Treating clients well and wanting them to succeed is a concept that is, alas, alien to many people working in the retail trading industry. Despite a series of scandals over the past decade, a number of brokers continue to churn-and-burn traders instead of looking to develop longer term relationships with them.
One man that’s hoping to change that is Kurt vom Scheidt. After eleven years with Danish powerhouse Saxo Bank, four of which were, vom Scheidt is now working as an advisor to three firms; , FX Prime AG and FairXchange.
Speaking to Finance Magnates last week, vom Scheidt said that his decision to work with those three companies was driven by a desire to instil some change in the wider foreign exchange trading world.
“These companies each have their own niches, directions, and appropriate target client segments,” said vom Scheidt. “But a common denominator is that they all offer products and services that can concurrently improve bottom line profitability for both retail brokers and their underlying clients. Pursuit of mutually beneficial outcomes and goals has always been what motivates me to get out of bed in the morning and what keeps me up at night; hence my excitement to be working with these firms to help formulate and deliver on their objectives.”
Developing the code
This isn’t the first time that vom Scheidt has made an effort to reshape the foreign exchange industry. Along with a group of other senior executives, he was a part of the which helped develop the FX Global Code – a set of principles for FX market participants that were published in 2017.
The only retail brokerage representative on the committee, vom Scheidt contributed directly to several of the principles pertaining to execution. Amongst other things, those rules state that firms should be clear about client order handling, including whether they are acting as agent or principal, and clarify what last look practices are acceptable.
“There was constructive debate over a number of issues,” said vom Scheidt, “but everyone collaborated well to achieve the shared goal of creating a more detailed code that identifies good global practices and helps promote a fair and effective market that is more transparent, and therefore sustainable.”
Making better traders
It is this drive for sustainability that seems to have guided vom Scheidt’s decision to work with the firms he is now advising. Though, as noted, each one provides a different service, they could all lead to a more successful base of traders in both the retail and institutional worlds.
Chasing Returns, for instance, is a company that, using behavioural psychology, hopes to reveal traders’ own biases to them and, with that information at hand, guide them to make better decisions.
On a similar tack, FairXchange helps liquidity consumers optimize market access and find the right balance for all-in execution costs, inclusive of slippage and market impact, by analyzing data in ways which were, in the past, nearly exclusively available to the largest liquidity providers.
Finally, FX Prime AG provides market access to aggregated liquidity and execution services particularly for non-linear fx products, such us as options, swaps and NDFs, which remain less electronified.
Having said all of this, transparency may be good in practice but, for better or worse, the fact that so many brokers seem opposed to it would seem to indicate that it could hurt revenues. Why then, I asked vom Scheidt, is the openness, that the three companies he is advising promote, good for the retail trading industry?
“A business that wants to succeed should strive to provide their clients with products and services that are transparent and mutually beneficial,” he replied. “I find it difficult to think of a business, in any industry globally, that has not achieved its aspirations when its teams focus on those underpinnings. The fact is that when clients achieve better profitability outcomes, they are more likely to stay with their service provider for a longer period of time, so higher lifetime client value is obtained by helping clients realize better individual performance.”
A guiding hand
Philosophy is certainly a good reason to get involved with a company but, unfortunately for us, there aren’t many businesses willing to pay people to sit around all day discussing the merits of their ideas.
Thus, vom Scheidt will be performing a range of tasks for the three firms he is now working with. That might mean helping them develop new products, providing guidance on how to break into specific markets and giving advice on running a business to ensure it continues to succeed as it scales upwards.
“We are delighted that Kurt is joining our advisory board to work more closely with us – he will be a huge influence,” Chasing Returns CEO Ann Hunt told Finance Magnates. “Kurt has been a fan of the Chasing Returns philosophy and our tools since we met and together we plan to accelerate the necessary changes in the industry to support client retention, and adherence to the highest standards for duty of care to traders.”
More regulation
That many national regulators have made those measures permanent would suggest that authorities are not going to tamper down their treatment of retail brokers any time soon. And, in vom Scheidt’s view, there could be even more regulatory scrutiny heading our way.
“I don’t think the change will end with de-leveraging,” he said. “IOSCO is doing a good job at making all the individual regulators aware of client protection challenges associated with regulatory arbitrage, so I anticipate that there will be more normalization to come. For example, the potential impact of risk-management techniques employed by retail brokers might well become more transparent and meaningful to clients, were there to be emerging regulation regarding stress-testing of market risk on open positions held by brokers.”
That’s something which most brokers, who tend to find most regulation incommodious, probably don’t want to hear. For vom Scheidt and his new colleagues, on the other hand, it could be good news.
Regulatory changes which push for greater transparency fit with the ethos of the three companies that the former Saxo Bank man is now advising. As such, if more similar rules are made law, those three firms could see accompanying success.
Whether that happens or not, it is refreshing to see a leading figure in the industry making a push to create a better-informed, data-driven dialogue between market participants which, in turn, should lead to improved outcomes for customers. It is, lest we forget, those people who ensure brokers get paid at the end of each month.
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