Global Custodian Fall 2018 | Page 77

[ S U R V E Y | A G E N T B A N K S I N M A J O R M A R K E T S ] Belgium BNP Paribas Securities Services The French bank is well-entrenched in Belgium. It services domestic global custody clients as well as foreign sub-custody and clearing customers and divides the work between local op- erations and its hubs elsewhere in Europe. The sizeable number of inbound respondents that have assessed the bank are pleased with the people, the relationship and the risk, but are clearly looking for economies. This is not surprising. Two years have elapsed since Euroclear Belgium migrated to the TARGET2-Se- curities (T2S) settlement platform operated by the European Central Bank (ECB), but the details of the scoring of the major European direct custody and clearing network in this market suggests the anticipated savings in cross-border settlement costs have yet to materialise here. Nor, judging by these scores, are custodians yet delivering the improvements to the management of liquidity and collateral that were promised at the advent of T2S – in short, reductions in the amount of cash and collateral required to settle trades – despite the introduction of a single cash account spanning multiple markets and an automated collateralisation service. Deutsche Bank A relatively small number of clients pass a less-than-stellar verdict on the local performance of the German bank. But local perceptions matter less than the client experience of the wider European custody platform Deutsche developed as markets in Europe migrated to the T2S settlement platform. Deutsche Bank was among the first to adapt its operating model to the new dis- pensation created by the phased transition to T2S, joining forces with Euroclear France to pioneer for a major global custodian an innovative solution to the post-T2S problem of the disjunction between settlement and asset servicing. The detailed scores for Belgium suggest that, whatever T2S has added in terms of settle- ment efficiency, the new European custody platform has not yet translated into lower settlement costs or savings in capital and collateral. It has also added nothing in asset servicing. KBC Securities Services In the core services of managing accounts, setting trades and servicing assets, KBC is keeping clients happy. The small number that have contributed to the survey also like KBC as a counterpar- ty, though they think it could do more to help on the price of cash and collateral as well as the services themselves. On the human side, they are less gruntled. “Always helpful when contacted,” writes one client, but the score for client service is respectable rather than resplendent, and a second respondent is dismayed to have had “hardly any contact.” A third is more specific. “Respons- es are sometimes not deeply investigated and out of scope,” writes a respondent. “Response time is high and reactivity not so high.” Technology and innovation are clearly issues. However, having functioned for several years as the independent brokerage arm of the Flemish bank, KBC Securities Services was from this summer integrated with the wider investment bank, giving the custody and clearing group access to additional technological resources as well as offering clients potential synergies. WEIGHTED AVERAGE SCORES BNP Paribas Deutsche Bank KBC Securities Services Market Average Global Average Market share (% of responses) 68% 18% 14% Relationship management 5.50 5.04 5.56 5.43 5.20 Client service 5.66 Account management 5.42 4.64 5.75 5.51 5.40 5.17 6.48 5.54 5.44 Asset safety Risk management 5.42 5.81 6.71 5.68 5.68 5.52 6.01 5.39 5.56 5.46 Liquidity management 4.94 6.25 5.68 5.16 4.89 Regulation and compliance 5.62 5.24 6.18 5.62 5.64 Innovation 5.60 4.25 5.61 5.41 5.18 Asset servicing 4.98 5.21 5.90 5.16 5.09 Pricing 4.91 4.34 5.18 4.93 4.82 Technology 5.31 5.52 5.09 5.30 5.28 Cash management and FX 4.10 5.55 4.00 4.15 4.25 Total 5.26 5.23 5.70 5.32 5.24 Fall 2018 globalcustodian.com 77