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

ECB’s Francis Gross Makes the Case for Data Standardisation and Shared Data Infrastructure

Subscribe to our newsletter

Technology has added complexity to capital markets, shifted the human-machine interface,  and will soon provide automation beyond human understanding. It could also go wrong and cause an unplanned and unwanted crisis on a scale far larger and more damaging than the 2008 crisis. Countering this criticality and ‘the data mess that is getting worse all the time’, Francis Gross, senior adviser to the directorate of general statistics at the European Central Bank, set out a vision of finance as a global network of standardised contracts among a global population of agents at last week’s TSAM conference.

Noting the need to address data management challenges and invest in data, having opened a pandora’s box that can’t be closed, Gross outlined steps that could be taken to achieve his vision. He talked about the need to move from operational to analytical systems, to be able to measure the speed of global systems in real time and to develop flexible analytics to address sudden surprises in global markets. He also underlined the importance of extremely granular data and the need to standardise data globally, starting with identifiers such as the Legal Entity Identifier (LEI). Additionally, every contract should be represented in a universal language.

Taking a step back, Gross described data today as an obstacle to technology, and technology as a catalyst of increasing social complexity caused by connecting more diverse people in different countries. He noted that the ‘data mess’ is getting worse all the time and that technology is adding to complexity rather than complementing financial markets.

He commented: “The problem is deep, global, growing fast and potentially critical. The implementation of standards has become urgent, but harder and slower to reach on a global basis.”

While Gross called for global standards as a means to solve problems caused by data and technology, he questioned who would make the standards. He cited the LEI as a working standard made at a global level, but said the issuance of 1.3 million LEIs is not good enough. He commented: “We need public leadership to make global standards and an infrastructure that holds data that is used by all.”

Fleshing out his vision of a network of global contracts, Gross said standards will need to be agreed by law and that law should mandate standardised digital contract representation. Distributed ledgers would also be needed to represent populations of diverse contracts in a single language.

With global standardisation in place, Gross described the possibilities of industry participants and regulators working with a shared data infrastructure, banks having single identifiers for all objects, which would lead to safer operations, and machine executed reporting. He concluded: “Building data infrastructure underpinned by law has to be a public mission. It will create more freedom for markets, lower the costs and risks of our industry, and automate reporting.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Hearing from the Experts: AI Governance Best Practices

The rapid spread of artificial intelligence in the financial industry presents data teams with novel challenges. AI’s ability to harvest and utilize vast amounts of data has raised concerns about the privacy and security of sensitive proprietary data and the ethical and legal use of external information. Robust data governance frameworks provide the guardrails needed...

BLOG

Experts Probe Data Management Best Practices for Regulatory Reporting: Webinar Preview

Compliance with regulators is getting harder for data professionals as economic volatility and geopolitical strains look set to reshape how global financial markets are overseen. As data professionals brace to take the brunt of the work needed to comply with these rapid and unpredictable changes, A-Team Group will host a webinar that will probe the...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

Now in its 2nd year, the AI in Capital Markets Summit returns with a focus on the practicalities of onboarding AI enterprise wide for business value creation. Whilst AI offers huge potential to revolutionise capital markets operations many are struggling to move beyond pilot phase to generate substantial value from AI.

GUIDE

MiFID II Handbook

As the 3 January 2018 compliance deadline for Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) approaches, A-Team Group has pulled together everything you need to know about the regulation in a precise and concise handbook. The MiFID II Handbook, commissioned by Thomson Reuters, provides a guide to aspects of the regulation that will have...