Published by Gbaf News
Posted on March 24, 2014

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Published by Gbaf News
Posted on March 24, 2014

Sunil Prabhu, Industry Consultant, Banking & Insurance at Lexmark
Following the financial meltdown, regulators have been responding with a steady stream of new regulations, zealous enforcement and punitive fines.

Sunil Prabhu, Industry Consultant, Banking & Insurance At Lexmark
To name a few: Basel III, EMIR, MIFID 2, FATCA, AML, CFT, SEPA; and banks and capital markets can expect more.
A bank official recently testifying before Congress in the US, estimated that conforming to banking-industry regulations now costs the industry approximately €37 billion a year globally.
Some of the large banks see compliance as a complex, bottomless pit. Given such a wide array of legal and regulatory requirements, banking CIOs we talk to are keen to automate manual processes, which are prevalent in the sector. One area in urgent need of automation is Big Data. If banks can find a way to manage the large volumes of unstructured data (85 per cent of all data within a bank is unstructured according to some estimates) and paper documents, siloed data stores, disjointed processes and paper-based workflows this would be a big step in the right direction.
Some leading solutions advocate modernisation through replacement of core applications. These are long – and often disruptive – programs, not always economical or feasible and fraught with risk, delays and cost overruns.
Things to look for
The ideal solution is the one that can safeguard their investment, existing applications and technologies. Here are some tips that banks are applying in the pursuit of the Compliance Holy Grail:
A trusted partner
Resolving the data-issues that is such a key part of compliance requires subject matter expertise and a deep understanding of processes and challenges. System’s that can meet all these requirements, will offer limited benefits if the vendor implementing them lacks the track record of trust, delivery and credibility. It is crucial they are capable of providing an integrated technology stack and all the components required to build a bespoke solution instead of a one-size-fit-all approach.
Conclusion
As the global economy stabilises, compliance is only going to continue and the fishbowl-effect is not going away anytime soon.
Using specialist solutions, banks can extend the life of their current legacy systems and still enjoy cost savings through lean processes and operational efficiencies. Data security, data integrity and consistency, reduced manual intervention, single click access of information and auditability are all building blocks for a future-proof regulatory compliance strategy.