Tag Archives: Point-in-Time Reconstruction

The 2026 UK Financial Services Lakehouse Reference Architecture

An opinionated but practical blueprint for regulated, temporal, multi-domain data platforms: focused on authority, belief, and point-in-time defensibility. This article lays out a reference architecture for UK FS in 2026: not as a rigid blueprint, but as a description of what “good” now looks like in banks, insurers, payments firms, wealth platforms, and capital markets organisations operating under FCA/PRA supervision.

Continue reading

Eventual Consistency in Regulated Financial Services Data Platforms

In regulated financial services, eventual consistency is often treated as a technical weakness to be minimised or hidden. This article argues the opposite: eventual consistency is the only honest and defensible consistency model in a multi-system, regulator-supervised institution. Regulators do not require instantaneous agreement: they require explainability, reconstructability, and reasonableness at the time decisions were made. By treating eventual consistency as an explicit architectural and regulatory contract, firms can bound inconsistency, preserve historical belief, and strengthen audit defensibility rather than undermine it.

Continue reading

Why UK Financial Services Data Platforms Must Preserve Temporal Truth for Regulatory Compliance

A Regulatory Perspective (2025–2026). UK Financial Services regulation in 2025–2026 increasingly requires firms to demonstrate not just what is true today, but what was known at the time decisions were made. Across Consumer Duty, s166 reviews, AML/KYC, model risk, and operational resilience, regulators expect deterministic reconstruction of historical belief, supported by traceable evidence. This article explains where that requirement comes from, why traditional current-state platforms fail under scrutiny, and why preserving temporal truth inevitably drives architectures that capture change over time as a foundational control, not a technical preference.

Continue reading

Migrating Legacy EDW Slowly-Changing Dimensions to Lakehouse Bronze

From 20-year-old warehouse SCDs to a modern temporal backbone you can trust. This article lays out a practical, regulator-aware playbook for migrating legacy EDW SCD dimensions to a modern SCD2 Bronze layer in a medallion/lakehouse architecture. It covers what you are really migrating (semantics, not just tables), how to treat the EDW as a source system, how to build canonical SCD2 Bronze, how to run both platforms in parallel, and how to prove to auditors and regulators that nothing has been lost or corrupted in the process.

Continue reading

Enterprise Point-in-Time (PIT) Reconstruction: The Regulatory Playbook

This article sets out the definitive regulatory playbook for enterprise Point-in-Time (PIT) reconstruction in UK Financial Services. It explains why PIT is now a supervisory expectation: driven by PRA/FCA reviews, Consumer Duty, s166 investigations, AML/KYC forensics, and model risk, and makes a clear distinction between “state as known” and “state as now known”. Covering SCD2 foundations, entity resolution, precedence versioning, multi-domain alignment, temporal repair, and reproducible rebuild patterns, it shows how to construct a deterministic, explainable PIT engine that can withstand audit, replay history reliably, and defend regulatory outcomes with confidence.

Continue reading