One trade, two regimes
A Singapore entity facing an overseas counterparty often appears in two reports: its own under the MAS Securities and Futures (Reporting of Derivative Contracts) Regulations, and the counterparty's under their regime. Without a common identifier, reconciling those two views would be impossible.
How the LEI ties them together
The 20-character LEI is global and permanent. The same code the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) sees on a Singapore report is the code an EU, US or APAC counterparty reports on the other side. That shared identity is the whole point of the LEI.
What this means in Singapore
For a Singapore entity, the practical rule is simple: keep your LEI current and accurate. A lapsed LEI breaks not only your DTCC Data Repository (Singapore) Pte Ltd (the prescribed report but potentially your counterparty's foreign report too, putting the trade at risk.
Getting it right
Confirm your LEI status before cross-border trades, renew on time, and keep reference data aligned with ACRA (UEN).
Key takeaways
• A cross-border trade can be reported under two regimes.
• The LEI is the shared identifier across both.
• A lapsed LEI can fail reports on both sides.
• Keep it current to keep cross-border flows clean.


