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

Collaborative Approach to Instrument and Entity Identification Could be the Key, Suggests A-Team Group and CGS

Subscribe to our newsletter

Can commercial initiatives and innovation through partnerships succeed where standards bodies have failed in the world of entity and complex instrument identification? That is the question posed by A-Team Group and Cusip Global Services’ (CGS) most recent whitepaper, “Expanding Global Identifiers in Complex Assets and Other Areas”, and one which, given the focus of the regulatory community of late, is increasingly important to the community at large.

Regulators have become much more focused on the data details of the reports they receive; one need only look at the UK Financial Services Authority’s (FSA) recent fines for transaction reporting failures for proof. The proposals for reference data utilities in the US and Europe are further proof that the issue of data quality and the need for standardisation is high on the priority list in the current market. Within financial institutions themselves, as well as regulatory reporting, the risk management function also relies on accurate and reliable data, and in the post-crisis world this is a top priority for these firms.

However, entity identification has long been a challenge for market participants due to a lack of standardisation across the industry and this makes the performance of essential functions such as counterparty risk assessment much more challenging. Securities identification for the more complex instruments in the market poses a similar challenge, especially given the increase in the use of these alternative assets across the market. As the whitepaper says: “In order to ensure that an individual ?rm’s exposure through such complex instruments can be accurately measured, and therefore, managed, that ?rm must be able to correctly identify the securities and the entities that they are investing in.”

Thus far, the market has failed to progress a standardised approach to problem of identifying securities and entities across geographies. A March 2009 industry briefing, “Business Entity Identifiers”, prepared by A-Team Group for Standard & Poor’s, analyses the ongoing global initiatives to create business entity identifiers and highlights the lengthy and as yet unresolved process of agreeing a standard format among industry bodies. Given the seriousness with which risk management and regulatory reporting is being taken in the post-crisis environment, however, this lack of standardisation cannot continue for long.

The focus on systemic risk tracking at a global level is just one of the drivers that will push this agenda forward, basic risk management practices are the fundamental issue. “Without the consistent application of unique identifiers the risk of error is significantly increased throughout the instrument’s lifecycle, from pre-trade valuation, through trading, clearing and settlement to post-trade valuation,” explains the whitepaper.

A-Team Group and CGS highlight the practical challenges encountered in the derivatives and securitised debt instrument markets in the whitepaper and the appetite for the extension of new unique identifiers to this sector as a result. These instruments require a much more wide ranging set of criteria for identification purposes, for example, including reference entity, tier, currency, restructuring type, trade date, maturity date and initial spread.

So, it is a serious challenge and one that cannot be ignored, but how can it be tackled? The whitepaper suggests that “innovation through partnership” could be an answer, with the participation of specialist data providers such as CGS, industry bodies and clients to drive forward the instrument and entity identification cause.

For its part, CGS has already launched its own series of initiatives in which it has partnered with the industry and other key vendors to this end. The whitepaper explores the work the vendor has done thus far in three key spaces: business entity identification with the Cusip Avox Business Reference Entity identifier (Cabre) code; US listed options identifiers launched in partnership with UK-based futures and options specialist FOW Tradedata; and identifiers for the European syndicated loans market.

However, much more work is still to be done and the OTC markets in particular are likely to continue to throw challenges in the path of greater standardisation for identifiers across the market. It will therefore take a collaborative approach, such as that adopted by CGS, to solve some of these problems and achieve vital progress over the coming years.

The whitepaper concludes: “As financial markets recover from the effects of the credit crisis, we can expect to see innovation in the use of identifier driven data for the early identification of market trends and capital creation opportunities, alongside the continued expansion of unique identifiers into alternative asset classes.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Detecting and preventing market abuse

Market abuse – unlawful disclosure of inside information, insider trading, circular trading, “pump and dump” schemes, etc. – poses significant threats to the integrity of capital markets. In 2024, global trading house Trafigura agreed to pay a $55 million fine to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) for trading with non-public information, manipulating a...

BLOG

Euronext Sees Research Growth Opportunity in Substantive Research Acquisition

Technology has redrawn how investors obtain and buy research, and for many the new landscape is forcing them to reassess their requirements and their tech spend. With more financial regulations on the horizon expected to add yet more complexity to market participants’ research operations, European stock market operator Euronext has seen an opportunity to provide...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit London

Now in its 14th year the TradingTech Summit London brings together the European trading technology capital markets industry and examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

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...