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

Data Management Industry Weathers the Political Storm

Subscribe to our newsletter

Capital markets in the US and Europe are fraught with uncertainty following the election of President Trump in the US and the start of the Brexit process in the UK, but what material effects will these changes have on data management and will they present more opportunities than threats?

The regulatory landscape in uncertain times and the data management response for 2017 were discussed during a panel session at A-Team Group’s Data Management Summit in New York City earlier this month. The panel was moderated by David Blaszkowsky, managing consultant at RGP, and joined by Tim Lind, principal, RTech Advisors; Roger Fahy, vice president and chief operating officer, CUSIP Global Services; and Hudson Hollister, founder and executive director, Data Coalition.

Blaszkowsky’s first question asked whether Trump, Brexit and wars galore meant capital markets are entering a period of higher volatility. Lind said he expects no change in market volatility as the Trump administration cannot make wholescale change to regulation in the short term. Fahy commented: “We are at a stage of maturity with regulation in data management, the industry is not prepared to undo what has been done. The principles that drove regulation still exist today.” Hollister said the Trump election won’t change anything in the data management industry, but noted the ongoing need for regulators to exercise leadership in implementing open data standards that could make compliance easier.

Commenting on the opportunities and threats of regulation, Lind said: “Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) requires information on asset classes we have never seen before. This means trade reporting will give a better view of the health of the market.” On a less positive note, he pointed to fundamental regulatory changes that threaten markets by causing a lack of liquidity, as well as the unintended consequences of regulation.

Hollister saw no regulatory threats, but only opportunities in the increasing adoption of non-proprietary data standards and the US Financial Transparency Act. The act was put before congress in March 2017 and directs the Office of Financial Research of the Department of the Treasury and eight US financial regulatory agencies to adopt data standards for all corporate financial information collected or received by them. Hollister commented: “The act will take many years to implement, but it will reform and standardise data communication, and let data flow for the first time.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Unlocking Transparency in Private Markets: Data-Driven Strategies in Asset Management

As asset managers continue to increase their allocations in private assets, the demand for greater transparency, risk oversight, and operational efficiency is growing rapidly. Managing private markets data presents its own set of unique challenges due to a lack of transparency, disparate sources and lack of standardization. Without reliable access, your firm may face inefficiencies,...

BLOG

Seven 2026 RegTech Outlooks for Compliance, Reporting and Financial Crime

As 2026 gets underway, RegTechs are positioning for a shift in regulatory emphasis from refits, rewrites and attestations to demonstrable evidence. Across the jurisdictions supervisors are shifting from consultation and rulemaking into validation and testing whether firms have operationalised reforms through governance, high-quality data, defensible controls and credible evidence. The seven RegTechs that follow have...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit London

Now in its 15th year the TradingTech Summit London brings together the European trading technology capital markets industry and examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

Regulatory Data Handbook 2014

Welcome to the inaugural edition of the A-Team Regulatory Data Handbook. We trust you’ll find this guide a useful addition to the resources at your disposal as you navigate the maze of emerging regulations that are making ever more strenuous reporting demands on financial institutions everywhere. In putting the Handbook together, our rationale has been...