Research

clear
clear

Latest Results from /devops

Report

Payments Transformation: Emerging Stronger

The Finextra Annual Payments Survey Report 2022 in association with Fiserv We discuss findings from the survey on how financial institutions are continuing to grow and tackle emerging and disruptive competition while rationalising investments. There is a change in emphasis towards reduction - reduction in costs through consolidation; reduction in risk through a focus on financial crime; reduction in a one-size-fits-all approach; reduction in resources to address the increasing demands of customers, regulators and the payments industry. It demonstrates that there is a clear understanding of the benefits of consolidation of payment types, including operational and customer experience improvements. Progress to this goal highlights the trend towards outsourcing standardised processes such as payment processing to a capable and trusted partner, through the evolution to payments as a service, allowing the financial institution to improve its overall operational efficiency and customer propositions.  Download the report of the results from the recent Finextra Annual Payments Survey, by Finextra & Fiserv, below to learn more.

913 downloads

Report

ISO 20022: How banks can avoid becoming a cautionary tale

Transitioning to the ISO 20022 financial messaging standard has been high on the agenda for financial institutions for several years, but as deadlines loom, the true advantage of early adoption means institutions are facing new pressure to migrate, and to do so quickly. By late 2022, institutions across the globe will have begun their migration to the new ISO 20022 financial messaging standard for high-value payments. SWIFT’s timeline delays have somewhat hindered the process for many institutions, but the project is resolutely on track for completion by 2025. The benefits of transitioning to the data-rich standard are well documented, but executing the migration itself is relatively new territory for financial institutions and the counterparties that transact with them. Financial organisations should approach their ISO 20022 projects with an honest view of the strengths and weaknesses of their existing infrastructure, so that avoidable mistakes remain just that. Download your copy of this Finextra impact study, produced in association with OpenText, and find out about four key areas that institutions must address when approaching their ISO 20022 migration to avoid unnecessary complications, and instead build an infrastructure that caters to a data-led, customer-centric future.

604 downloads

Report

The Future of Regulation 2022

From Innovation to Execution The fire for innovation in financial services has long been raging, and regulators, having transformed their modus operandi to keep pace with the force of technological change, are carefully approaching their role in the great rewiring of the financial system. The fear once invoked by terms like artificial intelligence, cloud computing, or data sharing, has been relegated to the past, and the role of technology in the future of financial services is now accepted as being intrinsic to its success. With Open Banking reaching new realms of maturity, players have begun questioning how best to measure its success in a post-pandemic world. While Open Finance edges ever closer to pulling all focus away from the original Open Banking objectives, innovators are looking for ways to unbridle all pretence tied to our traditional view of what finance should achieve. Instead, they are placing impeccable user experience at the centre of their offering. This unbridling is also becoming apparent in the burgeoning appetite for decentralised finance offerings by retail and institutional investors. Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) inject another layer into this mix, as central banks and governments carefully weigh up the advantages and risks of diving straight into the opportunity they present. Regulators are caught in the middle of these rapidly evolving trends and forces, attempting to stay the regulatory course by ensuring stability and security, while also motivated to remain at the forefront of this technology. Resilience has never been a more important focus for regulators, who are shifting responsibility directly onto market players to ensure strength across intertwined systems. Selecting a handful of areas tied to fintech that are either ripe for, or undergoing seismic regulatory evolution, we’ve compiled a wealth of insights from industry experts who have shared their views on the changes we can expect in 2022. This new Finextra report features commentary from industry experts across a breadth of financial, technology and regulatory firms, which include contributions from Accenture; A&O Consulting; Bird & Bird; Change Gap; Coutts; Herbert Smith Freehills; Hogan Lovells; Plaid; Proskauer; P2 Consulting; McDermott, Will & Emery; Noll Historical Consulting LLC; Société Générale; State Street; and The DPO Centre.  

1112 downloads

Report

Open Banking Europe 2022 - What’s next for Open Banking?

Since the European Payments Services Directive 2 was introduced in 2018, open banking has come to mean different things to different participants. Progress, innovation and developments have taken place at varying speeds with varying results. In financial services there has been a flurry of new participants- quite as per the intention of PSD2- and between these, the banks and the often-conflicting, sometimes symbiotic relationships that have emerged, the customer has indeed been the recipient of a richer choice of services and providers. But it is still more limited than it might be. The end user- be that consumer or business customer- has notions of the concept of open banking generally only in the form of new services now on offer. And they have become more attuned to the value and proprietary nature of data. The customer relationship has become the holy grail, and yet no financial service can be launched or be delivered credibly without the unfaltering robust protection and compliance that only licenced banking organisations have the wherewithal to provide. Hence the need to increase access to banking rails for Third Party Providers (TPPs). To this end there has been something of a stalemate, because for many banks, the value proposition is still unclear and the question burns brighter by the quarter- do the relevant bodies need to galvanise efforts by introducing stronger direction regarding infrastructure and accessibility? Download your copy of this Finextra report, produced in association with Worldline, which takes the pulse on the development of open banking initiatives from several stakeholders through one-to-one interviews to ascertain where the biggest opportunities lie now and, crucially, what it will take for them to be fully realised.

