News
capital markets
TAS

T+1: From Regulatory Requirement to Operational Transformation Driver

During the event “T+1: Implementation Has Begun”, Bancaforte spoke with David Mogini, Head of Capital Markets Business Unit at TAS, about the impact the new regulation will have on banks, market participants and the broader financial ecosystem, as well as the solutions that can turn compliance into a strategic opportunity.

Mr. Mogini, which processes will be most affected by the new regulation?

The transition to T+1 represents a significant shift in the post-trade operating model. It is not simply a matter of shortening the settlement cycle; it requires a fundamental rethink of the entire value chain.

The areas most affected are matching and confirmation, which must now be completed on the trade date (T), settlement, which requires more dynamic management of instructions, fails and partial settlements, and liquidity management, which becomes intraday and highly time-critical.

In addition, there is a growing need for integration with corporate actions, which are becoming increasingly interdependent with the settlement cycle. Interactions among these processes are now intraday and tightly interconnected: errors or delays upstream are immediately propagated across the entire processing chain.

How do you support clients in managing liquidity and the broader operational impacts?

Our approach is based on the understanding that T+1 is not simply about accelerating processes—it is about managing greater complexity.

Solutions must provide an integrated view of liquidity across both central bank and commercial bank money, granular monitoring of market- and counterparty-specific cut-off times, and intraday forecasting capabilities. These are complemented by auto-funding functionalities, automated matching and proactive exception management.

Many of these capabilities already exist, but they must be redesigned to operate in real time and in a coordinated manner. From an architectural perspective, we are evolving towards event-driven and streaming-based models that enable real-time data processing and move beyond traditional batch-oriented approaches.

At the core of this transformation is the introduction of end-to-end orchestration mechanisms, enabling continuous monitoring, intelligent exception handling and intervention prioritization. The objective is to make the post-trade value chain more seamless, integrated and responsive—not only to monitor operations, but also to support timely and effective decision-making.

What challenges are you encountering? Are banks ready?

The main challenges are not purely technological; they are also operational and organizational.

From a technology standpoint, system fragmentation remains a major issue. Current architectures were designed around separate domains and sequential processes, whereas T+1 requires real-time coordination across highly interdependent workflows spanning multiple business areas. Coordination does not necessarily mean that all processes must be managed through a single platform; rather, organizations need tools that provide a unified and integrated operational view.

A second challenge is exception management. What was traditionally handled overnight must now be addressed intraday, requiring higher levels of automation, alerting capabilities and robust Data Quality Management from the earliest stages of trade capture. This includes bringing data enrichment activities forward into the matching phase—for example, the early identification of the Place of Settlement.

Finally, there is the organizational dimension. T+1 demands closer collaboration between business and IT teams to design intelligent, automated processes, while also redefining the boundaries between middle-office and back-office functions.

The real question is not whether banks are ready, but whether their operating models are designed to function in real time. In many cases, the answer is still no. However, the entire ecosystem is moving rapidly in this direction.

In this context, we believe market participants should embrace the principle of “zero additional people”, leveraging automation, Straight-Through Processing (STP) and rule- and AI-driven decision-making models.

Institutions that can effectively orchestrate matching, settlement, corporate actions and liquidity processes will be able to turn T+1 into a competitive advantage, improving productivity while reducing the overall cost to serve.

English version by TAS

Original article from Bancaforte

You might also be interested in