controlled by the local and global private banking institutions superstructure;

2. Private banking based on Fractional Reserves – As a system, this allows banks to create money out of thin air, charging interest for it – often at usury rates -, and generating huge profits for “investors” and creditors;

3. Debt – This is the key concept that “fuels” private and public economies replacing the far more economically sound concept of reinvesting company profits and promoting a savings culture. Those who benefit from the unnecessary creation of debt need to promote and instigate among the public at large in all countries, fericiously undisciplined consumerism and greed, which goes hand in hand with total rejection of the very concept of saving and preparing for a rainy day. (4)

4. Privatize Profits /Socialize Losses – As a channelling and transference scheme for the various stages of the recurrent “cycles”, so that when they reach the inexorable stage where collapse is nunavoidable, there is always a way of making the population at large pay the bill.

Source: Information Clearning House 3.10.2008, by Adrian Salbuchi economic analyst based in Argentina

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