SIA Standards & Protocols Committee - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 12
About This Presentation
Title:

SIA Standards & Protocols Committee

Description:

SIA Standards & Protocols Committee March 25, 2004 Draft 1 (3/5/04) Recommendations to SIA on Standards for Securities Processing Automation Prepared by Michael Atkin ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:45
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 13
Provided by: archiveFi
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: SIA Standards & Protocols Committee


1
SIA Standards Protocols Committee
  • March 25, 2004
  • Draft 1 (3/5/04)

Recommendations to SIA on Standards
for Securities Processing Automation Prepared by
Michael Atkin (FISD)
2
Executive Summary
  • The SIA Standards Protocols Working Group was
    established to
  • Assess the role of reference data standards in
    helping to establish the infrastructure for
    securities processing automation
  • Identify the scope of relevant standards-based
    initiatives needed or underway
  • Assess the possibility of delivering functional
    and operationally viable standards (that meet the
    objectives of efficiency and risk mitigation) in
    a reasonable time frame
  • Define and understand the global standards
    development process including how and where SIA
    should leverage its position
  • The initial recommendations of the Working Group
    are
  • The ISO standards development process (while
    cumbersome) is both viable and functional
  • There are four standards activities currently
    underway in three core areas that (if successful)
    will provide a common data and protocol
    infrastructure for securities processing
    automation. The objectives are real and
    achievable.
  • The Working Group recommends that SIA should
  • Publicly support these standards activities as
    both an organization and as a participant in the
    global Reference Data Coalition (REDAC)
  • Provide oversight to the ISO standards
    development process to ensure that the
    initiatives remain on task to deliver value to
    SIA members
  • Encourage SIA members to directly participate in
    the standards development process at the
    practitioner/operational expertise level

3
Standards Protocols Evaluation Process
  • The SIA Standards Protocols Working Group met
    six times over the past 8 months (from June 2003
    February 2004)
  • The active participants in the Standards
    Protocol Working Group are
  • 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 (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)

4
The Reference Data Connection (business case)
  • Reference data is in the spotlight (according to
    Tower and others)
  • Inconsistent, incomplete or inaccurate reference
    data is the 1 cause of internal STP failure
  • Over 30 of all transactions breaks are caused by
    poor quality reference data
  • Costs to repair trades to correct mismatches
    from settlement delays to maintain security
    master files and from trade failure are
    significant and increase as errors pass through
    front (6), middle (16) and back (50) offices
  • Reference data is used everywhere (front, middle
    and back), is decentralized (multiple systems and
    processes) and relies on manual operations to
    scrub, update and maintain data. About 40 of a
    trade record is composed of reference data.
  • Overall goals of the standards activities are to
    reduce costs and manage operational risk
    (efficiency is still the mantra)
  • Information architecture and reference data push
    to normalize data, synchronize master files,
    reduce infrastructure costs for integrating data
    from multiple sources and promote information
    exchange
  • Shorter cycles mean more automation is needed.
    Reference data standards are needed to facilitate
    automation

5
Four Pillars of Reference Data Standards
  • Goal is a common market data infrastructure for
    securities processing automation
  • Four core components
  • Identify all financial instruments with precision
    (multiple listings)
  • Identify all business entities for processing
    efficiency, regulatory compliance and risk
    mitigation
  • Identify all data elements associated with a
    financial instrument lifecycle with absolute
    precision (standard terms, definitions and
    relationships)
  • Define a common distribution protocol for
    efficient and accurate processing

6
Standards for Instrument Identification (UII)
  • Instrument identification is fundamental
  • ISIN alone is not sufficient (ISIN is unique at
    issue level, but not instrument level -- one ISIN
    is shared among offerings in multiple locations)
  • Official place of listing (OPOL) is needed to
    differentiate instruments
  • Place of trade is needed for intra-day pricing
    decisions and market compliance
  • REDAC paper on requirements for UII has received
    global validation
  • LSE SEDOL and ASB extension both meet the
    criteria
  • New ISITC/REDAC/RDUG Working Group on UII
    Implementation
  • Document errors caused by instrument
    identification problems by asset class and
    function
  • Assess how issue can be resolved by adopting the
    UII scheme (at 15022 message level)
  • Cost/benefit analysis (business case) to
    establish implementation priorities at the
    operational level

7
Standards for Business Entity Identification
  • Real processing and regulatory compliance
    problems exist and there is no international
    standard for linking legal entities and
    portfolios under management
  • Identifiers are needed for
  • Due diligence to set up new accounts/verify
    entities for new business
  • Communication of trade processing information and
    for automated post trade allocation/settlement
    (FIX)
  • Regulatory compliance (KYC, AML) and timely
    reporting of transactional information and
    client/corporate entity relationships
  • Managing risk requirements for grouping entities
    (operational risk, Basel II and G30
    recommendations)
  • Instructions come in different formats with all
    sorts of proprietary and internal identifiers
  • Difficult to automate the order execution, trade
    allocation and settlement processes (processing
    efficiency)
  • Difficult to precisely extract reporting,
    transactional and relationship information
    (regulatory compliance and risk mitigation)
  • IBEI activity has been correctly specified and
    approved by ISO TC68/SC4 Working Group 8
  • Focus is beyond conceptual theory and on the
    design/structure of the identification scheme
    (complete, functional, operationally viable,
    commercially acceptable)

