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

Talking Reference Data with Andrew Delaney: Valuations and Electronic OTC Markets

Subscribe to our newsletter

While all eyes seem to be on the LEI and its tortuous birth, many of our clients and contacts are preparing – perhaps more quietly – for perhaps the other great challenge or opportunity of 2013: valuations.

Before I set off for New York a couple of weeks ago, I was fortunate to catch up with a couple of New Yorkers, in London to pick the brains of the market’s valuations experts, with evaluated pricing on their minds.

Rui Carvalho and Daina Senatore are both managing directors for enterprise solutions at S&P Capital IQ, which become somewhat less quiet than most on its valuations strategy earlier this year when it acquired CMA and QuantHouse. They outlined the S&P Capital IQ’s vision for the valuations space, which makes sense of QuantHouse’s role in the company’s line-up of valuations offerings and points to major changes in our marketplace over the next two to three years.

CMA, for me, was an obvious fit with S&P Capital IQ’s established valuations business. CMA’s coverage of the OTC derivatives space fills a gap in S&P Capital IQ’s valuations portfolio, with its strengths in municipals (via MSRB), US corporate bonds (via FINRA Trace), Euro and other bond data (via Euroclear’s Xtraktr) and its own evaluated pricing services.

QuantHouse’s role in this space, though, was more of a conundrum. For readers of our Low-Latency.com sister channel, QuantHouse is a familiar name, as a provider of high-speed market data and trading infrastructure for the high frequency trading segment. While it will continue to service that space, Carvalho says, S&P Capital IQ has identified the need to bring valuations of listed instruments into the fold as its client base becomes more multi-asset in its approach.

The overall aim, say Carvalho and Senatore, is to create a full picture of the marketplace: Evaluations for fixed-income and OTC derivatives, and pricing for listed securities, including equities, futures and options. In other words, to fit the emerging market need for a truly cross-asset view.

At the heart of this strategy is transparency, Carvalho says. CMA will play a major role in addressing transparency in the particularly opaque OTC derivatives market.

“Opinion is not enough,” says Senatore. To assess valuations in illiquid markets, clients need a range of inputs, she argues, including market data, trade data and details of models used to calculate values. “The model underpins everything,” she says. “Inputs into the model are what generate the valuation. How those inputs are chosen will drive the result. Our aim is to provide that data to clients to aid in their assessments.”

Aside from helping improve information in the trading and investment decision-making process, this approach could help valuations professionals better understand the risk profiles of their portfolios and aid in the price-challenging process. Challenging valuations is a time-consuming and costly process, and providing more data on how a valuation is arrived at could reduce the number of inquiries, saving time and money all round.

QuantHouse’s role in S&P Capital IQ’s valuations strategy is two-, possibly three-fold. First, it will be deployed to provide an end-of-day pricing service for listed securities, giving the company its own offering in this space. Second, as the client base becomes more cross-asset in its approach, S&P Capital IQ believes customers for its fixed-income and derivatives services will require equities and other listed instrument data. Using QuantHouse, says Senatore, “we’ll be able to service the entire portfolio.”

The third potential deployment provides an interesting twist, relating to incoming regulatory change, particularly posed by the likes of MiFID 2.

“QuantHouse comes with a network,” says Carvalho. “There has been a lot of talk about the ‘electronification’ of fixed-income and OTC markets,” and this is expected to speed up trading in those markets. With S&P Capital IQ’s growing strengths in these markets, QuantHouse could provide the underlying infrastructure as those markets start to resemble the listed markets it already serves.

Electronic OTC Markets. It’s almost a call to arms.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: End-to-End Lineage for Financial Services: The Missing Link for Both Compliance and AI Readiness

The importance of complete robust end-to-end data lineage in financial services and capital markets cannot be overstated. Without the ability to trace and verify data across its lifecycle, many critical workflows – from trade reconciliation to risk management – cannot be executed effectively. At the top of the list is regulatory compliance. Regulators demand a...

BLOG

Modern Data Platform Adoption Growth Seen as Benefits Become Apparent: Webinar Review

Take-up of modern data platforms (MDPs) is expected to accelerate in the next few years as financial institutions realise the greater agility, scalability and deeper insights offered by the innovation. Organisations that have so far been relatively slow to adopt the streamlined platforms – because they have been unsure of the technologies’ benefits – will...

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

ESG Handbook 2023

The ESG Handbook 2023 edition is the essential guide to everything you need to know about ESG and how to manage requirements if you work in financial data and technology. Download your free copy to understand: What ESG Covers: The scope and definition of ESG Regulations: The evolution of global regulations, especially in the UK...