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

Issuance of ISINs for Loans is a Step in the Right Direction, Says DTCC’s Lewis

Subscribe to our newsletter

This year has seen the issuance of the first set of ISINs for the loans market and Mathew Keshav Lewis, vice president of the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation’s (DTCC) LoanServ business, reckons this is a great start to introducing further data standardisation in this particularly slow moving corner of the market. Of course, there is some degree of bias to his view, given that DTCC launched the LoanServ platform, which is aimed at providing a secure and automated network for the transmission of standard loan messages between agent banks and lenders in the syndicated loan market, back in 2008.

Since its launch, DTCC has been adding to the syndicated loans market’s reference data standards with the adoption of new entity identifiers from Markit earlier this year. Markit introduced loan entity identifiers in 2008 as part of a broad identification system for the loan market. Working in collaboration with Standard & Poor’s and Cusip Global Services, Markit then issued the first validated entity identifiers in early 2009.

“It has only been in the last couple of months that ISINs have been issued for loans but it is the first step on the road to getting accurate reference data for the market,” says Lewis. “We need these standards in order to make the infrastructure work efficiently.”

There is certainly a lot less liquidity in the loans market than in another market such as bonds. As Lewis notes, there are more trades in bonds in a single day than are traded in loans over the course of a whole year. DTCC, however, is keen to bring the loans market up to speed in terms of infrastructure in order to make these instruments easier to trade and settle, with the related risk management benefits of an automated process.

Settlement times for loans average around the T+40 mark at the moment, which is reflective of the trend to hold most of these instruments to maturity. A large part of the loans market is a relationship market, where deals are private and non-regulated, and trading opportunities can be limited but the DTCC and other market players are interested in the potential it represents overall.

“I would like to see in three to four years’ time much more trading in the loans space,” says Lewis. “That is why we have embarked on this four year project to improve the infrastructure around the market.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: AI in Asset Management: Buy-Side Attitudes toward GenAI and LLMs

Since ChatGPT exploded onto the scene in late 2022, financial markets participants have been trying to understand the opportunities and risks posed by artificial intelligence and in particular generative AI (GenAI) and large language models (LLMs). While the full value of the technology continues to become apparent, it’s already clear that AI has enormous potential...

BLOG

Data Quality Still Troubling Private Market Investors: Webinar Review

Obtaining and managing data remains a sticking point for investors in private and alternative assets as financial institutions sink more of their capital into the markets. In a poll of viewers during a recent A-Team LIVE Data Management Insight webinar, respondents said the single-biggest challenge to managing private markets data was a lack of transparency...

EVENT

RegTech Summit London

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in London will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the European 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,...