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

Mastering Data Compliance: Strategies to Overcome the Data Mountain

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Adam Quirke, Business Development Lead, Financial Services, InterSystems UK & Ireland.

With the financial sector’s regulation landscape continuously evolving, compliance officers at financial institutions play a crucial role in maintaining integrity and trust. They maintain compliance despite a growing burden of responsibilities and the increasingly acute problem of legacy technology, which lacks agility, requires significant maintenance efforts, introduces operational inefficiencies and may delay implementing required regulatory changes.

This reliance on outdated systems is becoming a serious threat as regulators become more demanding. Manual processes remain common at a time when new regulation demands more detail and greater frequency of reports. Multiple disparate data sources often struggle to connect and work together to manage the growing mountain of data required for analysis, insight and reporting in this sensitive area.

By leveraging modern data technology, compliance teams can significantly enhance efficiency and avoid continuing to toil away on lengthy and complex processes that eat up unnecessary amounts of their time. A survey of 375 asset management companies around the world commissioned by InterSystems found two-thirds of firms employ between six and nine people just to process data.

Data management challenges have intensified

Asset managers need to think hard about new approaches to data. The survey found that 44% of respondents see improving responses to regulators’ requests as one of their major data management challenges. Some 54% state data errors between disparate sources is their number one driver for investing in data management.

Many firms also struggle to obtain data that is current. Only 38% use data less than a day old for reporting, with processing unstructured information from a wide variety of sources, errors, and manual methods all contributing to the problem.

Firms need to innovate and adopt a smarter architecture

Innovation is now essential for compliance. Data fabric architecture is rising in popularity as it is one of the most effective approaches to deliver accurate, harmonised data for reporting in near real time. As an architectural layer, it simplifies complex data infrastructures without replacing systems, maximising current investments in technology. The data fabric layer sits on top of a firm’s infrastructure, delivering a unified version of data from high-volume internal and external sources without time-consuming manual processes or complicated wrangling. It streamlines compliance work and supplies the kind of timely and trusted data compliance officers need for reporting.

The truth is that without greater automation in compliance processes, and more efficient data management, costs will rise. Recruitment of skilled and expensive staff is becoming necessary to cope successfully with the burdens of compliance. The Thomson Reuters’ 2023 Cost of Compliance Report, which reviewed 1,374 regulators in 190 countries, found a third of respondents with compliance-related responsibilities at financial institutions in the UK, EU, and US expecting compliance teams to grow and the overall costs to increase. Many also see how compliance will steadily have more involvement in cyber resilience, corporate governance and the setting of risk appetite.

Coping with these extra demands is difficult when firms have legacy systems and applications. These create enormous complexities and prevent organisations from accessing and processing the clean standardised data needed for regulatory reporting. Harmonising data and rendering it usable and meaningful can be time-consuming and costly when firms require data spread across spreadsheets, data warehouses, data marts or data lakes.

Significant regulatory changes will demand more reporting

A quick scan of the regulatory horizon shows why such innovation is necessary. The entire financial services world faces a tide of new rules. EMIR 3.0, and Basel 3.1 will introduce more than 80 new data-field requirements. For Basel 3.1, the Prudential Reporting Authority (PRA) plans to introduce 19 new COREP (Common Reporting) templates and revise 12 of those already in use. Last year’s wide-ranging UK Financial Services and Markets Act also introduced significant updates to the regulatory reporting framework (also giving the Bank of England and PRA expanded enforcement powers).

The UK and EU are not alone in developing regulations. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has adopted final Private Fund Adviser Rules. These rules include five regulations and are backed up with a large volume of summary materials.

Environmental, social and governance (ESG) obligations are also an increasingly strong factor in regulation. As of May this year, for example, UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) regulated firms must review product types and disclosures in the context of ESG to eliminate greenwashing. These changes will increase workloads substantially.

The benefits go beyond compliance

When an asset management firm transforms its data architecture, the gains extend beyond the compliance function. The firm can build machine learning (ML) models to inject greater efficiency into risk management and to streamline back- and middle-office processes. They can also more easily meet bespoke client requirements and provide rapid and detailed insight into performance, fees and charges, changing market conditions and competitors’ activities.

By investing in smart data fabric, which takes the data fabric approach a step further by embedding a wide range of analytics capabilities, asset managers can enable compliance teams to excel at a time when their firm may well be struggling with low margins and sluggish growth.

The compliance function needs agility and new technology just as much as line-of-business teams, which is why asset managers should think seriously about smart data fabric. It will give them the compliance capabilities they need to streamline onerous new regulatory requirements and achieve higher margins and greater internal efficiency.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Augmented data quality: Leveraging AI, machine learning and automation to build trust in your data

Date: 19 September 2024 Time: 10:00am ET / 3:00pm London / 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 minutes Artificial intelligence and machine learning are empowering financial institutions to get more from their data. By augmenting traditional data processes with these new technologies, organisations can automate the detection and mitigation of data issues and errors before they become...

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

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 8th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the regtech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

Pricing and Valuations

This special report accompanies a webinar we held a webinar on the popular topic of Pricing and Valuations, discussing issues such as transparency of pricing and how to ensure data quality. You can register here to get immediate access to the Special Report.