What is a pre-trade information?

What is a pre-trade information?

Pre-trade liquidity discovery The MTS pre-trade information tool enables asset managers to search for the bonds they wish to trade and identify an appropriate counterparty in an efficient and effective manner.

What are pre-trade analytics?

Pre-Trade Analytics(RVFI) RVFI is a multi-currency and multistrategy pre-trade system that allows traders and portfolio managers to run an in-depth analysis using relative value metrics and measures and generate new trading strategies to maximize alpha.

What is a trader AXE?

An axe (or “axe to grind”) is the interest that a trader shows in buying or selling a security that is typically already on the books. If a trader holds a long position but has short-term concerns, that trader’s axe toward short-term put options may be significant.

What is pre-trade transparency MiFID II?

Concerning pre-trade transparency, MiFID II requires trading venues and so-called systematic internalisers – i.e. firms that trade on their own account with clients on a systematic and substantial basis – to make public quotes in instruments they are trading.

How many corporate bond CUSIPs are there?

There are approximately 3.2 million dealer offer quotes for 13,740 distinct public bond issues (CUSIPs).

What is post trade analysis?

Post-trade analysis requires you to mark your trades with the specific date on which you purchased an investment. You should know if particular events on the said day affected your investments in one way or another. It is a critical aspect of post-trade analysis.

Who can buy in pre market?

Premarket trading is the trading session that happens before the normal trading session starts. The session allows both institutional investors and individual traders to trade stocks between 4:00 a.m. ET and 9:30 a.m. ET. Brokers, however, can determine the exact timeframe during which premarket trading takes place.

What is a bond axe?

The term ‘axe’ originating from the phrase ‘axe to grind’ is used in fixed income trading to represent a sell-side advertising buy or sell bond interests. These are traditionally tied in some form to the sell-side’s book but can also be driven by client orders and even a trader’s market view or valuation.