Regtech: A Brand New Old Industry
Mounting regulations have given rise to a what some say is a new business sector: regtech.

The phrase was probably coined to sound like fintech, Rory McLaren, senior vice president for regulatory services at Deutsche Börse, tells WatersTechnology. "There are a number of relevant solutions and companies out there but I think it is also a bit of a buzzword. Nowadays, if you call your company a regtech, suddenly it's worth twice as much in the market," he says.
On the other hand, according to Brian Lynch, CEO of Risk Focus, regtech just a different label for fintech. "It's actually good for search engine optimization, since people are looking for it massively on the internet, but at the end of the day, people have been providing these types of solutions forever. It's not new—it's a way of identifying solutions in a specific domain that investors are excited about today."
For McLaren, however, there are key elements that define a new industry and regtech could be a transformation of a part of fintech, or could be just a spinoff. "There are two key aspects of regtech," says McLaren. "On one hand, there is a new take on technology that can help us solve the same problems it always had, such as transaction reporting, best execution and the like. And then there are new technologies and products … and that's actually developing a brand new industry."
Regtech has always existed within the industry, especially since the early 2000s, when regulations began to ramp up.
Michael O'Brien, head of product management, risk and surveillance solutions at Nasdaq, pointed out during a panel discussion about regtech at the IDX Conference in London that generating and taking orders was not sufficient anymore and that participants need to increase the care and diligence with which they handle orders.
"The regulators started shifting the responsibility to the sell side," O'Brien said. But regtech only became distinctive when regulations actually started heavily affecting the buy side as well. "Lately, we have seen a dramatic increase in our client base in the buy side in the last 20 months. That mirrors the evolution of regulation and the expectation of how a trade is monitored. The technology has evolved to match that at the same time," said O' Brien.
Landscape Changes
Regtech was on full display among the vendor stands at the IDX Conference on June 8. "Undoubtedly, vendors benefit from the amount and the pace of regulation and also the lack of harmonization," says Lynch. "There is a very exciting thing happening right now for vendors in this space. The level of collaboration we're seeing across the industry is unprecedented. The amount of cost that has to be extracted is huge and everyone realizes that the 'build-it-yourself' model is not going to get you anywhere."
Justin Llewellyn-Jones, global head of derivatives at Fidessa, provided a good example of that. For him, the game is going to be played in the field of Tier 1 banks. "These banks have big IT teams that build technology. The problem they face is the maintenance of keeping up with the regulations. As a vendor, I can make a change and split the cost of the change in regulations across brokers. A bank that builds its own technology will get no leverage as it has to absorb the full cost of that change. And if you get a regulatory change every three months, you just can't afford it," explains Llewellyn-Jones. "Banks are not fintech firms. They're going to have to decide whether they will continue building their own technology or find someone else to do it for them. And I believe that they will choose the latter. They'll keep what differentiates them and they will leave the rest to vendors."
Still, since regulations drive the industry now, the transformation that has already started within the industry will affect everyone. Theories vary about who the winners are. For instance, Llewellyn-Jones predicts that start-ups in the fintech space will be the first to fall under the pressure of having to keep up with the constant demands and changes in their services and products. "Start-ups in the fintech space will be impacted more compared to the large vendors," says Llewellyn-Jones. "That is because big vendors have the scale to absorb the costs of maintenance."
Because of that, many firms are likely going to seek alliances within the sector—a survival strategy in a highly competitive sector. "There will be a period where lots of firms will appear and there will be aggregations with people collaborating," says Risk Focus' Lynch. "Everyone sees that no one can be the expert on every single field. The old model of trying to own the entire domain doesn't work. Architectures are more open and everyone sees that they can't depend on one single vendor to solve their problem," he adds.
After all, today's market fragmentation is not exactly the ideal landscape in which to promote a business model, since the cost burden has multiplied and client demands have increased. "There is fragmentation in the market as people come along and spot opportunities, saying we need a product that tackles that regulation. However, depending on the area of the products, you'll see more and more collaboration. Either way, regulations have become more encompassing, less fragmented, covering more counterparties," says Deutsche Börse's McLaren.
Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.
To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@waterstechnology.com or view our subscription options here: https://subscriptions.waterstechnology.com/subscribe
You are currently unable to print this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
More on Emerging Technologies
BofA ramps up AI deployment, patents
The bank has 1,400 patents in AI and machine learning, either granted or pending, alongside a growing portfolio of 250 models.
BNY CEO updates on ‘platform’ operating model, AI rollout
In its Q2 earnings call, the bank outlined its progress on rolling out its new operating model and ‘Eliza’ internal AI assistant.
NZX outlines plans to bolster fast-growing dark pool
Since launching one year ago, NZX’s dark book has 5.5% of the exchange’s total turnover, and price improvement per trade on average is 11 basis points, but the exchange has more in store.
Waters Wavelength Ep. 325: Octaura’s Brian Bejile
The CEO joins the podcast to talk about the vendor’s modernization efforts in credit and CLOs.
Agentic AI comes to Bloomberg Terminal via Anthropic protocol
The data giant’s ubiquitous terminal has been slowly opening up for years, but its latest enhancement represents a forward leap in what CTO Shawn Edwards calls, “the way we should talk to the world.”
M&G Investments braves cost headwinds in pursuit of AI
The UK asset manager’s AI ambitions started with the creation of a data lake to ensure high-quality data is being fed into models.
Droit awarded patent, US CT plan shapes up, Chicago traders go to court, and more
The Waters Cooler: TNS expands 24x5 trading, SIX and Pictet complete a token pilot, and an Asic probe spells more trouble for ASX in this week’s news roundup.
GenAI too risky for collateral processes
The technology has been heralded as game-changing for other areas of finance, but its potential to hallucinate may disqualify it from sensitive settlement procedures.