How do mutual funds and financial services companies ensure delivery essentials of completeness, security, timeliness, responsiveness, consistency, and resiliency? How do they manage challenges to rise above competition and create a point of difference in their frame of reference? The solution is to find IT partners capable of managing these challenges and requisites with a track record of exemplary delivery. An organization’s pursuit of customized and robust systems will ensure a seamless operation that will enrich the experience of end-users—both employees and customers—helping it stand out amidst competition.
US-based open-ended mutual funds are traditionally traded during market hours of 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time (ET). During these hours, investors place trade orders to fund companies via intermediaries and destinations. With the forward pricing rule, fund companies price their purchase and redemption trades of mutual fund units as per the next Net Asset Value (NAV). Once a day, after the trades close at 4:00 p.m. ET, fund managers calculate and report the NAV. Hence, trades placed before close of day are priced at same day’s NAV, while trades received after closing are priced at next day’s NAV. Extended Day Trading in mutual funds refers to trades placed after closing but priced at same day’s NAV. Only a small subset of large investors is eligible for extended day trading. This is critical, as the sheer size and complexity of these transactions warrant several processing steps—adherence to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations—that help in maintaining integrity of financial data and investment security.
Extended day trading has at least two cut-off times that guarantee current day price. Firstly, the trades need to reach trading destinations such as Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC) and Fidelity by respective cut-off times (6:00 a.m. ET for DTCC). Also, trades must reach fund companies from destinations before companies’ fund cut-off times. In either case, trades submitted after cut-off times are priced at the following day’s NAV.
This paper analyzes the complete Extended Day-trade Processing Lifecycle of US-based mutual funds. It focuses briefly on the information technology stack that intermediaries commonly use for end-to-end processing of trades, the challenges, and solutions that can lead them to spatial and business growth.
Information Technology plays a pivotal role in facilitating trade execution and processing. Multiple automated and centralized platforms are used from order entry (purchase, exchanges, and redemption) to order confirmation, registration, and money settlement. Some critical IT systems and platforms in extended day trading are:
TPA Order Aggregation System
Third-Party Administrators (TPAs) use Order Aggregation Systems to amass orders for their client banks in their standard format with basic validations, and refer them to the Order Management System.
Order Management System (OMS)
The trade Order Management System (OMS) receives aggregated orders from TPAs/banks and generates trade orders. The aggregated orders can be of three types:
For sell orders, pricing information is not necessary to generate trade orders. However, for buy or swap/exchange, the OMS retrieves pricing information from the pricing engine to generate corresponding trade orders. On confirmation from fund companies, the OMS also stores pricing information provided by TPAs/banks to identify and manage future discrepancies
Trade orders may or may not be aggregated depending on business needs. Once trade orders are created, the OMS submits these to the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) for processing and submission to fund companies. OMS also creates fund accounting platforms on the basis of which trade orders are submitted to NSCC. Extracts are used for future reconciliation when fund companies confirm trade receipt.
Fund Accounting Platform
The Fund Accounting Platform receives extracts of all trade orders submitted to NSCC, and updates corresponding accounts with types of orders, units, funds, pricing, and other order details. It provides an updated position for assets and cash for each account and interfaces with the settlement platform. It also feeds TPAs and notifies them of trades submitted to fund companies with exact estimate of trades.
National Securities Clearing Corporation’s (NSCC) Fund/SERV Standard
Fund/SERV is the industry standard to process and settle mutual fund transactions. It interfaces with fund companies, banks and trust companies, TPAs, broker/dealers, and other distribution firms. The order generation platform creates trade orders for Fund/SERV in the appropriate (automated and standardized) format. Fund/SERV uses this to place trades with respective fund companies. Once trades are successfully processed by the fund companies, it also confirms back to the order generation platform. Fund/SERV uses a cut-off time of 6:00 a.m. (ET) for extended day trading. Trade orders received later that day are processed on the next day’s NAV.
Settlement Platform
The settlement platform settles each account for asset positions and cash balance at the end of a business day. It receives feed from the Fund Accounting Platform and NSCC.
Some key challenges that financial institutions face in implementing extended trading services solutions are:
Information Technology is transforming capital markets by negotiating challenges and opening up possibilities. Markets are interconnected resulting in ever-emerging and ever-evolving transnational markets and global exchanges. Aggressive growth and accurate processing of high transaction volumes are imperative for financial companies while they strive to deliver an enhanced experience for customers as well as employees.
There is an urgent need to provide mission-critical, flexible, and scalable extended day trading solutions, which support multiple channels and cover different types of trading methodologies—resulting in increased agility and transparency in trading environments. For example, trading platforms that are built as a set of robust Extract, Transform and Load (ETL) workflows to process all inbound files (trade order confirmation, pricing information, etc) and outbound files (trade order files to destination, client notifications, etc.). The workflows can send notifications at every critical stage of the trade order. These notifications are able to provide complete transparency on the status of orders at any time to business users. The workflows provide added functionality to raise B50 requests to set up new fund accounts, and a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for the operations team and system administrators to manage and view the status of orders easily.
Extended Day Trade Lifecycle
An illustration of a typical seamless Extended Day Trade lifecycle is given below:
Solution System Attributes for Seamless Process Flow
The primary requisite for financial intermediaries is a team that has been partnering with leading financial services companies, providing them with trading solutions that support multiple channels, and one that covers an extensive range of trading methodologies.
The organization should be able to help identify, analyze, design, assemble, implement, and maintain solution systems that improve trade processing responsiveness, security, consistency, and resiliency. Offerings must begin with analysis and evaluation of customers’ trade processing environments. Then, by selecting the right set of business processes, they need to enable financial services organizations to manage costs and alleviate risks of transforming trading environments.
In an increasingly competitive marketplace, banking and financial solutions are helping financial firms to develop key differentiators. These solutions are helping deliver new, state-of-the-art systemic capabilities and establishing enduring market credentials. They are also enabling enterprise-wide trade cycle management by leveraging integrated automation of processes—improving efficiency, increasing transaction capacity, and reducing operational and financial risk.
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Vinit Sharma is a Business Solution designer within the Banking and Financial Services practice at Coforge. He has over eight years of experience. His expertise extends to Capital Markets, Corporate Finance, and the Credit Card, and US Mortgage Business.