Cadis Software is a UK-based company (with offices in New York,
San Francisco, Hong Kong and Luxembourg) that provides enterprise
data management (EDM) solutions for the buy side of capital
markets. That is, it provides data integration, data quality,
master data management (MDM) and lightweight data warehousing for
this sector. The interesting question is why you need specialised
facilities in this market: why couldn’t you do
what you need with IBM, for example?
There are several answers to this question. The first is that the
data sources used are not just conventional back-office systems
but also market data from the likes of Reuters and Bloomberg and
you will not typically get connectors for this sort of data from
the pure-play data integration vendors.
The second is that there are specific data quality issues on the
buy side. To begin with, Cadis validates incoming data before you
can apply data quality rules. This is akin to data profiling in
the sense that you are assessing the quality of the data and
generating exception reports. Next, you may not have enough
information to tell whether two financial instruments are
actually the same or, worse, if one instrument is equivalent to
multiple other instruments. So you need some specific
capabilities that won’t be in a standard data
quality tool. More generally, Cadis uses probabilistic and fuzzy
matching to automate matching processes, as well as providing
manual capabilities and exception workflow. The company also
provides pre-built rules for matching within financial services
environments, using standards where they exist (they
don’t always: there are no standards for
derivatives, for example).
Third, the master data management in this market is rather
different, as what you ultimately obtain is a golden copy of
positions, securities and accounts/counterparties, which may in
turn make use of golden copies of things like prices and assets.
In other words, not only are there multiple domains but they all
interact so that you can’t really consider them
independently or implement them separately, as you would do in
most MDM environments.
Finally, there is the data warehousing. This you could do using a
third party product. What Cadis provides is primarily web-based
reporting. One notable ability is that it can do transactional
cubing on the fly. However, the warehouse is not intended for
heavy-duty analytics. The data integration capabilities provided
by Cadis can be used to load data into a third-party data
warehouse where appropriate.
On top of all this the whole emphasis of the suite of products
(which you license individually or en masse, as required) is that
the people who understand the data should be the people who
manage the data. In other words: business people not IT. This is
the direction in which the leading data integration vendors are
moving but Cadis is several steps ahead.
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