By John Ginovsky
As new technology continues to
proliferate in the banking industry, various observers advise banks to not only
remember the basics when it comes to compliance, but seek to find ways to use
new technology to meet regulatory requirements.
ABA
Banking Journal recently talked with a number of such observers on this
issue.
Nicholas Brewer, senior analyst at
Aite Group, for example, says: "Something changed in 2008-2009 which we're
still working through. Before then there was never a time-maybe excepting the
Glass-Steagall Act-when popular politics and banking regulation coincided...We're
still seeing the working out of the politics and banking regulation.
"To the extent that banks remain agile
to customers and credit changes and market prices and all the rest, they should
also remember in their IT strategies that they need to remain under the
regulatory requirements."
Andrew Tilbury, chief marketing
offier, BluePoint Solutions, says much the same thing. "No matter what [new
technology] you're looking at, there are going to be regulations around it. Up
front you should make sure that what you're going to start offering has
built-in compliance.
"We've seen a lot of financial
institutions being able to handle the regulatory documentation and compliance
with better document imaging systems. It saves a lot of time within the
financial institution."
And Randy Roth, president of Vitex,
offers this observation: "We have to be more diligent with our due diligence of
the vendors, our definition of processes. The actual roll-out of the technology
has got to include the security component of it and regulatory compliance.
"One of the biggest things that we
see with banks today is they kind of tack on the regulatory and compliance
pieces at the end of the process. They don't really re-engineer the process, so
every time a new regulation comes out they just keep making their processes
longer."
Roth recommends incorporating a
standard process to periodically examine each of the bank's processes not only
for its regulatory compliance aspects, but to see if there are new systems
available to make the regulatory aspects more effective.
"On a regular basis I think banks
need to step back and look at each individual process from a customer
standpoint and see where is the most appropriate place to plug in the
regulatory and the compliance components," Roth continues. "You can't just keep
tacking them on the end...All of this new technology is coming at them so fast
and the regulations are changing so fast, you really have to look at each
process from beginning to end."
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About the Author
John Ginovsky is contributing editor of ABA Banking Journal and editor of the publication's TechTopics e-newsletter.
For more than two decades he has written about the commercial
banking industry. In particular, he's specialized in the
technological side of banking and how it relates to the
actual business of banking. He previously was senior editor
for Community Banker magazine (which merged with ABA Banking Journal) and was a staff writer for ABA's Bankers News. You can email him at
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[This article was posted on January 29, 2013, on the website of ABA Banking Journal, www.ababj.com.]
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