Buy-side Perspectives Issue 5 | Page 5

Mind the gap “We may be a small island, but we are not a small people,” remarked Edward Heath, UK prime minister, in June 1970. Over the next three years, Heath took the UK into the European single market, which later became the EU. At the time, it was seen as a step forward for the UK, which had previously feared isolation. In the aftermath of the UK’s shock decision to leave the EU on 23 June 2016, much discussion inevitably turns to the question of how Brexit will affect the world of capital markets. The result was one which few had expected, even just hours before the result became clear. In the aftermath, the pound crashed to the lowest level in over 30 years, falling by 13% on the Friday after the result was announced. From a trading perspective, the outcome may yet prove significant in terms of capital markets regulation. Buy-side observers have raised concerns that the European Commission’s MiFID II legislation was heavily influenced by the UK FCA, particularly on payments for research; it remains to be seen how the legislation may change between now and January 2018 given that the UK is no longer a member of the Union. Sometimes it can seem as though the only constant is change itself, and nowhere is this more true than on the trading desk. One of the more interesting questions arising this issue is how to organise the trading desk – a question that was recently explored in our K&KGC survey Organising the FX trading desk parts one and two. On the one hand, there are those who advocate a true multi-asset desk, in which the true divide is between high-touch and low-touch trading, not between the asset classes. On the other are those who see the question as mainly one of information sharing and education, in which case traders from one asset class can help to better inform their peers in another. This issue, these questions are tackled by Paul Squires, head of trading at AXA Investment Managers, and Christoph Hock, head of multi-asset trading at Union Investments. This month’s issue of the Buy-side Perspectives August 2016 also focuses on how increased collaboration between the buy side and the sell side is helping to reshape the market in the interests of the end-investor. For years, it has seemed as though many developments in the market were primarily driven by the sell side. Now, however, new platforms in equities and fixed income are bringing the buy side firmly on board to lower the cost of trading, improve the quality of execution, and tackle some of the thornier challenges around trading technology such as messaging standards, connectivity and data. These platforms offer the prospect of a more collaborative industry, which better serves the interests of the buy side. At the same time, the buy side is a