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

Hedge Funds are Increasing their Scrutiny Of Counterparty Risk, Says Pershing and Aite Group

Subscribe to our newsletter

Managing counterparty risk has become a much more critical component of a hedge fund’s overall business operations today than it has been in previous years, according to a recently published white paper by Pershing and Aite Group. The report, which is entitled Risk and Reward: Hedge Funds Changing Views on Counterparty Relationships, focuses on the heightened importance of effectively managing counterparty risk and the integral role it plays in partnering with a prime broker.

The joint report highlights best practices that have been implemented by other hedge funds to help address and mitigate counterparty risk. Sang Lee, managing partner at Aite Group, explains: “The current credit crisis has elevated the importance of counterparty risk management in the eyes of many hedge fund managers. Creating a more systematic approach to counterparty risk management will go a long way in restoring market confidence and helping the hedge fund industry recapture its profitability.”

Pershing and Aite Group claim that one of the major drivers for this attention is hedge funds’ concerns about the negative impact of one of their key counterparties default on their obligations. According to the report, more than 50% of respondents reported monitoring counterparty risk on a daily basis and nearly 85% consider it an extremely important or very important business issue.

Moreover, 96% of respondents also cited managing counterparty risk as the number one factor in selecting their prime broker relationships. Concerns about managing counterparty risk two years ago were not a primary issue for most hedge funds, says the report, as 26% of the respondents considered counterparty risk important and 22% viewed it as moderately important.

The report contends that effectively monitoring counterparty risk will continue to be a critical component of a hedge fund’s business operations. The development of a standardised, well documented approach to analysing counterparty risk remains one of the top priorities for the hedge fund community, it claims.

Some of the best practices for proactively managing counterparty risk described by Aite Group and Pershing include leveraging a tri-party account approach to risk management and conducting consistent internal portfolio and risk assessments. They also recommend formalising business processes by outsourcing and installing in-house technology solutions such as portfolio management systems, as well as implementing third party independent valuation technology solutions and service providers supplemented with in-house valuation tools.

Craig Messinger, managing director of Pershing Prime Services, adds: “In order to help ensure continued growth and success, hedge funds of all sizes must continue to invest in and implement the proper internal controls and systematic processes to effectively monitor, manage and mitigate counterparty risk.”

However, the report says that there is no silver bullet for hedge funds when attempting to actively monitor the balance sheets of important counterparties. Most hedge funds currently go through manual intensive processes to keep track of counterparty relationships. “The reality is that despite the industry’s lack of a comprehensive technology platform to fully automate counterparty risk management, hedge funds continue to expand their presence globally and invest in more complex instruments. Reliable counterparty relationships will become even more critical, and continual innovation in terms of technology and services from leading service providers will be key to mitigating the hedge fund industry’s exposure to counterparty risk,” the report states.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: How agile data management can power business transformation

An asset manager’s ability to successfully execute on business transformation plans can make the difference between thriving and barely surviving in today’s competitive, digitally connected and regulatory-constrained environment. The more progressive buy-side firms are embarking on business transformation programmes that range from expansion across asset classes or geographies, introduction of new products, digital transformation to...

BLOG

Agentic AI Deployment Presents Potentially Dangerous Data ‘Trust Paradox’

Artificial intelligence deployment in capital markets’ data processes may be approaching an inflection point that, if not managed properly, could introduce dangerous risks to institutions’ operations. The growing deployment of anonymous agents has the potential to hardwire data errors into workflows, magnifying data weaknesses as the automating technology scales processes, according Informatica from Salesforce. The...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

Now in its 3rd year, the AI in Capital Markets Summit returns with a focus on the practicalities of onboarding AI enterprise wide for business value creation. Whilst AI offers huge potential to revolutionise capital markets operations many are struggling to move beyond pilot phase to generate substantial value from AI.

GUIDE

Corporate Actions 2009 Edition

Rather than detracting attention away from corporate actions automation projects, the financial crisis appears to have accentuated the importance of the vital nature of this data. Financial institutions are more aware than ever before of the impact that inaccurate corporate actions data has on their bottom lines as a result of the increased focus on...