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

Regulatory Oversight Committee of the LEI Revises Policy on Level 2 Data Reporting

Subscribe to our newsletter

The Regulatory Oversight Committee (ROC) of the Global LEI System (GLEIS) has revised two elements of policy covering the reporting of LEI parent relationship data, also known as Level 2 data.

To improve the usability of Level 2 data, the ROC has revised the list of opt-out reasons that can be used by an entity to decline providing information on its parents. The aim of the revision was to consolidate opt-out reasons to facilitate best use of them while retaining the most valuable and used information.

The decision to streamline the list of opt-outs was made at the ROC’s June 2021 meeting and based on statistics from the Global LEI Foundation (GLEIF) that highlighted the most used opt-outs. It resulted in the consolidation of five opt-outs in the ‘non-public’ category into a single opt-out, also called ‘non-public’. The five consolidated opt-outs are binding legal constraint, legal obstacles, disclosure detrimental, detriment not excluded, and consent not obtained.

The resulting ‘non-public’ opt-out joins existing and lasting opt-out categories of natural person(s), no LEI, no known person, and non-consolidating.

The ROC has also decided to discontinue collection of Provisional Node Identifier (PNI) data for parents without LEIs. This decision resulted from a pilot programme that collected metadata on parents without LEIs and assigned these parent entities PNIs as identifiers to supplement Level 2 data collection. The extended Level 2 information was internal to the GLEIS and made available to ROC members for evaluation purposes only.

The ROC recently undertook an analysis of the usefulness of the PNI data for ROC members. It showed that PNI data roughly doubled the information on the parents of LEI registrants available to regulators, but concluded that PNI data collection should be discontinued as the added value of continuing PNI data collection would be outweighed by the cost of cleaning the data to remove duplicates and address other data quality issues.

Instead, the ROC recommends that efforts and resources dedicated to PNI data collection should be redirected to improving the collection and validation of LEI registrants data on their parents, which is a key component of the quality of the LEI data.

You can read more detail about the ROC revisions to reporting LEI parent relationship data here. And we will be back soon with a review of the LEI’s progress through 2021 and the GLEIF’s plans for the identifier through 2022.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: How to maximise the use of data standards and identifiers beyond compliance and in the interests of the business

Date: 18 July 2024 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Data standards and identifiers have become common currency in regulatory compliance, bringing with them improved transparency, efficiency and data quality in reporting. They also contribute to automation. But their value does not end here, with data standards and identifiers...

BLOG

Duco Acquires Unstructured Data Management Specialist Metamaze

Duco, a provider of SaaS AI-powered data automation, has acquired Metamaze, an Antwerp, Belgium-based company offering an AI-driven intelligent document processing SaaS platform that automatically processes, extracts and interprets information from any type of unstructured document. By combining the Metamaze and Duco platforms, customers can ingest any type of data from any type of document...

EVENT

TradingTech Briefing New York

Our TradingTech Briefing 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

Regulatory Data Handbook 2023 – Eleventh Edition

Welcome to the eleventh edition of A-Team Group’s Regulatory Data Handbook, a popular publication that covers new regulations in capital markets, tracks regulatory change, and provides advice on the data, data management and implementation requirements of more than 30 regulations across UK, European, US and Asia-Pacific capital markets. This edition of the handbook includes new...