MDDL and the quest for a market data standard explanation, rationale and implementation
The aim of this book is to provide an objective vendor independent assessment of the Market Data Definition Language (MDDL), the eXtensible Mark-up Language (XML) standard for market data. Assuming little previous knowledge of the standard, or of systems networking, the book identifies the challenge...
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; London :
Butterworth-Heinemann
2008.
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Edición: | 1st edition |
Colección: | Elsevier world capital markets series.
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Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009672606706719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover; MDDL and the Quest for a Market Data Standard; Copyright page; Table of Contents; Series Editor's preface; Chapter 1 Introduction; Audience of this book; Structure of the book; Chapter 2 What is market data?; Chapter 3 Executive summary; The Vision; Linking MDDL to corporate goals; The business benefits of using MDDL; MDDL opportunities; Chapter 4 The financial standards landscape; Industry standards; Market data is everywhere; Chapter 5 Self-describing data and XML basics; Elements, attributes and hierarchy; Chapter 6 Evolution of MDDL; MDDL versioning; Why use schemas?
- Chapter 7 How MDDL works Synopsis of the MDDL hierarchy; MDDL domains; Classes and subclasses; Containers; Properties; MDDL property types; Industry standards used in content; Creation of new types; Classification of properties; Controlled vocabulary; Top-level wrappers; Instance headers; Inheritance; MDDL extensions; Naming convention; Creating an extension schema; Defining code lists (controlled vocabulary); Chapter 8 The life of a financial instrument; Issuance; Pricing and reporting; General pricing and volumes; Historical pricing; Book management; Trade reporting; Time and sales
- Reconciliation Portfolio valuation; Chapter 9 Regulatory adherence; Reference data terms; Best execution; Regulatory reporting; Data vendors and end of concentration rules; Chapter 10 Reference data management; Business entities; Indices, rates and indicators; Corporate action events; Security definitions; Alternative solutions to securities definitions; Change mechanism; Chapter 11 Industry standards - mix and match; MDDL to FIX, FIX to MDDL; MDDL and FIXml; FpML; RIXML; XBRL; SDMX; ISO standards in the financial sector; ISO 19312 and MDDL; ISO 20022 and MDDL; Chapter 12 MDDL as payload
- MDDL and SOAPMDDL as a FIX payload; MDDL as ebXML or OAGIS payload; Chapter 13 'Build-your-own' - MDDL equivalent schema; Chapter 14 UML to XML schema generation; Chapter 15 Undertaking a mapping exercise?; Data mapping process; Data mapping pointers; Chapter 16 Compression; xtcMessage (fisdMessage); FASTSM; Chapter 17 A final tribute to Jonathan Castaing; Appendices; Appendix A: Glossary and acronyms; Appendix B: MiFID terms; References and further reading; Index