Reference data (financial markets)

Reference data is a catch all term used in the finance industry to describe counterparty and security identifiers used when making a trade. As opposed to market data the reference data is used to complete financial transactions and settle those transactions. The financial service industry and regulatory agencies have pursued a policy of standardizing the reference data that define and describe such transactions.[1]

At its most basic level, reference data for a simple sale of a stock in exchange for cash on a highly liquid stock exchange that involves a standard label for the underlying security (e.g., its ISIN), the identity of the seller, the buyer, the broker-dealer(s), the price, etc. At its most complex, reference data covers all relevant particulars for highly complex transactions with multiple dependencies, entities, and contingencies.

History

Standardisation efforts

The background for this policy is the risk that transactions fail and are reversed because contractual terms were misunderstood or ambiguous. In addition, the lag between the trade and ultimate settlement of the transaction may include various events that affect various elements of the transaction.

Efforts to standardize reference data are complicated by a number of factors, including:

  • Semantic differences in common terminology
  • The sheer number of data elements that make up transactions
  • Rapidly changing markets, products, and underlying events
  • Static Data
  • Dynamic Data
  • Bounded Data

As a result, work to standardize reference data is broadly considered to be an ongoing effort rather than a series of discrete programs.

Types of Data

There are many fields included in reference data. Some of the most common include:

  • Instrument classification (e.g., large vs small, tenor, region, sector)
  • Sale information (e.g., ISIN, seller identity, buyer, price)
  • Market Identifier Codes (ISO 10383 MIC)
gollark: Well, then you can use those, I guess.
gollark: And you would be disincentivized to hold stock in things, too.
gollark: Hmm. Did you *know* they were going to do that?
gollark: If limited liability was gone, investment in risky things/startups/new businesses/whatever *would* go down a lot, which I think is bad.
gollark: Not so risky that you could lose an *unknowable* amount of money.

See also

References

  1. "Focus on Reference Data". MarketsMedia. July 13, 2012.
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