Free Site Registration

MiFID II Turns Spotlight on Buyside OMS/EMS Spending, Greenwich Reports

Traders Magazine Online News, June 29, 2018

John D'Antona Jr.

The increasing importance of trading desk order management systems (OMS) and execution management systems (EMS) is contributing to steady growth in technology costs for institutional investors.

Europe’s MiFID II and post-crisis regulations in the U.S. have raised the bar on “best execution” requirements and significantly increased operational burdens with stricter transaction reporting rules. These rule changes have increased investors’ reliance on OMS and EMS systems, which together now account for approximately one quarter of buy-side technology budgets, according to a new report from Greenwich Associates.

Just 20 years ago, many buy-side firms used in-house technology platforms. “In fact, working with in-house technology was seen as a badge of honor and competitive advantage,” says Kevin McPartland, Head of Greenwich Associates Market Structure and Technology Research and author of Order and Execution Management Systems Increasingly Indispensable, which analyzes the fast-shifting landscape of buy-side technology platforms and budgets.

Today, 77% of these investors use third-party OMS and approximately two-thirds use third-party EMS due in large part to the lower total cost of ownership. The share of buy-side firms using in-house EMS has been cut in half in the last five years alone. Equity desks led the way in the adoption of OMS and EMS, but most fixed-income desks now employ at least an OMS, with EMSs finally gaining some traction.

“Maintaining a fully staffed team to keep up with not only regulations but also user requests and new features has become too expensive for most investment companies to justify,” says Brad Tingley, co-author of the report. “Platforms from the major third-party providers can perform those functions affordably and with scale.”

Due in part to increased spending on OMS and EMS, technology costs now account for 40% of total budget for the typical buy-side firm, up from slightly less than one-third only two years ago.

For more information on related topics, visit the following channels:

Comments (0)

Add Your Comments:

You must be registered to post a comment.

Not Registered? Click here to register.

Already registered? Log in here.

Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.