---
name: managing-financial-data-aggregation
language: en
description: Structures data aggregation analysis with connectivity, accuracy assessment, and consumer consent frameworks. Use when evaluating data aggregation, analyzing financial data APIs, or assessing account linking.
tags:
  - management
  - financial-technology
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Fintech
    - Payments
    - Digital Banking
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---
# Managing Financial Data Aggregation

## When To Use

- Evaluating or selecting a data aggregation provider (e.g., Plaid, MX, Finicity, Yodlee, Akoya)
- Assessing connectivity coverage, data accuracy, and latency for account-linking integrations
- Reviewing consumer consent and permissioning frameworks for open-banking or screen-scraping implementations
- Conducting due diligence on aggregation infrastructure during M&A, partnerships, or vendor procurement
- Auditing an existing aggregation stack against CFPB Section 1033, FDX standards, or open-banking regulations

## Inputs To Gather

- **Use-case definition**: Account verification, balance checks, transaction enrichment, income/employment verification, or portfolio aggregation
- **Institution coverage requirements**: Target FI list, coverage tier expectations (top-tier banks, credit unions, neobanks, brokerage accounts)
- **Connectivity method inventory**: Direct API (FDX/OAuth), screen-scraping, hybrid; note which methods are currently in use vs. planned
- **Data elements needed**: Account metadata, balances (available vs. current), transaction history depth, categorization, investment holdings, payroll/income fields
- **Consent and authorization model**: Consumer-facing permission screens, token lifecycle (duration, revocation, re-authorization cadence)
- **Regulatory and compliance context**: Jurisdiction, applicable rules (CFPB 1033, PSD2/PSD3, CDR, PIPEDA open-banking framework) [VERIFY jurisdiction-specific requirements]
- **SLA and performance benchmarks**: Acceptable latency, uptime targets, error-rate thresholds, data freshness windows

## Workflow

1. **Map the aggregation landscape**
   - Catalog all data sources (FIs, payroll providers, investment platforms) and connectivity methods currently in use
   - Identify gaps in institution coverage and data-element availability
   - Document credential-based vs. tokenized (OAuth) connection ratios

2. **Assess connectivity and data quality**
   - Measure connection success rates by institution tier and connectivity method
   - Evaluate data accuracy: compare aggregated balances and transactions against source-of-truth exports or reconciliation files
   - Track latency from authorization to first data return and ongoing refresh intervals
   - Flag stale-data risks (e.g., screen-scrape connections that silently fail)

3. **Evaluate consumer consent framework**
   - Review authorization UX: transparency of data-sharing scope, granular permission controls, plain-language disclosures
   - Map token lifecycle: initial grant, refresh cadence, expiration policy, consumer-initiated revocation flow
   - Confirm consent receipts are stored and auditable [VERIFY whether CFPB 1033 final rule mandates specific consent-record retention]
   - Assess re-authorization friction and its impact on conversion/retention metrics

4. **Analyze regulatory alignment**
   - Compare current practices against CFPB Section 1033 rulemaking requirements (authorized data access, screen-scraping phase-out timelines) [VERIFY effective dates and compliance deadlines]
   - For international scope, map against PSD2 strong-customer-authentication requirements or CDR data standards [VERIFY applicable regime]
   - Identify data-minimization and purpose-limitation obligations
   - Review third-party risk management expectations (e.g., aggregator acting as authorized third party vs. data processor)

5. **Benchmark provider capabilities**
   - Compare aggregation vendors on: institution coverage breadth, API uptime SLAs, data normalization quality, enrichment features (categorization, merchant identification), and pricing model (per-connection, per-API-call, flat fee)
   - Evaluate migration complexity: SDK integration effort, credential migration paths, consumer re-authorization requirements
   - Assess vendor security posture: SOC 2 Type II, penetration-testing cadence, encryption at rest/in transit, incident-response commitments

6. **Compile findings and recommendations**
   - Summarize connectivity coverage gaps and remediation options
   - Present data-quality metrics with red/amber/green scoring
   - Outline consent-framework improvements ranked by regulatory urgency and user-experience impact
   - Provide vendor comparison matrix if multiple providers are under evaluation

## Output

Produce a **Financial Data Aggregation Management Report** containing:

- **Executive summary**: Aggregation posture, key risks, and top-priority recommendations
- **Connectivity coverage matrix**: Institution list with connectivity method, success rate, and data-element availability
- **Data quality scorecard**: Accuracy, latency, freshness, and error rates by connection type
- **Consent and authorization assessment**: Current-state flow diagram, compliance gaps, and remediation steps
- **Regulatory gap analysis**: Requirement-by-requirement mapping with compliance status and deadlines [VERIFY all cited regulatory deadlines against current rulemaking status]
- **Vendor evaluation matrix** (if applicable): Side-by-side comparison on coverage, quality, cost, and integration effort
- **Recommended action plan**: Prioritized initiatives with estimated effort, dependencies, and owners

## Quality Checks

- All institution coverage claims are validated against provider documentation or sandbox testing — not marketing materials alone
- Data accuracy metrics are based on actual reconciliation, not aggregator self-reported figures
- Consent-flow analysis includes screenshot or flow-diagram evidence of the consumer-facing experience
- Regulatory citations reference specific rule sections and effective dates [VERIFY all statute and rule references are current]
- Vendor pricing and SLA figures are sourced from executed contracts or formal proposals, not public website estimates
- Report clearly distinguishes between credential-based (screen-scrape) and API-based (OAuth/FDX) connections throughout
- Any compliance conclusion that depends on jurisdiction, entity type, or regulatory interpretation is marked with [VERIFY]
