CPPIB to Collaborate with Inpher to Develop Unique Dataset for Investment Forecasting

The pension fund is hoping Inpher’s technology will give them new information to beat the market.


The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has entered into an agreement with Inpher, a company that has developed a technology to protect data while it is being analyzed. The technology, called Secret Computing, allows data analysts to run complex, collaborative, machine-learning models without compromising the data’s security.

CPP hopes that using Inpher’s technology, they will be able to develop a unique dataset that helps predict market trends and allows its investment team to perform above the market, according to the press release. Through this collaboration, CPP aims to bring together both data contributors and asset managers.

“Working with Inpher to leverage their technology to access non-public data sources aligns with our objective to enhance our informational edge and generate value for the CPP Fund over the long run,” said Daniel Wroblewski, managing director and head of CPP Investments’ Alpha Generation Lab, which looks for creative new ways to increase investment returns.

Inpher itself is a relatively new company which started in 2015. It is currently listed as a late-stage venture capital company, according to PitchBook. Its list of investors includes names like JP Morgan Chase & Co., Bowery Capital, and Alpana Ventures. 

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Ultimately, CPP aims to use Inpher’s technology to analyze macroeconomic trends more quickly, predict company performance, and better understand aggregate portfolios.  

CPP is the largest pension in Canada, with approximately $440 billion (C$550 billion) in assets under management.

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Proposed SEC Rules Aim to Rein in High-Frequency Traders

Regulator says algorithmic trading requires expanding the definition of a dealer to level the playing field.



The Securities and Exchange Commission has proposed two rules that would require market participants who assume certain dealer functions, particularly those who act as market liquidity providers, to register with the SEC, become members of a self-regulatory organization, and comply with federal securities laws and regulatory obligations.

The SEC said the new rules were necessary because technological advances in electronic trading have allowed certain participants who may not be registered dealers to play an increasingly significant role providing liquidity in overall trading and market activity.

The regulator is concerned about how the use of algorithmic trading have made market transactions so fast that high-frequency trading firms are participating significantly in markets such as the Treasury cash market. The SEC said high-frequency traders account for 50% to 60% of the volume on the inter-dealer broker platforms in the Treasury markets, and often account for a large percentage of total volume of the broader secondary markets.

However, because not all these participants are registered as dealers or government securities dealers, the SEC warns that key investor and market protections it provides through registration and regulation are inconsistently applied to firms engaged in similar activities.

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SEC Chair Gary Gensler said that in recent years, the regulator has seen “high-profile events” in markets with significant participation by high-frequency traders, including “tremors” in the Treasurys  markets in 2014, 2019, and at the beginning of the COVID pandemic in 2020.

“Requiring all firms that regularly make markets, or otherwise perform important liquidity-providing roles, to register as dealers or government securities dealers also could help level the playing field among firms and enhance the resiliency of our markets,” Gensler said in a statement.

The rules, 3a5-4 and 3a44-2, would define the phrase “as a part of a regular business” to identify activities that would deem those engaging in them to be “dealers” or “government securities dealers” and thus subject to the registration requirements of Exchange Act. However, the proposed rules do not attempt to address all circumstances under which one may be acting as a dealer or government securities dealer.

The proposed rules would exclude anyone who has or controls total assets of less than $50 million, as well as an investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940. 

“While I have deep reservations about the breadth of today’s proposal, it addresses some important issues on which public comment will be valuable,” SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce said in a statement. “I particularly appreciate the use of the rulemaking process to clarify the scope of the term ‘dealer.’”

The public comment period for the proposed rules will be open for 60 days following its publication on the SEC’s website, or 30 days after the proposed release is published in the Federal Register, whichever is longer.

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