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

The FCA’s Warning on Operational Resilience

Subscribe to our newsletter

By Paul Roberts, CEO, Milestone Group.

The FCA annual report is out and it’s not just Brexit under the microscope. As expected, operational resilience continues to be an area of concern, building on the issues raised in their business plan of 2019/2020 in April. It’s clearly an area they feel deserves more attention. And it’s not just the FCA, other regulators have all raised similar such as European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), Luxembourg Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier (CSSF); and Central Bank of Ireland (CBI).

Operational resilience is an area of risk that continues to climb the risk league tables and regulators in multiple jurisdictions are taking it seriously. However, customers, investors and investment management firms can incur significant financial losses and reputational damage from disruptions to the outsourcing relationships they have in place. And while it may seem like a less obvious area of concern for some, in comparison to financial crime for example, for institutions on the buy and sell-

side, operational resilience is right up there as a priority. Or at least it should be.

Look no further than recent fines levied by the Central Bank of Ireland on the basis of clarity in controls around outsourcing arrangements, which in itself speaks directly to the importance of operational resilience.

These types of risks are a step beyond what we normally think of as pure operational risk, as they highlight the infrastructure interdependencies among financial services participants and third-parties. Fundamentally, firms can outsource certain functions, but they cannot outsource the responsibility.

One area of increasing importance for those across the fund industry is the ability to calculate and publish a backup NAV under any disruption scenario, including a complete service provider outage. This speaks directly to the theme of operational resilience. If this were to arise it would have serious consequences for the firm as an accurate NAV is the basis for the price of a unit or share of the fund in question. This is something that many firms outsource fully or in part to third-party providers. Yet,

crucially, the firm retains all regulatory responsibility. Third-party administrators are not responsible entities that carry fiduciary liability and while firms recognise this, few have addressed this need for operational resilience. For those that have, there is a wide variation in approach and effectiveness.

Many firms still rely heavily on spreadsheets and reports from outsourcers in overseeing their NAVs. If this is the case, how can a firm responsible for billions in assets declare they have effective oversight, let alone contingent or backup NAV capabilities, in response to this new regulatory theme of operational resilience?

The truth is they can’t. The bar is being raised when it comes to market practice and firms need to take a holistic approach and consider how best to satisfy both clients and regulators of their operational resilience. Insuring against NAV outages by deploying purpose-built and proven solutions will allow firms to strengthen this key area of operational resilience. If their current models fail at any point, this approach will protect their investors and satisfy the regulators.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Managing Off-Channel Communications Compliance

Managing off-channel communications – business interactions occurring outside of approved corporate systems – continues to challenge firms’ compliance efforts. The rise of personal messaging apps, social media, and other unmonitored channels – for example, messaging functionality embedded in an order management system – exposes firms to substantial regulatory risk. Enforcement actions by regulatory bodies, such...

BLOG

Diginex Labour Rights Expert Acquisition Highlights ESG Data Shift to Risk

Sustainability data and RegTech provider Diginex’s recent acquisition of The Remedy Project labour and human rights advisory illustrates how ESG is transforming from an investment strategy to a risk mitigation objective among financial companies. The London-based company, which last year purchased sustainability data and analytics provider Matter DK, anticipates that the The Remedy Project’s expertise...

EVENT

Eagle Alpha Alternative Data Conference, Spring, New York, hosted by A-Team Group

Now in its 8th year, the Eagle Alpha Alternative Data Conference managed by A-Team Group, is the premier content forum and networking event for investment firms and hedge funds.

GUIDE

The Reference Data Utility Handbook

The potential of a reference data utility model has been discussed for many years, and while early implementations failed to gain traction, the model has now come of age as financial institutions look for new data management models that can solve the challenges of operational cost reduction, improved data quality and regulatory compliance. The multi-tenanted...