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

DMS Review: Emerging Technologies Respond to the Challenges of Data Management

Subscribe to our newsletter

High performance technologies can support the delivery of efficient and effective data management, but they are not the only tools for the task as financial firms strive to centralise reference data, deliver the right data at the right time, and move towards on demand, always available data. This was the assessment of a panel of experts discussing emerging technologies for the data management segment at last week’s A-Team Data Management Summit (DMS).

Moderating the panel discussion, Andrew Delaney, editor-in-chief at A-Team Group, asked panel members their views on the impact of technology on data management and how it can support user requirements.

Stuart Grant, EMEA business development manager for financial services at SAP, stepped back in time before fast forwarding: “Legacy systems implemented 10 to 20 years ago and siloed systems won’t satisfy regulations and business going forward. Considering regulation around risk there are many pieces of regulation that have a common demand for a view of risk across an organisation. The challenge is to create a plan that looks out five years and integrates reference data with distributed calculation engines, reporting and downstream analysis. The need is for a single version of the truth.”

Pavlo Paska, director and senior consultant at FalconSoft, added: “Banks want to make decisions on accurate, live data. The challenge is how to deliver consistent data at the right time to the decision maker.”

From a user standpoint, Rupert Brown, lead architect in the CTO office at UBS Investment Bank, noted the need for the right data at the right time. He said: “We are interested in latency and moving data as fast as possible, and we also have a fetish about formats. The aim is wholeness of data, how we look at it and how we deal with it.” His concern is that there are no data discovery tools of real value in the market.

Turning to emerging technologies, John Glendenning, managing director of EMEA at DataStax, provider of an open-source noSQL database, said: “There are legacy relational database management systems that firms are pushing to go faster and in-memory technologies that are used to cover up any gaps in performance. Then there are companies like Yahoo and Google investing in something new – on demand, always available big data that can be managed by systems like DataStax’ Apache Cassandra noSQL database. In financial services, the database is being deployed for risk and end-of-day pricing, allowing models to be run more frequently.”

While new technologies have a place in the financial industry, transition is not always easy. Grant explained: “Changes in technology over the past five years have been incompatible with keeping the lights on, as keeping the lights on and a strategic approach of breaking down fragmented architecture and turning it inside out don’t mix well. Covering up the cracks doesn’t solve the problem, but new technologies, expertise and relevant old technologies, such as data dictionaries and metadata, can be combined in a new approach.”

In terms of specific emerging technologies, Delaney questioned the use of cloud services. Brown responded: “The price advantage of cloud has been the driver of interest, but with it come the challenges of meeting privacy regulations and engineering the technology to make cloud solutions truly dynamic. A lack of good tools in the market makes it difficult to provision data dynamically.”

Brown went on to talk about Hadoop, an open-source software framework that supports data intensive distributed applications, and suggested Hadoop 2 tools will bring the technology further into the financial sector. He also pointed out that, perhaps converse to perception, many banks are trying to manage less data, not big data.

One common theme in the panel discussion was access to data and improved analytics. Grant commented on the need to consolidate workloads into real-time enabled datasets, a solution that is being driven by risk. In terms of analytics, he said: “Rather than trying to bring fragmented data together, it is possible to take queries to where data resides. This pushes business rules closer to data.” On the issue of access to data, Paska added: “Meta data can help, it describes data and makes it accessible, and it is a way to make sense of data and make money out of it.”

Considering data management on a longer-term basis, panel members concurred that company culture, understanding and communication at a high level are key to success. Looking at trending technologies, Brown concluded: “Semantics and ontology are the new frontiers in data. We haven’t yet joined together the systemic and semantic worlds, but we do have a grand unification plan.”

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 Growth Exposes Asset Servicing’s Infrastructure Gap

By Toby Glaysher, Chairman, FINBOURNE. Asset servicers face a paradox: winning business in the industry’s fastest-growing segment whilst discovering that growth erodes rather than enhances profitability. Private markets represent both strategic opportunity and operational crisis, exposing fundamental limitations in infrastructure built for a different era. When growth creates problems The expansion into private credit, infrastructure...

EVENT

TEST Event page 2

Now in its 15th 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

Entity Data Management Handbook – Fifth Edition

Welcome to the fifth edition of A-Team Group’s Entity Data Management Handbook, sponsored for the fourth year running by entity data specialist Bureau van Dijk, a Moody’s Analytics Company. The past year has seen a crackdown on corporate responsibility for financial crime – with financial firms facing draconian fines for non-compliance and the very real...