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

Opinion: Proven Main Street Solution Proposed for Global Financial Identification

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Allan Grody and Bob Carpenter

There is a business model in existence today that has been around for nearly four decades and that has solved the unique identification problem in the global commercial trade supply chain. Now in partnership with our respective firms, we are proposing to share this system with regulators and the financial services industry for solving the same problem in the global financial supply chain.

GS1 has uniquely, unambiguously and universally identified 1.5 million companies and 40 million products across 25 diverse global industries. The same numbers and system, already an ISO sanctioned standard that is used to identify these businesses today are proposed for use as the legal entity identifier (LEI) for the US Treasury’s Office of Financial Research, and the analogous unique counterparty identifier (UCI) for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the unique identifier code (UIC) for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

GS1 operates a federated model with member organisations in 110 countries. The federated model allows for local involvement and, where required, local regulatory oversight. However, it operates its self-registering numbering assignments from a single pool of numbers administered through a distributed data model, thus assuring global uniqueness.

The UK cabinet office’s interest in competing identity assurance services fits well with our proposal to have public auditors apply their assurance function to the LEI and its minimum data attributes. These attributes are quite basic, mainly company name, address, postal code and such. The powerful element is the uniqueness of the number and its mandated global use in reporting data to regulators.

We also see XBRL playing a role in creating templates for the LEI so that it can be “certified” at its source of origination. This is not unlike XBRL’s role in annual report submissions, one of the most successful automation efforts in global regulatory reporting. Coupled with GS1’s success with global identification, also described as one of the more successful business automation efforts ever, the long overdue journey toward resolving the reference data identification issue will be well on its way.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Sponsored by FundGuard: NAV Resilience Under DORA, A Year of Lessons Learned

The EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) came into force a year ago, and is reshaping how asset managers, asset owners and fund service providers think about operational risk. While DORA’s focus is squarely on ICT resilience and third-party dependencies, its implications extend deep into core operational processes that are critical to market integrity, investor...

BLOG

12 Companies Bridging Agentic AI and Data Management in Capital Markets

The friction inherent in mobilising data is a perennial problem for financial institutions, who have spent the last decade perfecting the passive data stack – investing heavily in cloud warehouses, governance frameworks and ETL pipelines designed to move data for human consumption. However, the operational reality remains plagued by manual intervention. Recent developments in agentic...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit New York

Our TradingTech Summit 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

Regulatory Data Handbook – Fifth Edition

In response to the popularity of the A-Team Regulatory Data Handbook, we have published a fifth edition outlining the essentials of regulations that are likely to have an impact on data and data management at your organisation. New to this edition is a section on RegTech, covering drivers behind the development of innovative regulatory technology,...