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State of Play in OMS/EMS

October 2010 | 37 pages | ID: SB6862AFFD1EN
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Introduction

Order management and execution management systems, or OMSs and EMSs, are trading platforms that came into existence in the equities world, where they are an established part of the infrastructure in both buy- and sell-side institutions. Indeed, OMS can be considered a mature market, in that the majority of potential customers have already had one installed for a long time.

Features and benefits

The report shows how liquidity continues to fragment in Europe and begins to do the same in Asia Pacific.

It discusses the evolution of transaction cost analysis from a compliance to an optimization tool.

It considers the challenges to OMS/EMS from the move to multi-asset strategies.

Highlights

The biggest and best-funded investment banks will certainly want to keep their offerings going and continue to devote development budget by adding new functionality to them, as they are an excellent means of maintaining a captive buy-side audience. Banks are, however, becoming more selective about whom they provide the systems to.

The growth in popularity in multi-asset funds, and therefore the increasing number being launched in the market, is a predictable reaction to the volatility that has characterized the cash equity markets since the global financial crisis broke out in 2007.

The main thrust of current legislative endeavors is intended to reduce banks’ ability to take on risk by imposing more stringent capital requirements.

Your key questions answered

Will OMS and EMS platforms ultimately converge into so-called OEMS that does both order and execution management?

What are the challenges for handling multiple asset classes from a single OMS/EMS?

Will transaction cost analysis be offered primarily by OMS and EMS vendors, or will the dedicated TCA vendors continue to have a role to play?
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Summary
Catalyst
Ovum view
Key messages

INTRODUCTION: WHAT ARE OMS AND EMS?

Not all customers require both an OMS and an EMS
The buy and sell sides have different requirements from an OMS

THE ISSUES FACING OMS/EMS IN TRADE EXECUTION

Challenges require further technological development
Venue proliferation represents a challenge for EMSs to keep up with interfaces
Multi-asset capability is becoming an essential feature
Trading multiple assets and multi-asset strategies are two different things
Transaction cost analysis needs to go deeper and wider
Issues in the pre- and post-trade arenas
Overview
Tougher regulation is driving change in technology
OMS/EMS will not become full risk platforms
Compliance capabilities will grow
Should OMS and EMS converge?
Ongoing debate
Some market participants do not require a full OMS and EMS
Integrating OMS and EMS is an opportunity for messaging vendors
A lot of so-called OEMSs are still two separate products
Competitive Landscape
Overview
BNY ConvergEx Group
Charles River Development
Fidessa
InfoReach
Investment Technology Group (ITG)
Linedata
List Group
Orc Software
Portware
RTS Realtime Systems (RTS)
SunGard
Trading Technologies
ULLINK
Recommendations
Recommendations for enterprises
Recommendations for vendors
Alternative views

APPENDIX

Further reading
Methodology
Author
Ovum Consulting
Disclaimer

TABLE OF FIGURES

Figure 1: Example of how a multi-asset fund operates


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