TD Securities Archives - The TRADE https://www.thetradenews.com/tag/td-securities/ The leading news-based website for buy-side traders and hedge funds Fri, 25 Apr 2025 15:13:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 People Moves Monday: Clear Street, Columbia Threadneedle, TD Securities, and more… https://www.thetradenews.com/people-moves-monday-clear-street-columbia-threadneedle-td-securities-and-more/ https://www.thetradenews.com/people-moves-monday-clear-street-columbia-threadneedle-td-securities-and-more/#respond Mon, 28 Apr 2025 08:30:25 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=99974 The past week saw appointments across prime brokerage, equities, event-driven trading, market solutions and product management.  

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Clear Street  

John Levene has joined Clear Street as head of institutional, overseeing the firm’s prime brokerage business, following more than 25 years at Goldman Sachs. The move will see Levene using his experience in building and managing prime brokerage platforms across the capital markets to bring leadership to his new role at Clear Street.  

During his time at Goldman Sachs, Levene was partner for 14 years, acting as a leader in the client service space and serving as head of global banking and markets client experience, co-head of prime services client experience and head of prime brokerage client franchise, Americas.  

“We welcome John to his new role, where his industry expertise and strategic mindset will be instrumental in advancing our mission to provide best-in-class technology and client service,” said chief executive of Clear Street, Edward Tilly.  

Columbia Threadneedle  

Columbia Threadneedle Investments has welcomed Francesca Mace Wilson to the EMEA equity trading desk. The move sees her leaving her role as senior investment control analyst at Capital Group, which she had held since October 2022.  

Prior to this, Mace Wilson held previous positions at Titan Institutional Services, working across wealth management, prime brokerage and sales.  

Head of EMEA equity trading at Columbia Threadneedle, Michael Johnson said: “Francesca joins us having spent five years at Capital Group and, in addition to trading equities, will help us enhance our position across the capital markets structure.”  

TD Securities  

TD Securities has named Greg Levett, Neil McKay and David Abraham as the new managing directors of its event driven sales and trading team, with all three new hires transferring from BTIG. Levett had previously served at BTIG since 2010 and began his career in event driven sales at Pali International.   

Abraham’s recent roles include positions at FBR Capital Markets, Merebis Capital Management, Titanium Capital, ZAN Partners, Goldman Sachs, NatWest Markets and Credit Lyonnais Securities.   

New addition McKay also covered equity sales and trading as managing director at BTIG and brings extensive knowledge of the event driven sector. Prior to his stint at BTIG he held roles at Barclays, Abberton Capital, United First Partners, Arrowgrass Capital Partners, Stark Investments, Citadel and CSFB.  

Citi  

Citi has named Christopher Chang as its new head of markets solutions for financial institutions for Asia South and Asia North. Chang joins from Goldman Sachs, where he served as head of FICC and equity distribution for Southeast Asia and been a board member of Goldman Sachs Singapore for more than 10 years.  

Prior to Goldman Sachs, he held various senior banking, solutions and sales roles at Deutsche Bank and Nomura. The move will see him reporting to head of markets sales for Japan, Asia North and Australia and Asia South, Cecile Gambardella, who said: “He [Chang] will work closely with our productpartners and across banking, wealth and international to bridge the best of Citi’s capabilities and deliver value to both our clients and Citi.”  

Broadridge  

Broadridge Financial Solutions has expanded its product management team with Ian Williams and Anand Chintala stepping into senior roles within Broadridge Trading and Connectivity Solutions.  

In his new role, Williams will assume the role of vice president of product management based in Toronto, leaving his previous position as chief executive of Virtu Canada.   

Similarly, Chintala will become the division’s senior director in New York, and joins from Barclays, where he acted as director of portfolio trading. Williams brings more than 30 years of trading and product leadership positions to the role, and he previously worked at TriAct Canada Marketplace – now Cboe Global Markets, Perimeter Financial Corp and TD.  

Chintala also has extensive industry experience and held director and vice president titles at Lehman Brothers and ITG.  

“With over three decades of trading and product leadership positions in both Canada and the US, Williams will be instrumental in expanding our global footprint in Canada,” said the firm in an update on social media.  

