Cyber Threats Marked as Top Risk for Banking and Capital Markets CEOs

Cyber Threats Marked as Top Risk for Banking and Capital Markets CEOs
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According to PwC's survey, cyber threats have replaced over-regulation as top concern for Banking and Capital Markets (BCM) CEOs. 89% are worried about their cybersecurity, while 93% will be investing more heavily in it in 2018. The survey highlights the outcomes of interviews with 188 BCM CEOs around the world.

“There are two types of BCM organisations, those that have experienced a major cyberattack and those that will. Unsurprisingly, nothing is more likely to keep their CEOs awake at night. The importance of cyber protection to customer trust underlines the extent to which cyber threats are a strategic rather than just IT risk. Developments such as the GDPR make the need for more proactive safeguards, better coordination and more systematic response plans even more pressing,“ says David Hoffman, Global Banking & Capital Markets Leader.

BCM CEOs seeing the pace of technological change (85%) and the closely-related impact of changing consumer behaviour (73%) as threats to growth is up on last year. They’re realising customer behaviour can’t be addressed without first dealing with the technological disruption that drives them. At the same time, the relatively low level of perceived disruption coming from new competition would suggest that the heat from FinTech is easing off. Rather than a potential rival, FinTech businesses are coming to be seen as a valued source of innovation and talent.

Capitalising on the potential of new technologies is also as much about talent as tech itself. People rather than systems drive innovation and realise its full commercial potential. As the CEO Survey findings highlight, attracting digital talent is notoriously hard: less than 20% of BCM CEOs see it as easy. While much of the focus is on bringing in app developers, robotics engineers and other specialists, it’s just as important to ensure that tech awareness permeates throughout the organisation, including senior leadership.

It’s also key to consider how to organise talent when humans and machines are now coming to work so closely as part of a hybrid workforce. Most BCM CEOs are still trying to work out how to make the most of the collaborative potential. When thinking about their people strategy for the digital age, less than half (44%) are clear about how robotics and AI can improve customer experience, for example.

BCM organisations also need to address common anxieties about the impact of automation and AI. When asked whether they are creating transparency over the impacts of automation and AI to help build trust within their workforces, nearly two-thirds of BCM CEOs said yes and a further 10% plan to do so in the next 12 months. However, more than 20% aren’t addressing this issue and have no immediate plans to do so.