Tag Archives: SDR

Sapient Global Markets Facilitates Compliance Reporting with DTCC's Swap Data Repository

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Sapient Global Markets Facilitates Compliance Reporting with DTCC’s Swap Data Repository

Sapient’s Compliance Management and Reporting System Drives Efficiencies across all Asset Classes for Required SDR Reporting

BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Sapient Global Markets has today announced its Compliance Management and Reporting System (CMRS) will be offered for customers connecting to The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) Swap Data Repository (SDR) reporting. CMRS provides firms with a complete solution for more efficiently and effectively meeting regulatory reporting commitments.

Regulations, such as the Dodd-Frank Act, European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) and the Regulation on Energy Market Integrity and Transparency (REMIT), are increasing reporting requirements for firms in the capital and commodity markets. Sapient’s CMRS allows firms to collate vast amounts of data from disparate systems, translate it into the destination message format, deliver it directly to regulators and receive acknowledgement messages back from DTCC. Additionally, it provides a single view of compliance regardless of operating model and required reporting venue.

DTCC is focused on delivering to our clients world-wide effective solutions that bring greater cost efficiency, transparency and risk mitigation to the OTC derivatives market. Our global trade reporting platform is designed with an open architecture which allows a wide universe of market participants to gain seamless access to our services which help them meet their regulatory reporting requirements around the world,” said Chris Childs, managing director, Deriv/SERV. “Working with complementary solution providers such as Sapient Global Markets and connecting with CMRS is a prime example of how we look to accomplish just that and jointly help our mutual clients face the challenges of an evolving regulatory landscape.”

Designed for firms doing business across borders, CMRS connects to all major trading and risk management systems that process high volumes of swaps and other OTC products. It is SDR agnostic and is the only system to date that collects and normalizes data from multiple sources before transforming it into formats accepted by regulatory reporting destinations. It is this end-to-end capability that ensures firms concerned with swap data reporting have a single view of compliance regardless of operating model and required reporting venue.

“As regulatory reporting deadlines approach, firms must achieve a single view of their compliance status and a streamlined method of translating data from multiple sources into the format required by regulators,” said Arun Karur, vice president, Sapient Global Markets. “With connection to the DTCC, we are offering our …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why SandRidge Energy Is Not a Dud

By Matt DiLallo, The Motley Fool

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Friend and Fool blogger Robert Zimmerman recently wrote a post entitled, “A Proven Winner, a Likely Winner and a Dud.” While I agree wholeheartedly with his two winners, I have some issues with his calling SandRidge Energy a dud. Let’s drill down into his thesis and why I think he, and investors like him, are letting the company’s spotty past cloud its future potential.

Topping the list of criticisms is CEO Tom Ward and the eerily similar “shenanigans” (as Bob calls them) to Chesapeake Energy‘s CEO Aubrey McClendon. Now, I’ll be quite honest with you, I have my questions, too, and after hearing about McClendon’s early retirement I wondered if Ward might be next. SandRidge, with Ward at the helm, has made many of the same mistakes as Chesapeake in taking on too much debt and betting that borrowed money too heavily on a volatile commodity.  

Both men have profited wildly, and in some cases questionably. It is hard to justify how Chesapeake’s Founder’s Well Program and SandRidge’s conflicted related-party transactions were completely aligned with shareholders. Meanwhile, investors have suffered as shares of both companies have crumbled.

However, the value in the company goes much deeper than management’s ability to destroy it. Bob points out that the all-in strategy to develop the Mississippian Lime will likely be the wrong one. I don’t think the numbers would agree with that.

Sure, given the recently reported poor results from SandRidge’s two royalty trusts, SandRidge Mississippian Trust I and SandRidge Mississippian Trust II  there is reason to be concerned. It’s hard to spin the numbers as SDT‘s sales volumes increased just 1% due to higher natural gas production and slightly lower oil production. This led SDT to produce a 10% lower distribution per unit than was targeted. Over at SDR, sales decreased 7% due to lower oil production along with slightly higher natural gas production. That caused SDR to produce an 11% lower distribution per unit than was targeted. The key takeaway on both, oil volumes were down and gas was up, not exactly the mix you want to see on what’s supposed to be an oil-levered play. However, it is still very early in the play and, more importantly, the key metrics being reported by SandRidge are a bit more positive.

This is a company that delivered 20% reserve growth, with its oil reserves growing even faster at 35%. Further, its proved reserve replacement was up 454%. Reserves are the lifeblood of an oil and gas company, so growth here is important. Production was also up and the company expects its Mississippian Lime production to jump 72% in 2013. If you can find a company growing both production and reserves, then you’ve found a potential winner, even better if that growth is in oil and liquids. 

This is a company that’s also improving its financial metrics in that core Mississippian Lime play. Drilling and completion costs dropped by 14%, or half a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance