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

Can Corporate Actions Automate Without Wave of Regulatory Stick?

Subscribe to our newsletter

Despite a myriad of available software solutions aimed at automating corporate actions processing, industry participants can relish the prospect of unreliable data and manually intensive processing for some time to come.

That’s among the findings of new research from TowerGroup that suggests that corporate actions processing remains one of the major roadblocks standing in the way of the industry achieving straight-through-processing (STP) and the operating efficiencies it has long promised but so far failed to deliver.

That said, the research group believes that global revenues for vendors offering automated corporate actions processing platforms will rise from $75 million this year to around $120 million in 2010. Key drivers, it reckons, will include the realization of benefits from mitigating operating risk and implementing process efficiencies, rather than the continual quest for compliance with midterm regulations.

TowerGroup has just issued two new reports on the subject, both authored by Matt Nelson, a senior analyst in the research company’s investment management group: Update on Corporate Actions: Progress in the Face of Apathy on the STP Battlefront; and Corporate Actions Automation Software: Tools for the March Toward STP.

Through his research for the reports, Nelson concludes that: “The best possible solution to the corporate actions issue starts with bilateral industry-wide adoption of data standards, and ends with industry-wide agreement on best practices.” He believes that by collaborating to achieve a single, central set of best practices, the industry can move toward STP in corporate actions.

With 67 corporate action types currently in use globally, according to the International Securities Association for Institutional Trade Communication, it has to be said that achieving such a level of collaboration among competing vendors and their various competing clients seems like a shot in the dark.

Nonetheless, Nelson urges all North American custodians to adopt data standardization and common message formats, arguing that this can facilitate automation in the corporate actions space. Nelson points out the fact that only 2% of all Swift network traffic consists of instruction messages from investment managers to their custodians, which he says illustrates that many custodians are no accepting message-based instructions.
Nelson isn’t optimistic. He says that while operational risk mitigation should be a major driver, it’s often overlooked in favour of immediate regulatory drivers, of which none currently focuses on corporate actions processing.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: How to organise, integrate and structure data for successful AI

Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being rolled out across financial institutions, being put to work in applications that are transforming everything from back-office data management to front-office trading platforms. The potential for AI to bring further cost-savings and operational gains are limited only by the imaginations of individual organisations. What they all require to achieve...

BLOG

Private Markets Data Opportunities Under the Microscope: Webinar Preview

As institutional asset managers accelerate their allocations into private markets, they often find themselves facing an alien landscape when it comes to data. Used to the data-driven systems that power public capital markets, investors in private markets, including private equity and private credit as well as alternatives such as property, must contend with greater opacity,...

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

Regulatory Data Handbook 2025 – Thirteenth Edition

Welcome to the thirteenth edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a unique and practical guide to capital markets regulation, regulatory change, and the data and data management requirements of compliance across Europe, the UK, US and Asia-Pacific. This year’s edition lands at a moment of accelerating regulatory divergence and intensifying data focused supervision. Inside,...