At General Electric Co., matching interest rate and foreign currency trade data with its thousands of counterparties around the world was stymied by the lack of an international standard for recognizing and capturing trades, not to mention the poor and often inconsistent data received from the counterparties.

As GE's book of assets grew, so did its book of complex derivatives. It soon became apparent–and imperative–that a system was needed to put trades and marks with counterparties in agreement. "We were getting marks in from counterparties on Excel worksheets that made no rhyme or reason," says Dennis Sweeney, deputy treasurer at Stamford, Conn.-based General Electric.

In 2005, GE's credit risk management team worked with counterparties to develop a standard template for populating trade data containing all key fields required to reconcile trades, such as notional amounts, maturity dates and entity name. The team then internally redesigned a cash reconciliation software tool called Frontier to match trade data, providing the first automated importing and reconciliation of GE and its counterparties' trade data.

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