Financial services businesses are looking to emerging technologies at a higher rate than organisations in other sectors but a significant skills gap still exists, according to an independent report.
The study, by 451 Research, was commissioned by Canonical, found that AI and machine learning (36%), containers (29%) and blockchain (24%) are highlighted as the industry’s top priorities. However, adopting emerging technologies often leads to increased complexity of IT environments who cite acute skills shortages in cloud platform expertise (46%), information security (41%) and machine learning/AI (37%).
This combination of a demand for innovation and skill shortages will result in many businesses seeking out managed services.
The report reveals that 60% of EMEA and North American financial services businesses expect multi-cloud to be the architecture of their IT environments in the next two years. Established financial services organisations are being driven to transform by new cloud-native competitors making it critical to develop new tools and services enabled by emerging technologies, such as AI and blockchain. As such, agility tops the list of cloud adoption drivers in the financial services industry- 47% cite time to market as a key incentive compared to 32% of businesses overall.
Implementing a multi-cloud environment is a key part of financial services organisations’ overall IT strategy: 62% of the sector’s IT managers believe multi-cloud will allow them to improve application performance and availability demands. Such container driven portability is required for financial services businesses, where different workloads may need isolation if containing sensitive customer data or intellectual property. An increase in extensive regulations for the sector mean that 43% expect multi-cloud to help satisfy the granular compliance and security requirements. Finally, 41% anticipate that multi-cloud will help them to reduce the overall costs of cloud deployments through data centre consolidation and more effective use of resources, which is important to financial services organisations as higher operational costs puts additional pressure on bottom lines.
“Emerging technologies are transforming financial services businesses by enabling product innovation and updates to existing operating models,” said Liam Eagle, research manager for cloud, hosting and managed services at 451 Research. “The next few years will bring critical changes, including a major shift toward execution on cloud platforms. Executing on transformation in the finance sector means tackling challenges such as regulatory compliance and information security. We expect hybrid IT strategies and partner-led managed services to be key elements in overcoming those obstacles.”
Emerging technologies
Financial institutions looking to move towards a multi-cloud environment and adopting emerging technologies can benefit from managed services such as Canonical’s managed Openstack and Kubernetes offering. The widespread use of Ubuntu Openstack in conjunction with a competitive public cloud represent a clear transition path to multi-cloud to provide superior economics, security and the compliant infrastructure that the financial industry demands. Benefitting from an automated yet flexible managed service enables developers to concentrate their time on new services rather than infrastructure maintenance.
“We’re pleased to see that financial services institutions are identifying the importance of a multi-cloud environment to help them accelerate change and innovate. Since 2017, eight of the world’s top 20 banks have chosen Canonical for their cloud infrastructure,” commented Stephan Fabel, director of product at Canonical. “Ubuntu is the trusted platform of innovation for technologies such as machine learning, blockchain and Kubernetes. Canonical’s Charmed Distribution of Kubernetes provides the workload container portability to enable financial services organisations to innovatein a multi-cloud environment and deliver new services to their customers quicker.”
Readers can download the ‘Multi-Cloud Fundamental to Financial Services Transformation’ white paper, click this link