About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Can the FX Industry Achieve ‘Business as Usual’ at these Most Unusual of Times

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Vikas Srivastava, Chief Revenue Officer at Integral.

As novel COVID-19 has swept the globe, financial institutions can still remain focussed on trying to operate ‘business as usual’ and serve their clients. But this continuity can be achieved largely in part with access to the right technology.

We are facing the biggest black swan event of our generation. The impact of COVID-19 has surpassed all other crises in the last 50 years, at least in terms of its far-reaching impact on global economies and everyday life.

The current crisis has forced businesses of all kinds to shut their physical offices. Firms with the wherewithal to do so have now transitioned their operations and employees to a 100% remote working condition. No doubt that the impact of this disruptive event will continue to be felt professionally and personally by many people for several more weeks, if not months to come.

We should also recognize that it was no small feat for so many financial institutions to move quickly into business continuity plan (BCP) protocol. Being able to make prices and manage risk remains a business-critical mission, especially at a time when we’ve seen huge volume and volatility spikes, as well as impact on liquidity.

Yet working in BCP mode means doing all the above while also problem-solving for the load on one’s technology infrastructure, or perhaps even an inability to easily access systems remotely. Fortunately, many obstacles this time were mitigated by the fact that quite a number of firms have already moved significant parts of their infrastructure to cloud-based services.

The FX industry has yet again proven its inherent resilience and we should be very proud of our response thus far. Let’s give recognition and kudos to the teams at banks, financial institutions, and technology platforms working tirelessly to keep operations running and maintaining business continuity. Here at Integral, I was proud of the fact that our move to working remotely was practically seamless, and largely ‘business as usual’ as we focused on how to continue serving our clients.

Indeed, now is exactly the time to be focused on serving clients, and serving them well. To do this, I firmly believe that half the battle is simply having the right systems and infrastructures in place, and to be able to access it wherever you are working. Technology has a critical role to play in this prolonged period of uncertainty we find ourselves in.

I believe many of us will also be asking ourselves what exactly the new normal will be once we emerge from this period of remote working. I firmly believe that together we will get through this and emerge stronger. When we get to the other side, I would not be surprised if the banking industry begins to take a closer look at their infrastructures and their readiness for similar events in the future.

Just as one wouldn’t say “now that coronavirus isn’t a threat, I’m not going to wash my hands,” businesses will not be able to argue that cloud is still an optional item in their technology strategy.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Navigating the Build vs Buy Dilemma: Cloud Strategies for Accelerating Quantitative Research

For many quantitative trading firms and asset managers, building a self-provisioned historical market data environment remains one of the most time-consuming and resource-intensive steps in establishing a new research capability. Sourcing data, normalising symbologies, handling corporate actions and maintaining infrastructure can take months and absorb significant budget before a single model is tested. At the...

BLOG

Build, Buy, or Both? Why the Real Question for Quant Infrastructure Has Shifted to Where the Edge Sits

The questions have become perennial: build versus buy, cloud versus on-premise, in-house versus managed platform. But the discussion that emerged from a recent A-Team Group webinar on quantitative research infrastructure pointed to something more interesting than a binary choice. The build-versus-buy question, panellists agreed, has matured into a more sophisticated conversation about where firms locate...

EVENT

AI in Data Management Summit New York City

Following the success of the 15th Data Management Summit NYC, A-Team Group are excited to announce our new event: AI in Data Management Summit NYC!

GUIDE

Entity Data Management Handbook – Seventh Edition

Sourcing entity data and ensuring efficient and effective entity data management is a challenge for many financial institutions as volumes of data rise, more regulations require entity data in reporting, and the fight again financial crime is escalated by bad actors using increasingly sophisticated techniques to attack processes and systems. That said, based on best...