The Barrington Report 2009 on Portfolio Accounting Systems is available now, as usual with a hefty price tag (3000 $). It covers buy and sell side systems, and portfolio management and fund accounting systems.
Not all of the fund accounting systems in use in the German speaking markets are covered: Sungard's GP3 and Profidata's Xentis, oddly enough, are missing. SimCorp's Dimension and IGEFI's MultiFonds is included though. Princeton Financial System's PAM, currently prepared for its release in Germany, is also handled.
The survey says it covers systems also from Germany (in fact, none of the systems are from Germany but used in Germany; the only system being from Germany, Diamos F, is not even mentioned), and altogether 33 systems are reviewed. But by omitting a major player in the German speaking market (for whatever reason) makes this report come up a tad bit short...
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...you've found a bilingual blog, so please choose "English" or "German". The blog represents personal views on IT systems and consulting in the asset management and investment banking market and focuses predominantly but not exclusively on issues in German speaking countries, respectively countries with a German speaking sub-community (DE, AT, CH, LU, LI, BE, IT).
For more information about this blog check out the blog note: I-2008 or all blog notes
For more information about this blog check out the blog note: I-2008 or all blog notes
Sunday, October 04, 2009
Barrington: "Portfolio Accounting Systems" Survey 2009
Posted by Ronald Knecht at 5:16 PM
Labels: Barrington, English, Fund Accounting, Germany, IGEFI, Princeton Financial Services, ProfiData, SimCorp, Sungard, Survey
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4 comments:
Is it possible to get this report or components (short versions) for less/free some were? cheers Holger
Officially ? I don't think anybody would nor should do that. Maybe you do have a buddy who would pass it on under the table...
Just tow corrections (thank you, Mr. Brunner): the link was broke (but works now), and the list of systems was from the 2006 report - apologies for the conclusions that were obviously drwan too quickly. I will post the 2009 list as soon as I have my hands on it.
Hi Ron,
We´re talking about Portfolio accounting - not fund accounting - different story
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