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

Global LEI Foundation Development Plan Adds Data Quality Management and Proposes Limited Hierarchy Data

Subscribe to our newsletter

The Global Legal Entity Identifier Foundation (GLEIF) has set out development plans for 2016 including a recently introduced LEI data quality management programme and completion of the accreditation process for LEI issuers – but provision of much needed LEI hierarchy data remains sketchy, with the GLEIF saying only that it expects to design a process to collect data on parents of legal entities this year.

While the LEI is gaining traction as a result of regulatory reporting requirements and financial institutions beginning to adopt the identifier for internal purposes such as risk management, its lack of prescribed relationship and hierarchy data limits the extent of its usefulness, requiring firms to link it to other data to gain a full picture of exposure.

The GLEIF’s 2016 plan begins to solve this problem, but falls far short of ensuring full relationship and hierarchy data, and fails to provide a timeline for the provision of legal entity parent data. Stephan Wolf, CEO of the GLEIF, says: “Following a public consultation carried out by the LEI Regulatory Oversight Committee in 2015, it is expected that in 2016 a process will be designed that allows collecting data on parents of legal entities. As a result, the global LEI data pool will provide information on ‘who owns whom’ in addition to ‘who is who’. The GLEIF will be responsible for carrying out the project management and development of corresponding organisational and technical standards.”

The GLEIF’s data quality management programme aims to optimise integrity of the LEI data pool and initially bases its measure of quality on a set of seven criteria that use standards developed by the International Organisation for Standardisation. The criteria cover the accuracy, completeness, comprehensiveness, integrity, representation, uniqueness and validity of LEI data records. The GLEIF then scores the quality level of LEI data and reports the percentage of all LEI data records that have successfully passed checks against the criteria during a specific month. In its first data quality report made on 31 January, 2016, the GLEIF reported a total data quality score of 99% and noted LEI issuers in the Czech Republic, Norway, China, Turkey and Poland as the top five in terms of data quality in January. The top five countries on the data quality list were Puerto Rica, Paraguay, Canada, the US and the Cook Islands.

Wolf says the data quality management programme should help drive LEI adoption, and explains: “The programme will further clarify to market participants globally the advantages of the LEI with regard to its multiple applications in both the public and private sectors. It also ensures that the LEI remains the industry standard that is most trusted.”

Development of the data quality programme over the coming year will include the implementation of additional data quality criteria bringing the total checks up to 12. In the mid-term, the GLEIF also plans to publish detailed data quality reports for each LEI issuer.

The foundation’s accreditation project aims to complete the accreditation process for LEI issuers operating on the basis of previous endorsement from the LEI Regulatory Oversight Committee and accredit new organisations seeking to become LEI issuers.

Wolf concludes: “This ensures the GLEIF will fully monitor the functioning of the Global LEI System.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Navigating a Complex World: Best Data Practices in Sanctions Screening

As rising geopolitical uncertainty prompts an intensification in the complexity and volume of global economic and financial sanctions, banks and financial institutions are faced with a daunting set of new compliance challenges. The risk of inadvertently engaging with sanctioned securities has never been higher and the penalties for doing so are harsh. Traditional sanctions screening...

BLOG

ace Seeks to Disrupt the Very Idea of ‘Digital’ for Financial Institutions

For more than a decade, financial institutions have been told to go digital. Data strategies have been written, platforms migrated to the cloud, and front-end experiences wrapped in slick apps. But for Niamh Kingsley, founder of ace, that conversation is already out of date. Her new firm, launched in November as a specialist post-digital advisory...

EVENT

ExchangeTech Summit London

A-Team Group, organisers of the TradingTech Summits, are pleased to announce the inaugural ExchangeTech Summit London on May 14th 2026. This dedicated forum brings together operators of exchanges, alternative execution venues and digital asset platforms with the ecosystem of vendors driving the future of matching engines, surveillance and market access.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2026

AI adoption in capital markets has moved into a more disciplined phase. The priority is now controlled deployment: where AI can be used safely, where it can deliver measurable value, and how outputs can be governed, monitored and evidenced. The 2026 edition of the AI in Capital Markets Handbook examines how AI is being applied...