Liquidnet  

Chris Jackson has been promoted as Liquidnet’s new global head of equities, continuing his 10-year tenure with the firm. The move sees London-based Jackson departing from his role as global head of equity strategy and head of equities for EMEA. 

Prior to joining Liquidnet, he held the position of head of EMEA execution sales at Citi from 2009 to 2015. He has also worked in director positions with a focus on portfolio sales, analytics, and sales trading at SBC Warburg and Merrill Lynch.  

Speaking on the announcement, Liquidnet said: “His [Jackson’s] leadership will be instrumental as we continue to scale up our equities business globally and develop, together with our members, innovative solutions that combine deep liquidity access with intelligent execution.”   

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TD Securities acquires BTIG event-driven trading team https://www.thetradenews.com/td-securities-acquires-btig-event-driven-trading-team/ https://www.thetradenews.com/td-securities-acquires-btig-event-driven-trading-team/#respond Wed, 23 Apr 2025 15:34:46 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=99949 Move will see individuals stepping into new roles, in a push to drive TD’s European equities and special situations market.  

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TD Securities has named Greg Levett, Neil McKay and David Abraham as the new managing directors of its event driven sales and trading team, with all three new hires transferring from BTIG.  

The appointments will see the three London-based industry veterans reporting into head of European cash equities at TD Securities, Carl Hayes, and will build into the firm’s presence across European equities and special situations.  

All three bring two years’ experience as managing directors at BTIG and are set to offer trading insight for hedge funds and prop desks in their new positions.  

Both Levett and Abraham joined Olivetree Financial’s event driven team in London in September 2021, before returning to managing director roles at BTIG in 2023.  

Read more – Olivetree Financial rebuilds event driven team in London with hires from BTIG 

Levett had previously served at BTIG since 2010 and began his career in event driven sales at Pali International.  

Abraham’s recent roles include positions at FBR Capital Markets, Merebis Capital Management, Titanium Capital, ZAN Partners, Goldman Sachs, NatWest Markets and Credit Lyonnais Securities, where he spanned sectors including equity research, investment and portfolio management.  

Read more – Olivetree reboots event driven team in London with hires from Citi 

New addition McKay also covered equity sales and trading as managing director at BTIG and brings extensive knowledge of the event driven sector. 

Prior to his stint at BTIG he held roles at Barclays, Abberton Capital, United First Partners, Arrowgrass Capital Partners, Stark Investments, Citadel and CSFB.  

Read more – TD Securities names new head of European cash equities 

The moves follow recent appointments at TD Securities, including the addition of Carl Hayes as head of European cash equities in August 2024, where he joined following a position as head of sales trading at Cowen and Company. 

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Fireside Friday with… TD Securities’ Matthew Schrager https://www.thetradenews.com/fireside-friday-with-td-securities-matthew-schrager/ https://www.thetradenews.com/fireside-friday-with-td-securities-matthew-schrager/#respond Fri, 07 Feb 2025 10:29:21 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=99502 The TRADE sits down with Matthew Schrager, managing director and co-head of TD Securities Automated Trading, to discuss what should be front of mind when it comes to increased adoption of automated trading, the growing role of AI in markets, and the key market structure changes to bear in mind throughout 2025, and beyond.

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What’s spurring the rapidly evolving electronic trading landscape and what are the implications of this growing demand for automated trading solutions? 

Electronic trading is like Amazon, or the iPhone, or the internal combustion engine: it’s the story of technology writ large, applied to trading.

Like all technology, electronic trading represents a phase shift in productivity. Just as the personal computer compressed work timelines from days to minutes, electronic trading vastly improves the efficiency of trading workflows. What previously required a phone call with humans on each side can now be done instantly and without human intervention. This elimination of friction in turn unlocks all sorts of otherwise-uneconomical market activity. And in a competitive market, once this paradigm shift occurs, all firms are compelled to get on board to keep up. The automation train only goes in one direction. 

The implications of this transformation are widespread.

For dealers and asset managers, technology becomes a core business requirement, and market share tends to accrue to firms with the most efficient and scalable infrastructure. This tends to lead to consolidation, with less scaled players either acquired by larger firms or competed out of existence. This played out, for example, in equities in the 1990s/2000s, where flow used to diffuse among dozens of smaller dealers, but ended up concentrated primarily among a few large tech-driven liquidity providers. 

