{"id":4484,"date":"2017-01-20T05:40:00","date_gmt":"2017-01-20T05:40:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/capital-markets-operations-perfect-storm_012017\/"},"modified":"2017-01-20T05:40:00","modified_gmt":"2017-01-20T05:40:00","slug":"capital-markets-operations-perfect-storm_012017","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/capital-markets-operations-perfect-storm_012017\/","title":{"rendered":"Capital Markets Operations Blueprint Explores the Perfect Storm for Services"},"content":{"rendered":"

We started off the new year at HfS with the launch of the Capital Markets Operations Blueprint last week. This is our first coverage of the key dynamics in capital markets and furthers our BFS research on the back of the HfS Mortgage As-a-Service Blueprint mid-last year.<\/p>\n

Policies, politics, and structural market challenges are plaguing capital markets firms, raising the stakes in partnerships with service providers <\/strong><\/p>\n

Going into 2017, we find banks and capital markets firms are cautious as they continue to endure a volatile environment with no signs of letting up. Policy ambiguity across the US and European markets, political uncertainty, and structural market changes continue to plague the capital markets industry. Meanwhile, low interest rates and as a consequence, bank margins across sectors have created new waves of cost pressures. Capital markets firms continue to struggle to generate more revenues to counter their rising cost of capital.<\/p>\n

To add to this perfect storm, the revenue-generating aspect of this industry is under fire as well. Capital markets firms have had to abandon categories of products due to new regulations. They are more challenged to attract and retain clients that expect different, digitally enabled levels of service with faster turnaround times across the ecosystem, particularly in wealth management. As more big-ticket fines and penalties hit the headlines, public confidence and trust are continuing to erode, and at the same time, the competitor landscape is expanding for the biggest players with the continued success of community banks, regional banks, and fintech disruptors.<\/p>\n

Overall, banks and capital markets firms are severely challenged in predicting strategies for long-term sustainability in a changing market and need to have several strategies in play to meet short-term cost pressures. Traditional cost management from cutting back trading desks and providing front-line compensation have not yielded results at the magnitude required to significantly balance profitability.<\/p>\n

As a result, we believe that capital markets firms will undergo large-scale operational transformations in 2017 and beyond.<\/strong><\/p>\n

\u00a0Since the early to mid-2000s, global technology and business services providers have taken over large parts of the back and middle office processes for banks and capital markets clients. They are now in a unique position to help rethink and run more Intelligent Operations as capital markets clients figure out their strategies to tackle these market challenges. Some of the key buyer-service provider dynamics include:<\/p>\n

Back Office Processes Continue to Dominate the Services Landscape: <\/strong>The capital markets operations market started a little over a decade ago with back-office BPO processes offshored to IT service providers. Today, these processes are the majority of work engagements, prominent in 63% of contracts in our analysis. Major service areas include clearing and settlement, corporate actions, reconciliations, fund accounting, collateral management, data management and reporting, investor operations, and product control.<\/p>\n