Ensuring resilience, banking in the cloud

25 Feb 2022 04:07 PM

The Bank of England's Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) is looking into getting more access to data and systems used to assess financial services firms’ operational flexibility in response to outages and possible cyber-attacks.

techUK will address these rules and their wider impact at a webinar with industry experts on 23 March. Find out more here.

New rules coming into force this year

This move from regulators follows the publication of new rules last year which were established to increase operational resilience and improve practice in outsourcing, which is important for consumers, firms and financial markets.

Operational disruptions and the unavailability of important business services can have a wide and critical impact on the economy, businesses and consumers alike. These disruptions can ultimately threaten the viability of firms or cause instability in the financial markets.

The PRA has issued outsourcing requirements which relate to operational resilience, cloud, data, data locations, data security, data classification and business continuity, together with a range of other matters relevant to technology providers.

Timeline and transition

To allow firms to adapt and adjust to the new rules, including testing, the PRA have set a transition period and decided on a phased approach:

Bank of England discusses new rules

A Bank of England Financial Policy Committee meeting last September discussed the "increasing reliance by the financial system on critical third parties, including cloud service providers.”

"The increasing criticality of the services that critical third parties provide, alongside concentration in a small number of providers, pose a threat to financial stability in the absence of greater direct regulatory oversight," the minutes said.

Regulated firms will continue to have primary responsibility for managing risks stemming from their outsourcing and third-party dependencies. However, additional policy measures, some requiring legislative change, are likely to be needed to mitigate the financial stability risks stemming from concentration in the provision of some third-party services.

Join techUK on 23 March to hear from industry experts who will discuss how cloud providers can best navigate the new regimes and how financial institutions are implementing cloud computing programmes.