FLASH FRIDAY: Recapping the Year in Market Structure

FLASH FRIDAY is a weekly content series looking at the past, present and future of capital markets trading and technology. FLASH FRIDAY is sponsored by Instinet, a Nomura company.

Predicting market structure trends is no easy feat, and revisiting those predictions a year later often reveals unexpected twists.

Kevin McPartland

Kevin McPartland, Head of Market Structure and Technology Research at Coalition Greenwich, Zoomed with Traders Magazine for the third-annual ‘look back at a look ahead’, assessing CG’s Top Market Structure Trends to Watch in 2024.

Of the 10 trends highlighted in the January 2024 report, which ones happened as expected, and which ones took an unexpected turn?

1. U.S. Regulations Must Speed Up or Die, Ahead of U.S. ElectionsAs Expected

Kevin: “Many of the rules that were proposed in 2024 will ultimately die, given the outcome of the election. We actually wrote about this recently—Chair Gensler was going to resign, and a new chair was announced. It does seem like a lot of the outstanding rules will likely be scrapped, and they’ll step back and reevaluate where to go from here”

2. GUI Search is Out, AI Search is In As Expected

“We’re definitely moving in that direction. Of course, not all applications can sort of tear out years of development and immediately replace it with generative AI, but it does very much feel like the world continues to move in that direction, and it’s only getting better.”

3. The Exchange Buying Spree ContinuesLess than Expected

“There wasn’t much this year, so perhaps this trend is delayed a year. I would say that yet again, given the change in Washington, there is an expectation for more M&A in 2025. So less than expected, but perhaps playing catch-up in 2025.”


4. Private Markets Aren’t So Private Anymore – More than Expected

“I literally read an article this morning about how private market access is continuing to expand and how there are multiple ways to do it. We do have ETFs for private market access, so it’s certainly becoming more and more available to institutional and retail investors.”


5. Workflow Automation Becomes the Priority
As Expected

“As expected, automation will continue to be a priority. We recently published a research piece on muni dealers, and we asked about their tech priorities for next year. Again, the number one answer was automation. So this does continue to be a topic across every asset class, front office and back office alike. So, as expected and will only continue.”

6. The Market Still Cares About Crypto and Blockchain for Capital MarketsAs Expected

“This trend continues to move forward. This is another trend that the U.S. election is going to drive even further, so interest should only grow here. A lot of U.S. entities are hoping for more regulatory clarity, which now seems realistic for 2025. Both on the crypto front and the tokenization front are seeing progress. Of course, you can’t ignore Bitcoin hitting $100,000 — that kind of growth is certainly going to drive interest even further forward.”


7. Central Clearing Tries to GrowAs Expected

“If we take the word ‘tries’ literally, then yes, it’s as expected, we certainly try to continue to move forward. I think treasury and repo clearing are again trying to make progress. The expectation is that these rules will stick, even with the changes in Washington, but will likely take longer to implement, the deadlines will be pushed out. This is a long-term trend
that arguably started after the financial crisis in 2010 or so and continues and will continue going forward. So definitely a push to more clearing, but it is a slow-moving train.


8. T+1 Prematurely Creates T+0 Talk – Less than Expected

“We’ve still had those conversations this year about T+0. I do think the idea is sitting with certain FinTech firms that are thinking about how to move the market forward and what opportunities might exist. I don’t think anybody foresees any regulatory action in this regard anytime soon, especially in the U.S., but that doesn’t mean the industry won’t try to make some progress in certain pockets where they see opportunity.

9. Cheap Capital is Harder to FindAs Expected

“This trend stuck with us through 2024. Even as the Fed started to cut rates, long-term interest rates didn’t come down all that much, so rates are still historically high right now, which is making it expensive to borrow. There’s also a political lean to all of this. Because of the election, there’s some expectation that additional capital requirements for banks could be scaled back or even canceled altogether, which should free up some capital on the banking side. If we’re talking about more M&A, that should hopefully create a lot of deals, allowing private equity and venture firms to sell their existing holdings or bring them public, which then frees up capital to do more investing, and it seems like that could start to shift in 2025.”

10. Buy, Build and Integrate Replaces Buy vs. BuildAs Expected

“There do seem to be very few capital markets firms that are all buy or all build anymore. This ties back nicely to workflow automation — being able to move information between applications, whether internal, external, or from multiple vendors, to make that workflow more seamless and automated. These two things will just feed on each other and help continue to move this forward.”

And:

The Search for “Normal” Continues

“I do kind of feel like we’re there, right? It’s funny reading what I wrote a year ago—trains are definitely still less empty on Mondays and Fridays, although less so than they were at the start of the year. There are a lot more mandates for everybody to come back five days a week, especially with big financial markets firms and even some tech firms. It feels like the industry has found its new, new normal. Business is certainly back, the markets have been on fire, and we’ll see what next year brings.

Bonus question: What was the biggest market structure trend of 2024 that you didn’t highlight in your top 10 list from one year ago?

“Maybe this is a little in the weeds, but a lot of electronic trading focus for years has been very much about the buy side, the investors and how they interact to get liquidity. But in 2024, it seemed like there was a big focus on the dealer-to-dealer market and innovation there in electronic trading. So, we saw growth in electronic trading in that segment, along with a lot of innovations the from trading venues, with new solutions or existing ones that really started to grow. That was a bit of a surprise that come out of the data.”