Examples of How the RIXML Research Standard can be used

The files provided here show specific examples of how the RIXML Research Standard can be used to publish research documents. Each sample includes the sample document or file(s), a document explaining the process the publisher used to create that XML, and the related XML instance document, tagged according to the RIXML specification.

Individual Examples:

Example 1: Company Report

The report used for this illustration is a mock-up of a standard company research report written primarily by Eric J. Sample at Sample Securities, with input from several other analysts at his firm. They are initiating coverage on Google with a ‘buy’ rating and have provided some analytics to support this rating.

Links:

Sample Company Report - BASIC

Sample Company Report - ADVANCED

Example 2: Macroeconomic Report

The report used for this illustration is a mock-up of a standard macroeconomic research report entitled Sample Economics Report written primarily by Eric J. Sample at Sample Securities, with input from several other analysts at his firm. It is a 5 page PDF with their economic forecast of the US economy.

Links:

Sample Economics Report - BASIC

Sample Economics Report - ADVANCED

Example 3: Industry Review

The report used for this illustration is a mock-up of a standard industry analysis research report written primarily by Eric J. Sample at Sample Securities, with input from several other analysts at his firm. It provides earnings estimates for several companies in the Internet Software & Services subindustry, including Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft.

Links:

Sample Industry Report - BASIC

Sample Industry Report - ADVANCED

Example 4: Morning Call

The report used for this illustration is a transcript of a daily morning call that covered a number of securities.

Links:

Sample Morning Call Report - BASIC

Sample Morning Call Report - ADVANCED

Example 5: Roster Update

NEW FOR RIXML VERSION 2.4. This example shows the Fictional Financial Services Corporation’s use of the new Roster Updates sidecar to provide an updated analyst roster.

Link:

Sample Roster Update

 

RIXML Interactions Standard logo

Introduction

In order to comply with the European Union’s revised Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (commonly referred to as MiFID II), the member firms of RIXML have collaborated to define a new standard – the RIXML Interactions Standard. This standalone standard leverages existing tag sets in the RIXML Standards Suite, re-using and adapting the relevant parts of the existing RIXML schema, while also adding interaction-specific tags.

There are various types of interactions:

  • Some take place between one service provider and one service consumer (e.g. an onsite one-on-one meeting)
  • Some take place between one service provider and more than one service consumer (e.g., a conference call)
  • Some take place between one service provider, one or more service consumers, and a third party expert (e.g., a session at a conference)

In all of these cases, the service provider will provide a separate interactions record to each service consumer with information about the event, but it will include ONLY the attendee information that pertains to that consumer. The RIXML Interactions Standard accommodates both one-on-one interactions and more complex ones.

The RIXML Interactions Standard is part of the RIXML Standards Suite, which is also includes the RIXML Research Standard, the RIXML Analyst Roster Standard, and the RIXML Coverage Standard.

Current production release: Interactions Standard 2.0

The current production version of the RIXML Interactions Standard is version 2.0. It was released for public comment on July 18, 2019 and became the production version on September 5, 2019.

A summary of the changes and enhancements included in this release can be found in the press release announcing the finalization of this version.  In-depth information about these changes can be found in the RIXML Interactions 2.0 Data Dictionary.

Note that version 2.0 does break backward-compatibility with version 1.0. That is, a RIXML Interactions instance record that validates against version 1.0 will not also validate against version 2.0. The RIXML Interactions Working Group did not take this decision lightly, but we feel that the benefits outweigh the downsides, and felt that making these changes as early as possible will enable that the standard to more fully meet the needs of the industry.

Older versions

Older versions of all RIXML Interactions Standard can be found on the Version History page.

Documentation

Interactions Data Dictionary

The RIXML Interactions Data Dictionary provides the tags used in the standard, with definitions and usage guidance. It outlines the approach we took in creating the RIXML Interactions Standard and explains some fundamental concepts such as XML, object modeling, schemas, etc. Diagrams of the RIXML Interactions object model provide a visual representation of the tags and tag relationships.

RIXML Interactions Data Dictionary (.pdf)

Release Notes

This document highlights the changes between version 1.0 of the RIXML Interactions Standard and version 2.0.

Reference Links

Improving efficiency and streamlining workflows are core concepts behind RIXML. Therefore, RIXML standards leverage ISO or other standards already in common use in the investment industry whenever possible.  Learn more about the other standards utilized within the RIXML Standards Suite.

Schema

The RIXML Interactions Schema is the set of actual XSD files that represent the relationships and components as defined by the object model. These files can also be used to validate interaction records to ensure they are RIXML-compliant. 

The following schema files contain the tags used in the RIXML Interactions Standard:

RIXML Interactions main schema – contains the interactions-specific tags used in the RIXML Interactions Standard

RIXML Common schema – contains the tags used in multiple places in the Research Standard and/or used in more than one standard in the RIXML Standards Suite

RIXML Data Types schema – contains the valid values for the enumeration lists used in the RIXML Standards Suite

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Friday session ad

Our Friday Topic Series has concluded; however, we are in the process of making replays of the presentation portion of many of these meetings available.  These videos include the list of questions we would like your input on as we plan for RIXML v3.0, so feel free to watch them and let us know your thoughts - and feel free to share them with your colleagues as well!

Componentization

Entitlements

Tagging of Non-Standard Research