Opening Cross: Everybody Wins When the Customer Is Always Right… Right?
Give the customer what they want... even if that means a way out.
But in the market data world, this is becoming increasingly hard to find. In part, it’s those pesky customers. To use the hotel analogy to represent market data costs, no-one wants to stay in a full-service luxury hotel anymore; they want a budget motel with an itemized bill and a free breakfast. Meanwhile, to protect incumbent business, vendors have made it difficult to switch away from their products, by integrating them with infrastructures that are hard to unwind.
For years, firms have pursued true best-of-breed data architectures, with limited success, while projects such as Collaborative Software Initiative tried to create abstraction layers to facilitate these moves—itself failing to get sufficient buy-in.
Yet, there now appears to be greater momentum around change, and—with the maturing of the OpenMAMA open-source messaging technology—a vehicle to achieve it.
OpenMAMA was open-sourced in 2011 by NYSE Technologies based on the Middleware-Agnostic Messaging API layer built by Wombat Financial Software, which NYSE acquired in 2008. But NYSE Tech—assembled via a string of acquisitions—never achieved the ambitions of its owner (former NYSE Tech chief executive Stanley Young once laid out plans to grow it to a $1 billion business), and was ultimately spun off in pieces by new owners Intercontinental Exchange, with ICE CEO Jeffrey Sprecher saying “[The NYSE Technologies assets] are... things that my colleagues and I don’t understand, and I don’t think we should be in businesses that we don’t understand.”
Yet with broad industry support, and removed from a single owner with vested interests, OpenMAMA is now showing the promise of being able to succeed where previous efforts have failed. In this week’s issue, we detail two such efforts. First, London-based market data toolkit vendor Tick42 has built a “bridge” between OpenMAMA and Thomson Reuters’ Enterprise Platform (TREP—formerly known as RMDS), ostensibly for connecting different data sources to TREP, but also to allow developers to write applications to the OpenMAMA API rather than directly to TREP, ultimately giving them the option of removing TREP altogether and replacing it with a different vendor’s solution—providing that the new vendor also supports OpenMAMA.
And second, low-latency data technology endor SR Labs—which acquired the Wombat business and MAMA API from NYSE Technologies last year—is building a new hosted data management platform that incorporates tools for compliance and usage monitoring, but which also integrates OpenMAMA to make it easier for firms to connect applications to the platform, and to swap out parts of other vendor’s infrastructures in favor of its own platform, using OpenMAMA as a sort of abstraction layer that standardizes vendor connections.
The great thing about these initiatives is that they don’t necessarily end up displacing a specific vendor, but—like the services launched by GFI and Bolsas y Mercados Espanoles for measuring swaps clearing spreads on different clearinghouses, and for transaction cost analysis, respectively—provide customers with more choice, forcing vendors to be more competitive and responsive. If an incumbent vendor ups its game to fend off rival vendors who are now in a better position to compete, then it may well remain the incumbent, and either way, the customer is happy. In short, everybody wins.
Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.
To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@waterstechnology.com or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.waterstechnology.com/subscribe
You are currently unable to print this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
More on Emerging Technologies
An AI-first approach to model risk management
Firms must define their AI risk appetite before trying to manage or model it, says Christophe Rougeaux
Waters Wavelength Ep. 297: How to talk to the media
This week, Tony and Wei-Shen discuss the dos and don’ts for sources interacting with the media.
The Waters Cooler: Tidings of comfort and joy
Christmas is almost upon us. Have you been naughty or nice?
FactSet launches conversational AI for increased productivity
FactSet is set to release a generative AI search agent across its platform in early 2025.
Waters Wavelength Ep. 295: Vision57’s Steve Grob
Steve Grob joins the podcast to discuss all things interoperability, AI, and the future of the OMS.
S&P debuts GenAI ‘Document Intelligence’ for Capital IQ
The new tool provides summaries of lengthy text-based documents such as filings and earnings transcripts and allows users to query the documents with a ChatGPT-style interface.
The Waters Cooler: Are times really a-changin?
New thinking around buy-build? Changing tides in after-hours trading? Trump is back? Lots to get to.
A tech revolution in an old-school industry: FX
FX is in a state of transition, as asset managers and financial firms explore modernizing their operating processes. But manual processes persist. MillTechFX’s Eric Huttman makes the case for doubling down on new technology and embracing automation to increase operational efficiency in FX.