1330 downloads

Report

Will banks use digital security as a post-pandemic differentiator?

Banks large and small, old and new, have come a long way in a short amount of time. Prior to the pandemic there wasn't a bank or financial services provider worth their salt who did not have some kind of digitalisation strategy as a core part of their operations planning. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic catapulted banks and their clientele into instantaneous cashlessness, forcing many organisations and customers to adapt at speed. A year and a half on, how much of this urgent transition will remain permanent is a key indicator of financial organisations’ success in responding to an unprecedented situation. Furthermore, whether the key pillars of trust and security upheld by banks have not only survived but positively thrived such that they stand taller and prouder, will be a key differentiator in a thoroughly modern banking landscape. These factors will illustrate how consumers and the industry have truly evolved as a result of unimaginable change. We take a pulse on these themes and questions by interviewing senior experts at several banking service providers across Europe and Asia. Download your copy of this Finextra report, produced in association with Feedzai, to learn more.

376 downloads

Report

Future-Ready Payments Solutions: Remaining competitive with reusable technology

Over fifty years ago, when the original payment pioneers built electronic funds transfer (EFT) platforms to enable card services, they had a single use in mind. Reliable and secure card payments were achieved, but the architecture was so closely bound to card transactions that it is now becoming incompatible with today’s colourful payment universe.  As mobile and contactless payments, Quick Response (QR) codes, digital currencies, Request to Pay (R2P), Real-Time Payments (RTP), Buy-Now-Pay-Later (BNPL) and peer-to-peer (P2P) payment applications take off, banks are forced to build separate in-house silos, in order to process these new payment types. Given a plethora of dedicated systems are already in place to process cash, cheque and card payments, management of these silos and ‘add-ons’ is becoming a complex undertaking. Forward-looking banks are tackling this challenge by deploying modern payments platforms that are comprised of a set of re-useable services. These have the capacity to not only consolidate numerous payment schemes onto a single platform, but they can also future-proof businesses by facilitating easy adoption of new payment types. As the payments race heats up – and banks wrestle with the emergence of new digital currencies, payment instruments, funding methods and payment types – those with the most agile, secure, and reusable platform will be rewarded with a strong competitive edge and improved margins from being able to control when, how deeply and how long to take part in any new payments venture. Download your copy of this Finextra impact study, produced in association with Diebold Nixdorf, to learn more.

788 downloads

Report

Building the Road to a Hybrid Cloud Future

A recent survey conducted by Finextra and Red Hat showed that 82% of the financial services respondents say they are embracing and implementing hybrid cloud infrastructure company-wide. Many are now deploying open source technologies to support and enhance the inherent capabilities of a hybrid cloud infrastructure, which include agility, resilience, portability, automation, speed to market and continual testing and iterative improvements at speed in isolated, protected environments. The open hybrid cloud adds interoperability to this, and is a factor cited by leading practitioners as increasing their ability to attract developer talent. These attributes, however, will mean very different things to different business stakeholders and will therefore be prioritised in differing orders by different business lines. Speed of development and speed-to-market will likely be of greatest importance to digital programme strategists and developers, whereas portability will be more important to someone leading system recoveries or performance outages, where operational resilience is key. Where these priorities conflict – or complement – each other needs to be identified and communicated to the board, for a cohesive, top-down strategy to be fulfilled with a consistent approach. There will be different challenges in executing that strategy across different parts of the business - there could be gaps in knowledge, understanding or expertise, hence where these challenges lie and for whom becomes a compelling question to answer. Overcoming different hurdles and identifying the different benefits is a key part of a strategy to fully realise the potential of cloud architectures. And all strategies need to take a long-term view – the migration from on-premise systems in bank-owned data centres to a cloud service provider and on through hybrid cloud environments is a dynamic culture shift rather than a quick decision to migrate a few workloads and reap the benefits. Financial organisations need to know and understand the value of what hybrid cloud can deliver to what part of their business and overall operations, and they need to identify the different gaps and challenges in order to achieve the required outcomes. It is no small journey or undertaking, but the benefits can be universally acknowledged as a clear incentive. This research paper from Finextra, in association with Red Hat, is based on several interviews with senior leaders from diverse areas of the banking business to explore and understand some of the key questions around hybrid cloud.