Greater efficiency also unlocks new business models. For example, the growth of the SMA (separately managed account) industry in the municipal market over the past decade was fuelled in large part by better technology, which allowed scaled providers to efficiently manage tens of thousands of accounts and millions of individual bond holdings. This in turn allowed SMA providers to lower account minimums, expanding accessibility of the asset class and fuelling AUM growth.

At the market level, electronic trading inevitably leads to a reduction in transaction costs, be it in the form of bid/ask spreads or explicit transactional fees. And as trading gets cheaper, you get more of it, leading to an increase in transaction volumes. This increase is often concentrated in smaller increments, leading to a reduction in average transaction size.

Ultimately, the main beneficiaries of electronic trading are investors, who gain better access to a larger selection of investment products at lower cost. 

How important is data when it comes to increased automated trading? What is the key thing that needs to be considered? 

Data is the lifeblood of any automated trading business. But this should not be surprising, because the same could be said for non-automated trading as well.

When a human is deciding how to make a trading decision, he or she relies on prior experiences and information at hand. Where was the last trade in this instrument? Was there any recent news? Is anything interesting happening in related tickers? How much can I generally charge for a trade in an instrument like this? These questions are answered, in one way or another, by data. The trader probably has a Bloomberg terminal with streaming order book data and a news feed. She also has a database, of sorts, in the form of prior experiences and memories. 

Automated trading systems operate similarly. They synthesise various forms of live and historical data into a series of trading decisions. The difference, of course, is that automated systems can utilise much larger quantities of data at much higher precision, and can apply quantitative techniques to such data near-instantaneously. But the general role of data as an input to decision-making is similar. 

The biggest mistake firms make during the transition to automated trading is simply throwing data away. People have limited processing capacity, so firms used to human-driven workflows are often sloppy about persisting the large quantities of valuable data flowing through their businesses. This failure mode is particularly pernicious because once data is gone, it is often only recoverable in real-time. If you need a year’s worth of training data for a new model, and you’ve thrown your prior data away, guess what? You now have to wait a year until you’ve rebuilt that dataset. Not fun.

What are the most impactful changes AI is making on electronic trading, and markets in a wider sense?

First, some terminology. When people say “AI” nowadays, they’re generally referring to a specific type of technology known as a large language model, or LLM. What’s an LLM? Basically, think: ChatGPT.

LLMs are an important development, to be sure. However, they are just one part of a much broader ecosystem of techniques collectively known as machine learning. Machine learning contains various forms of statistical techniques to understand data. The boundary between machine learning and 9th grade algebra is somewhat fuzzy – for example, is linear regression machine learning? But generally the term is used to refer to more complicated techniques, such as neural networks and random forests. 

I highlight this difference between classical machine learning and LLMs because the impact each has had on electronic trading to this point is quite different.

Classical machine learning techniques have been used in electronic trading for decades. They form the foundational building blocks of many trading algorithms. These techniques appeared first in more liquid asset classes, like equities and futures, but in recent years have proliferated in fixed income as well. For example, since bonds often trade only a few times per day (or less), it can be difficult to estimate the “current” price of a bond. Machine learning techniques such as Kalman filters have been applied to this problem for years.

By contrast, electronic trading use cases for AI/LLMs are in relative infancy. Applying LLMs to trading is less straightforward than for classical machine learning, and the reason is in the name: LLMs are about language, whereas automated trading is about math. ChatGPT can write a pretty convincing rap in the linguistic style of Benjamin Franklin, but it’s not yet great at predicting the price of the next bond trade. Direct applications to trading algorithms are therefore still limited.

The caveat is that all of this is changing rapidly. I anticipate more direct applications to trading strategies over time.

And widening the aperture a bit, AI is beginning to have the same impact in trading as in every other industry: as a major productivity enhancer. For example, copilot-style tooling is increasing the throughput of the software developers who write the code behind trading algorithms. I expect this form of impact to grow significantly over time.

Looking ahead to the rest of 2025, what industry developments/market structure changes are you most conscious of? 

