Tradeweb
Tradeweb Markets Inc. is an international financial technology company that builds and operates electronic over-the-counter (OTC) marketplaces for trading fixed income products, ETFs, and derivatives. Its customers include banks, asset managers, central banks, pension funds and insurance companies.[2] Tradeweb's headquarters are in New York City. HistoryThe company was co-founded in 1996 by Lee Olesky and Jim Toffey. The trading platform was launched in 1998 as the first multi-dealer online trading network for U.S. Treasuries. In 2000, the firm opened its London office and launched marketplaces for trading European government bonds and agencies. The firm was privately held until 2004, when it was acquired by Thomson Corporation (now Thomson-Reuters) for $535 million.[3] Tradeweb established its Tokyo office in 2005, starting a partnership with CanDeal to launch Canadian debt securities trading.[4] That year, the firm grew by introducing marketplaces for interest rate swaps, credit default swap indices, and repo. In 2006, Tradeweb Retail was established as the firm entered the retail fixed income marketplace through the acquisition of Lever-Trade, a provider of web-based fixed income management systems for the retail marketplace.[5] In 2007, Thomson Financial, a unit of Thomson, announced its plans to expand electronic trading by creating a strategic partnership with nine other global dealers through Tradeweb, valuing the company at $1.55 billion.[6] In 2008, Olesky became CEO.[7] and Billy Hult became president. That same year, the firm acquired brokerage firm Hilliard Farber & Co. Inc.[8] In 2009, it launched Dealerweb, an electronic interdealer platform for to-be-announced, or forward, mortgage-backed securities (TBA-MBS).[9] In 2010, it facilitated the first fully electronic, dealer-to-customer interest rate swap to be processed by a central clearing house in the U.S.[10] In 2011, it acquired the brokerage assets of Rafferty Capital Markets LLC (RaffCap) and the municipal bond broking business of J.J. Kenny Drake.[11] In 2013, the firm secured CFTC temporary approval of two wholly owned swap execution facilities (SEFs) TW SEF and DW SEF.[12] Live SEF trading on the platforms began on October 2, 2013.[13] In November 2013, the firm acquired BondDesk Group, a bond trading venue in the U.S. for advisors and middle market investors, and integrated the businesses, technology, services and support of its existing Tradeweb Retail trading platform with BondDesk, and rebranded the combined service Tradeweb Direct.[14] In May 2014, Tradeweb and BlackRock announced a strategic partnership in electronic trading in rates and derivatives markets for BlackRock's Aladdin clients.[15] In June 2014, Tradeweb launched active U.S. Treasury bond trading on the Dealerweb platform, supporting trading of the most liquid on-the-run Treasury bonds with participation from dealers and several electronic market-making firms.[16] In October 2014, the company announced the launch of its U.S. institutional corporate bond platform.[17] In February 2016, Tradeweb launched an OTC marketplace for U.S.-listed ETFs aimed at institutional investors. In March 2016, the company acquired CodeStreet LLC.[18][19] In October 2016, Tradeweb, along with FTSE Russell, was named a provider of Gilt and Treasury Bill end-of-day reference pricing by the U.K. Treasury.[20] The same month, the firm became one of four electronic trading platforms to launch the Electronic Debt Markets Association Europe (EDMA Europe), which was formed to develop and promote collective member views on regulatory developments affecting electronic fixed income trading venues in Europe.[21][22][23][24] In January 2017, the firm announced the launch of an Approved Publication Arrangement (APA) service to allow market participants to meet post-trade requirements mandated by the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) II.[25] In March 2017, Citadel Securities became a liquidity provider on the Tradeweb institutional U.S. Treasury marketplace, expanding its role on the platform beyond IRS, CDS indices, and U.S. ETFs.[26] The firm announced the launch of all-to-all trading on its U.S. institutional credit platform in April, enabling clients to trade with more than 130 dealers.[27] In June 2017, it became the first offshore trading platform to connect with the China Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS), allowing investors outside of China to invest in the China Interbank Bond Market for the first time.[28] In 2017, the firm also made a strategic investment in DealVector, Inc., a fixed income asset registry and communication platform.[29][30] In May 2018, Tradeweb partnered with Plato to launch eBlock, a European cash equities block trading platform.[31] In August 2018, it launched an RFQ platform for US equity options allowing traders to send multiple price requests to multiple liquidity providers.[32] Tradeweb tendered an IPO on April 3, 2019.[33] According to Bloomberg, its offering was the best-performing IPO exceeding $1 billion for 2019.[34] Also in 2019, the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced it was partnering with Tradeweb to begin trading a single security for mortgages backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.[35][36] In September 2019, Tradeweb and Intercontinental Exchange launched Tradeweb ICE U.S. Treasury Closing Prices, which calculates and publishes more than 900 Treasury securities prices daily,[37] and in October the firm expanded portfolio trading for corporate bonds.[38] In 2020, the firm's average daily trading volume across all asset classes exceeded $837 billion.[39] In June 2021, Tradeweb acquired Nasdaq’s U.S. fixed income electronic trading platform, formerly known as eSpeed for $190 million in cash.[40] In June 2022, Tradeweb announced a partnership with FXall, the foreign exchange aggregator run by the London Stock Exchange Group, which majority owns Tradeweb\, that would have the two companies work on solutions for emerging market currency swaps and bonds.[41][42][43] In January 2023, Billy Hult succeeded Lee Olesky as CEO of Tradeweb and Thomas Pluta became the company’s President.[44] Pluta left the company in 2024.[45] In August 2023, Tradeweb acquired Yieldbroker, an Australian trading platform.[46][47] In November 2023, Tradeweb announced it would acquire r8fin, a technology provider that specializes in algorithmic-based execution for U.S. Treasuries and interest rate futures. The transaction closed in January 2024.[48][49] In April 2024, Tradeweb agreed to acquire Institutional Cash Distributors (“ICD”), an investment technology provider for corporate treasury organizations trading short-term investments. The $785 million, all-cash transaction was completed in August 2024.[50] ManagementBilly Hult is CEO of Tradeweb and a member of the board of directors. He was President for 15 years prior to becoming CEO in 2023 and played a key role in the firm's growth and acquisitions.[51][52][53] He joined the firm in 2000 from Société Générale.[54] As of September 2024, the management structure was as follows:
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