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

DTCC Expects More Comparison Capability From Rebuilt Warehouse

Subscribe to our newsletter

As DTCC prepares to move its Trade Information Warehouse (TIW) for credit derivatives swap management to a distributed ledger technology (DLT) platform, the post-trade clearing and settlement services organization expects the change to enable more comparisons of transaction information, according to Jennifer Peve, executive director, office of fintech strategy at DTCC.

“Comparability is certainly helpful. We’re not creating a new business from scratch,” she says. “There are a number of use cases out there being explored, where the distributed ledger certainly can be a good fit because it’s creating efficiencies like taking away duplicative processes or adding value to the clients. Or it’s creating a single source of truth on the transaction and sharing that across a number of participants. It can be applied even to businesses that don’t have an exact comparison.”

TIW has design principles in common with DLT, in that both centralize the collection of transaction information on a ledger using standardized protocols, for transparency, according to Peve. “The standardized protocols and data models around credit derivatives that came out when we originally developed the TIW lent themselves nicely to putting on a distributed ledger,” she says. “Anything you put on a distributed ledger should be part of your business case so you understand the standardization of the asset.”

DTCC partnered with IBM, Axioni and R3 to build the DLT framework to which TIW will be moved. TIW processes trade lifecycle events for 98% of all credit derivatives transactions worldwide, and supports processing for central counterparties and custodian banks.

On a separate project, DTCC and software company Digital Asset Holdings is beginning the second phase of planning a DLT-based service to clear and settle US Treasury, agency and agency mortgage-backed repo transactions. The work began in March 2016, and the second phase includes creation of a Stakeholder Working Group comprised of market participants to collect feedback on the plans for the service. Based on feedback collected by June, DTCC and Digital Assets will then consider how to develop the service.

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

Tracing Data’s Transformation is Key to Compliance and AI Effectiveness: Webinar Preview

Transparency and accuracy are characteristics of data that are equally important for financial institutions’ compliance processes and the rollout of artificial intelligence applications. Without those qualities, regulators will have little trust in the disclosures of firms’ compliance teams and any AI technology will be prone to misleading and potentially damaging outputs. To ensure these two...

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

The DORA Implementation Playbook: A Practitioner’s Guide to Demonstrating Resilience Beyond the Deadline

The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) has fundamentally reshaped the European Union’s financial regulatory landscape, with its full application beginning on January 17, 2025. This regulation goes beyond traditional risk management, explicitly acknowledging that digital incidents can threaten the stability of the entire financial system. As the deadline has passed, the focus is now shifting...