The main theme that comes to mind is: we’re so much closer to the beginning of this journey than the end. 

We’ve come a long way, to be sure. In investment-grade credit, for example, electronic trading has grown from less than 10% to north of 50% market share over the past decade. High-yield credit is around 25%, and on a similar trend line. 

But this is just the start. There are many fixed income markets where electronification is just getting started. Municipal bonds, mortgage specified pools, loans, and others are still voice-dominated markets, with electronic volumes below 20%. Will these markets follow the precise path of credit or equities? No. But the direction of travel is clear.

And electronification of trading volumes is just the first step. When execution is cheap and instant, it unlocks forms of market activity that would be otherwise infeasible. For example, in credit we’ve seen the rise of portfolio trading, where hundreds or thousands of bonds are traded simultaneously as a single package. This kind of workflow could not exist without automation. I expect we will continue to see new forms of market activity like this, built on the back of electronic trading workflows. For example, OpenYield (in which, disclosure: my employer, TD Bank, is an investor) is building innovative trading protocols to create a more equity-like experience for fixed income investors.

I am also watching areas of the market which have not yet garnered as much attention. For example, electronic trading is mostly discussed in the context of secondary markets, but not as much in relation to primary markets. The process of debt issuance hasn’t changed much in 25 years. Timelines are long, processes are manual, and underwriting fees haven’t budged. These conditions are ideal for the emergence of a more automated solution. I would not be surprised to see a push into this space in the coming years.

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People Moves Monday: SS&C Technologies GIDS, BNY, TD Securities and more… https://www.thetradenews.com/people-moves-monday-ssc-technologies-gids-bny-td-securities-and-more/ https://www.thetradenews.com/people-moves-monday-ssc-technologies-gids-bny-td-securities-and-more/#respond Mon, 13 Jan 2025 10:12:02 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=99328 The past week saw appointments across trading, fixed income, equities, sales and capital markets.

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Michael Horan was appointed head of trading at SS&C Technologies Global Investor and Distribution Solutions (GIDS) in EMEA following two decades working with BNY and Pershing. He most recently served as head of electronic equity trading at BNY’s London branch for 11 years. Before that, London-based Horan served as head of outsourced trading at Pershing EMEA. Previously in his career, he also served as head of the European broker desk at Instinet, as well as working in an equities-related broker role at Tullet Prebon and UK-focused market maker at ABN AMRO Bank.

Aviad Axelrod was named head of fixed income and equities (FIEQ) product for EMEA at BNY within the Global Markets Trading business. He most recently served in an algorithmic trading and execution services role at Stifel Financial. London-based Axelrod will report to both John Goodheart, global head of FIEQ product and Bianca Gould, head of fixed income and equities EMEA at BNY. His experience spans over two decades, working at firms including ITG Virtu, Pi-Finance, and Stifel in roles related to electronic algo trading, business development, and market structure.  

TD Securities appointed Rob Fallon as director of sales trading, based in Dublin. Fallon joined the firm from Deutsche Numis, where he spent the last two years, most recently serving as director of sales trading. Prior to his role at Deutsche Numis, Fallon spent over two decades at Goodbody, also based in Dublin. While at Goodbody, he most recently served as a senior sales trader covering Irish and UK SMID stocks. Earlier in his career, Fallon held a money market derivatives operations role at Deutsche Bank.

Broadridge appointed Stephen Wilkes senior vice president, head of international buy-side sales, based in London. As part of the role, Wilkes will be responsible for the firm’s sales efforts across EMEA and APAC, focusing on the asset management and asset servicing communities. Earlier in his career, Wilkes spent nearly 13 years at Deutsche Bank in a variety of sales-related roles. Before joining Deutsche Bank, Wilkes spent six years at JP Morgan, most recently serving as executive director, futures and options and OTC clearing sales. Before this, he worked as vice president at the bank for four and a half years.

The Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) appointed April Day head of capital markets. Day was promoted to the role, following 12 years at AFME, where she has previously served as head of equities. As part of the role, she oversaw equity capital markets (ECM), trading and post-trade activities. She also brings extensive experience in investment banking and capital markets to the new role. Earlier in her career, Day held senior roles at Dresdner Kleinwort, as well as serving as director of equity sales at Panmure Gordon.

