You are viewing all posts in the "Post-Trade" category

15
May
2013

Carrier Pigeon or Twitter Bird: The Evolution of Corporate Actions Messaging Efficiency

Contributor:

A version of this blog post was originally published by Wall Street & Technology. Virtually every industry in every corner of the world has undergone technological or process evolution in recent times. There are countless examples of innovations that have addressed a challenge – the process takes too long, the process costs too much, the process is too risky – and changed the game by helping organizations or individuals operate smarter through efficiency, automation, or simplification. Let’s consider communication, or the transmission of messages, as just one area where evolution has occurred. There are ways to communicate that involve quite a bit of manual work, such as the use of a carrier pigeon. Not the quickest way to transmit a message, and not too efficient, as apparently a carrier pigeon typically only flew in one direction – home – and would need to be manually taken to a message’s original location to begin the process. Given the level of difficulty and manual intervention required, it’s no surprise we don’t see the skies full of email or text message pigeons today. On the flip side, if we look at a more modern messaging bird, it is evident that technology has changed the game for how individuals, organizations, and governmental entities can communicate and discover information. Twitter offers its users a simplified and efficient way to communicate specific messages to an audience across the room or across the world – pointing to why the social network has amassed millions of users in just a few years. A similar, albeit less feathery, evolution is taking place within the corporate actions space today.... read more

vice president, SunGard’s capital markets business

13
May
2013

Leveraging LSOC Opportunities

Contributor:

This blog post was originally published on TabbFORUM. New rules have recently come into effect that have substantively changed the customer collateral asset protections relevant to central clearing. Specifically, the Dodd-Frank Act prescribed that the CFTC adopt rules that provide for enhanced protections of cleared swaps customer margin collateral. The mandate is known as “legal segregation with operational commingling,” or LSOC. LSOC provides a fundamental change in how futures commission merchants (FCMs), as members of central clearing counterparties (CCPs), must manage customer margin collateral. As a result of these rules, there was an initial flurry of activity to automate compliant processes. For instance, the first phase simply provided a bridge whereby FCMs reported excess collateral without reaching individual-customer-level granularity.... read more

senior vice president, Stream, SunGard's capital markets business

24
Jan
2013

Key Theme for Asian Middle Office: Automation

Contributor:

This blog post was originally published on TabbFORUM. It is well known that Asia is leading the world in the proportion of trades achieving same-day affirmation (SDA); most Asian trading venues comfortably exceed SDA rates of 90%, whereas the U.S. trading venues currently achieve 70%, on average. The automation of middle-office processes in Asia’s securities markets continues to be implemented with great vigor. This trend is undoubtedly being propelled by forthcoming regulatory requirements; yet there are other factors also driving the development.... read more

vice president, SunGard’s capital markets business

12
Oct
2012

Only the Beginning for Exchange and Clearing Innovation

Contributor:

As global regulators move to implement new rules designed to control the swaps markets, the world’s futures exchanges are responding with bold and innovative structural changes intended to reduce or eliminate certain regulatory burdens faced by their customers, including increased trading costs and additional expenditures associated with alternative risk management processing methods.... read more

senior vice president, Stream, SunGard's capital markets business

10
Oct
2012

ASEAN: New Trading Opportunities, New Post-Trade Demands

Contributor:

The ASEAN trading link announced its launch in September 2012. The link will firmly establish the ASEAN nations as an investment and trading bloc, and is also expected to attract new foreign investment to the region, as well as provide better opportunities for local capital. Local Asian brokerage firms will probably benefit most from the link. They are now in a better position to compete with major international brokerage houses to manage the inflow business coming from neighboring countries, and they will also now have outbound access to local exchanges. While international brokerages have already established their own networks and unilateral relationships at the individual exchanges, the ASEAN trading link will bring the local brokers up to speed.... read more