Survey, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks are taking steps to mitigate risks from their increasing use of external cloud computing services, a survey by Harris Poll and Google Cloud said on Thursday.

The Bank of England and the Bank of France have expressed concerns about a lack of transparency in how banks rely on a “concentrated” number of outside cloud computing providers like Google, Microsoft and Amazon which are beyond the arm of the regulators.

Regulators are worried that reliance by many banks on the same providers could create systemic risk if one of the cloud companies were to go down.

The survey of 1,300 leaders in financial services from the United States, Canada, France, Germany, Britain, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Australia showed that 83% were using the cloud as part of their primary computing infrastructure.

The bulk of the companies are also considering adopting a multicloud strategy, the survey said, which would allow a bank to switch to an alternative provider if there is an outage to avoid an interruption of services for customers.

“Based on the Harris survey, it is clear that financial institutions are taking actions to solve concentration or vendor lock-in concerns with 88% of respondents not currently using a multicloud strategy considering doing so in the next 12 months,” Adrian Poole, director for financial services in Britain and Ireland for Google Cloud, said.



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Central bank e-cash could ‘challenge’ role of big banks, Bank of France says, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Central bank digital cash could give new types of businesses access to ultra-cheap central bank funding and lessen the role of big banks in settling large transfers, a senior Bank of France official said on Thursday.

With high stakes involved in the development of e-cash, the Bank of France is part of the European Central Bank’s research into how a future digital euro could be used both in wholesale bank-to-bank lending and in everyday retail banking.

A wholesale central bank digital currency could spark demand from financial firms which don’t currently have access to central bank money, Denis Beau, deputy governor of the Bank of France, told an online seminar organised by the OMFIF think-tank.

“Even if these actors would be … subject to similar regulatory requirements, the role of large banks in the settlement of transfer orders in central bank money would be challenged,” Beau said.

The world’s biggest central banks, including the ECB, are revving up work on issuing digital cash, aiming to use its flexibility to improve payment systems, ease some of the complexities of negative interest rates and ensure they don’t cede too much control to digital currencies.

The scope and scale of the central bank digital currency research varies from country to country.

The People’s Bank of China is in the advanced stages of testing a digital yuan that would be used by both individuals and businesses. The Bahamas has a fully working digital ‘Sand Dollar’ while Switzerland has successfully tested large-scale bank-to-bank digital currency transactions.

Meanwhile, U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that China’s digital yuan plans would not push the Fed to rush its own digital dollar plans.



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