Wall Street Letter VOL. XLV, NO. 30 - Sept. 23, 2013 | Page 8

NEWS The partnership opens up avenues for new capabilities, which is what initially drew Charles River to partner up with SJLS, according to Gallacher. Both Levinson and Gallacher pointed out the companies are crossselling the service to their clients, who share a common background. “We have over 350 clients on the buyside ranging from institutional to boutique,” said Gallacher. “Our intention is to open the equity solution to clients across the gamut.” POST-TRADE SWIFT survey: Regulatory reporting, manual confirms top risk, cost sources 08 Regulatory reporting requirements and the use of manual confirms are the top two sources of risk and cost to firms in the area of posttrade, according to a survey recently released by SWIFT. The utility’s Post-Trade Survey 2013 indicated that, among global respondents identifying as brokerdealers, investment managers or custodians and outsourcers, while regulation is the number one driver for automation, regulatory reporting was identified as the number one source of risk and cost for firms in the current environment by the largest number of respondents. The use of manual confirmations came in second place as the top concern. The survey also focused on the affirmation process, highlighting that the process has not been widely adopted by firms in certain asset classes. For example, in responding to a question as to whether more than 75% of trades were positively affirmed using either central or local matching methods, respondents indicated that the practice is least common in commodities and over-the-counter derivatives. That is in spite of the fact that an overwhelming majority noted positive affirmation positively affects timely settlement. In order to support automated affirmations, broker-dealers and custodians were revealed as using the highest number of systems (three each) to support the process, while investment managers use just two. The report indicates the number of systems used by the different groups may be inversely correlated. “As investment managers consolidate their processes on fewer systems, broker-dealers and outsourcing providers can be forced to spread out ever more widely,” the report states. More systems mean more fragmented processes, higher costs and potentially higher risks.” TECHNOLOGY Confluence develops global expense offering Confluence, a data management vendor for the investment management space, is in the process of developing a new version of its recently released expense processing platform designed for more global use, according to Paul Soltis, North American market manager. The vendor released its first expense processing platform for mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, insurance funds and Ucits in May. The platform, Unity NXT Expense Processing, automates and standardizes the process and allows fund administrators to access the application at home or abroad. Soltis told WSL a new version of the offering is in development in a move to provide more global appeal. “It will be multilingual, multi-currency, it will be global by design,” he explained. The effort to incorporate more visible global offerings is a theme for the vendor and one that is being incorporated across different aspects of the business, Soltis said. As an example, he cited the recent acquisition of Data Agent, announced earlier this month. While a significant element of the acquisition was to give Confluence a line in to the alternative fund space, the offering will also help its clients deal with global regulations, such as AIFMD. Soltis also said the vendor is working on an offering to support shareholder reporting requirements. The offering will be intended to provide more control and eliminate risk inherent in the process, he said. TECHNOLOGY Thomson Reuters looks to expand fixed income support Thomson Reuters is expanding its support of automated fixed income trading in the coming year, according to Claudio Salinardi, head of fixed income. The vendor most recently added cash bond prices from Société Générale to its multi-asset electronic trading platform in a bid to offer as much bond liquidity as possible, according to Salinardi. The platform offers data on 26,000 unique debt issues across government, agency corporate, covered and sovereign bonds. In a response e-mailed to WSL, Salinardi said the availability of highquality, dealer-attributable prices is key to automated trading. “In 2014, Thomson Reuters plans to provide further support for this automation across fixed income markets,” he added. Salinardi also noted some of the need for the offering is being driven by fragmentation that is coming into the space. With corporate bond dealer holdings ramping down and a subsequent reduction in liquid-