Friday, May 11, 2012

Part 1 - Our Review of Big Data’s Impact on the Financial Services Industry


Big Data Brings Transparency, one of Wall Street’s Biggest Fears

(Part 1 of 2)
So last week we were a bit critical of Big Data, today we are going to share one of the many reasons why we love it.  Big Data is shaking up many industries and perhaps banking more than most!  When referring to the 99% regarding the Occupy Wall Street movement we personally think about failed banking oversight, government bailout packages, recession catalysts and excessive banking compensation.   Clearly there is room for improvement in banking fairness in the eyes of the 99%.  We think availability as well as proper utilization of Big Data in the Finance industry will overall help the 99% and we will tell you why in 1 word… TRANSPARENCY!  In many cases, Wall Street thrives on lack of transparency in order to hoard the little financial information available, and uses that info to profit against the 99%.
7 years ago, Big Data’s first major impact on Wall Street began, when Stock exchanges began to migrate towards electronic trading.  Average transaction fees went down, many specialist trading firms closed or consolidated, and the online brokerage model was able to thrive.  Big Data made this possible because it made information rapidly available to near automate the market making process.  These drastic improvements made possible by Big Data regarding transparency were only the beginning…
The “Subprime” Financial Crisis created an even Greater Demand for Big Data!
After the Subprime blow-up, increased regulatory standards were rolled out worldwide.   Risk management and process controls around financial services became a priority, and demanded better utilization of data.  Now, major investment banks have bulked up their risk management systems to a point where regulators are somewhat content as the regulation evolves.  The Big Data within major banks was not being utilized effectively and regulators needed to step in to put a universal risk framework in place to do so.  According to the notorious McKinseyBig Data Study that we love to refer to, Securities Trading and Financial Services have now generated and manage some of the largest numerical/text based databases in the world!

Big Data’s Next Major Impacts on Banking & Investments
Together with a new breed of cloud-based portfolio analytics and performance management solutions, data aggregators are providing an IT solution to a client service problem. Key to these alliances is the ability to turn Big Data insights into a beautiful, dashboard-like view of portfolio performance so that both portfolio managers and their clients get a complete view of a portfolio’s performance and have total confidence in the completeness of the information that underlies the big picture.”  SOURCE  -Andrew Peddar, CEO StatPro America
This is Transparency, exactly what legitimate value investors love and banks fear!  As Big Data in a useable format becomes quickly and cheaply available to investors and financial markets, the OTC (“Over-the-Counter”) business model is being constantly questioned for more standardized asset classes.  These OTC securities are traded outside of a formal stock exchange because the products are specialized and often need sales people to interact with buyers.  Some asset classes that still remain OTC are corporate bonds, municipal bonds and many of the troublesome mortgage bonds that were at the heart of the credit bubble. 
Big Data is starting to Revolutionize the traditionally profitable OTC space for major Banks...Stop back to find out why in Part 2 of our Financial Review in the next couple days!

2 comments:

  1. Definitely interesting. You always read articles portraying high frequency trading in a negative light, but it's interesting to read about the positive implications as well - more transparent pricing and lower transaction costs. Does your article include algorithmic trading also? Looking forward to part two.

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  2. Thanks Tara, we will get to that in Part 2, please stay tuned!!

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