About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Asset Control Enlarges On Standard Chartered Project

Subscribe to our newsletter

Asset Control has released details of its implementation of the AC PriceMaster platform at Standard Bank last year. The Hong Kong- and London-based bank announced last spring that it was live at four main offices with AC PriceMaster for management of market rates in support of its risk analysis activities (Reference Data Review, May 2005).

In a case study published by the company this month, Asset Control says Standard Chartered was seeking to migrate off a legacy system from 1997/98 that was overstretched and had been sold by the original vendor to another supplier. As such, it was no longer being developed, and Standard Chartered could see no route forward to extend its functionality.

The system was being used to handle market rates in support of its risk management function across foreign exchange, derivatives, fixed income and other instruments. Because of the lack of further development, the bank was finding it difficult to add new instrument types to the system. Meanwhile, volumes were increasing, leading to unacceptable levels of system downtime, which in turn required more manual checks on data validity.

Standard Chartered conducted what Asset Control calls an “exhaustive selection process.” According to Robert Oddy, global market systems manager and project manager for the rates system implementation, “Once you’ve invested in a product like this, you can’t afford to change your mind and throw it out. So it’s worth spending that extra month on selection to ensure you get the right system.”

The bank opted to take a centralized data management approach, selecting Asset Control on the basis of reliability, scalability and flexibility. The implementation was conducted in two phases, handled by IT teams in the bank’s London, New York, Mumbai and Singapore offices.

In particular, Standard Chartered needed a platform that was capable of handling a range of internal and external data sources and multiple instrument types, as well as providing automatic data capture in local time zone notation, data validation, cleansing, audit and control functions.

The bank needed the system to be able to capture and normalize data from several specific sources, including Reuters, Bloomberg and Telekurs, as well as proprietary information and other data in formats adhering to ISO data standards. The AC PriceMaster system was modified for Standard Chartered to allow local time-stamp capture for end-of-day data delivery. Says Oddy: “At the end of the day, a rate is just a piece of data. It has no intrinsic value. It’s the way you analyze it, review it, time-sequence it and relate it back to the underlying framework that counts. That’s the value-add.”

In addition, Standard Chartered needed the system to aggregate data to form a golden copy data set. As such, AC PriceMaster would act as the system of record for market rates information. Data, meanwhile, would be validated at different levels, from the point of capture through to distribution to receiving applications. This entailed cleansing according to rules set up in the system. Finally, the system continuously checks tolerances so that any sudden spurts or excesses could be picked up immediately.

The implementation was delivered over a six-month period. The IT teams ran systems in parallel for two weeks prior to going live. The AC PriceMaster platform featured interfaces to eight of Standard Chartered’s core banking systems. With a centralized database located in London, access to the system worldwide is via the AC Desktop client system.
According to Asset Control, certain limited developments were required for the first phase, the largest of which involved the calculation of zero curve algorithms. Additionally, the bank needed to value trades at the end of the day in each of its market centres, in Asia, India, the U.K. and the U.S. This requirement was complicated by the fact that two of these centres were switching to summer daylight savings, requiring the system to collect data in local time zones to ensure consistency as the clocks changed.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Are you making the most of the business-critical structured data stored in your mainframes?

Fewer than 30% of companies think that they can fully tap into their mainframe data even though complete, accurate and real-time data is key to business decision-making, compliance, modernisation and innovation. For many in financial markets, integrating data across the enterprise and making it available and actionable to everyone who needs it is extremely difficult....

BLOG

Businesses Struggling with ESG Data that will Aid SFDR Compliance

Most businesses are struggling to prepare their data to meet a new European regulation that is designed in part to deliver huge troves of corporate ESG information into financial institutions’ systems. More than four-fifths of companies questioned in a study by data mastering company Semarchy said they lack confidence in their data management capabilities to...

EVENT

Data Management Summit London

Now in its 16th year, the Data Management Summit (DMS) in London brings together the European capital markets enterprise data management community, to explore how data strategy is evolving to drive business outcomes and speed to market in changing times.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets: Practical Insight for a Transforming Industry – Free Handbook

AI is no longer on the horizon – it’s embedded in the infrastructure of modern capital markets. But separating real impact from inflated promises requires a grounded, practical understanding. The AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2025 provides exactly that. Designed for data-driven professionals across the trade life-cycle, compliance, infrastructure, and strategy, this handbook goes beyond...