Telerate Is First Vendor To Carry Morgan's Riskmetrics
CONTENT & FEES
Dow Jones Telerate has become the first market data vendor to offer information from J.P. Morgan & Co.'s Riskmetrics, the firm's newly released -- and free of charge -- risk analysis and data service, which gauges market risk in 15 global bond, currency and equity markets. J.P. Morgan, which introduced the service two weeks ago, has tried hard to position its risk exposure information as the benchmark by which banks, institutional investors and corporations will measure their risk exposure. The firm expects that data from Riskmetrics will soon be making its way to the desktops of numerous financial professionals -- including portfolio managers and analysts.
Riskmetrics makes public J.P. Morgan's own daily estimates on volatilities in the selected markets, as well as correlations for over 300 instruments. The service also reveals the internally developed risk valuation algorithms with which J.P. Morgan calculates exposures in these markets. J.P. Morgan began publishing Riskmetrics Oct. 11. The data is based on the previous day's market close, and is published daily by 10 a.m. Eastern Standard Time.
Though Riskmetrics is available in its entirety on the Internet and H&R Block Co.'s Compuserve online service, Telerate is for the time being displaying only a subset of the entire Riskmetrics database. It is available as pages 17379 through 17384 on the Telerate Digital Page Feed (TDPF). According to a Telerate spokesperson, the vendor aims to transmit Riskmetrics in its entirety next year, incorporating the service into its planned Microsoft Corp. Windows-based Telerate Workstation (TW) standalone terminal service.
Meanwhile, Reuters is also trying to get into the act, but as of yet has been unable to do so. The vendor has plans to post subsets of the Riskmetrics data via its Reuter Monitor service, according to a Reuters spokesperson. "We are working on a technical solution to deliver a subset," says the spokesperson. She declines to elaborate.
'A BIG THING'
A Telerate spokesperson says that the pages of Riskmetrics currently available via TDPF cover "a lot of different instruments -- including equities, foreign exchange and others." The spokesperson says that the number of pages currently being displayed is "pretty much" what Telerate plans to display until such time as the TW is released early next year.
At that point, he says, Telerate users will have "the ability on the Telerate Workstation to access the complete Riskmetrics database and bring it into your terminal and then download it into other applications, such as spreadsheets." The spokesperson says that "there'll be no charge for that either. This is a big thing for Morgan, and for us. There's a lot of interest in this, particularly from portfolio managers and analysts."
A J.P. Morgan official says: "Since it was hard to get initial feedback about what to put up on Telerate, we just took the liberty of offering what we thought people would be most interested in. It was nothing more scientific than that. But we're looking to see what people want."
A J.P. Morgan spokesperson says that Riskmetrics' most likely users are found at mid-sized commercial banks ("who need to estimate the market risk for their bond portfolios"), corporation treasurers ("for similar reasons") and the investment management community (not so much for valuation as for risk estimation). Regarding portfolio managers, the spokesperson says: "By using the volatility and correlation data, they'll be able to estimate how much risk they're taking, either in a single portfolio or across all of their portfolios."
The J.P. Morgan spokesperson says that investment managers may "be more likely to have access to Telerate as opposed to [Compuserve and the Internet], which is why we're making it available on a number of platforms." Morgan's spokesperson declines to specify why Reuters was later to the mark.
The spokesperson says that Riskmetrics to a large degree utilizes information gathered internally at J.P. Morgan to make up the product's volatility and correlation reports. Information such as time series data for all the equity, forex and treasury data used in Riskmetrics comes from J.P. Morgan's internal prices and also from third-party data vendors such as Primark Corp.'s Datastream International Ltd.
The actual data in Riskmetrics includes the one-day and one-month volatilities of 120 government bonds, 180 money market instruments and swaps, 14 currencies and 14 equity indices. Additional information on commodities, mortgage- backed securities and other markets will be added to the list next year.
John Matero, a J.P. Morgan bank associate in the market risk research department headed the firm's efforts to put together a platform able to handle the computing the Riskmetrics service requires.
According to Matero, the Riskmetrics systems group uses four Sun Microsystems Inc. Sparcstation 10s with 96 megabytes of memory each. The four Sparcstations -- one of which is being used as a data server, with the rest serving as calculation engines -- are linked via Ethernet local area network.
SOFTWARE VENDORS
Nine vendors have signed deals with J.P. Morgan to develop commercial application software or services that make use of the Riskmetrics methodology and data sets. These are: Algorithmics Inc., Barra International Inc., C.ats Software Inc., Dow Jones Telerate, Financial Engineering Associates Inc., Price Waterhouse L.P., Quantec Ltd., Reuters' Sailfish Systems Inc. and Wall Street Systems Inc.
The J.P. Morgan spokesperson says that several additional software vendors have approached the firm about creating products that support Riskmetrics, both before and after its release. The spokesperson, however, declines to name these vendors until they provide J.P. Morgan with a release date and a detailed product description.
The spokesperson also says that other software vendors are free to develop their own systems that use the Riskmetrics product free of charge, provided that they inform J.P. Morgan that they are using the trademarked Riskmetrics name.
One point about Riskmetrics that industry sources have been focusing on is the fact that J.P. Morgan is giving it away for free. Industry speculation is mixed as to the firm's motives, but J.P. Morgan's strategy becomes at least a little less surprising when viewed in the context of the increasingly controversial over-the-counter derivatives market (Derivatives Engineering & Technology, Oct. 17). J.P. Morgan officials assert that by promoting the product, they are making the market safer for everyone -- including J.P. Morgan.
Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.
To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@waterstechnology.com or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.waterstechnology.com/subscribe
You are currently unable to print this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@waterstechnology.com
More on Emerging Technologies
This Week: Startup Skyfire launches payment network for AI agents; State Street; SteelEye and more
A summary of the latest financial technology news.
Waters Wavelength Podcast: Standard Chartered’s Brian O’Neill
Brian O’Neill from Standard Chartered joins the podcast to discuss cloud strategy, costs, and resiliency.
SS&C builds data mesh to unite acquired platforms
The vendor is using GenAI and APIs as part of the ongoing project.
Chevron’s absence leaves questions for elusive AI regulation in US
The US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the Chevron deference presents unique considerations for potential AI rules.
Reading the bones: Citi, BNY, Morgan Stanley invest in AI, alt data, & private markets
Investment arms at large US banks are taken with emerging technologies such as generative AI, alternative and unstructured data, and private markets as they look to partner with, acquire, and invest in leading startups.
Startup helps buy-side firms retain ‘control’ over analytics
ExeQution Analytics provides a structured and flexible analytics framework based on the q programming language that can be integrated with kdb+ platforms.
The IMD Wrap: With Bloomberg’s headset app, you’ll never look at data the same way again
Max recently wrote about new developments being added to Bloomberg Pro for Vision. Today he gives a more personal perspective on the new technology.
LSEG unveils Workspace Teams, other products of Microsoft deal
The exchange revealed new developments in the ongoing Workspace/Teams collaboration as it works with Big Tech to improve trader workflows.