This changing landscape reminds financial regulators that we have to continually focus on outcomes and adapt to remain fit for purpose.
Innovation services and a targeted approach
As many of you will know, our Sandbox and broader innovation services have been in existence for around 5 years now. What literally started as a 2-person initiative called ‘Project Innovate’ offering regulatory feedback to innovative business models has grown into an entire innovation division dedicated to bringing disruption to financial markets in the interests of consumers.
It’s important that we don’t rest on the laurels of our achievements. I’m a lot more interested in what we haven’t so far achieved.
- make finance work for everyone through addressing issues such as access, exclusion and vulnerability
- support the UK in the move to a greener economy by responding to the challenges posed by climate change
- use technology to overcome regulatory challenges — by helping regulated firms comply with their obligations
I’ve already discussed the unintended consequences that technology and change can have on some of the more vulnerable people in society so we think it important to try to ensure as much as is possible that technology acts as a force for good. Similarly, we feel that as a regulator we have an important part to play in the fight against climate change, following on from our first ’FinTech challenge’ focusing on green and sustainable models held last year.
RegTech and digital sandboxes
The reasons for this untapped potential are undoubtedly manifold and several beyond our gift to remedy, for example the length of sales cycles and complexity of information technology systems in many of the larger institutions who are potentially significant consumers of RegTech. However, there is perhaps one key area that we may be equipped to address.
While the RegTech market is growing I still consider it to be the sleeping giant of the financial services world
We know from our discussions with RegTech firms, and through the TechSprints we have run, that a key struggle for RegTech solutions is making the step from Proof of Concept to Proof of Value — being able to demonstrate to these potential customers in the financial services industry that your solution not only works, but may provide a more efficient and effective way of doing things than they are currently done. In other words, to develop trust in your solution and develop the business case for deployment and implementation — to justify the security, procurement risk and cost requirements that these involve.
We have also heard from RegTech firms that a missing rung in the ladder to market is the lack of access to high-quality synthetic data assets against which to test new technology solutions. So, one of the things we are currently looking at and beginning conversations around is what that digital testing environment might need to look like, what role we ought to play in supporting its creation, and whether it could be something that could be scaled across jurisdictions.
We already have a bit of experience on this front in terms of the way we run TechSprints, essentially creating an ephemeral ‘digital sandbox’ where very focussed proofs of concepts can be tested and then demonstrated to industry for a very finite period of time, with the environment itself usually only being in existence for a week or so. We have received great engagement from RegTech firms at the TechSprints we have held in recent years, so feel that exploring a permanent, data-rich testing environment is something really worth pursuing.
We are beginning conversations around what a digital testing environment might need to look like, what role we ought to play in supporting its creation, and whether it could be something that could be scaled across jurisdictions
As well as calling out 3 outcomes that we would like to see people with ideas bring forward in Cohort 6, we also mentioned 2 specific technologies that we are interested in firms exploring the potential of. I mentioned at the outset the need for regulators to anticipate what might be coming next, to identify early the potential actors of change and be on the front foot rather than reactive.
This is a tactic we employed at our recent Global AML and Financial Crime TechSprint where we specifically brought tech firms and the industry together to explore the potential of Privacy Enhancing Technologies to make improvements in the area of financial crime detection.
The first of these technologies is ‘federated learning’ or ‘travelling algorithms’ which potentially allow entities to develop and refine more performant algorithms which are trained on multiple data assets without bringing those assets together. We recognise this is a nascent field and are keen to work with innovators to explore its potential further.
The second area is ‘complex scenario modelling and scenario simulation’. This is basically a fancy way of saying that we’d like to see how graph analytics, behavioural science and deep learning can be used to better model relationships, connections and behaviours in financial markets. And to then test various simulations and scenarios against these models’.
We should be aware that standing still is effectively running backwards so continually look to improve the services we offer
Global community of regulators
We should be aware that standing still is effectively running backwards so continually look to improve the services we offer. And most of all we have to be humble enough to realise that we can’t achieve our goals alone. In a digital world and future, where physical borders are increasingly irrelevant to how business is done, we have to be part of a global community of regulators seeking to bring about disruption on an international scale.
The recent announcement that 4 federal US regulators — the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) — have joined the Global Financial Innovation Network (which we have the honour of chairing) demonstrates this global direction of travel and reiterates the enormous potential for the collective to shape and transform the future.