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

MarkLogic and ModelDR Propose a BCBS 239 Compliance Solution Based on Data Point Modelling

Subscribe to our newsletter

MarkLogic and ModelDR are challenging traditional approaches to BCBS 239 compliance with a solution that combines MarkLogic’s non-relational, multiple model database platform and ModelDR’s data point modelling software. The companies detailed their approach in a recent webinar, Sustained Compliance with BCBS 239, and said banks implementing the solution could lower costs, increase agility and ensure data quality while achieving compliance.

The webinar was moderated by Diane Burley, chief content strategist at MarkLogic, and joined by experts Chris Atkinson, solutions architect at MarkLogic, and Greg Soulsby and Simon Roberts, directors at ModelDR.

Atkinson started the conversation explaining the limitations of traditional data management and regulatory compliance processes. He said: “The most common approaches are to coalesce as many data sources as possible into a data warehouse, or to stitch together siloed data. A data warehouse needs a canonical data model that is very rigid. Silos offer more agility, but their cost is significant and if siloed data is put into a data warehouse it becomes brittle. Alternatively, multiple feeds can be sourced many times and calculations can be performed many times. In this scenario, consumers become servers and sources of data to others, but this is expensive, rigid and it is difficult to get a congruent view of data.”

Noting the need for banks to achieve BCBS 239 compliance, but also reduce costs, increase business agility and improve data quality – all contributors to a lower total cost of ownership – Atkinson highlighted a data point modelling solution that is used by the European Banking Authority to turn regulations into specifications. Banks, he said, could also gain from using the solution, which is relatively quick to implement and provides ongoing flexibility and agility for regulatory responses.

Looking at the practicalities of this type of solution, Soulsby described a data point model as a business rather than technology model that provides a base for concerns such as data quality, validation, storage, integration, reporting requirements definition and the generation of XBRL taxonomy. The model is combined with the MarkLogic multiple model database that can store multiple types of data in one database and support queries across the data, making it a good tool for data aggregation.

Atkinson explained: “The clever part is stitching regulatory requirements to data in the database. The data needs to be mapped and metadata attributes need to be created in the database and tagged to an ontology such as FIBO.” Combining the source metadata, ontology, an enterprise data model, and ModelDR data point models for diverse elements such as BCBS 239, MiFID II, data quality, FIBO and Murex with NoSQL and semantic queries it is possible to run queries across the models to generate a view of data that could be used for regulatory or other reporting purposes.

Soulsby says: “The combination of the MarkLogic database platform and ModelDR data point model allows data to be ingested dynamically without ETL tools and queries to be run on the fly in real time against any database in the bank. BCBS 239 suggests banks need these kinds of capabilities.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best practice approaches to integrating legacy data with the cloud

Acceleration of cloud adoption, increasing demand for digital transformation and real-time data management have led financial institutions to rethink their data infrastructure to enable more agile operating models that can respond faster to change and make data a competitive advantage. For many, integrating data from legacy systems and data across the business landscape with a...

BLOG

Derivatives Service Bureau Hits Deadline of 16 October 2023 with Go-Live of UPI Service

The Derivatives Service Bureau’s (DSB’s) Unique Product Identifier (UPI) Service went live as planned on Monday 16 October 2023, enabling firms to create and search for UPIs. UPI reporting starts in major derivatives markets in 2024, with US rules applying from 29 January 2024, the EU EMIR Refit regulations from 29 April 2024, followed by...

EVENT

Buy AND Build: The Future of Capital Markets Technology, London

Buy AND Build: The Future of Capital Markets Technology London on September 19th at Marriott Hotel Canary Wharf London 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

Regulatory Data Handbook 2023 – Eleventh Edition

Welcome to the eleventh edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a popular publication that covers new regulations in capital markets, tracks regulatory change, and provides advice on the data, data management and implementation requirements of more than 30 regulations across UK, European, US and Asia-Pacific capital markets. This edition of the handbook includes new...