251 downloads

Report

Continuous Reinvention: The holy grail of Digital Transformation

Driven by the uncertain macroeconomic environment - and remote working paradigm - that endured throughout the pandemic, the term 'digital transformation' has increasingly been grabbing headlines. Indeed, to stay afloat and remain competitive, financial services firms have been compelled to modernise their solutions. However, as is the case with any kind of technological innovation, infinite reinvention is key, and as such, structural agility has become critical to banks’ transformation strategies. For such a strategy to succeed, however, the migration of banks’ core systems to a resilient and scalable platform in the cloud is vital. To workshop these issues, experts gathered for a Finextra webinar, ‘Beyond 2021 – Why infinite reinvention is key to digital transformation’, in association with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Capgemini. This impact study explores the findings of that webinar, and examines how firms should go about building an evergreen solution within a modern, cloud-based infrastructure.

313 downloads

Report

Open Banking powered by the Cloud, Democratising Finance at Scale

As new business models emerge with recurring revenue in the innovative payments sector, traditional banks are looking to utilise open banking and open finance to assist with their digital transformation. Consumers need real-time, instant, and faster payment capabilities, and with open banking, PISPs are providing alternative methods of payments with a single API connection. Whether banks are providing alternative payments methods or not, this shift to a digital economy will continue and will result in an attraction to a platform where financial data can be used to offer value-added services to other industries. By utilising APIs, financial institutions can implement open finance solutions to improve the customer experience and offer customers greater product choice and control over their finances and data. With a cloud provider, customers can build APIs across multiple microservices that interact with third parties quickly and connect with them in a simple way. Fintech firms have developed open finance solutions that complement cloud-based open API platforms and provide the solutions financial institutions need. With the cloud, financial institutions can scale APIs on demand, pay only for what they consume, and build modern serverless architectures. Building open finance solutions on the cloud requires minimal capex and investing in this technology today will help financial institutions get a step ahead of industry peers. Download this Finextra impact study, in association with Amazon Web Services (AWS), to learn more.

546 downloads

Report

Core Banking on the Cloud - The Catalyst for Innovation, Agility and Efficiency

Traditional core systems that assume a branch interface and retain human-led back offices no longer meet needs. To be truly agile, banks must prioritise interoperability and automation through digital channels to stay competitive and avoid irrelevance. With this focus on digital transformation and initiatives such as open finance, banks are adopting a buy approach to software and infrastructure, especially when running core business applications on the cloud. Today, banks do not have to build customised software when providers have plug and play solutions readily available. Software providers have historically deployed a maintenance model where their customers opt for per-user licenses for a particular service. Now, with SaaS, software can be centrally hosted and delivered through the cloud. In addition, many providers are leveraging AI and ML capabilities, and embedding enhanced omnichannel features. This enables banks to optimise, tailor and deliver consistent customer experiences across digital channels, remove friction, and develop deeper trust. As new technologies open up data streams to and from third parties and emerging startups, banks will be able to offer their customers a range of new products, services and insights that will not only optimise customer experiences, both online and offline, but will create highly personalised, customised relationships. Download this Finextra impact study, in association with Amazon Web Services (AWS), to learn more.

534 downloads

Report

Prepare to Choose: 4 factors Banks must assess before committing to a SaaS Provider

Most banks' digital transformation journeys are well underway, and the need to now deliver on their strategy milestones means that time is of the essence. A recent survey by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and Temenos found that just under two thirds of banks see new technologies as the greatest driver of change for the next four years, up from 42% from three years ago. While the momentum toward digitalisation of financial services has grown significantly during the past 18 months, financial institutions are increasingly recognising the value of Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) solutions in delivering new products and meeting customer expectations. Central banks are also increasingly showing their appetite for and recognition of the fundamental role of cloud-driven SaaS solutions in financial services. In mid-2020 the Bank of England announced its search for a technology partner to help build out its public cloud platform, while the Bundesbank recently began encouraging German banks to focus and adopt SaaS solutions enabled by cloud computing. Banks have refined their SaaS strategy beyond non-core offerings such as payroll or HR-related tools into more comprehensive, cloud-centric strategies. Covid-19 has served to accelerate adoption in core banking technology. SaaS is attractive to financial institutions looking for fast, agile solutions, because they are able to consume the required service instead of having to buy, install and maintain a suite of software independently. Rather than building in-house, financial organisations are looking specifically for resources that will speed up their attempts to innovate and scale at pace, and engender independence where suitable, all the while bolstering compliance regimes from the heart of operations throughout its entire API network. In order to have confidence that the correct SaaS provider is being selected, it is vital for banks to drill down and assess the factors which make SaaS attractive from a business perspective in the long and short term. Banks must consider whether its core offering will enable business continuity, optimise business outcomes and help the bank reach its regulatory obligations. Above all else, SaaS providers must provide certainty that their solution will not hinder or threaten business functionality in any way. This Finextra impact study, in association with Temenos, will outline four fundamental factors for banks when considering a SaaS solution, in order to position a financial institution’s business offering for success.

