Family Office
CheckFree SMA unit buys wounded IDS

Money-troubled IDS to merge with CheckFree's APL division.
E-billing giant CheckFree has acquired Integrated Decision
Systems (IDS) for about $18 million. CheckFree says IDS – a New
York-based provider of portfolio-management systems to asset
managers and investment-program sponsors – will become part of
its CheckFree Investment Services (CIS) unit, which provides
separately managed account (SMA) processing and connectivity
support to asset managers, brokerages and financial
consultants.
CheckFree’s purchase of IDS had been in the rumor mill for
months. In June IDS hit the skids when its venture funding ran
dry. Unable to meet its payroll obligations, it laid off about 70
of its 80-member workforce, according to sources.
“The combination of CheckFree Investment Services and Integrated
Decision Systems delivers strong benefits for both organizations
and their respective customers,” CIS general manager Alex Marasco
says in a press release.
Connectivity
Portfolio processing and connectivity are vital to the smooth
running of SMA programs, largely because of the sheer number of
individual accounts and the need for continuous communication
between managers and sponsors.
CheckFree says the purchase of IDS gives asset managers who use
CIS’ APL processing platform “links to a larger network of
broker-dealer organizations” while providing IDS’ software users
access to APL.
“The deal gives [CIS] additional technology, including new retail
brokerage performance reporting tools to [provide] participants
in the [SMA] industry [with] large-scale performance reporting,”
says CheckFree.
In terms of “additional technology,” Jersey City, N.J.-based CIS
may be especially keen on IDS’ GIM2 multi-currency accounting
engine. CIS has promised to enhance its multi-currency
capabilities through EPL, its “next-generation” processing
platform.
The merger alters the SMA processing and connectivity landscape.
With IDS is out of the picture (and with DST Systems having given
up on its foundering SMA business about a year ago), the only
players left are CIS and two much smaller firms: Edison,
N.J.-based Market Street Advisors and Wakefield, Mass-based
Vestmark. –FWR
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