Waters Wavelength Ep. 316: Finbourne Technology’s Toby Glaysher

This week, Toby Glaysher, chairman at Finbourne Technology, joins the podcast to discuss the asset servicing industry.

Wei-Shen Wong, Asia editor, and Anthony Malakian, editor-in-chief of WatersTechnology, record a weekly podcast touching on the biggest stories in financial technology.

 

To hear the full interview, listen in the player above, or you can click on the download button in the player above.

You can also listen to us on Spotify and Apple Podcasts

0:00 – Reb and Shen rant about using ChatGPT for academic projects

12:00 – Toby Glaysher from Finbourne joins the podcast and gives an overview of his 36 years of experience in the asset servicing business

16:30 – Fund accounting is a good introduction to the investment lifecycle

19:00 – A potential zero fund accountant environment

23:00 – The impact tariffs have on asset servicing firms

27:30 – The potential solution

30:30 – There are too many participants

35:30 – 95% of the work is in executing

39:30 – Reducing the cost of investing


Contact Info: 

As is the case with everything we do, we’d love to get some feedback from our listeners.

Wei-Shen Wong: + 852 3411 4758;  wei-shen.wong@infopro-digital.com

Anthony Malakian: + 1 646 490 3973; anthony.malakian@infopro-digital.com


Past 10 episodes:

Episode 315: Company names and the loans market

Episode 314: Capco’s Bertie Haskins

Episode 313: FIS Global’s Jon Hodges

Episode 312: Jibber-jabber

Episode 311: Blue Ocean’s Brian Hyndman

Episode 310: SigTech’s Bin Ren

Episode 309: FIA Boca

Episode 308: Arta Finance’s Caesar Sengupta

Episode 307: The shrinking OMS landscape

Episode 306: Reykjavik and market data

 

Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.

To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@waterstechnology.com or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.waterstechnology.com/subscribe

You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@waterstechnology.com to find out more.

Study: RAG-based LLMs less safe than non-RAG

Researchers at Bloomberg have found that retrieval-augmented generation is not as safe as once thought. As a result, they put forward a new taxonomy to help firms mitigate AI risk.

Most read articles loading...

You need to sign in to use this feature. If you don’t have a WatersTechnology account, please register for a trial.

Sign in
You are currently on corporate access.

To use this feature you will need an individual account. If you have one already please sign in.

Sign in.

Alternatively you can request an individual account here