By all appearances, it’s back to square one for US corporate issuers when it comes to dealing with the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation and the manner in which it imposes minor or more severe restrictions on a newly public company accessing some or all of its services. Any possible future changes in DTCC’s adjudication of so-called […]
Europe’s T+2 Settlement: Bond Trades Hardest Hit?
With about thirty European countries moving to a two-day settlement cycle next month, concern is starting to mount that the fixed-income market will trail its equities counterpart in meeting the shorter timetable, leaving fund managers and broker-dealers to pay a heftier cleanup bill than initially anticipated. Securities depositories responsible for settling domestic and cross-boder transactions say that they […]
Russia Sanctions: Narrow Focus Makes Compliance Trouble
Asset managers have to deal with trading restrictions against countries on U.S. or foreign sanctions lists every day. Trading with certain countries or in issues from certain companies is forbidden, period. The black and white requirements are clear to understand so they are easy to follow. Not so, when it comes to the new sanctions imposed by the U.S. government […]
AIFMD’s Depositary Lite: Handy Option With Limited Lifespan?
It’s lite, but is it right? That’s the question, some fund managers should be asking themselves about which business model they use when selecting a depositary to perform critical post-trade services under the new European Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive (AIFMD), a regulatory initiative which enables cross-border marketing of alternative funds in EU countries. Given […]
Collateral Management: Is Access Really King?
When it comes to managing collateral, fund managers can just forget about all the doomsday talk of a shortfall. There is enough to go around — and to fulfill a multitude of regulatory requirements — if only it could be easier to access it. Or so says a new study supported by the US Depository […]
EMIR: Gaining Control of Old Errors and New Requirements
EMIR, it’s short for European Market Infrastructure Regulation. It has also become a four-letter word for fund managers struggling to fulfill reporting requirements. About five months after the effective date for fund managers and broker dealers to send details of trades executed on exchange-listed and over-the-counter swap transactions to recognized trade repositories, fund managers are bemoaning the number […]
October 8: The Witching Day for European Settlement
With at least ten European markets set to implement a two-day settlement cycle on October 6, financial firms need to get ready to complete more than just one goal. They should brace themselves for a double-duty workday on October 8, warn settlement experts. That’s when they will have to settle trades in equities in at […]
AIFMD and UCITS V: Custodians Under the Gun to Monitor Subcustodians
Global custodians always claimed to be selective about who they did business with. After all, billions if not trillions of dollars worth of client assets are at stake. Well now they have to be even more cautious about who they have selected as their subcustodians or local agent banks across the globe, and many are […]
DTCC’s Issuer Chills: Unfreezing Sparks Debate
Chills typically precede colds or fevers, which can be treated through medication. But when the chills are related to cancellation of settlement and other services by the US market infrastructure Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. (DTCC), they can be as deadly as the Bubonic plague, say critics, who are now battling the efforts of its […]
Middle Office Takes Center Stage in T+2
Once the unsung sibling of the front and back office, the middle-office could finally get its long overdue recognition as the US prepares to shorten its trade settlement cycle from three days to two. Squeezed between traders praised for making lucrative deals and operations experts at the end of the line moving cash and securities around to meet settlement obligations, […]