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TD Securities taps Deutsche Numis for new director of sales trading https://www.thetradenews.com/td-securities-taps-deutsche-numis-for-new-director-of-sales-trading/ https://www.thetradenews.com/td-securities-taps-deutsche-numis-for-new-director-of-sales-trading/#respond Wed, 08 Jan 2025 09:46:39 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=99304 New appointment held the same role at Deutsche Numis; previously served as a senior sales trader at Goodbody.

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TD Securities has appointed Rob Fallon as director of sales trading, based in Dublin.

Fallon joins the firm from Deutsche Numis, where he spent the last two years, most recently serving as director of sales trading.

Institutional broker Numis was acquired by Deutsche Bank in 2023, as part of its Global Hausbank strategy aimed at “unlocking deeper engagement with corporates in the UK”.

Read more: Deutsche Bank completes acquisition of Numis

Prior to his role at Deutsche Numis, Fallon spent over two decades at Goodbody, also based in Dublin.

While at Goodbody, he most recently served as a senior sales trader covering Irish and UK SMID stocks.

Earlier in his career, Fallon held a money market derivatives operations role at Deutsche Bank.

Read more: TD Securities names new head of European cash equities

“[I’m] delighted to announce I [will] join TD Securities, Dublin as a director of sales trading, joining Carl Hayes and his [sales trading] team as we expand the TD equity franchise across Europe […] I thoroughly enjoyed my time at Numis and very much looking forward to the next chapter at TD Securities,” said Fallon in a social media announcement.

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SEC charges TD Securities as former head of US Treasuries desk found to have allegedly made ‘hundreds’ of illegal trades https://www.thetradenews.com/sec-charges-td-securities-as-former-head-of-us-treasuries-desk-found-to-have-allegedly-made-hundreds-of-illegal-trades/ https://www.thetradenews.com/sec-charges-td-securities-as-former-head-of-us-treasuries-desk-found-to-have-allegedly-made-hundreds-of-illegal-trades/#respond Tue, 01 Oct 2024 10:36:50 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=98093 Specifically, a former TD Securities trader was found to have spoofed the US Treasury cash securities market; the SEC has ruled that the firm “lacked adequate controls and that it failed to take reasonable steps to scrutinise the trader”.

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The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has charged TD Securities with manipulating the US Treasury cash securities market through an illicit spoofing scheme between April 2018 and May 2019. 

The watchdog also charged the bank with “failing to supervise” the head of its US Treasuries trading desk who allegedly made “hundreds” of illegal trades over that period.

The firm was ordered to pay $6.5 million to the SEC, $6 million to FINRA to resolve ‘related charges’, and entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the US Department of Justice and agreed to pay a total sanction of more than $15 million.

Mark Cave, associate director in the SEC’s division of enforcement, said: “Manipulative and deceptive trading undermines the integrity of our markets. Broker-dealers and other firms cannot ignore their employees’ manipulative conduct and must take meaningful steps to detect and prevent it. Today’s action results from our continuing commitment to combating illicit trading.” 

Specifically, a former TD Securities trader was found to have spoofed the US Treasury cash securities market through entering orders with no intention of executing to obtain more favourable execution prices on other orders which were taking place simultaneously which he did intend to execute. 

After these intended orders were filled (profiting TD Securities) the trader in question allegedly then cancelled the other orders.

The SEC has ruled that the firm “lacked adequate controls and that it failed to take reasonable steps to scrutinise the trader after receiving warnings of his potentially irregular trading activity”. 

Read more: JP Morgan hit with record $920 million penalty after admitting eight-year spoofing scheme 

Following the findings, TD Securities has consented to the entry of the SEC’s order finding that it violated an antifraud provision of the federal securities laws as well as having failed to reasonably supervise the trader in question.

The SEC confirmed that it had received assistance from the Fraud Section of the DOJ’s criminal division and FINRA throughout the investigation.

