About a-team Marketing Services

A-Team Insight Blogs

Ensuring Data Integrity in Finance – A Foundation for Efficiency and Trust

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Neil Sandle, director of product management at Gresham.

In today’s financial landscape, data integrity is more than a regulatory requirement — it is the backbone of efficient operations and trustworthy decision making. Ensuring that data remains accurate, consistent, and reliable throughout its lifecycle is essential for financial institutions looking to maintain operational excellence, manage risk, and meet evolving regulatory standards.

From transaction processing to compliance reporting, high-quality data is the foundation for every business-critical process. In this context, maintaining data integrity is not just about technology; it’s about building confidence among stakeholders and ensuring long-term success.

Effective data governance, encompassing permissions, clear roles and change procedures, is essential for maintaining this integrity. Understanding data lineage and provenance helps trace data from its entry into an organisation to its archival, thereby promoting transparency and accountability.

Ensuring data integrity involves several key elements. It is about maintaining accuracy, consistency, and reliability across the data’s lifecycle ­– from acquisition to retirement. This involves establishing rigorous data governance frameworks, which include defining roles and permissions, setting up procedures for managing data changes, and tracking data lineage. These measures help to ensure that data remains accurate and reliable, reducing the risk of errors that can disrupt operations and result in significant financial losses.

Overcoming challenges in data integrity and integration

The challenges around data integrity in financial services are multifaceted. Among the most significant is resolving exceptions that arise when records do not reconcile with counterparties. High-quality data ensures smoother processes and fewer discrepancies, ultimately cutting costs associated with fixing trade breaks later in the transaction lifecycle.

Preventing errors through stringent data quality measures is more cost-effective than rectifying issues after they have happened. This proactive approach to data management can significantly improve operational efficiency and lessen the risks associated with poor data quality.

Data lineage is a key element of data integrity. It involves tracing the data’s journey through multiple systems and processes within an organisation. This traceability allows firms to understand where data originates, how it transforms, and where it moves over time.

By maintaining detailed records of data lineage, financial institutions can make sure that any discrepancies or errors are rapidly identified and resolved. This transparency is crucial for compliance with regulatory requirements and for maintaining the trust of clients and stakeholders.

Moreover, financial services firms need to manage the complexities of integrating data from multiple sources. Each source may have different standards, formats and quality levels, making it difficult to ensure consistency and accuracy. Implementing robust data management platforms capable of harmonising data from various sources and providing a unified view is essential. These platforms should also offer real-time monitoring and alerts to identify and address data quality issues in a timely manner.

Maintaining data integrity also involves managing the vast quantity of data generated daily. Financial institutions deal with a high volume of transactions, each generating data that must be accurately captured, processed, and stored. Efficient data management systems that can handle large datasets and provide scalable solutions are critically important here. These systems should also support data lineage tracking, ensuring that every data point can be traced back to its original source.

Another challenge is the regulatory environment, which continuously evolves, imposing new requirements on data management practices. Recent amendments to the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) and the Markets in Financial Instruments Regulation (MiFIR), for example, have introduced several new requirements targeted at enhancing market transparency, improving data management and reducing systemic risks across the financial services sector.

Financial services firms must stay on top of these changes and ensure their data management strategies comply with current regulations. This requires a flexible approach to data governance, enabling firms to adapt quickly to new regulatory demands without compromising data integrity.

The ESG dimension and how to tackle it

Integrating environmental, social, and governance data into financial workflows presents a further layer of complexity. The financial services industry faces significant challenges in effectively managing ESG data, which is key for product development, asset allocation, benchmarking, and client reporting. Effective onboarding, integrating, and quality-proofing dispersed ESG datasets is vital. This process includes data quality and lineage tracking, ensuring the accuracy and traceability of ESG data. Easy data access is enabled via APIs and web browsers, facilitating research, product development and regulatory reporting.

Operationalising ESG data involves integrating high-quality information into workflows to support multiple use cases. This includes climate stress testing, client onboarding and green asset ratio reporting. By providing a comprehensive data model that covers regulatory information and underlying datasets, firms can link ESG data to pricing and reference data. This integration supports different ESG use cases across the investment management process, helping firms to make informed decisions and meet regulatory requirements.

The role of Data as a Service (DaaS)

In finding a balance between ensuring data integrity and delivering operational efficiency, financial services firms can benefit significantly from Data as a Service (DaaS) solutions that offer flexibility and control over their data. These services allow clients to configure data feeds, choose specific datasets, and integrate seamlessly with various systems.

The ability to customise data requirements and receive it in preferred formats, such as JSON or XML, makes certain that data flows smoothly into portfolio management systems, trading platforms, and compliance tools. The flexibility to adapt to changing business requirements and regulatory demands, while maintaining rigorous standards, is a major advantage of modern data management.

Another important benefit of DaaS is its ability to deliver real-time insights and alerts. Dashboards can provide a comprehensive view of data quality, highlighting deviations or delays in data feeds. This real-time monitoring assists in proactive management and swift resolution of issues, maintaining the integrity of financial operations.

The combination of flexibility and rigour in DaaS allows financial firms to handle inevitable changes in the regulatory landscape and business requirements efficiently. As firms transition from one data provider to another or update their reporting systems, DaaS can accommodate these changes seamlessly, minimising disruptions and ensuring continuity in operations.

Future evolution and benefits of enhanced data management

The flexibility and rigour offered by DaaS allow financial firms to handle inevitable changes in the regulatory landscape and business requirements effectively. As firms transition from one data provider to another or update their reporting systems, DaaS can accommodate these changes seamlessly, minimising disruptions and ensuring continuity in operations. This ability to adapt to changing business and regulatory environments while maintaining high standards of data quality and operational efficiency, is critically important for financial institutions.

Financial institutions can derive significant benefits from DaaS solutions by customising their data requirements, selecting specific types of data like corporate actions, market data, or ESG data, and receiving it in preferred formats such as JSON or XML. This customisation extends to integration with existing systems, ensuring that data flows smoothly into portfolio management systems, trading platforms, and compliance tools.

Real-time insights and alerts provided by DaaS solutions help enable comprehensive data quality monitoring, highlighting deviations or delays in data feeds and facilitating proactive management and swift resolution of issues. This real-time monitoring ensures that any anomalies are detected and addressed promptly, maintaining the integrity of financial operations.

In summary, as financial institutions continue to face increasing pressure from both regulators and stakeholders, the importance of maintaining data integrity cannot be overstated. Adopting robust Data as a Service (DaaS) solutions provides firms with the flexibility, control, and real-time insights needed to navigate a complex and ever-changing environment. By investing in the right tools and processes, financial firms can not only ensure compliance but also improve operational efficiency, reduce costs, and drive sustainable growth in a competitive market.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best practices for compliance with EU Market Abuse Regulation

EU Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) came into force in July 2016, rescinding the previous Market Abuse Directive and replacing it with a significantly extended scope of regulatory obligations. Eight years later, and amid constant change in capital markets regulation, technology and culture, financial institutions continue to struggle to stay on the right side of the...

BLOG

Citigroup Fine Shows Importance of Having Robust Data Setup

The US$136 million fine meted out to Citigroup for data irregularities dating back to 2020 should serve as a warning to all financial institutions that robust data management is essential to avoid sanctions amid tougher regulatory regimes. The Federal Reserve and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) jointly imposed the penalty on the...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2024 – Twelfth Edition

Welcome to the twelfth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a unique and useful guide to capital markets regulation, regulatory change and the data and data management requirements of compliance. The handbook covers regulation in Europe, the UK, US and Asia-Pacific. This edition of the handbook includes a detailed review of acts, plans and...