Posts Tagged ‘Analytics’

Using Compliance as a Spur for Innovation

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

This article also published at the National Mortgage Bankers Association at: http://www.mortgagebankers.org/tools/FullStory.aspx?ArticleId=21965#full

Regulations and oversight have become synonymous with death and taxes across FSI. For many organizations and individuals, compliance with the new Frank-Dodd Act (FDA) — SEC, Federal Reserve, CFTC, Treasury, and FDIC — is a burden and an intrusion against their existing business models and practices.

As evidenced by the positions that, “Dodd-Frank fails to meet test of our times[1],” and “Greenspan is wrong: we can reform finance[2],” it appears that the changes to financial code of conduct and actions are far from concluded.

Yet, as is often the case with sweeping regulatory compliance actions (e.g., SOX), rule adherence can promote silver linings of unintended consequences if properly assessed and implemented (i.e., xBRL, system rationalization, process efficiencies, data standardization, and even risk assignment).

Moreover, with 2011 estimates ranging from no increases for IT to widespread cancelations of discretionary projects to meet compliance requirements, the cost of adhering to FDA will not be zero-sum when addressing the interconnected components (see Figure 1).

Compliance can provide a non-traditional innovation spur to alter organizational behaviors especially within the once rigid back-office practices and processes. A few preliminary, optimistic estimates put the savings after subtracting compliance costs from zero to a net gain of 10% to 15%.

As FSI organizations begin reviewing specific rules from the aforementioned governing agencies across all the interconnected Titles of FDA, there are discrete roadmaps being created to assist organizations seeking to use one-off compliance initiatives (e.g., reporting, governance, and data management) as leverage for broader corporate innovations and greater returns.

Enterprise vs. Department Approaches

As with most regulatory proposals or actions, there is a rush to understand “what it means to me?” What does it do to the IT and business budgets? When do I have to have it? How can conformity be assured and insured? Can it be avoided or mitigated? The last thing many decision makers believe is that compliance mandates can hold any redeeming value for efficiency and innovation.

In a rush to “get it done” the costs of regulatory implementation rise across siloed initiatives – a range of 15% to 45% over centrally controlled compliance program offices. This range is in line with prior norms, but below the massive burdens and audit fees actually incurred under the SOX initiatives (e.g., permanent yearly audit increases from 60% to 390% of pre-SOX spend levels were commonly experienced). When examined from a polar perspective, differences between the two approaches can be understood (see Figure 2).

Within the real estate, housing and mortgage segments, the cost of compliance is viewed as a cost with little or no redeeming benefit to the greater efficiency of the organization or its changing consumer behaviors. If we leave the “good” or “bad” debate to those lobbying for change and focus attention on how to change efficiently (regardless of whether we agree with the regulations or not), differences in approaches can yield essential ROI and CAPEX leverage. Additionally, when considering FASB accounting changes and proposals, the need for tightly integrated compliance changes becomes increasingly important.

Figure 2

Department Approach: For large, intertwined regulatory actions (like FSA), enterprises disperse the Title language and rules into silos of existing operations. Whereas compartmentalization is good for segmentation reuse (like OO), without context and proactive designs, departments; a) recreate substantial portions of data repositories needed for increased reporting, b) fail to capitalize on standards, and c) consume computing resources (internal or cloud) that could be leveraged – avoiding costs, improving transparency, and increasing auditability of the result. One-off departmental approaches are common in organizational cultures with autonomous, decentralized decision making and full P&L accountability.

Enterprise Approach: With the acceptance that risks have not been fully assigned or understood, senior leadership teams have increasingly implemented top-down programs of work aligned to common compliance architectures. Using a cohesive and comprehensive approach, synergies of programs can be designed, while creating a framework for regulatory auditability and reuse. Lessons and best-practices from this approach are found across prior SOX initiatives. Characteristics are integrated programs, common architectures, and leadership goals tied to individual and organizational performance.

As mentioned, there are growing and varied number of summarizations and checklists surrounding Frank-Dodd – Morrison and Foerster, Information Week, PwC, and even the MBA – the challenge is finding which ones have efficacy across the established success parameters aligned to risk tolerances (as indicated in Figure 1).

Best-Practices and Lessons Learned

Increasingly acknowledged, regulations are about yesterday – not tomorrow’s business models, consumers, or marketplace realities. The pendulum of regulatory changes tends to swing to extremes before finding a model that works – or is proven deplorably weak as the world recognized too late shaving off trillions in global wealth in the process. FDA is an example of trying to plan for the “unplanable.”