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People Moves Monday: TD Securities, Morgan Stanley, Kepler Cheuvreux and more… https://www.thetradenews.com/people-moves-monday-td-securities-morgan-stanley-kepler-cheuvreux-and-more/ https://www.thetradenews.com/people-moves-monday-td-securities-morgan-stanley-kepler-cheuvreux-and-more/#respond Mon, 02 Sep 2024 10:25:26 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=97903 The past week saw appointments across cash equities, electronic sales, high touch trading, technology, data and RFX trading.

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Carl Hayes was named head of European cash equities at TD Securities, having most recently worked as head of sales trading at Cowen and Company.  In the role, Hayes will report to Sharon Kim, executive managing director and head of Europe. Alongside the established team, he will be focused on strengthening TDS’ presence in the European equity markets as well as helping to solidify its multi-asset capabilities across Europe. Hayes has previously held roles at Deutsche Bank and HSBC Securities.

Morgan Stanley appointed Pankaj Dhake as a new electronic sales trader, based in Mumbai. Dhake joins Morgan Stanley from CLSA, where he spent nearly seven years, most recently as an electronic sales trader. This followed a stint as an associate at CLSA – a position he held for nearly two years. Prior to joining CLSA, Dhake was a senior quantitative researcher at WorldQuant. Elsewhere in his career, Dhake served as a global equity derivatives trader at UBS.

Eric Kohler was appointed to Kepler Cheuvreux’s high touch trading team based in New York. Most recently Kohler worked as an international equity trader at Citi for more than three and a half years having previously served as a commodities sales and trading analyst at the firm. He has also served stints at both Morgan Stanley and UBS Wealth Management. In the role, he is set to help the firm grow its execution footprint and expertise across North America – a key strategic base for Kepler Cheuvreux.

Jamie Crank was named group executive technology and data at the Australian stock exchange, ASX. Prior to this appointment, he was general manager in the trading and markets division, and before that general manager of information and connectivity services for ASX.  He will officially begin his role on 9 September. According to ASX the appointment followed “an extensive external and internal search process”. Sydney-based Crank has worked in the industry across various exchanges for two decades. He has previously served at Chi-X Australia and the London Stock Exchange.

Crédit Agricole appointed Ryan Jones vice president, Latin American (LatAm) RFX trader, based in New York. Jones joins Crédit Agricole from Natixis Corporate and Investment Banking where he spent nearly three years, most recently as vice president, LatAm FX trader. Prior to that, Jones held the same position as an associate. Before joining Crédit Agricole, Jones spent three years at Standard Chartered Bank – also based in New York – most recently as a LatAm RFX trader.

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TD to leverage Google Cloud infrastructure after signing multi-year agreement https://www.thetradenews.com/td-to-leverage-google-cloud-infrastructure-after-signing-multi-year-agreement/ https://www.thetradenews.com/td-to-leverage-google-cloud-infrastructure-after-signing-multi-year-agreement/#respond Wed, 03 Apr 2024 14:16:49 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=96702 The move follows a previous collaboration between the parties which saw TD Securities’ Chicago-based subsidiary TDSAT use Google Cloud’s Kubernetes Engine (GKE) capabilities.

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TD Securities and Google Cloud have entered into a strategic multi-year relationship which will see TD leverage Google’s infrastructure in order to more quickly rollout and develop its offerings. 

Specifically, TD is set to enhance and further innovate banking experiences for clients through adding Google Cloud services to its portfolio of technology solutions.

The move follows a previous collaboration between the parties which saw TD Securities’ Chicago-based subsidiary TD Securities Automated Trading (TSAT) use Google Cloud’s Kubernetes Engine (GKE) capabilities in a bid to keep up with market developments.

Dan Bosman, senior vice president and chief information officer at TD Securities and treasury and balance sheet management (TBSM), explained: “Google Cloud’s features are very well-suited to our business and provide a secure and scalable infrastructure that can support compute-intensive quantitative analysis, with an elevated developer experience.

“Google Cloud’s capabilities have helped us grow TDSAT’s trading volumes and portfolio size, and optimally serve our global clients. Additionally, the Google Cloud team has been truly collaborative, providing the resources we needed to help our technology integration process be as seamless as possible.”

Read more: Fireside Friday with… Google’s Rohit Bhat

The partnership will also allow TD to benefit from Google Cloud’s engineering support, including access to Google’s global network of engineers in order to optimise product use in a highly regulated environment.

