The Trade: Jesse Forster highlighted that though initially only 9% of sell-side electronic equities professionals expected a smooth T+1 rollout, perhaps those views should be taken with a grain of salt now that we are in the midst of change.
The Trade: Jesse Forster highlighted that though initially only 9% of sell-side electronic equities professionals expected a smooth T+1 rollout, perhaps those views should be taken with a grain of salt now that we are in the midst of change.
Bond Buyer: SMA growth and electronic trading are a "little bit of a chicken and the egg" situation, according to Kevin McPartland, head of market strategy and technology research at Coalition Greenwich, with market participants differing on which...
Markets Media: “Most buy-side firms have a decade of experience with clearing swaps,” says Stephen Bruel...
FOW: Stephen Bruel said: “This becomes an asset class by asset class distinction."
Mirage News: ANZ today announced its Institutional business has once again been named Most Trusted Adviser in the annual Australian Corporate Treasury Association awards, based on the 2024 large corporate relationship banking report conducted by...
Financial News: Less than 10% of traders interviewed between April and May by Coalition Greenwich said they expected the T+1 transition to go smoothly and without issue. A fifth of those interviewed said there would be “a large disruption including...
IFR: “The equity structured products landscape has changed massively. Before, it was more driven out of Europe and Asia. Now, much of that activity has shifted and America is in the driving seat,” said Youssef Intabli, head of Equities and Wealth...
Bloomberg: Just 9% of sell-side firms polled by Coalition Greenwich in April and May said they expect the T+1 switch to go smoothly, with 38% warning that buy-side managers are unprepared.
TabbFORUM: Jesse Forster discusses recent research he undertook that addressed buy-side traders' current and expected use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) on the desk.
Efinancial Careers: There were 47,500 people working in front office financial services jobs last year according to market intelligence firm Coalition Greenwich.