FIRMS such as State Street Corp. and CF Global that offer outsourced trading services are seeing more inquiries in Asia as fund managers and family offices look to cut costs and set up contingency plans. Asia, and China in particular, has lagged behind other regions on the outsourcing front because of a reluctance by particularly family offices to go outside for help, according to executives in the industry. That is now slowly changing in part as the pandemic revealed the need to have backups. “Asia is catching up,” said James Woodward, APAC head of portfolio solutions who runs the outsourced trading desk at State Street. “There’s obviously an education phase, but as we move forward, some of those Asian funds embrace the benefits that can be garnered from some of these firms’ investments in all the technology and infrastructure and capability sets.” While in-house trading has long been viewed as providing a potential competitive edge for big asset managers, the combination of intense competition, new regulations and a push to streamline costs are leading more and more funds to outsource execution to specialist firms. Asia’s quickly-expanding wealth management industry is a holy grail for the firms which provide such services, but the region has so far lagged behind the United States and Europe in moving to outsourced trading. About 40 companies engage in the business worldwide, ranging from big firms such as Amundi and UBS Group AG, to smaller firms including Jones Trading and Outset Global LLP, according to a research report by Hong Kong-based consultancy Quinlan & Associates. Outsourcing is prevalent among big global asset managers. A recent survey by Northern Trust of 300 big firms showed that 85 percent were already taking on the service or interested in doing so, according to a 2021 report called “Outsourcing: From Niche to Norm.” Asset managers can use a “pay-as-you-go” model when employing outside traders, who act as a go-between the buy and sell sides to execute orders, saving fixed costs on human resources, trading, technology and access to research, according to Quinlan. CF Global, established in Hong Kong some 20 years ago as one of the oldest independent outsourcing firms in the region, has been gaining clients primarily in Hong Kong and Singapore, the region’s two trading hubs for international investors. Part of the demand comes from hedge funds who are seeking dealing partners outside of the brokers as well from clients who use the firm to extend operations into European and U.S. hours, according to CF’s co-founder, Robert Fleming. (SD-Agencies) |