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

Alacra Reference Data Service Details 200,000 Global Legal Entities

Subscribe to our newsletter

Online business information provider Alacra is aiming to help financial firms solve regulatory and compliance problems, and get ready for next year’s introduction of the global legal entity identifier (LEI), with a database of clean legal entity data attributes covering towards 200,000 global business entities.

The company’s so-called Alacra Authority File (AAF) expands on publically available data associated with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s (CFTC) Interim Compliant Identifiers, or CICIs, and is expected to do the same for the LEI once its final format is decided and a global LEI system is prepared for introduction in March 2013.

The AAF includes data on large financial institutions’ low-risk core clients and counterparties, leaving the institutions to manage high-risk entities. To be included in the file an entity must have a security listed on a global exchange; be rated by Moody’s, S&P, Fitch, or A.M. Best; be regulated by one of 30 global regulators selected by Alacra; or have been assigned a CICI or, when established, an LEI.

According to Steve Goldstein, CEO, “It’s one problem getting the data correct once. It’s an entirely different and larger problem to keep reference data accurate over time. While the accuracy of our data is unsurpassed, it is delivering changes to the data that makes the Alacra Authority File valuable. While other data vendors are taking in entities and tracking them one-by-one, we have taken a universe of entities and we track them programmatically to create a white-list of low-risk entities. Reference data changes are a compliance and risk problem, so we are providing a cost-effective way to track entities and changes. This solves a big part of the problem and banks can then focus on high-risk entities.”

As well as providing reference data, the AAF can map the entities it carries to over 40 commonly used industry standard entity and industry identifiers. Using this functionality Alacra suggests the AAF could be used to reduce reference data silos, accelerate know-your-customer onboarding and remediation, and prepare organisations for the LEI.

Goldstein says the AAF reference data enhances the six or seven data points associated with a CICI with data such as parentage, a regulator if an entity is regulated and a BIC code if one is allocated to the entity.

Similarly, the company will enhance LEI reference data and alert customers to changes such as name and address information, regulatory status, listing status and rating status.

Alacra aggregates data from thousands of web-based sources and uses a global research team to populate its database, with changes to reference data being alerted using proprietary monitoring software. The company delivers reference data on a daily basis, but it is also possible for reference data analysts to query the data online, ftp files to be sent from the database and consumed in downstream applications such as compliance, and data to be configured to give clients only data relevant to the entities they use.

The service is offered on a subscription basis with costs ranging from $75,000 a year for an entry-level service up to about $200,000 a year for a service including entity mapping. The service is available immediate and Goldstein says it has attracted interest and its first two clients, one a global financial institution, the other a financial markets services provider.

He notes reference data vendors such as Avox, CounterpartyLink, Thomson Reuters and Bloomberg as potential, but not direct, competition, saying: “Our value proposition is different. We offer reference data on 200,000 entities from a global perspective and on behalf of everyone. We keep track of all changes to reference data and we can map an entity to over 40 industry codes. We hope the return on investment will be less time spent on low-risk entities, a greater focus on high-risk entities that can create regulatory risk and support for firms getting their houses in order first for the CICI and then for the LEI.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: ESG: A Growth Opportunity and a Regulatory Challenge

Date: 16 May 2023 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes ESG investing, regulation and compliance are central concerns for financial institutions, although not all jurisdictions are equal. In the US, ESG has become a partisan issue making SEC regulation uncertain; the EU is on good form and has already...

BLOG

Clarity AI and LSEG Create Compliance Tool for Updated SFDR

Sustainability tech platform Clarity AI is providing the infrastructure and analytics behind a new tool that’s helping LSEG’s financial institution clients comply with European ESG reporting rules that came into effect this week. SFDR Reporting Professional Powered by Clarity AI has been created to enable compliance with the new Level 2 Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation....

EVENT

FinCrime Tech Briefing, London

RegTech Insight (from A-Team Group) is proud to announce the launch of its FinCrime Tech Briefing taking place in both London and New York this summer and focusing on RegTech for AML and Financial Crime Compliance.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2022/2023 – Tenth Edition

Welcome to the tenth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a publication that has tracked new regulations, amendments, implementation and data management requirements as regulatory change has impacted global capital markets participants over the past 10 years. This edition of the handbook includes new regulations and highlights some of the major regulatory interventions challenging...