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Open Source Gets Into Wall St. Back Office

Tough times for the financial services market doesn’t mean tough times for all of the software vendors that support them. Open source trading platform software developer Marketcetera, in particular, sees an increasing number of opportunities for its technology. Marketcetera is now rolling out new back office services for financial services users that leverage Marketcetera’s open […]

Oct 22, 2008
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Tough times for the financial services market doesn’t mean tough times for all of the software vendors that support them. Open source trading platform software developer Marketcetera, in particular, sees an increasing number of opportunities for its technology.

Marketcetera is now rolling out new back office services for financial services users that leverage Marketcetera’s open source Automated Trading Platform. The goal is to give traders an open platform that they can customize without being locked into a proprietary code base.

“It makes a whole lot of sense to provide an application platform for trading systems that is provided as open source,” Graham Miller, CEO of Marketcetera, told InternetNews.com. “The primary advantage being organizations get the flexibility and control that they don’t have from proprietary solutions but don’t want high cost and time to market of completely custom solution.”

Marketcetera develops software on which organizations can build trading applications. Financial services firms can build systems that enable traders and portfolio managers with real time market data as well as the ability to execute trades.

Miller noted that to date, Marketcetera has focused on the buy side of financial services with hedge funds and institutional investors. As the result of a partnership with software integrator dbConcert, Marketcetera now is also able to service the sell side, which includes broker dealers. Miller explained that Marketcetera can now offer sell side users visibility into order flow and back office integration.

The Marketcetera platform is licensed under the GPL open source license, which some in the technology market have seen as an element of risk. Miller admitted that there is an education gap that needs to filled when it comes to open source and the GPL in the financial markets. It is a gap that is getting to be less of an issue as open source become more tightly ingrained in the core of the US financial system.

Miller explained that Marketcetera was designed such that a hedge fund could use the technology and not be required to open source all of their secret trading algorithms.

Open Source in financial markets has gained more acceptance in recent years, in particular the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) currently runs Red Hat Enterprise Linux for its trading platform. Miller noted that adoption of open source anywhere in the financial services stack is beneficial to Marketcetera, as it helps with exposure and education overall.

“It’s great for us to see Red Hat making inroads,” Miller said.

This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.

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SMK

Sean Michael Kerner is an Internet consultant, strategist, and contributor to several leading IT business web sites.

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