Refinitiv Identification Code

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Reuters Instrument Code
)

A Refinitiv Instrument Code

financial instruments and indices. The codes are used for looking up information on various Refinitiv financial information networks (such as Refinitiv Real Time) and appear to have developed from the Quotron
service purchased in the 1980s.

Description

The Reuters Instrument Code (RIC) was originally defined by Herbie Skeete, the Reuters Executive who wrote the original product specifications for the first products on Reuters' Integrated Data Network (IDN). RICs as originally defined by Skeete were meant to be logical and intuitive.

For equities the codes were composed of a RIC Root (one to four characters – A through Z), followed by a period sign, then a one- or two-character (A through Z) code denoting the exchange on which the instrument is traded. Each company was meant to have a unique RIC root. Thus the RIC Root for International Business Machines would be IBM irrespective of the exchange on which International Business Machines was traded.

Glen Renfrew, the CEO at that time, was persuaded to veto the idea of unique RIC Roots. Also vetoed was Skeete’s intention of making RICs freely available and becoming an ISO standard. Much of Skeete’s original work is still contained within today’s RIC structure, but some key elements have changed over the years.

RICs were originally proprietary but following an EU investigation, their use was opened up.[2] Please see the Antitrust section below for more information.

The RIC is made up primarily of the

ISO 10383
, which is not used by the Refinitiv Instrument Code, but is in common use elsewhere. Ticker symbols are often reused on different exchanges, so in many cases the same ticker symbol references different securities.

RIC codes use "artificial" tickers for common indexes and money market instruments. For instance, the US 10-year money market bond is assigned the ticker US10YT, the "T" at the end referring to "Treasury". Commodities are similarly assigned tickers, for instance

crude oil is CL. Indexes have a leading period, for instance .DJI is the Dow Jones Industrial Average
.

Confusingly the "dot notation" is also used for a number of other purposes. Units are signified with a ".UN", and a particular exchange like

NASDAQ
by ".OQ". This confusion seems to be the result of Refinitiv attempting to merge the standards used by the wide variety of services they purchased in the 1980s and 90s.

Other examples:

Examples of indices:

Examples of commodity futures:

  • CL crude, light oil
  • GC gold
  • HU unleaded gasoline
  • HO heating oil
Delivery Month Codes
1st quarter 2nd quarter 3rd quarter 4th quarter
January F April J July N October V
February G May K August Q November X
March H June M September U December Z
Delivery Quarter Codes
1st H 2nd M 3rd U 4th Z

Antitrust issues

In November 2009, The European Commission opened formal antitrust proceedings[3] against Thomson Reuters to investigate whether Thomson Reuters could be abusing its dominant position in the market for consolidated real-time datafeeds through its RIC licensing practices, in breach of EU antitrust rules. In December 2012, the European Commission accepted Thomson Reuters proposal to remedy those concerns. The EC’s announcement[4] brought the matter to a close, with no finding of liability. In summary, the proposal involves Thomson Reuters agreeing to offer its customers specific licence rights to continue to use its RICs in applications with data from an alternative real time consolidated data feed provider to which they have moved.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Refinitiv Workspace for Wealth Advisors - Refinitiv Symbology Card". Refinitiv.
  2. ^ Refinitiv, ed. (2020). "Refinitiv EU Commitment RIC Licenses" (PDF).
  3. ^ European Commission, ed. (2009). "Commission opens formal proceedings against Thomson Reuters concerning use of Reuters Instrument Codes".
  4. ^ European Commission, ed. (2012). "Antitrust: Commission renders legally binding commitments from Thomson Reuters".