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  • user 1:50 pm on April 2, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , impacting, industry—and, , , , , ,   

    RegTech: How investment trends are impacting the industry—and how the ecosystem can work with the regulator 

    What a week—with graduation days complete, we had a chance to review progress in the Labs. Development was evident everywhere—product, but also management teams.

    I wanted to follow on from my previous blog around the emergence of (technologies that address the challenge and cost of regulatory compliance.) I wanted to explore how in this area are the industry and how the can with the . We’re lucky to have Jason Boud—who is pulling together a strong community in London—with us in the Labs.

    Right now, compared with , RegTech has low investment for the size of spend. Although governance, compliance and regulation (GRC) represents around 15-20 percent of run-the-bank costs and 40 percent of change-the-bank costs,[1] in 2015, US$ 588 million was invested in RegTech[2] versus US$ 22 billion in Fintech[3]. This suggests enormous potential for growth in the RegTech space from now on.

    Now—what does RegTech mean? RegTech means… RegTech! We think about RegTech as that lowers the “cost” (technical, physical, monetary) of regulation by using technology. It’s relevant not just in banking, but capital markets, wealth management and insurance. At its most basic, RegTech might be using better data, a workflow to reduce the complexities of reporting—or responding to new reporting requirements. Perhaps it’s making better use of existing data to lower the challenges of regulation for compliance staff—as FinTech Labs start-up, Enford, is excelling at. At the more advanced end—and with a timeline a few more years out—perhaps it’s applying machine learning or advanced AI to complex regulatory documentation, to help us ‘learn’ what the regulatory requirement is and apply a response to it.

    The RegTech ecosystem requires several different backgrounds to come together: finance, entrepreneurs, regulators, lawyers and change managers. Now—given that background, employees in these areas often have a deeper knowledge base and clearer career track in industry (and salary expectations) than perhaps people who have founded traditional Fintechs. There’s a risk that fewer start-ups will enter the market; so we think the area would benefit from a degree of nurturing. Lessons can be learnt from how partnered with Fintechs. This should provide a clearer roadmap for growth, help identify pain points in adoption and build confidence.

    We’re certainly seeing an upsurge in activity. It’s great news for the industry, but it also raises a number of priorities. As more and more solutions are launched, it’ll be important to prevent the marketplace from becoming fragmented. Start-ups need to ensure that they’re not point solutions, but can be embedded across the business, and that they can collaborate with other RegTechs to provide more complete solutions. That might mean, for example, a trader surveillance RegTech that tracks computer activity partnering with voice recording and behavioural analytics to provide a more comprehensive solution.

    For problems at the most regulated end of the business, they’re likely to be even more cautious about entering partnerships. Banks that will lead here will be the ones that are already successfully integrating their innovation agendas into the business and have built channels for partnering with Fintechs. In other institutions, regulatory and compliance functions may have to go through the same learning curve as their colleagues did with Fintech before they establish effective RegTech partnerships.

    Regulators have a key role to play, too. They can help drive adoption and lower the regulatory burden by collaborating with the industry to enable greater clarity and more long-term planning. Once banks have a clearer view of what lies ahead, they’ll be more willing to invest in new technology solutions and less likely to make ad hoc, incremental changes. Certification or approval of RegTech solutions would be helpful too, allowing banks to use RegTech with more confidence.

    The FCA is being extremely proactive in this area: Its ‘regulatory sandbox’, which allows start-ups to test products in a live environment, is now being copied in other jurisdictions. Looking ahead, Accenture has called on the FCA to become the ‘Github of regulatory code and business logic’. If regulation is written to be machine readable, it’ll help create a standardised set of rules and logic that ensures compliance and compatibility with technology solutions.

    Banks know that they should partner with RegTech… but they don’t always know how. Guidance from the regulator will be key to fostering a richer ecosystem—one in which banks feel confident about the trajectory of regulation, and where start-ups can quickly and easily assimilate the logic of regulation to deliver the innovative solutions that are so essential.

    Watch this space!

    [1] http://www.bain.com/publications/articles/banking-regtechs-to-the-rescue.aspx
    [2] https://www.cbinsights.com/blog/regtech-compliance-startup-funding-trends
    [3] http://www.fintechinnovationlablondon.co.uk/fintech-evolving-landscape.aspx

    The post RegTech: How investment trends are impacting the industry—and how the ecosystem can work with the regulator appeared first on Accenture Banking Blog.

    Accenture Banking Blog

     
  • user 1:47 pm on April 2, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , effectively, , , ,   

    How banks can deal effectively with the security & fraud impacts of PSD2 

    With the introduction of , a new era of secure payments has begun in the European Union. The new regulation is aimed at enhanced customer protection against , with stringent liability and accountability requirements and strong customer authentication features.

    Read the report

    PSD2 requires European and other payment service providers to allow customers’ accounts to be accessed via
    application programming interfaces (APIs). Their customers are able to initiate payments from their accounts directly from third-party apps and websites, and to share transaction and balance information with third parties.

    The directive provides measures to protect the confidentiality and integrity of personalized credentials. Banks will now be authorized to block third-party access to accounts if they detect unauthorized or fraudulent activity. At the same time, providers who fail to authenticate a transaction appropriately will now be held liable for any resulting breaches.

