INSIDE VIEW: On the lookout for innovative options

Far more than a record-keeping function, data has become an essential element on the frontier for investment analytics, says State Street’s Tim Caverly.

Changes sweeping across the institutional investment and regulatory landscape pose profound implications for data management. As investors develop new approaches to asset allocation and risk management, their demand for enhanced information is accelerating. Compounding this challenge for asset managers are the many regulatory directives now emerging that include additional reporting and record-keeping requirements.

As a result of these changes, asset managers can foresee increased pressure on costs and operating models. The mounting need to achieve efficiencies in their overall perations is driving many firms to consider innovative options, including strategic partnerships with servicing providers that can deliver scalable, outcome-driven solutions.

Today’s growing focus on data management stems largely from the investor- and regulator-driven pursuit of greater transparency and risk awareness.

Responding to a difficult investment climate, Europe’s pension funds, insurers and sovereign wealth funds are revising allocation strategies to accommodate a broader range of asset classes. They are also adopting more robust methods for managing risk in a volatile low-return environment. To support these efforts to balance risk and reward, investors seek high-quality data to guide them.

Amplifying this trend, incoming directives contain significant new reporting and record-keeping requirements. For example, the second Markets in Financial Instruments Directive will have far-reaching implications that include changes in client categorisation and best execution rules from 2014. In response, asset managers may be obliged to develop and target products more narrowly at specific types of investors.

Client reporting
The gravity of the upcoming data-management challenge emerged strongly in a new State Street survey of European asset managers conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit. With responses from more than 160 asset managers in 25 European countries, the survey was an opportunity to assess the state of the industry at a critical point in its evolution. When asked to identify the biggest data management challenges facing them today, 49% of asset managers highlighted the provision of a high level of detailed and quality data to clients (see chart).

In addition, they recognise that these demands will put significant pressure on their existing infrastructure, with 44% saying they would struggle to achieve sufficient scale with their in-house systems to deliver on data management challenges ahead.

In the face of mounting complexity and growing reporting burdens, the benefits of leveraging the scale and expertise of third-party providers through outsourcing partnerships look increasingly attractive. After several years of difficult market conditions, when asset managers have undertaken many of the easier cost-saving measures, they must now look to more radical solutions. For example, they are looking to the advantages of single-platform infrastructures and centralised data management systems, often replacing multiple systems inherited through acquisition.

IV table 3While it has been possible to avoid the challenges of such projects during boom times, the current cost-conscious and risk-averse climate gives such undertakings a new urgency.

Streamlined platforms provide a consolidated picture of global exposure for reporting to investors and regulators, possibly at a lower cost.

Furthermore, these platforms offer the flexibility and agility needed to launch new products quickly as asset managers seek to grow through innovation. Costs to develop, maintain and upgrade new infrastructure, however, can be daunting.

The operational challenges of data management are just one driver of the increasing trend towards outsourcing. Managers’ preparedness to outsource extends right through the investment value chain, comprising not simply the back and middle-office but front-office activities, too, where there may be scope to outsource virtually everything beyond core investment decisions.

Increased reporting and compliance burdens that add to the complexity of data management certainly represent important factors in the decision to partner with external providers. Outsourcing enables asset managers to delegate these and other key administrative responsibilities that threaten to distract them from their core investment focus.

At the same time, managers recognise that they may need to invest substantially in expertise and technology to keep pace with evolving compliance requirements over the longer term. While the largest asset managers may have the scale to absorb this investment, other firms will view outsourcing as an opportunity to benefit from the resources and efficiencies of scale of a third-party provider.

With this in mind, leading providers are continually seeking to add new capabilities that deliver on the increasingly complex needs of asset managers and asset owners.

Risk focus
With a rising focus on risk, effective data management has become a necessity for asset managers, investors and regulators. Indeed, with 42% of respondents to the State Street survey rating their ability to capture and report regulatory data as only “adequate”, it also poses significant challenges.

In addition to the regulatory requirements, investors expect to gain a consolidated picture of their assets, a task made vastly more difficult by today’s more complex global and derivatives-heavy investment portfolios. Only robust data management capabilities can produce the answers that investors demand, with the memory of the financial crisis still fresh in their minds.

As a result, data management now plays a central role in the integrated solutions for assessing risk and performance that can help managers to maximise returns in a more risk-controlled environment. Far more than a record-keeping function, it has become an essential element on the frontier for investment analytics, addressing the defining dilemma for asset managers in today’s climate, namely the need to drive enhanced returns in a world more risk-averse than ever.  

As asset managers consider outsourcing among their data management options, they also recognise that asset servicing organisations – with their geographic breadth and local expertise – represent valuable sources of insight into ways to streamline their operations or refine their product offerings. Thus, whether supporting key reporting activities, helping to manage risk, or enabling managers to seek new markets and investors, servicing providers can become strategic partners for leveraging the value of data.

Tim Caverly is executive vice president and Emea head of sales and business development at State Street Global Services

©2012 funds europe 

HAVE YOU READ?

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP

The tension between urgency and inaction will continue to influence sustainability discussions in 2024, as reflected in the trends report from S&P Global.
FIND OUT MORE
This white paper outlines key challenges impeding the growth of private markets and explores how technological innovation can provide solutions to unlock access to private market funds for a growing…
DOWNLOAD NOW

CLOUD DATA PLATFORMS

Luxembourg is one of the world’s premiere centres for cross-border distribution of investment funds. Read our special regional coverage, coinciding with the annual ALFI European Asset Management Conference.
READ MORE

PRIVATE MARKETS FUND ADMIN REPORT

Private_Markets_Fund_Admin_Report

LATEST PODCAST