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

A rose by any other name…

Subscribe to our newsletter

Budget cutting has hit the data vendor community, hard, and nowhere more so than the enterprise data management (EDM) end of the spectrum. Given the limited appetite for all encompassing projects to restructure a firm’s entire approach to its reference data and the cost, time and complexity involved in such an endeavour, it is unsurprising that not many deals have been signed in recent months.

This may also go some way to explaining the results of this month’s Reference Data Review reader poll. It seems that although EDM is still a relevant concept, distributed data management (DDM) is rising in importance. This is likely as a result of the downward pressure on costs caused by the tough economic climate and the growth of electronic trading. According to 56% of the respondents to our reader poll, centralised data management or EDM is still top of the list for data management projects (in theory if not in practice). But for 44% of respondents, distributed data models are the way forward.

Last year, analyst firm Aite Group produced a report that claimed DDM was the next big thing for data management and it seems that a significant proportion of Reference Data Review readers agree. DDM extends out of the technology associated with electronic trading such as in-memory data caches, complex event processing engines, data fabrics and grid computing. The ethos behind a distributed data architecture is the creation of multiple sets of ‘truth’ where each version is unique to the subscriber and their needs.

“You don’t need to house the data universe in a single instance. You can break out by geography, product type, data type, however you want to manage ‘truth’,” explained Adam Honoré, senior analyst with Aite Group and author of the report, on its release. Aite Group claimed that EDM was rarely realised in large firms due to flaws in the execution of such centralised data models. It accused such models of contributing to latency, creating a single point of failure, experiencing significant integration pain and requiring that like data be used on disparate systems.

EDM projects have also frequently been criticised for involving high costs and lengthy implementation times. In an environment such as today’s, where sign off for projects is predicated on them being able to be completed within short timeframes and where budgets have been slashed to the bare minimum, EDM may be suffering due to this negative view within senior management. Although risk management and regulation have both raised the profile of data management within institutions, it could be that DDM is becoming the more attractive proposition due to its perception as a more targeted and faster approach to data management.

Financial institutions are also spending their limited budgets in targeted areas, such as entity data management systems and valuations data. Last month saw the valuations vendor community come together to discuss the trends and opportunities in the market at the Valuations & Risk 2009 conference in London. Panellists agreed that there is a trend towards firms taking a greater number of valuations data feeds than ever before to ensure transparency and asking for a greater depth of data from their vendors (see our lead story for details).

The partnership between Avox and Standard & Poor’s Cusip Services Bureau is also indicative of the appetite for greater standardisation of entity data. The development of a new universal identification system for global business entities has most certainly been prompted by the intense focus by financial institutions on counterparty risk, following the troubles experienced by so many large firms last year. Whether the vendors are successful in getting the market to adopt these new identifiers is yet to be ascertained (it hasn’t even been launched yet), but there is definitely a need for someone to assume the mantle of a business entity standards champion.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: End-to-End Lineage for Financial Services: The Missing Link for Both Compliance and AI Readiness

The importance of complete robust end-to-end data lineage in financial services and capital markets cannot be overstated. Without the ability to trace and verify data across its lifecycle, many critical workflows – from trade reconciliation to risk management – cannot be executed effectively. At the top of the list is regulatory compliance. Regulators demand a...

BLOG

Private Markets Data Opportunities Under the Microscope: Webinar Preview

As institutional asset managers accelerate their allocations into private markets, they often find themselves facing an alien landscape when it comes to data. Used to the data-driven systems that power public capital markets, investors in private markets, including private equity and private credit as well as alternatives such as property, must contend with greater opacity,...

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

Regulatory Data Handbook – Fourth Edition

Need to know all the essentials about the regulations impacting data management? Welcome to the Fourth edition of our A-Team Regulatory Data Handbook which provides all the essentials about regulations impacting data management. A-Team’s series of Regulatory Data Handbooks are a great way to see at-a-glance: All the regulations that are impacting data management today A...