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

Sitting Up and Taking Notice

Subscribe to our newsletter

Finally, the world seems to be paying attention to what industry protagonists have been saying about the reference data marketplace for what now seems like quite some time: that reference data is important to your business, no matter what it is.

Maybe it’s because the protagonists have become more sophisticated. We were encouraged to hear about the FISD’s ‘Four Pillars of Reference Data Standards,’ as presented to the Securities Industry Association by Mike Atkin last month. Pointing out that the overall goal is “a common market data infrastructure for securities processing automation,”

Atkin described the four pillars thus: 1. Identify all financial instruments with precision (multiple listings). 2. Identify all business entities for processing efficiency, regulatory compliance and risk mitigation. 3. Identify all data elements associated with a financial instrument lifecycle with absolute precision (standard terms, definitions and relationships). 4. Define a common distribution protocol for efficient and accurate processing. This kind of definition of reference data activities can only help the user community realize that it’s a serious business.

It seems to be happening. First, London’s Exchange Data International (EDI) let slip that it signed up 20 new customers in the first two months of the year. Not bad. Then, we spoke to Ken Johnson of the State of Wisconsin Investment Board’s decision to build a reference data management platform around Eagle Investment Systems’ Eagle Reference Manager system. And finally, we got wind of a major win in New York – stay tuned, as we like to say – for a relative newcomer to the space, as well as of a spate of requests for proposal – ditto – in both New York and London. A clue to how seriously the industry is now taking the various standard work going on is yielded by a glance at the list of active participants in the SIA’s Standards & Protocol Working Group:

  • Norm Allen (Bear Stearns)
  • Michael Atkin (FISD/MDDL, X9D, ISO TC68/SC4, REDAC, UII Working Group)
  • John Bottega (Credit Suisse First Boston)
  • Mary Dupay (Goldman Sachs)
  • Cecilia Holden (Merrill Lynch)
  • Steve Kelly (Goldman Sachs, Reference Data Coalition/REDAC)
  • Kevin Smith (Bank of New York, ISITC IOA)
  • Steven Lachaga (JPMorgan)
  • Simon Leighton-Porter (Citigroup, RDUG)
  • James Leman (who recently joined SunGard/Brass from Citigroup)
  • Sandy Throne (DTCC, X9D, ISO TC68/SC4)
  • John Panchery (SIA)
  • Brad Smith (Capco)
  • Judy Smith (Morgan Stanley)
  • Sanjay Vasta (Merrill Lynch Asset Management)
  • John White (State Street Global Advisors)

Whichever way you look at it, the group is not too shabby. Its particip-ants underscore the commitment the major firms are making to the initiative. Surely, with this level of support, the efforts to introduce workable standards must be successful.

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

Private Markets Data Opportunities Under the Microscope: Webinar Preview

As institutional asset managers accelerate their allocations into private markets, they often find themselves facing an alien landscape when it comes to data. Used to the data-driven systems that power public capital markets, investors in private markets, including private equity and private credit as well as alternatives such as property, must contend with greater opacity,...

EVENT

TEST Event page 2

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

Corporate Actions USA 2010

The US corporate actions market has long been characterised as paper-based and manually intensive, but it seems that much progress is being made of late to tackle the lack of automation due to the introduction of four little letters: XBRL. According to a survey by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and standards...