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

CPSS and Iosco Set Out Recommendations for Trade Data Repositories in New CP

Subscribe to our newsletter

A joint working group of the Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems (CPSS) and the Technical Committee of the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (Iosco) has published a consultation paper this week setting out recommendations for the operation of trade repositories in the OTC derivatives markets. Data sharing and new data infrastructure is a subject that has been much discussed over recent months and the consultation paper indicates that these repositories will have a significant impact on firms’ data supply chains.

The introduction of repositories in this space is all part of the post-crisis regulatory effort to improve the post-trade infrastructure for the OTC derivatives market. However, there is some degree of disagreement remaining about whether a single or multiple repositories are required. European regulators in particular are concerned that a US-based single repository in the form of the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation’s (DTCC) Trade Information Warehouse might not be the right option and multiple repositories may be needed, especially one based in Europe.

To this end, the consultation paper sets the ground rules for the establishment and operation of such repositories, which are aimed at centralising information on outstanding OTC derivatives transactions and helping to improve the market’s overall transparency. “A well designed trade repository that operates with appropriate risk controls can provide an effective mechanism to collect and disseminate reliable data in a timely and proper manner to relevant authorities and the public, thereby strengthening the scope and quality of information available regarding the OTC derivatives market,” states the paper.

Exactly what constitutes “reliable” data and a “timely” manner is at the heart of the related derivatives data management challenge. The repository will take the data that is generally held by counterparties and often stored in proprietary systems in various formats with different data fields and turn it into standardised and complete data sets. However, this data will not replace that being used by individual counterparties, counterparty data will instead need to be reconciled with the trade repository data, adding another layer of data processing to the data supply chain.

A proportion of the data held by the repository will therefore be seen as a reliable record of the relevant trade information, says the paper: “Some data maintained in a trade repository may be considered the ‘official legal record’ of the transaction and therefore constitute the data that can be used for various downstream processing.” Regulators are convinced that this will thus bring down some of the cost and risk in the market related to data cleansing, but it will involve another layer of data reconciliation.

Market participants have until the 25 June to provide responses to the regulator on the proposals within the consultation paper, including voicing any concerns they may have about the operational reliability or governance of these repositories.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: The Role of Data Fabric and Data Mesh in Modern Trading Infrastructures

The demands on trading infrastructure are intensifying. Increasing data volumes, the necessity for real-time processing, and stringent regulatory requirements are exposing the limitations of legacy data architectures. In response, firms are re-evaluating their data strategies to improve agility, scalability, and governance. Two architectural models central to this conversation are Data Fabric and Data Mesh. This...

BLOG

The Business Conduct Risk and Data Challenge Behind AI Adoption

Poor data preparation for artificial intelligence deployments is exposing financial institutions to greater business conduct risks that could cost them as much as US$43 million per year, according to new research. An updated report by business conduct data provider RepRisk found that such AI-related incidents are on the rise as applications are rolled out at...

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

The Data Management Implications of Solvency II

Bombarded by a barrage of incoming regulations, data managers in Europe are looking for the ‘golden copy’ of regulatory requirements: the compliance solution that will give them most bang for the buck in meeting the demands of the rest of the regulations they are faced with. Solvency II may come close as this ‘golden regulation’:...