US brokerage and bank operations and compliance managers will soon have to face an onerous back-office and legal challenge — figuring out how to make short sellers pay back $2.74 plus interest for each share of Dole Foods shorted more than three years ago. That money would be used to compensate beneficial investors who are considered the […]
Making Every Proxy Vote Count is Hard Work
An investor casts its vote at an annual or other corporate meeting, but has no way of knowing whether it was actually received and counted. It could be rejected or even partially accepted, which defeats the purpose of casting the vote in the first place. While the US Securities and Exchange Commission has left market […]
Northern Trust Minds the Corporate Actions Gap
A successful investment strategy is about more than just buying and selling the right stocks at the right price at the right time. It also depends on picking the best option when it comes to voluntary corporate actions or being able to recognize a bad decision after the fact. Northern Trust is helping its asset […]
Depository Reforms Russian Corporate Actions Risk
Sketchy information on annual meeting agendas or corporate actions announcements is not going to plague investors in Russia equities in the future. Nor will fund managers risk losing money as many do today, because the operational difficulties discourage them from participating. Russia’s corporate actions reform has given the country’s national securities depository National Settlement Depository (NSD) the […]
Fund Operations Managers Weather UK’s Brexit Storm
While the UK and European Union leaders will have two years to come up with a gameplan for how the UK will separate from the European Union, middle and back-office operations professionals at fund management shops are taking it one day at a time during extreme market volatility. The UK’s legal limbo has caused higher trading […]
Custodian Banks: New Landscape, New Strategies
A new research report authored by Morgan Stanley and consultancy Oliver Wyman has resurrected the debate over how some of the world’s largest custodian banks will need to rethink their time-honored strategy. Gathering more assets from more clients won’t be enough to sustain profitability. Earnings are under pressure from low interest rates and a historical […]
Johannesburg in Final Sprint to T+3 Settlement (Updated)
(Editor’s Note: This article was updated on February 29 to reflect the JSE’s announcement on February 26 that it had selected July 11 as the go-live day for T+3.) South Africa is in the last lap of a longstanding project to shave two days off its current five day settlement cycle, even though the […]
Fund Transfer Agents: SEC Toughening the Rules
Providers of shareholder recordkeeping services for US mutual funds and non-equity accounts could soon face more regulatory oversight if the US Securities and Exchange Commission has its way. The SEC’s lengthy concept release issued late last year suggests that the US regulatory agency wants rules to keep up with the changing times. To that end, […]
Harmonizing ISO 20022 Messages: Only Best Efforts Apply
Understanding unfamiliar accents and dialects can be hard, even if you come from the same country and supposedly speak the same language. Imagine how users of ISO 20022-compliant messages must feel as they struggle to process the current variants of the up-and-coming messaging standard. Their solution: create ISO harmonization groups and hope they can reach […]
Automating Corporate Actions: Fund Managers Trail
The more things change the more they stay the same when it comes to corporate actions processing. Although financial firms as a whole are adopting more automation to communicate with each other and investors on income and dividend payments as well as reorganizations such as mergers, tender offers and takeovers, fund managers are trailing their sell-side peers, […]