TechnologySunGard Identifies 10 ‘Big Data’ Trends Transforming Financial Services

SunGard Identifies 10 'Big Data' Trends Transforming Financial Services

SunGard has identified 10 trends shaping ‘big data’ initiatives across all segments of the financial services industry in 2012. They are:

  1. Larger market data sets containing historical data over longer time periods and increased granularity are required to feed predictive models, forecasts and trading impacts throughout the day.
  2. New regulatory and compliance requirements are placing greater emphasis on governance and risk reporting, driving the need for deeper and more transparent analyses across global organisations.
  3. Financial institutions are ramping up their enterprise risk management frameworks, which rely on master data management strategies to help improve enterprise transparency, auditability and executive oversight of risk.
  4. Financial services companies are looking to leverage large amounts of consumer data across multiple service delivery channels (branch, web, mobile) to support new predictive analysis models in discovering consumer behaviour patterns and increase conversion rates.
  5. In post-emergent markets like Brazil, China and India, economic and business growth opportunities are outpacing Europe and America as significant investments are made in local and cloud-based data infrastructures.
  6. Advances in big data storage and processing frameworks will help financial services firms unlock the value of data in their operations departments in order to help reduce the cost of doing business and discover new arbitrage opportunities.
  7. Population of centralised data warehouse systems will require traditional extract, transform, load (ETL) processes to be re-engineered with big data frameworks to handle growing volumes of information.
  8. Predictive credit risk models that tap into large amounts of data consisting of historical payment behaviour are being adopted in consumer and commercial collections practices to help prioritise collections activities by determining the propensity for delinquency or payment.
  9. Mobile applications and internet-connected devices such as tablets and smartphone are creating greater pressure on the ability of technology infrastructures and networks to consume, index and integrate structured and unstructured data from a variety of sources.
  10. Big data initiatives are driving increased demand for algorithms to process data, as well as emphasising challenges around data security and access control, and minimising impact on existing systems.

Michael Versace, research director of worldwide risk and big data industry leader at IDC Financial Insights, said: “Big data is one important trend driving investments in enterprise analytics, and analytic excellence is core to much needed innovation in today’s finance industry. Business analytics applied to relationship pricing, capital management, compliance, corporate performance, trade execution, security, fraud management and other disciplines is the core innovation platform to improving decision making. Analytics and the ability to efficiently and effectively exploit big data and advanced modelling, in memory and real-time decisioning across channels and operations, will distinguish those that thrive in uncertain and uneven markets from those that fumble.”

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