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

To Centralize or Not to Centralize

Subscribe to our newsletter

It’s always better to end with a bang than a whimper. So we were happy this month’s FIMA event in London gave the reference data community real pause for thought. Many industry events don’t deliver; this one did.

Central to the three days of industry debate was the subject of, erm, centralization. In other words, should a financial institution place responsibility for enterprise-wide management of its data services within a single group. Loyal Reference Data Review readers will already be familiar with our recent survey of 100 or so reference data managers. (If you haven’t read it yet, you should. Download it from commissioner Reuters’ web-site at http://about.reuters.com/datascope)

Whichever business driver is jerking your chain – our survey found that regulatory pressures were stronger than the promise of operational efficiency often espoused by protagonists looking for the Holy Grail of ROI – management of data is key. The current centralized vs. decentralized debate reminds us of the state of affairs in the front-office market data platform business a decade ago. Back then, asset classes were run by fiefdoms. Standardization didn’t matter. The head of fixed-income couldn’t care less what the head of equities thought, as long as money was being made. At FIMA, participants to’d and fro’d over the centralization issue.

Many firms – Goldman Sachs for one – approached the centralization task in stages, working on relatively easy U.S. equities first, followed by European equities and then fixed income. This approach “built momentum as the project’s reputation grew internally,” said James Perry. ING worked on a local Brussels-based project but has since expanded it to be European-wide with the rollout of their central repository of reference data, corporate actions and historical data covering 1.5 million instruments. The firm’s data management group acts as an internal data vendor, although it has only one interface to an external vendor Telekurs Financial, alongside its own data, having decided that it is too difficult to normalize across all the information vendors. While the technology is centralized, the management of it is not always the same.

The expertise of local staff in the right time zone to handle the data was pointed out as an important factor in a centralization project’s success. Several firms, including ING, backed up our research by suggesting they were considering ways to leverage their investment in data management to provide outsourced data services for their clients. As for outsourcing their own data management by using data management technology vendors, there was a mixed response. Some firms believed in the benefit of using external vendors to leverage their expertise and market experience. Other firms, State Street among them, said that the complexity involved and the heavy customization work required to make external vendor systems work with their own operations, and that any changes via the made it costly and less flexible.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: How to organise, integrate and structure data for successful AI

25 September 2025 11:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being rolled out across financial institutions, being put to work in applications that are transforming everything from back-office data management to front-office trading platforms. The potential for AI to bring further cost-savings and operational gains are...

BLOG

The Data Year Ahead: More Data Formats and Use Cases

In the second part of our preview of the next 12 months in data management, we take in the views of experts who offered Data Management Insight their thoughts on a range of developments, including the increased use of unstructured data, the wider application of data sets and distribution challenges. 1 Data Governance, Quality and Technologies Ian...

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...