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

Thomson Reuters Details Growth of Due Diligence around Evaluated Pricing Providers

Subscribe to our newsletter

Thomson Reuters experienced a four-fold increase in due diligence meetings examining its role as an evaluated pricing provider in 2012, signalling growing pressure on financial firms to check the viability of their content providers and underlining extended expectations of transparency.

Jayme Fagas, head of evaluated pricing, enterprise content, at Thomson Reuters and a speaker at the company’s Analytics and Pricing Forum in Paris this week, explains: “Transparency continues to be the number one concern among evaluated pricing clients. A year ago, a pricing recipe was adequate, now much more transparency is required. The need is to show everything used in creating a price, such as benchmarks, derived analytics, market analytics, news and more. Transparency is required across clients’ back, middle and front offices. It is important for regulation and reporting, risk analysis and compliance, and portfolio assessment. Transparency is no longer just about pricing, it is about our processes and procedures.”

As demand for transparency has extended beyond data flow to processes and procedures, Thomson Reuters also notes a rise in the number of due diligence meetings it has been called on to host or attend. While the performance of due diligence around pricing vendors is not driven by regulation, as is the requirement for transparency, it is mandated for any company using a pricing vendor by US regulatory bodies the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Fagas says: “These authorities are putting the onus on firms’ boards to better understand pricing vendors. Last year, we were involved in over 200 due diligence meetings with clients, this is up from just 50 in 2011.”

Clients mandated to make on-site visits and conduct due diligence meetings typically look at issues such as what a company offers in evaluated pricing, its revenue, employees, how many evaluators it has and where they are located. Fagas adds: “What has changed since last year is the addition of questions on what investments and changes a vendor has made. Then the meeting might dive deep into a particular group of securities, bringing in evaluators and other employees as necessary.”

Meetings last several hours and include an examination of price challenge processes and control. From a client point of view meetings are usually attended by the evaluation committee, staff from pricing, compliance and risk operations, and sometimes the firm’s auditor. Vendors must field pricing services specialists, product specialists, evaluators and sales people as needed. Fagas cautions: “It is not just US clients visiting US locations. US clients are going to other locations, such as the London office of a data vendor, to do due diligence. If a company works with a custodian, the custodian will send the client to do due diligence.”

While the time commitment and workload of data transparency and due diligence are already large, Fagas sees no let up in ongoing demand, saying: “There is room for more requirements. Due diligence meetings could, for example, be required to provide detailed reports and attendees could be required, rather than asked, to take part in meetings.” Looking forward at how to tackle the issues, Fagas says Thomson Reuters will continue to work with large companies on due diligence meetings, perhaps helping them write questionnaires for the meetings, and will increasingly offer transparency in an efficient and accessible way.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Streamlining trading and investment processes with data standards and identifiers

3 June 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes Financial institutions are integrating not only greater volumes of data for use across their organisation but also more varieties of data. As well, that data is being applied to more use cases than ever before, especially regulatory compliance and ESG integration....

BLOG

Global Relay Launches AI-Enabled Surveillance as Data Insights Report Highlights 400% Surge in AI Communication Capture

Global Relay has introduced a new AI-powered surveillance solution aimed at meeting the evolving regulatory demands for communications monitoring. The system is designed to address common challenges faced by existing surveillance tools, including poor data quality, the need for constant model retraining, and limited reasoning capabilities, while offering a scalable and future-proof platform. AI-Driven Compliance...

EVENT

Data Management Summit New York City

Now in its 15th year the Data Management Summit NYC brings together the North American 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...