Print this article
Strategy Should Be Driven By Innovation Not Regulation - Celent
7 November 2012
Research by consultants Celent highlights the risk that change is being
driven by regulation, rather than innovation. The report, Equipping the Front Office for the New Risk Environment: A Survey of
Strategic and Operational Priorities, observes that the nature of
regulation has changed from something to be complied with or reported on, to an
issue that needs to be contended with from a strategy and competition
standpoint. Celent expects regulatory changes such as Dodd-Frank and EMIR
derivatives reforms and Basel III, to individually cost between $150 million
and $350 million per firm. According to Celent firms need to move away from the “incremental
changes and quick fixes” they have tended to pursue in the past and focus on “multifaceted
changes” on the business and technology front. “With firms heavily involved in
compliance-led initiatives, which are characterized by tight deadlines and
reporting obligations, change teams need to bear in mind that their initiatives
must be catalyzed by regulation, but led by innovation and value,” says Cubillas Ding, research
director with Celent’s Capital Markets, Finance and Risk Group. One area where Celent believes future battles will be won
and lost is in the manner to which performance and risk measures are deployed
and utilized, especially in the front office. The research finds that 60 per cent of
firms believe that bringing performance and risk measures in tandem with the
front line can be used to shape and facilitate the right risk-taking culture,
thereby facilitating better trading decisions, stronger controls, and a more
accurate picture of profitability. In the long run, Celent believes that successful firms will
be characterized by smart exploitation of next-generation technologies, coherent
risk IT strategies underpinned by strategic principles and sound IT practices
and an ecosystem change approach across end-to-end trading and risk workflows.