The TRADE 60 | Page 50

[ I N - D E P T H | O U T S O U R C E D T R A D I N G ] market participants as to how these providers actually oper- ate, primarily in terms of how they differ from agency brokers. Alongside this, buy-side traders often view the outsourced dealing desk as a potential threat to the future of their careers. However, those asset managers venturing down the outsourced trading path are supposedly seeing a number of practical benefits. Outsourced trading providers essentially act as a buy-side trading desk, with very similar operat- ing models in terms of how they transact on behalf of clients. For a typical arrangement in the UK, “The sell-side is happy to have those conversations with us because they understand that we are not crossing orders or competing with them, and there is no potential for information leakage.” ANDREW WALTON, TOURMALINE TRADING the buy-side client has a single relationship with the outsourced trading provider, while the pro- vider has individual relationships with the sell-side and trading venues, meaning that the client is transacting with the out- sourced trading desk and they are the counterparty risk. Ultimately, the provider is standing between the market and the client. Most outsourced trading 50 // TheTrade // Summer 2019 providers will accommodate methods and arrange- ments in terms of anonymity based on the needs of the individual client because, as with most things in this industry, this is not a one-size-fits-all type of deal. There can also be differences according to region. Some parts of Europe, for example, have adopted a model known as RTO, or reception and transmission of orders, which has proved to be popular in major financial districts such as Paris. With the RTO method, the outsourced trading pro- vider deals in the name of the buy-side client, so the counterparty risk remains between the institutional investor and the broker. Focusing more on the typical UK model, anonymity is an aspect that providers of outsourced trading agree can bring huge benefits to many funds. “Standing between the buy- and sell-side means that we can protect the end client by allowing them to re- main anonymous, and conversations our clients would have previously had with the sell-side are now han- dled by us,” says Andrew Walton, head of European business development at outsourced trading provider, Tourmaline Trading. “The sell-side is happy to have those conversations with us because they understand that we are not crossing orders or competing with them, and there is no potential for information leakage. If we were to get buy and sell orders in the same name from a bulk of clients, we aren’t taking that away from the sell-side table, we are taking it to their table.” For smaller asset managers in particular, anonymity created through a typical UK outsourced trading ar- rangement could prove useful in terms of minimising market impact, reducing information leakage and pre- serving alpha. Such an arrangement also removes the need to establish separate and individual relationships with brokers, which can often be legally complex, costly, and difficult to both attain and maintain due to potentially lower business flowing from smaller funds. But for the larger asset managers that most likely have the appropriate sell-side relationships embedded, anonymity doesn’t always provide a competitive edge. If a secondary relationship with an outsourced trading provider was established and that provider was trad- ing on behalf of the larger asset manager, the market would likely see a sizeable shift in volumes and far less flow coming from that particular buy-side firm. “CF Global has clients that want to trade anony- mously, and others that want to be visible with their counterparties,” says Steve Blackburn, partner at out-