512 downloads

Report

Addressing tech skills shortages in financial services

As digitisation increases within banking, financial services and insurance, tech leaders are faced with the task of aligning skills to strategy. Ensuring the learning and development function is positioned in line with business strategy is therefore of paramount importance. Regardless of how much emphasis is placed on acquiring technology solutions and understanding how best to utilise them, if employee training is not aligned with the organisation’s needs, progress will not be made. Homing in on business goals is an efficient starting point. Only then can outlining clear key performance indicators (KPIs) in an intentional manner support the talent strategy. By communicating a business goal to employees and requesting their feedback, talent management can be bolstered by considering behavioural traits, in addition to cultural fits - hiring strong candidates who can make smart decisions. Employers must be asked: what business outcomes do we expect technology skill development to deliver for us? Download this Finextra impact study, in association with Pluralsight, to learn more.

283 downloads

Report

Managed Services: Helping Banks refocus on Innovation and Growth

Key concerns such as security and compliance are often cited as barriers to banks adopting managed services. In fact, the managed model can deliver significant advantages in these and other areas. It’s important to understand how today’s services providers contribute more than just piecemeal solutions to individual problems. Managed services is about creating a partnership that focuses on outcomes, and adopting the latest technology continually to turn pain points into competitive advantage. Download this Finextra impact study, in association with Finastra, to learn more.

280 downloads

Report

Love Change: The Dynamics of Modern Leadership

Change in financial services has become a differentiating factor. With that, the facets of leadership have and are still evolving, with a refreshed focus on the dynamics and instruments of change within organisations. The pace of change is a different proposition now than it used to be. The confluence of technology advances, which continue to occur exponentially, and consumer demand in combination with market and regulatory pressures give the context for the very real challenge of agility for financial institutions (FIs) of all sizes. This means in some cases wholesale transformation of traditional structures, hierarchies and business models, away from not only legacy technology stacks and systems, but also from endemic siloed cultures. Architects often say it is easier to demolish and start anew but with live running workforces and global operations in train, transforming an enterprise on-the-go requires astute and reasoned methods and a considered approach. It goes beyond placing the focus on technology, as the industry is wont to do. What are the core tenets of change and transformation? How does one effect change, enterprise-wide and what are the real dynamics of modern leadership? It takes the vision to identify processes that are redundant or limiting, for example longstanding Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) may be redundant within new business and operating models. Or the way in which teams interoperate and report may need to be adjusted; upskilling is likely a contributing factor; HR and recruitment parameters need likewise to be taken into account.  The instruments with which to change course need to be clearly and realistically set on course, but what else is required in order to inspire and influence. Is failure indeed required in order to succeed? This report from Finextra, in association with Mambu, engaged several industry leaders from a range of financial services organisations, to address the dynamics of modern leadership and what it takes to succeed and orchestrate change, not only once but as a constant.

310 downloads

Report

Driving successful Cloud Transformation

Capital market firms face the challenge to evolve at pace with technology, so that they're able to innovate and adapt to the customer’s needs quickly. Cloud is seen as a key enabler to their digital future, however cloud adoption isn’t just about IT infrastructure. How can executives develop a holistic approach towards cloud modernisation to ensure their investments pay off? As ‘digital’ engulfs business strategies, large-scale financial services players need to develop smarter ways to adapt and accelerate technological change. They are also under constant pressure from fintechs operating on agile systems, rolling out products and services at speed. The pace of innovation at large firms often suffers due to the scale of operations, monolithic tech infrastructure, ‘people alignment’ and old ways of working. Challenges brought about by COVID require even greater levels of resilience and agility to navigate. More firms than ever are using cloud-led modernisation as a catalyst for holistic enterprise transformation, and crucially, this should lead to adaptable business models that can sustain growth and weather future uncertainties in an ever-changing milieu. To maximise the value from investment, operating models need to align closely business and tech strategies. A democratised approach needs to be implemented enterprisewide and with that, a portfolio management approach to balance the long-term evolution of the underlying platform whilst pursuing growth with new products and features. Technology modernisation is also an enabler for lean product management practices such as low-cost rapid experimentation for exploring and exploiting innovative opportunities. Organisational, as well as technological change is needed to ensure teams can tap into the acceleration and agility that cloud-based architecture promises. Organisations need a mind shift- moving from a top-down decision culture to an empowered agile workforce that can continuously deliver on strategic business outcomes. This research paper from Finextra, in association with Thoughtworks, is based on interviews with senior leaders on their plans and challenges around digital programmes and cloud modernisation.

338 downloads