Ed Chen
Senior Product Designer · Regulated Finance
Institutional Finance · Compliance UX · Design Systems
Architecting trust in regulated finance. After five years across institutional trading and UHNW markets, I design for auditability from the first token.
Currently Product Designer at ACY Securities — a 150-person ASIC-regulated broker with $2B+ daily volume. I lead design across five product lines, maintaining a 150-component system that absorbed eight regulatory rewrites without a rebuild cycle.
How I Ended Up Here
From Editorial Craft to Regulated Design
My MFA was in digital design. The instinct was toward editorial craft — beautiful layouts, typographic restraint, things you could point to. Christie's gave me that. Nine months designing for $80M property clients taught me something unexpected: the most important design decisions weren't visual. They were about trust. Which information went first. What the client saw when uncertainty was high.
When ACY Securities asked me to redesign a trading platform audited by regulators, the same instinct applied — just with higher stakes. A misplaced risk warning isn't a design flaw. It's a compliance violation. That clarity — that every decision has a real consequence — is what kept me in this domain.
The Documentation Habit
I document the why for every meaningful decision — the trade-offs, the alternative I rejected, the regulatory clause that drove the placement. Six months later, when Legal asks why a disclosure sits in row two and not row one, the answer needs to be reconstructable from a file, not from my memory.
What I Actually Build
Compliance Infrastructure
Design systems where regulatory requirements are component properties. 150 components that absorbed eight regulatory rewrites at the token layer.
Execution Surfaces
High-frequency terminals where milliseconds matter and errors cost money. Keyboard-first, density-optimised, zero cognitive overhead.
Trust Interfaces
UHNW client portals and KYC onboarding. Where typography and disclosure lines are proxies for institutional reliability.
I built a working institutional trading terminal — in this portfolio.
Not a prototype. Not a Figma mockup. A fully functional Bloomberg-class terminal with live price simulation, a real FIX 4.4 order lifecycle, TWAP/VWAP algo execution, options chain with Greeks, a Kronos AI signal engine, and an account ledger that deducts cash on every fill.
- FIX 4.4 order lifecycle with GARCH vol across 18 correlated instruments
- TWAP / VWAP execution and options chain with Black-Scholes Greeks
- Kronos AI signal engine with regime-aware confidence scoring
Four Things I Won't Compromise On
Ambiguity Is the Bug
A confusing risk disclosure is a compliance finding waiting to happen. I design on the assumption someone external will audit it line by line.
Rationale Survival
The test is whether someone joining 18 months later can reconstruct the logic from the documentation without messaging me.
System Over Bottleneck
The system exists so engineering teams can ship without queuing for my Figma file. The measure is whether it keeps working when I'm on a flight.
Done Means Live
Figma is a proposal. Production is the work. I stay through QA, regulatory review, and the first week of live traffic.
Most of my work isn't visible from a portfolio homepage. It's in the rationale behind a margin dialog default, the disclosure that survived three rounds of Legal review, the component still shipping correctly two years after I last touched it. That's where design value in regulated finance actually accrues.
How the work translates downstream
Most design hires show up with craft. I show up with craft plus four years of reading regulations, running audits, and building inside a system that gets reviewed by one. The 150-component system at ACY absorbed eight regulatory rewrites without a rebuild cycle — each rewrite that used to cost three to four engineering weeks now costs three to five days, and that compression shows up as gross margin the business keeps instead of pays out in re-engineering labor. The same system covered 100K+ traders across 40+ jurisdictions handling $2B+ daily volume for four years with zero material regulatory findings tied to UX, which is revenue the firm didn't have to park during an investigation. The work happens inside a standard product team — PM, engineering, compliance, legal — but the design voice carries weight in those rooms because it arrives with the regulation already read, not asking someone to summarize it.
The AI work lives on this site as working demos, not production systems. Intent Canvas is a typed-artifact layer where a human-AI conversation becomes a signed diff with an append-only audit trail. Double-Blind Fiduciary Protocol seals AM and RM independent analyses with SHA-256 before convergence and emits a SEC 17a-4-compatible audit record. TradeX ships an HMM regime classifier wired to live regulatory citations. Macro Signal routes four FRED prints into fourteen product defaults with a threshold decision log. Each one runs. They exist because I don't want to talk about AI in interviews using slides — I want to talk about it using a surface you can click. The product-development logic underneath is consistent: read the regulation first, design backward from audit readiness, build components that survive three team rotations and one regulatory rewrite, stay through QA and the first week of live traffic. The work that shows up on the portfolio is the visible layer. The work that earns the seat is everything underneath it.
Experience
Product Designer at a 150-person ASIC-regulated broker — 100K+ active traders, 40+ jurisdictions, five product lines. I built the governance infrastructure (design system, component audit trails, compliance review workflows) that lets engineering teams ship autonomously while maintaining regulatory accuracy across every market we operate in.