It is precisely this regulatory engineering necessity (i.e., more regulations, stress testing, safe and soundness) which dictates a tightly-coupled series of sensible innovation approaches reactive to external requirements and pressures. As presented earlier in Figure 1, we can establish a model for compliance innovation best practices encapsulated by program management disciplines. Let’s consider just a few of them:

· Architecture: A series of interconnected blueprints (e.g., retention, reuse, reporting) must be proactively designed to accommodate not only today’s requirements, but anticipation of tomorrow’s practices. It acts as a “filter” for technology innovations and approvals.

· Data: As a baseline for compliance, it represents the most stable and reusable portion of any enterprise compliance program, and one of the best sources of leverage (e.g., warehouses, repositories, and taxonomies).

· Governance: A critical aspect needed for on-going validity and cost management across data, technology, and operational methods necessary for market facing reporting and transparency.

· Infrastructure (technology): Is a by-product of integrated data and architectural building blocks tied to process and governance requirements. It is the least stable of the compliance building blocks.

· Outsourcing: With multiple back-office functions outsourced, changes needed to contractual relationships can increase costs and tensions. However, those relationships set up under gain-sharing arrangements, may yield improved returns over mature captives. Leverage of outsourcing best-practices (honed across multiple clients with similar needs) can shorten lead times, while delivering commonality of architectures and data reusability.

· Reporting and Analytics: This is where many organizations start – and work back into new compliance requirements. However, failure to incorporate feedback as part of a closed-loop approach (i.e., adaptability) can yield false-positive conformance when assessed against risks – resulting in stop-start efforts, rework, and poor returns.

· Risk Management: The goals set for by the spirit and letter of the laws, provide the success criteria for any compliance mandates. The “work-breakdown” of the requirement into practice, demands auditability of the rules and flows to ensure not just initial conformance, but for repeatability, disclosures, and replication.

Additionally, with the incorporation of best-practices and lessons learned from within and across industry segments, compliance innovation can be used to address on-going regulatory inconsistencies and emerging political agendas.

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In conclusion, with the final disposition of the GSE’s still under debate, any approach taken to deal with sweeping regulatory compliance such as FDA should be constructed for even more pending changes to the compliance structures.

History has proven time-and-again, the only certainty about regulations for FSI operations is that there will always be more – not less. Today, there are an estimated 20,000 state, federal, and local regulations – up nearly 30% since 2004.

The success of our compliance efforts are more than checking-the-boxes, submitting the data, or passing an audit – due in no small part to changing global wealth and shifting finance “guidance” from Asia. For domestic business to be sustainable, compliance innovation must become a goal of the corporate agenda and a guiding principle for IT budgetary efforts.


[1] “Dodd-Frank Fails to Meet Test of our Times,” Alan Greenspan, Financial Times, March 29, 2011

[2] “Greenspan is Wrong: We Can Reform Finance,” Barney Frank, Financial Times, April 3, 2011

ABS – Are YOU Prepared for a Revised Regulation AB?

Monday, July 19th, 2010

By Mark P. Dangelo

www.Innovative-Relevance.com

 

Lenders want to lend.  Consumers want to buy.  Investors want to invest.  Governments want tax revenue and GDP growth.  Politicians and their appointees, let’s face it, want politics.

Generically, it sounds very familiar, pro-consumption, and mainstream capitalistic.  Historically, when put into practice across the financial services supply chain, it has been the growth formula for developed countries since the end of World War II.  That is at least until March 2008, when “financial engineering” designed to mitigate risks exposed systemic, seismic regulatory shocks that erased over $20 trillion in global wealth, while simultaneously increasing sovereign debts. 

Now, with financial reform passed, many assume that the vast uncertainties surrounding markets, assets, and corporations should close a chaotic chapter in our historical timelines.  But what about pending updates to existing regulations?  Weren’t they “closed out” as well? 

As the summer brings reflection, let us examine the backdrop for the proposed Regulation AB (REG AB) revisions, the rationale for REG AB, and a brief review of the extensive changes out for comment.  Oh, by the way, the short answer is no, there are many more regulatory “adjustments” still in the works.

The Stage for REG AB Revisions

It is quite possible, if not highly probable, that the U.S. economic outlook will languish for at least another two years.  With high unemployment stoking a steady stream of public and private loss mitigation actions, published and stealth home inventories will rise, as real household incomes will potentially stagnate and potentially drop for over 90% of the population.  At the risk of upsetting the optimists and those longing for a return to the good-old days, the freewheeling, frivolous consumer of old is dead.

The once stoic trophy of household debt funded by rising real estate prices is now replaced with disillusionment and reduction.  The lemming investments of “me-too,” which created the largest loss of capital in history, have been replaced with a government of business as usual — all underpinned by securitized assets “guaranteed” by entities in receivership. 