    So, what does all this mean for the incumbent players in the European financial services landscape?

    Accenture has identified key challenges that banks will need to deal with in the short term:

    • After PSD2, many customers may start relying on Third-Party Payment service providers (TPPs) for banking transactions, making it more difficult for banks to detect fraud.
    • By providing their APIs to TPPs, banks open up a significantly greater attack surface to potential cyber adversaries, and can no longer hide critical applications behind perimeter firewalls.

    With the new directive also come opportunities:

    • PSD2 encourages banks to embed security up front in the new systems and APIs, thus turning security into a business asset.
    • Creating systems with open APIs gives banks the opportunity to strengthen their fraud prevention capabilities—by blocking attacks high up the stack and protecting the intelligence located on lower layers.

    Accenture recommends five actions for banks to deal effectively with the challenges and opportunities of PSD2:

    1. Make API security an integral part of PSD2 implementations, and ensure that security controls for APIs are at par with digital banking.
    2. Adopt a user-driven authentication framework that doesn’t disclose user credentials to TPPs.
    3. Use biometric technologies for authentication, as that will not only address the PSD2 requirement for more accurate validation, but will also provide a better consumer experience.
    4. Assess customers’ location and behaviour against their usual patterns to gain a clearer view of the risks and the level of authentication required.
    5. Follow these principles while designing APIs:
        • Show respect for user privacy and design in consent management controls.
        • Embed privacy into design and use maximum privacy as the default setting.
        • Maintain transparency of operations of the IT systems.
        • Deny access to information that isn&;t absolutely necessary, or that the user has not agreed to share.
        • Strive to detect and prevent privacy-invasive events before they happen.

    Read more about this in our latest report, PSD2 & Open Banking | Security and fraud impacts on banks: Are you ready?

     

    The post How banks can deal effectively with the security &038; fraud impacts of PSD2 appeared first on Accenture Banking Blog.

    Accenture Banking Blog

     
  • user 12:18 pm on March 31, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , banks, , , , , , Settlements   

    FIs Complete Blockchain POC for Loan Settlements, Production Plans in 2018 

    Can speed up the drag of ? Synaps, R3, and more than a dozen say so. Synaps LLC, a joint venture from global financial services provider Ipreo and smart contracts solutions firm Symbiont, has just closed a successful proof-of-concept of its blockchain platform for syndicated loans. Nineteen banks participated in the POC, [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 pm on March 30, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , ,   

    Banks Need to Get Real with Fintech Startups 

    It&;s clear that are not going away &; there are more of them all the time. (And here are five more.) What&8217;s not clear is how they are getting along with . The number of publicly announced substantial partnerships is vanishingly small. Startups are getting fed up with banks&8217; hurdles and long sales cycles, [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 am on March 29, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , banks, , , ,   

    5 Fintechs to Watch: APIs, Robos, and More 

    Now that and have learned to coexist, we see new players emerge (or older ones re-emerge), most with a new focus on partnering with FIs for the better. Keeping track of emerging players is the best way to stay up to date on the current market trends, and Bank Innovation is here to help.  Here [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 pm on March 25, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , ,   

    Citi Demoes PFM App Built Via Its Developer Hub 

    Major are getting increasingly comfortable with the idea of open banking. For , the open banking initiative was marked by the launch of its global hub in November of last year. The hub was initially supported in three countries – the U.S., Singapore, and Australia – but has quickly spread to five more [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 am on March 21, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, Cognitive, , , , ,   

    5 Questions with IBM’s Cognitive Engagement Expert [VIDEO] 

    IBM Watson needs no introduction. The company has a huge number of bank and FI partners, all working to make financial services &;smarter.&; &8220;We are focusing on moving into this banking scenario, so that they can understand customers better, and communicate with them in a more conversational way,&8221; said Matt Kinney, customer insight and cognitive [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 pm on March 20, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Acquirer, banks, , FirstData, , , ,   

    Vantiv Beats FirstData as Largest U.S. Merchant Acquirer 

    Payments services provider becomes the U.S. , beating for the first time in 20 years. According to Nilson Report, released this morning, Vantiv increased purchase transactions to 21.2 billion in 2016, up almost 20% from the year prior. FirstData came in second, logging in 19.8 billion transactions. Three were featured [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:19 pm on March 18, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , ,   

    Banks Have the Capital to Buy Fintech Startups — Will They? 

    are entering what could well be a Golden Age &; deregulation, rising interest rates, and a bevy of eager to hop into bed with them. Will take advantage of this fintech opportunity? &;Banks now have the to put to work and invest in growth after a long period of cost-cutting,&; [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 1:29 pm on March 14, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: banks, , , , , Misys   

    D+H, Misys Merger Will Create $2B Fintech Company 

    Vista Equity Partners will acquire Canadian financial services provider D+H, and merge it with &; financial software provider &8212;  the announced today. The will , what appears to be, a mega , serving 48 of the world’s top 50 , among other clients, and generating about $ 2 billion in annual revenue &8212; or [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
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