AFME published a new report, Industry utilities: a perspective for capital markets, setting out potential future opportunities for utilities use across the capital markets, as well as the challenges preventing utilities from coming to market. The report lays out best practice principles for developing utilities for the industry, providing guidance for market participants, as well as supervisors and regulators.
The report highlights that ‘utilities for capital markets’ are a way for all participants – from financial firms to supervisors – to pool resources and capabilities and to collaborate in order to achieve benefits of efficiency, scale and cost saving.
Report findings:
Utilities can provide capital markets participants with cost and efficiency savings, enhanced risk management opportunities and scalability. They offer a way for participants to collaborate on areas of mutual interest and to realise shared benefits in areas such as identification (KYC), post trade and servicing (reference data), and data aggregation (regulatory reporting). The report highlights that these functions are currently costly and complex to manage and would benefit from increased standardisation.
However, utilities are complex by nature and there are barriers which can prevent both current and future utilities from coming to market, delivering the expected savings or from benefiting the industry in the long-term.
Common barriers for utilities:
- Internal investment factors – where financial institutions look at a utility on an individual basis, rather than as an industry-wide offering, or where funding limitations may prevent firms from investing with a long-term horizon;
- External regulatory factors – where the ability to invest in utilities may be limited by pressure on capital markets participants to focus resources on meeting their regulatory requirements, where the third-party liability associated with using a service may result in a lack of appetite to adopt it or where regulators have yet to provide guidance that a utility would be acceptable;
- Transformation – where complex operational structures or the burden of legacy technology may restrict moving to a utility;
- Operation – where firms may be reluctant to ‘give up’ control to a third-party or where security risk could be increased owing to the fact that utilities can lead to a concentration of a specific industry function or service.
Creating Industry Standards
AFME believes that harmonized standards are critical for increasing the consistency, interoperability and participation levels of utilities. Greater collaboration across financial institutions, policymakers, regulators and third-party providers is needed to address many of the barriers to utilities.
AFME’s report identifies eight principles that aim to increase the adoption and benefit of utilities. These principles cover: governance, transparency, compliance, standards, interoperability, scale, economic sustainability and market efficiency.