Buy-side Perspectives Issue 17 | Page 25

FIXED INCOME of our DNA as traders. We do not interact the same way with each counterparty and knowing your counterparties and their business model is crucial. This is as important as knowing the market. Building a relationship with your counterparty is key and important for the coming trades. For our traders it makes a lot of sense to talk to selected traders as well as the sales people in order to get market colour, flow information etc. Trading is an interactive and dynamic process and the evaluation of your counterparties is an important factor in this aspect. Broker evaluation needs to be both quantitative and qualitative and preferable in realtime. As we still experience evolving trends among how the buy-side use bond trading platforms, how do you feel the race is progressing between dominant legacy and challenger brands? Has competitive pressure resulted in overall innovation and how do you foresee the competitive landscape looking like in 3 years’ time? The Fixed Income market is facing a growing complexity and adapting to that, our trading team needs to develop and deliver smarter ways of trading based upon eg. optimised technology. Our traders now have alternative ways of trading than the traditional RFQ model and with more protocols available, our approach is changing. The need for a system that aggregates all different Fixed Income strategies is increasingly becoming a necessity in this more and more complex world with fragmented liquidity and diverse trading strategies. To manage, I think we need both better internal and external tools. Data plays a huge role in this, and our different trading desks are heavily involved in all aspects of the technology workflow, bringing the trading, investment and execution process closer together. We aim to create an open infrastructure that allows traders, quants and analyst to work with data across the whole value chain. Winter/Spring 2020 We are constantly looking to improve our trading processes for a more efficient way of trading to meet and evidence best execution. Data and automation are key within this evolving area. We talk a lot about data, which is crucial, but the quality and accuracy of data and the use of it is the big challenge. We tend to jump on all data, but to filter out the noise, is hard and a time consuming job. However, I think in the near future we will see a more efficient aggregation of price streams, which will help automate the low touch business further, turning it into a no touch business. In general, I think that automation and data /technology will develop Fixed Income bond trading over the coming years. Technology must act as an enabler that shifts our business focus from processing to advice. Automation helps us to increase efficiency and scalability by ensuring that simple tasks and routines are being automated leaving time to focus on more complex tasks. Therefore, it is important that we as the buy-side, stay in the forefront, both regarding systems, data, tools etc. We need a real time tool covering the whole market, but no one seems to fulfull all our needs. Multiple primary issuance solutions will also lead to the need for an aggregation. I would like to see a system, which is able to collect all the primary market information and details, including updates, allocations etc, preferably with full STP, to our OMS. I am not the data specialist or architect within our team, so developing internal tools is not me. I do however have a clear view of what technologies I am missing and what could be helpful or even needed in my daily work. I do not understand why vendors have not been successful in fulfilling the buy-side’s needs for fixed income trading platforms, aggregation of data, EMS, pre-trade engine, post trade analysis (TCA) etc. The discussion has been going on for years now and all vendors should already know by now that they cannot just put an equity framework into Fixed Income trading. Why should it be that hard? There is no single best provider that supports the entire life cycle of a trade, Tina at the 12 th ATF Fixed Income London For the primary market we are not yet there with “electronification” and it is still an onerous process. Despite initiatives such as IPREO, Direct Books, Liquidnet etc, I think we are still far from a solution. www.buysideintel.com from pre-trade to compliance, and you need to review the resources that you have internally to try to find what suits you best. At Nordea Asset Management we have taken on the responsibility 25