Digitalisation has been a hot topic for several years within the post-trade environment, with industry commentators forecasting a revolution on par with the transformation of sales and trading, that years of electronification brought to the front office. But despite all of the posturing and big intentions, little has materially changed outside of pockets of innovation led by start-ups such as Access Fintech trying to drive industry collaboration. Email continues to be the dominant communication tool of choice, with spreadsheets and PDF’s being leveraged on the whole to provide the content to feed exception management processes. And in some cases, faxes still persist for the exchange of confirmations or signed documents that require validation against physical signatory lists.
That is not to say that there isn’t demand for innovation – there is significant pent-up frustration at the C-level around the number of people typically involved in the process – but the lack of significant progress is more a reflection of prioritisation and allocation of resources to drive these agendas. With time and resources, an increasingly scarce commodity for all but the largest global players, the focus for most has been trying to keep on top of the day job. The fragmented operating models that persist for most after a decade of near and far shoring, create an increasing disconnect between senior leadership and those doing the job on the ground. All of this makes the digitalisation agenda a thing to envy for most post-trade leaders.
So, given the complexity of this problem, how will the current situation provide a catalyst for change that a decade of industry cost pressure has been unable to create?
Here are some reasons why.
‘Delivering operational resilience requires firms to take decisive and effective actions, for example by replacing outdated or weak infrastructure, increasing systems’ capacity or addressing key person dependencies.’ FCA
These expectations will force organisations to look hard at capacity constraints and key person or location dependencies (individuals and groups) that have arisen and rethink some of their historic investment decisions. And whilst some commentary reads that this will push a ‘jobs return home’ agenda, we see this as an uninformed opinion on the whole. Near and far shore centres provide well-educated talent pools, capacity and skills that do not exist in the local job market – so Ascendant Strategy does not see a material shift in the global make-up of resourcing. Besides, multi-location sites provide valuable BCP benefits (albeit of little value in a global lockdown). But where the investment decision was based solely on ‘cost of automation’ vs ‘cost of manual processing’ expect to see greater emphasis now being placed on how automation can deliver improved resilience.
The world is faced with a crisis that no one would have predicted 6 months ago – and the focus quite rightly is now tuned to survival. But once this passes and some sort of normality returns, the reflection will start. And it is this process of reflection that will provide opportunities for FinTechs to help capital markets firms accelerate their post-trade digital agendas.
Ascendant Strategy is a specialist post-trade consultancy operating within capital markets. We bring technology and operations together, bringing experienced, practitioner expertise to deliver transformational outcomes for organisations where complexity has overpowered efficiency.
Find out more here at www.ascendant-strategy.com or follow us on Linkedin or twitter @Ascendant_Strat.
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Download “Fintech’s Next Frontier: Data-as-a-Service” our Financial Markets Insights report. In collaboration with Natwest Markets, Maystreet, Euromoney TRADEDATA and Engine, part of The Investment Association, ipushpull explores the importance of Data-as-a-Service in facilitating remote working and accelerating digital initiatives within the financial markets industry.