True, the markets and the consumer are improving – but that improvement is hardly robust and not assured.  The Fed is once-again nervous, the markets are manic-depressive, and the consumers and homeowners are still seeking hope.  The omnipotent economy has improved from its worst – but will it last or is it even architected for sustainability?  What a difference an economic quarter makes.

It was early in the second quarter of 2010, against the prospect of a more promising future, the SEC released, “… significant revisions to Regulation AB and other rules regarding the offering process, disclosure and reporting for asset-backed securities.”  Spanning 667 pages, the implications of these proposed changes are far reaching and their compliance using new information captured within a repurposed EDGAR will have a pronounced impact on operating processes and business models for years to come.

REG AB Rationale

Come August 2, 2010, the comment period surrounding the proposed revisions to numerous 17 CFR (code of federal regulations) parts and sections will end.  It is anticipated on that by the end of 2010, some form of these new revisions and demands for private securitization (i.e., ABS, asset backed securities) will be made law. 

Pushing aside politics and headlines, without the creation of new ABS issues and markets comprised of transparent and liquid asset-backed private securitizations, mortgage banking and real estate will potentially languish for another decade.  Without faith in quality, non-government guaranteed ABS instruments, investors will continue to refocus their investment monies elsewhere.

But will these regulatory revisions succeed?  What will be the net burden and ROI?  Has the SEC with the REG AB changes articulated a critical set of enablers needed to entice investors to open their strategies to more than government-backed assets?

For those who remember, REG AB was first approved back in January 2005.  Now with the lingering crisis two years old, the SEC in their REG AB revisions states, “These proposals are designed to improve investor protection and promote more efficient asset-backed markets.”

Let’s take a cursory examination of the 667 pages of disclosures, new rules, eligibility, obligations, reports, and officer certifications.  

Parts, Sections, and Paragraphs

What stands out in the revisions first and foremost are the data fields proposed for RMBS’s and the new use of EDGAR for source code submission of cash waterfall projections. 

Regarding RMBS, the revisions declares, “We are proposing 137 data points for ABS backed by residential mortgages. The staff has surveyed the data and definitions provided by the organizations … to require additional data fields … on information already typically provided by sellers to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac or likely to be collected by participants in Project RESTART.”  With additional mentions of the OCC, OTS, MERS, and MISMO, the data field specifics are described in detail starting in Table 2 and running for 30 pages.

Regarding the use of EDGAR, two statements within the SEC revisions stand out.  First, “Because we believe that asset-level data should be provided to investors and all market participants in a form that facilitates data analysis, we are also proposing to require that asset-level data be filed on EDGAR in XML format. 

This statement goes beyond the initial filing and may include the need for updated information to ensure timeliness of information within mandatory periodic reports.  Or as stated in the SEC revision document, “We are proposing 151 data points for periodic reports for ABS backed by residential mortgages.

Secondly, EDGAR of the future may be importing waterfall cash projections for RMBS issues in Python.  Under the proposed requirement, the filed source code, when downloaded and run by an investor, must provide the user with the ability to programmatically input the user’s own assumptions regarding the future performance and cash flows from the pool assets, including but not limited to assumptions about future interest rates, default rates, prepayment speeds, loss-given-default rates, and any other necessary assumptions … The waterfall computer program must also allow the use of the proposed asset-level data file that will be filed at the time of the offering and on a periodic basis thereafter.

The complexities and implications of the revisions are numerous, and it is more than likely an organization will require specialized legal guidance to navigate the regulation in its final form.  However, what is apparent already is that an entire new class of technologies, analytics, and value-added services will spring from these revisions – at the same time taking current proprietary information solutions and offerings into the public domain. 

As stated several years ago in this column, the reverse financial supply chain is now gaining increased efficacy — when contrasted to the historical forward approach.  Profitable survivability for private ABS issuers and those supplying mortgage assets appears to be dependent on the ability to navigate from the investor requirements back into the consumer.

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Yes, it is true.  None of us like regulations or the compliance mandates that follow them into practice.  But, out of all the market concerns and anxieties that the government has gone awry, will anyone be willing to tackle the disposition of the GSE’s absent a private and functioning ABS marketplace?  

Are we just hoping that any GSE remediation’s post midterms won’t bring the lending markets to a complete standstill once again?  Without new, private ABS issues, especially in CMBS and RMBS, where will the liquidity come from for lending to consumer and corporate customers?

So, if we don’t like the proposed revisions, our window of response to the SEC’s comment period is rapidly closing.  In their defense, this regulator is asking for feedback on a lot of questions and potential market concerns. 

In the end, it appears, our organizations’ need to be prepared for new process, technology, analytical, and procedural requirements before 2011 arrives — as some form of an updated REG AB will be likely issued.