Continuous trading demands strong foundations, not composing lego blocks, say experts
With the premise of continuous trading quickly shifting from concept to reality across capital markets, experts at the TradingTech Summit in London took stock of how the technology landscape must modernise and evolve hand-in-hand with this structural change. To adapt to 24/7 and continuous trading models, audience members at the conference were polled on what they thought the biggest barrier for a transition to continuous market readiness, with operational cost and resource constraints, as well as legacy system limitations vying as the top contenders for potential obstacles participants are preparing for. When analysing how to navigate these difficulties, discussions turned to adopting strategies such as sourcing more technology in-house, to ensure that firms understand their own trading systems and infrastructure well, so that any updates or changes which may come with extending trading hours can seamlessly transition into workflows. One speaker explained: “Going in-house is bearing fruit in this push towards more continuous trading. Fundamentally, it’s a reduction back to architectural principles, and making sure that your foundation is sound, so it’s less about composing lego blocks and more building the fundamental foundation that we’re going to rely on in the next coming years.” As 24/7 trading and similar models begin to stake their place in the market, conversations also emphasised the importance of ensuring the technology implemented to support these structures can also adapt when market turbulence hits. For some firms, the solution to this lies in delegating building blocks to various different providers, to ensure stability. As one expert who uses this model highlighted: “When we hit highly volatile markets, if one provider can’t cope or starts to struggle, we can very easily expand out. We can cut and chew and switch out components whenever we need to.” Human relationships remain key Although the fear of AI taking over human jobs has been a key concern at the heart of the evolving technology debate, and has been reflected into some areas of the industry as desks become more streamlined, human relationships still appear to be intrinsic when developing and adapting to a 24/7 world. Dissecting this, panellists highlighted that as technology modernises and updates to support continuous trading, creating systems that humans can understand is essential, to ensure that the most benefits can be reaped from these changes. “The relationships and the human aspect are not going away, but being able to immediately know everything they need to know about a stock, the history, what points you should talk to is empowering,” asserted one expert. “A big part of having understandable technology is building a deterministic system that yields the same output every time you run them. That’s really good for humans because you understand why a system does a certain thing, and if it doesn’t do what you think it does, you can find a way to reproduce it and solve it more easily.” Building on this, discussions also emphasised the importance of ensuring teams have AI-friendly skills, not only so that the most efficiencies can be gained from modern technology, but also so that human hours don’t expand as trading hours do. Within this, panellists were unanimous in agreeing that as orders increase while trading hours expand, the role of traders should not be to monitor the desk all day and night, but instead to be able to access all automated flow in the case that something goes wrong. As one panellist emphasised: “If something goes wrong, you shouldn’t have to be an expert to know how to fix it. It’s all about consistency and making sure that everybody understands the system. That’s something where the technology really comes in to provide that normalisation.” The post Continuous trading demands strong foundations, not composing lego blocks, say experts appeared first on The TRADE.
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