Omgeo matching service to help Canadian securities industry settle on T + 1

Omgeo is making its Omgeo Central Trade Manager (Omgeo CTM) matching engine available to Canadian fund managers wanting to match both domestic and cross-border trades in Canadian securities through a single interface. The Canadian securities industry is planning a switch to settlement on T + 1.
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Omgeo is making its Omgeo Central Trade Manager (Omgeo CTM) matching engine available to Canadian fund managers wanting to match both domestic and cross-border trades in Canadian securities through a single interface. The Canadian securities industry is planning a switch to settlement on T + 1.

By making Omgeo CTM available for trades in Canada, Omgeo believes it can secure matching traffic from market participants obliged to comply with National Instrument 24-101 – Institutional Trade Matching (ITM) and Settlement. The instrument, by which counterparties are obliged to agree to the details of a trade on the day the trade is executed, is part of a series of measures being taken towards settlement on T + 1 in Canada.

“Through our direct link to the CDS, Omgeo CTM affords our Canadian clients the opportunity to achieve best-in-class institutional trade matching rates for both cross-border and now domestic trades,” says Marianne Brown, president and CEO of Omgeo. “We have clients in Canada who have leveraged our other solutions for cross-border trading for some time, and we have already seen healthy client interest in Omgeo CTM for the domestic Canadian market to greatly enhance their efficiency. Omgeo’s experience in this space, our large and expanding global community and organisational relationships with our parent companies, Thomson Financial – part of Canada-based Thomson

Corporation, and Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation – the depository in the US – position us to help the Canadian market be at the forefront of efficiency,” she adds.

By providing same-day matching, Omgeo CTM aims to support settlement on T + 1. Canadian domestic trades matched via Omgeo CTM are now sent directly to the Canadian CSD, the Canadian Depository for Securities (CDS), for settlement. The interface between Omgeo CTM and CDS provides fully automated messaging between the two systems to enable the electronic pass-through of matched trades on trade date.

Omgeo says operational risks, costs and inefficiencies can be significantly reduced as a result. It says users can match upwards of 90 percent of trades automatically, allowing them

to focus on exception processing and minimizing risk.

“National Instrument 24-101 necessitates that Canadian firms make their internal business processes and their interactions with counterparties much more efficient than they are today,” says Peter Delano, senior analyst from TowerGroup. “Investment managers, broker-dealers, and custodians are looking for technology solutions to support compliance with the institutional trade matching mandate while maintaining the firms’ ability to compete globally,” continues Delano.

Omgeo says Mackenzie Financial Corporation has successfully tested Omgeo CTM for cross-border trades in Canada and will soon begin testing for leveraging the solution for domestic trades. “We are looking forward to the ease of use of a single interface for both domestic and cross border trade processing that Omgeo CTM brings,” says Chuck Murray, assistant vice president, portfolio administration at Mackenzie Financial. “As we go through testing, we are excited that Omgeo CTM will help us achieve institutional trade matching as quickly and accurately as possible.”

“As an asset servicing provider, we are pleased to receive trade instructions from clients that have already been matched in the market,” adds David Linds, CIBC Mellon senior vice president, business development and client relationship management. “Leveraging automated solutions such as Omgeo’s CTM can bring many efficiencies to Canada’s post-trade, pre-settlement cycle,” he continues.

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