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

Navigating the Future of Regulatory Reporting: Insights from Industry Leaders

Subscribe to our newsletter

The landscape of regulatory reporting in capital markets is in constant flux, shaped by technological change, evolving compliance demands, and industry cost pressures. A recent webinar, Best Approaches for Trade and Transaction Reporting, hosted by A-Team Group in September 2025 and sponsored by the Derivatives Service Bureau, brought together senior RegTech executives and compliance practitioners to examine current challenges and emerging solutions. The discussion focused on simplification, standardisation, digitisation, and the cautious use of AI.

The Imperative for Regulatory Simplification

The opening theme was the European Securities and Markets Authority’s (ESMA) call for evidence on simplifying reporting. Industry groups have advocated a re-evaluation of EMIR and MiFID, narrowing them to their core purposes of systemic risk monitoring and market transparency. Suggestions included moving Exchange-Traded Derivatives (ETDs) from EMIR to MiFID, shifting to single-sided reporting in line with the US CFTC model, and removing delegated reporting. Panel members also argued that valuations and collateral reporting could be inferred from submitted data, rather than separately reported.

Historically, regulators have favoured dual-sided reporting to support matching, but speakers noted that concentrating obligations with larger, more sophisticated firms could improve consistency. One panellist estimated that the likelihood of single-sided reporting being adopted now stands at “about 50/50”, the most promising position to date. International identifiers such as ISINs, UPIs and LEIs, were seen as key tools for reducing errors by minimising the number of data points firms must submit.

The Digitalisation of Data and Reporting

Audience polling highlighted that translating regulatory updates into systems and controls remains the biggest challenge, followed by the integration of fragmented tooling and architectures. Panellists called for regulators to publish clearer, unambiguous rules – ideally in machine-readable form.

Industry initiatives such as Digital Regulatory Reporting (DRR) and the ISDA Common Domain Model (CDM) are designed to meet this need. The CDM provides a standardised, machine-readable representation of instruments and lifecycle events, while DRR applies reporting “skins” on top of this model. This enables automation of report production and supports rapid updates when rules change, reducing the burden of interpreting regulatory text.

Beyond DRR, wider use of international standards and identifiers has improved data quality and consistency. XML reporting formats and quality assurance providers have further enhanced validation, with some regulators themselves relying on QA services.

Operationalising Horizon Scanning and Oversight

Firms with global operations face significant difficulties monitoring regulatory changes across multiple jurisdictions. Thousands of unstructured documents from exchanges, regulators and CCPs must be reviewed monthly, making the process costly and resource-intensive.

Efforts are underway to mitigate this. One panellist described working with the Bank of England to embed metadata into regulatory texts, enabling structured extraction of key information such as applicability and deadlines. The DSB, meanwhile, has reduced implementation burdens by pre-populating UPIs from existing ISINs, liaising with regulators during rollouts, and providing free UAT environments in advance of compliance deadlines.

Automation, AI and Responsible Innovation

Adoption of automation and AI in regulatory reporting remains cautious. The “black box” nature of some AI models creates auditability concerns, with firms requiring traceability of outputs. For now, a “person in the loop” remains essential in compliance workflows. Long vendor onboarding processes and governance checks also slow adoption.

Nevertheless, firms are experimenting with controlled applications. One described developing an internal “Man GPT” tool trained on proprietary data, useful for document summarisation, error reporting, and internal knowledge queries. Smaller use cases, such as converting spreadsheets to XML via AI or co-pilot tools, are helping firms streamline manual tasks while maintaining auditability.

Metrics, Dashboards and Continuous Oversight

The panel also discussed how firms measure and improve reporting quality. Key performance indicators such as timeliness, completeness, resubmission rates and exception ageing are being tracked more systematically. Dashboards now provide visibility of issues, while quality assurance checks at quarterly or semi-annual intervals help firms maintain confidence in their reporting processes. Regulators increasingly expect evidence of these practices during audits, reinforcing the importance of documented remediation steps when errors are identified.

Looking Ahead: A Collaborative Path to Efficiency

The next 12–18 months could bring meaningful progress in reducing reporting complexity. Both EU and UK regulators appear more open to dialogue on burdensome requirements such as dual-sided reporting. Panellists agreed that engagement must remain constructive, with firms demonstrating strong internal controls and data quality while pressing for simplification.

Key takeaways were clear: push for reduced reporting scope and single-sided models; deepen reliance on standards to improve accuracy; and support digitisation efforts that turn legal text into structured, machine-readable rules. With regulators and industry now working more collaboratively, there is a real opportunity to shape a more efficient and sustainable reporting framework.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best practice approaches to data management for regulatory reporting

Effective regulatory reporting requires firms to manage vast amounts of data across multiple systems, regions, and regulatory jurisdictions. With increasing scrutiny from regulators and the rising complexity of financial instruments, the need for a streamlined and strategic approach to data management has never been greater. Financial institutions must ensure accuracy, consistency, and timeliness in their...

BLOG

Data Surge Argues for Enterprise-Grade Lineage: Webinar Review

The ingestion of growing volumes of data into financial institutions’ systems is posing a pressing challenge as data managers seek to optimise their data lineage, according to the latest A-Team Group webinar. Being able track data as it enters and is distributed within organisations is essential for prising the most value from that information. However,...

EVENT

TradingTech Briefing New York

Our TradingTech Briefing in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

The DORA Implementation Playbook: A Practitioner’s Guide to Demonstrating Resilience Beyond the Deadline

The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) has fundamentally reshaped the European Union’s financial regulatory landscape, with its full application beginning on January 17, 2025. This regulation goes beyond traditional risk management, explicitly acknowledging that digital incidents can threaten the stability of the entire financial system. As the deadline has passed, the focus is now shifting...