Research on the post-trade processing practices of private banks in
Singapore has revealed that nearly 60% of private banks in the region
lack back office automation in trade processing. The study was conducted
by InsightAsia Banking & Finance Consulting, a division of InsightAsia
Research Group, that specialises in the Asia Pacific region, and
commissioned by Omgeo, the global standard for post-trade efficiency.
Against a background of the growing importance of Singapore to the
global private banking sector, InsightAsia surveyed a group of
Singapore-based private banks regarding their post-trade processes. The
study focused on a range of issues related to trade processing,
including the effects of the recent financial crisis on the private
banking sector and the current mechanisms that private banks are using
to process trades.
The study showed that nearly a third of private banks continue to
manually carry out trade allocation and confirmation, rather than
processing their trades electronically. Manual processes can make a firm
more vulnerable to trade failure and create a more risk-prone
environment because there is more room for error in comparing trade
details.
Many of the Singapore private bank executives surveyed highlighted the
importance of having efficient and flexible banking and processing
systems as a key area of development. There was general agreement that
higher levels of automation in trade processing would result in a
reduction in operational risk. In fact, of the executives interviewed
from within private banks currently carrying out trade matching in
Singapore, 59% said they either wanted to make improvements to their
system or were in the process of doing so.
“This study suggests that Singapore private banks are becoming
increasingly aware of the benefits of introducing automation into their
back-offices,” said James Drumm, Executive Director, Asia Pacific for
Omgeo. “At present, many private banks operate in a manual environment,
but there is a growing consensus that introducing more automated
processes will significantly decrease their operational and systemic
risk.”
In addition to the findings on electronic trade processing, the study
also found general agreement from the private bank executives
interviewed that, while recent events in financial markets were
unprecedented and posed some challenges to the sector, Asia, and in
particular Singapore, remains a key element in their global expansion
strategies.
Another key finding of the research was that there was almost universal
agreement among executives that the focus on counterparty risk has
increased substantially over the last 12 months, and is likely to
continue in the foreseeable future.
"We conducted this study against the background of the global financial
crisis,” Phillip King, Head, Banking & Finance Consulting for
InsightAsia noted. “The impact of these events at a group level for many
private banks is still ongoing; however the long term growth story in
Asian wealth markets remains intact. The COOs and operations executives
interviewed reveal that Singapore has a solid corps of seasoned
and highly capable professionals in senior roles in its private banking
sector. They are a strong collective asset to the ongoing development of
Singapore as a private banking hub."
About OmgeoSM
Omgeo creates certainty in post-trade operations through the automation
and timely confirmation of the economic details of trades executed
between investment managers and broker dealers. Every day Omgeo enables
an efficient community of more than 6,000 financial services clients in
45 countries to manage matching and exception handling of trade
allocations, confirmations, and settlement instructions. Omgeo has also
extended its trade lifecycle coverage to include counterparty risk
management, which supports end-to-end collateralization and
reconciliation across multiple asset classes. Leading organizations rely
on Omgeo to help manage an increasingly complex investment industry by
providing operational stability and solutions that complement the focus
on profitability in an era of escalating trade volumes. Across borders,
asset classes, and trade lifecycles, Omgeo is the global standard for
operational efficiency across the investment industry. Formed in 2001,
Omgeo is jointly owned by the DTCC and Thomson Reuters.
For more information about Omgeo, please visit www.omgeo.com.