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

Data Management Summit: A Keynote on Data Utilities

Subscribe to our newsletter

Data management utilities could cut the cost of data, ease the burden of in-house data management and provide a solution that will deliver data not only to meet the requirements of today’s regulations, but also those of emerging regulations.

Presenting a keynote speech at this week’s A-Team Group Data Management Summit – which for the first time was linked to the company’s Intelligent Trading Technology Summit – in New York, Joseph Turso, vice president at SmartStream, argued the case for data utilities and detailed the Central Data Utility developed and run by SmartStream in conjunction with Euroclear.

Turso set the scene with a quick review of the past 20 years of data management and their sorry end of data stuck in siloed databases that are difficult to integrate and expensive to sustain. He said: “After the financial crisis, the mandate changed. Data management had to be improved and more ETL tools were used, but they didn’t get us where we needed to go. With $125 billion spent on data every year, the drivers behind a new approach to data management include timely trading decisions, best execution and compliance with regulatory requirements. The problem is that the wish list has to be achieved at reduced cost.”

Offering a solution to the problem, Turso suggested data utilities can come into play in data processing and data management operations. Users don’t lose control of their data as they continue to control vendor relationships and contracts; data from different vendors is not comingled but mapped to a common, consolidated data model; and efficiencies are provided by the utility fixing any data issues once for the benefit of all users.

Countering perceptions that utilities curtail the flexibility of data distribution, Turso touched again on user control and the ability to customise data distribution to different platforms, avoiding the complexity of doing this in-house and delivering significant cost savings.

Turning to the structure of the SmartStream Central Data Utility, Turso described a bottom layer that centrally manages data cleansing and mapping for all clients, a variable layer that can be used by clients on an individual basis to define the data integration and cross-referencing they want, and a top layer that can be customised by clients for data distribution.

He concluded: “The utility normalises, cleanses, maps and distributes data, providing clients with costs savings, improved time to market and, in turn, improved business performance.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

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

17 June 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes 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...

BLOG

T+1 Settlement in UK & Europe: Meeting the October 2027 Deadline

On 19 February 2025, the UK government confirmed that it would adopt a T+1 settlement cycle for securities transactions, following the recommendations of the Accelerated Settlement Taskforce (AST). The transition, set for 11 October 2027, will shorten the time required to settle trades from two days (T+2) to just one (T+1), aligning the UK with...

EVENT

ESG Data & Tech Briefing London

The ESG Data & Tech Briefing will explore challenges around assembling and evaluating ESG data for reporting and the impact of regulatory measures and industry collaboration on transparency and standardisation efforts. Expert speakers will address how the evolving market infrastructure is developing and the role of new technologies and alternative data in improving insight and filling data gaps.

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...