8
Standards for Content (market data
model/vocabulary)
  • Standard terms, definitions and relationships for
    all market data elements
  • Eliminate confusion about the meaning of terms
    regardless of source
  • Ensure completeness of terms required for any
    application
  • Common data format for efficient processing
  • Common names, values, formats are the logical
    basis of any reference data strategy within
    financial institutions (information architecture
    level)
  • Data Model/Common Market Data Vocabulary has been
    correctly specified and approved by ISO TC68/SC4
    Working Group 11
  • Mission is to produce a data model and ISO
    Technical Specification that provides a single
    standard for describing a financial instrument
    throughout its lifecycle comprised of completely
    defined data elements and how they relate to one
    another.
  • In essence define all data elements (and their
    relationships) used by all segments throughout
    the information chain (from issuance through
    asset servicing) correctly and with absolute
    precision
  • WG 11 result will incorporate 15022 data field
    dictionary (transactions), MDDL specification and
    TDR (market data) and other specifications (i.e.
    FIX and SWIFT as interface points)

9
Industry Standard Protocol
  • Industry standard distribution protocol for
    market data (both static and streaming)
  • Decouple the technology of the interaction
    between provider and consumer of market data from
    the content
  • Providing one set of software to receive and
    distribute data means less infrastructure costs
    for integrating data from multiple sources (no
    longer have to normalize, integrate and maintain
    multiple formats and interfaces)
  • Bring static (reference data) and streaming (real
    time pricing) applications toward a common (the
    same) market data content standard
  • Must overcome the chicken and egg problem (e.g.
    customers say we agree with the standards
    objective, and as soon as our vendors deliver it
    well adopt it. Closely followed by vendors
    saying as soon as our suppliers deliver XML,
    well adopt it for onward redistribution to our
    customers. On the heels of exchanges saying
    were interested in a standard distribution
    protocol prove it.)
  • fisdMessage was developed to compress/compact
    streaming XML to be as efficient as existing
    datafeed distribution and it works!
  • User firms are very interested in the industry
    standard protocol because of the economies of
    scale in design, production and maintenance of
    datafeeds, processing systems and applications
    as well as the extensibility benefits of XML for
    which fisdMessage is designed.
  • The business case for an industry standard
    distribution protocol is very compelling

10
The Standards Landscape
Ownership Stake
Telekurs
American Bankers Assoc. (ABA)
SP
CUSIP
Contracts
Maintains
ISO Standards
Part of ISIN
Local Identifiers(65 in total)
LSE
DB
SEDOL
CFI
ANNA
DUNS
Maintains
Developed
Ownership Stake
Registration Authority
BSI (UK)
ISIN
Business Entity Identification
Legal Entity Identification
Instrument Identification
ISO
ASB
SWIFT(Network)
MIC
US Representative to ISO
RDUG
REDAC
SWIFT(Reg. Authority)
BIC
Registration Authority
Facilitation
TC68
ANSI X9D (US)
SIIA
15022
Agreement to make ISO 15022 XML Aware
Membership
WG11
FIX Protocol Limited
WG8
CFI
WG10
TBMAAMF
ConvergenceISO 15022 XML
FISD
Adopting
Membership
Owns
Omgeo
Recommenda-tions
ISDA
FIX
ALERT
Developed
Adopting
Owns
Membership Involvement
ISTIC-IOA
Developed
Standard (Reference Data or Message)
XML Conformance Standards
OASIS(XML Conformance Standards)
MDDL
FpML(Derivatives)
XML Conformance Standards
Organization
11
Standards Landscape Explained
  • The ISO standards development and adoption
    process is complex but it is both viable and
    functional
  • Global standards development needs careful and
    thoughtful analysis to ensure they are functional
    and operationally workable and the ISO
    structure works
  • The pace of development/adoption can be
    significantly expedited if there is broad
    conceptual buy-in, operational practitioners are
    involved in the design of the standard and
    professional facilitators are involved in the
    development process.
  • UII -- is already well out of the gate
    (commercial solutions)
  • WG8/business entity identification has broad
    conceptual buy-in and the standards process is in
    place and correctly specified. Operational
    leadership is being managed by REDAC/RDUG
    (assistance is needed here)
  • WG11/data model and vocabulary has broad
    conceptual buy-in, the standards process is in
    place and correctly specified and is based on
    real activities (MDDL and 15022 DFD).
    Additional operational leadership is being
    managed by FISD/MDDL (assistance is needed here)
  • Global coordination to ensure that the four
    standards activities (and their associated
    business cases) are well defined, viable,
    functional, operationally palatable and
    commercially acceptable is required for success.

12
Recommendation
  • Relevant SIA Committees should
  • Challenge the hypotheses related to the
    importance of the four standards pillars (verify
    the premise)
  • Publicly support these standards activities as an
    organization
  • Actively participate in the global Reference Data
    Coalition (REDAC) to ensure there is a single and
    coordinated voice on reference data and protocol
    standards
  • Closely monitor the ISO Standards development
    process (ISO TC68/SC4 Working Groups 8 and 11) to
    ensure the standards output remains in line with
    real industry priorities and requirements
  • Provide operational experts (by function and
    asset class) to directly participate in the
    standards development process
  • Continue to help steer the debate about STP as a
    business priority by helping define the business
    case and ROI metrics.
  • Cost containment and risk mitigation is still the
    mantra standards are the key to achieving
    automation objectives leadership and global
    coordination is needed the global financial
    industry is paying attention the ISO process is
    oriented correctly this is our window of
    opportunity!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com