Matt Renner, president, global field organisation, for Google Cloud, said: “Our multi-year strategic relationship with TD will leverage the power of Google Cloud’s secure cloud infrastructure and world class engineering talent with the goal of driving new levels of agility, customer-centricity, and engineering innovation to more easily adapt and respond to the changing needs of TD customers.”

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TD Securities joins LCH SwapAgent as first Canadian bank member https://www.thetradenews.com/td-securities-joins-lch-swapagent-as-first-canadian-bank-member/ https://www.thetradenews.com/td-securities-joins-lch-swapagent-as-first-canadian-bank-member/#respond Tue, 20 Feb 2024 13:29:10 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=95937 Addition of TD Securities increases total member count at LCH SwapAgent to 44, spanning 12 countries.

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TD Securities has gone live as a member on LCH SwapAgent, becoming the first Canadian bank member to do so.

LCH SwapAgent’s member count has now grown to 44, spanning 12 countries, which have holistically registered over $5.9 trillion in notional at LCH SwapAgent in 2023 – with average daily volume (ADV) up 78% year-on-year.

“Welcoming TD Securities as LCH SwapAgent’s first Canadian bank member is a significant milestone, and we look forward to working with them as we continue to receive interest from users in North America,” said Nathan Ondyak, head of SwapAgent, LCH.

“The continued growth of SwapAgent is testament to the processing, margining and settlement benefits that our members derive from the service.”

LCH SwapAgent’s services claim to bring improved standardisation, efficiency and simplicity to the bilateral derivatives market.

Last year, SwagAgent added KfW to its service, having successfully processed the first transport currency trades between KfW and counterparties Bank of America, Commerzbank, Danske Bank and Santander.

Read more: LCH SwapAgent processes first trades for KfW

“We are delighted to be the first Canadian bank member of LCH SwapAgent,” said Jason Cope, executive managing director and head of global fixed income at TD Securities.

“By using the service, we believe our clients will benefit from its robust capabilities and potential reduction in costs and risks associated with the bilateral derivatives market.”

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Tradefeedr welcomes TD Securities as latest liquidity provider https://www.thetradenews.com/tradefeedr-welcomes-td-securities-as-latest-liquidity-provider/ https://www.thetradenews.com/tradefeedr-welcomes-td-securities-as-latest-liquidity-provider/#respond Mon, 06 Nov 2023 09:53:40 +0000 https://www.thetradenews.com/?p=93788 TD Securities’ clients will be able to access and analyse all their trading data, increasing transparency and engagement for all parties, through the use of Tradefeedr’s unified data API.

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FX data analytics platform Tradefeedr has gone live with TD Securities on its platform as its newest liquidity provider.

Using Tradefeedr’s unified data API, clients of TD Securities will be able to access and analyse all their trading data, increasing transparency and engagement for all parties.

Trading data from TD Securities will flow to the Tradefeedr platform automatically making TCA, client analysis, comparisons and benchmarking more consistent.

Using Tradefeedr will also allow TD Securities to have a data dialogue with its buy-side clients, with all parties using the same analytical tools for review meetings or algo analysis.  

“We are delighted to welcome TD Securities as our newest Liquidity Provider,” said Balraj Bassi, co-founder and chief executive of Tradefeedr.

“Connecting to the world’s leading financial institutions allows us to capture, standardise and analyse more trading data, which delivers new insights and better decision making for all.”

Earlier this year, FlexTrade integrated Tradefeedr’s FX pre-trade forecast data into its multi-asset platform, FlexTRADER EMS, to deliver enhanced data-driven workflows.

The new offering is available for FlexTrade’s buy-side clients and will help improve transparency and enhance trade decision-making.

Tradefeedr’s data analytics network now includes 21 liquidity providers, 50 major buy-side firms and 10 trading platforms.

“Tradefeedr allows us to conduct TCA and standardise our client reporting using trusted independent analytics,” said Ellie Griffiths, global head of eFX sales at TD Securities. 

“In addition, we are now able to deepen relationships with clients by identifying growth opportunities, using data to increase engagement.”

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