Opening Cross: When a Little Horizontal Spread Is a Good Thing
Who cares about Istanbul Menkul Kiymetler Borsasi and NYSE Liffe teaming up to offer futures and options based on the IMKB 30 Index? Well, apparently you should—because IMKB, aka the Istanbul Stock Exchange, certainly cares about you, and about attracting your investments to its marketplace.
Every so often I harp on about indexes, and how they enable investors to gain exposure to an asset or region without the risk of diving headlong into individual securities in far-flung places. Because despite some traders eschewing index benchmarks as the domain of unadventurous long-only asset managers, this is actually a growth area: In the past week, Nasdaq OMX unveiled the first phase of its global index family of 24,000 indexes overall, while over-the-counter equities marketplace OTC Markets and BNY Mellon launched a benchmark index of American Depositary Receipts, FTSE and the African Securities Exchanges Association announced a Pan Africa Index Series of benchmarks, and index and risk management technology provider MSCI completed its acquisition of real-estate indexes, performance analysis, research and market data provider IPD, to broaden its index asset classes.
“The point of us doing this is to highlight the quality of securities on our marketplace, so it’s a great way to get information to investors. There are a lot of indexes that could be created off OTC securities,” says Matt Fuchs, managing director of market data and strategy at OTC Markets.
This demonstrates one key reason for the current index activity: Firms want exposure to broader collections of assets, whether they be OTC equities, African securities or real-estate derivatives, and to be able to slice and dice benchmarks in whatever way they desire. Another reason is that individual investors are bypassing brokers and financial advisors in favor of trading markets directly themselves, and need investable benchmarks on which to base their investment strategies.
However, index appeal isn’t limited to this growing class of retail traders. In fact, data, charting and trading software provider CQG cited demand from futures commission merchants for access to derivatives on the Norwegian OBX 25 index as a key reason for recently connecting to the London Stock Exchange’s Turquoise Derivatives platform.
But benchmarks must fulfill their role without undue influence. Last week, UK regulator the Financial Services Authority solicited feedback on proposals for how the Libor rate-setting process will be regulated and monitored in future, while the Federation of European Securities Exchanges set out its own opinions for pan-European regulation of benchmarks, which are linked to over $560 trillion in notional outstanding OTC and listed products, according to estimates from the Bank for International Settlements.
Ultimately, everyone wants to broaden the scope of their target audience—in the case of indexes, to appeal to investors seeking out niches that might become the next big thing. But in the write-up of Inside Market Data’s recent webcast on Infrastructure Management in this week’s issue, Neil McGovern, senior director of solution marketing at SAP, says firms need to take the same approach to dealing with data, citing the increasing volume, velocity and expanding definition of market data as factors that will drive investment in data infrastructures to support these new datasets.
Broadening a target audience is also the philosophy behind plenty of other activity to be found in this week’s IMD: SuperDerivatives releasing its DGX data terminal, Emulex’s entry into the network monitoring market via its acquisition of Endace, ModeFinance’s new credit risk data portal, S&P Capital IQ’s integration of its RatingsDirect content, and BT’s call for data vendors to integrate its collaboration tools are all designed to broaden those vendors’ addressable markets—all of which makes perfect sense, because if your market is contracting vertically, look for ways to expand horizontally.
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
Asset manager Saratoga uses AI to accelerate Ridgeline rollout
The tech provider’s AI assistant helps clients summarize research, client interactions, report generation, as well as interact with the Ridgeline platform.
LSEG rolls out AI-driven collaboration tool, preps Excel tie-in
Nej D’Jelal tells WatersTechnology that the rollout took longer than expected, but more is to come in 2025.
The Waters Cooler: ’Tis the Season!
Everyone is burned out and tired and wants to just chillax in the warm watching some Securities and Exchange Commission videos on YouTube. No? Just me?
It’s just semantics: The web standard that could replace the identifiers you love to hate
Data ontologists say that the IRI, a cousin of the humble URL, could put the various wars over identity resolution to bed—for good.
T. Rowe Price’s Tasitsiomi on the pitfalls of data and the allures of AI
The asset manager’s head of AI and investments data science gets candid on the hype around generative AI and data transparency.
As vulnerability patching gets overwhelming, it’s no-code’s time to shine
Waters Wrap: A large US bank is going all in on a no-code provider in an effort to move away from its Java stack. The bank’s CIO tells Anthony they expect more CIOs to follow this dev movement.
J&J debuts AI data contracts management tool
J&J’s new GARD service will use AI to help data pros query data contracts and license agreements.
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