A-Team Insight Exchange is a new event series for 2010, which will combine A-Team’s expertise in financial markets IT with thought leadership from world-class technology innovators and practical experience from financial market practitioners.
In order to assist the European financial services community in its attempts to improve liquidity risk management, the Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) has published a new consultation paper on how to go about producing an effective allocation mechanism for liquidity costs, benefits and risks, CP36. The recommendations are aimed at providing firms with a framework upon which to build internal pricing mechanisms to price liquidity risk and to align liquidity risk management culture across their organisation via suitable incentives, which are likely to include significant data gathering and technology requirements.

















The UK Financial Services Authority (FSA) has this week been forced to back down somewhat in its aggressive approach to introducing further changes to its liquidity risk regime in light of the current economic climate. As promised last year, the regulator has assessed the state of the market and decided not to push ahead with the quantitative aspects of its regime, namely the controls around liquid asset buffers.
Following the relocation of its head office from Luxembourg to London last year (see
The Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) has produced a new set of high level risk management guidelines that stress the need for quantitative risk models to be balanced by a “qualitative approach” and for risk management systems to be revamped to take into account enterprise-wide risk exposure. In order to facilitate a qualitative approach, firms need to invest in their data feeds and systems in order to “explicitly” address macroeconomic environment trends and identify their potential impact on exposures and portfolios.
Next month, industry practitioners will have four opportunities to provide feedback to the Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) on its risk related proposals, including those around concentration risk and stress testing. The regulatory body has organised four separate hearings at its London premises to garner feedback on a number of its recent consultation papers, all of which involve technology and systems considerations.
As part of its endeavour to establish itself as a clearing counterparty (CCP) in the OTC derivatives market, CME Group has this month selected two pricing solutions to support its CCP’s credit default swap (CDS) pricing and intraday risk management services: CMA’s DataVision and Fitch Solutions’ CDS Pricing Service. Anna Mazzone, vice president of product management and marketing at CMA, explains to A-Team Insight how DataVision will support CME Group’s OTC CDS Clearing service.
BNY Mellon Asset Servicing has invested in its client and regulatory reporting systems as a result of valuation and regulatory changes such as FAS 157 and FAS 132R-1, explains Chris Richmond, managing director of global product accounting for the fund administrator, to A-Team Insight. This has involved a significant investment in automating the upload of non-standard pricing sources and the scrubbing of same security prices from multiple sources, he elaborates.