- Built a 150+ component design system across web, iOS, Android, and institutional products — engineering implementation time dropped ~33%; component misuse dropped from ~30% to under 8% (based on quarterly code review audits of component usage across 3 engineering teams)
- Redesigned the 47-field KYC/AML onboarding; new-user sign-up drop-off improved from 73% to 45% (Mixpanel, 90-day post-launch audit) after a three-week negotiation with Legal and leadership — all ASIC requirements kept, audit trail added
- Encoded ASIC disclosure rules, FCA risk warning standards, MiFID II best-execution reporting, and Dodd-Frank OTC transparency requirements into component properties. Eight regulatory revisions absorbed at the token layer between 2022–2025 (including ASIC RG 268 rev. 2023 and MiFID II Art. 27 amendments) with no component-level rework and zero QA regression
- Designed LogixTrader: a keyboard-first web trading terminal used by 20K+ traders. Applied research findings from a paired usability study (n=15 traders) that informed the order entry redesign — consolidated a 6-step flow to 2 steps, reducing placement time from 8.2s to 2.9s. Same research framework applied independently across the Finlogix platform.
- Designed ACY Connect: institutional FIX 4.4 API portal for 12+ hedge fund clients — support tickets dropped 67%, integration time went from 3 weeks to 1 week
- Designed the corporate identity for the ACYLogix Group — logos for ACY Group, ACY Securities, ACY Capital, ACY Wealth, ACY Advisory, ACY Connect, Zerologix, Zerologix Taiwan, Logixel, and ACYLogix itself (roughly 90% of the marks on the group org chart). What started as a product-design role quietly expanded into owning the visual identity of an eight-entity financial services group.
- Led consumer mobile app design (iOS + Android) for 100K+ users across 12 countries — multilingual UX (AR/EN/VN/TH with full RTL support), consumer onboarding that cut KYC drop-off, and progressive disclosure for first-time traders. Post-2024 restructure, design lead across all five product lines (web, iOS, Android, institutional APIs, compliance tooling) — scaled output with AI-assisted workflows on low-risk work (copy, asset resizing, scaffolding), with manual QA on every compliance surface.
Want the four-year narrative — chapters, mistakes, lessons learned? Read the full Career Journey →
0-to-1 B2B2C pet services marketplace connecting grooming, boarding, and veterinary providers to urban pet owners across Japan. Seven months of Tokyo field research before first line of code.
- Lead designer and developer: product architecture, iOS & Android app, and React Native frontend
- Map-centric discovery interface with venue-level filtering and venue recommendations based on proximity and pet profile
- PawsSafe Network: 24/7 connection between pet owners and certified emergency care providers
- Stack: React Native · Firebase · Google Maps API
Hired as a web engineer for Christie's International Real Estate editorial platform — serving UHNW clients ($5M–$80M property buyers) across NYC, London, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Taipei. With no dedicated designer or product manager, the role expanded to cover design direction, UX decisions, and full-stack implementation across five global offices. The audience expects institutional-grade polish; the brand demands 260 years of earned restraint (Christie's was founded in 1766).
- Redesigned the CIRE blog from scratch; +20% page views (GA, post-launch comparison Q4 2021 → Q1 2022, same content volume), 60% fewer database queries (47→18 per page) — performance matters when your audience judges credibility by load time
- Built the company's first Figma-to-production workflow; design-to-deploy dropped from 2 weeks to 3 days across five international offices
- Integrated Salesforce CRM workflows and standardised content operations — ensuring consistent brand voice across all markets
- The core lesson from Christie's: restraint is the luxury. Every design decision was measured against whether it preserved or diluted two centuries of institutional trust
Graduate study in digital design — editorial craft, typographic systems, interaction design. The editorial sensibility from this program is what Christie's originally hired for, and what underpins the visual restraint in every financial interface I've built since.
Skills & Capabilities
Five threads, one portfolio
The case studies on this site aren't isolated. They sit on five threads — recurring problem classes where each project demonstrates a different solution profile under different cost, ROI, and risk constraints. Pick any case study, scroll to the bottom, and follow the threads to see how the same class of problem was solved elsewhere.
- Regulatory Routing & Disclosure How upstream regulation and macro prints become downstream product defaults.
- Concentration, Risk & Agents Portfolio-level math primitives rendered into UI defaults and AI-assisted decisions.
- Retail → Institutional Translation Consumer-grade UX into regulated contexts — or reverse-porting institutional discipline to retail.
- Editorial Voice in Finance Luxury and editorial discipline in financial interfaces — where restraint is signal.
- Evidence & Verification Discipline How design claims get proven with data — A/B, pooled-SD, cohort, the rigor behind every number quoted.
Education
Recognition
Let's Talk
If you're hiring for a senior product design role inside an institution where the work gets reviewed — by clients, regulators, or auditors — I'd rather hear from you directly than be filtered through a generic recruiting pipeline. The fastest path is email; LinkedIn works too. I read everything that lands in either inbox.