U.S. financial firms
embrace cloud, 'fat fingers' notwithstanding
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[March 17, 2017]
By Anna Irrera
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Only two years ago, an outage similar to the one that
struck Amazon's cloud services last month would have reinforced U.S.
financial firms' view that shifting data and systems onto the public
cloud was just too risky.
The fact that the Feb. 28 shutdown had no visible impact on the
industry's use of cloud services goes to show how far it has progressed
since then in embracing the cloud after nearly a decade of hesitation.
That change of heart came after providers Amazon Inc, Microsoft Corp and
Alphabet Inc's Google took steps to assure financial firms and
regulators that the cloud not only made tech systems cheaper and faster,
but also more reliable and secure than their own server-filled
warehouses.
The benefits are so unquestionable that last month's outage caused by an
employee who typed in a wrong code was barely a bump on the road to the
cloud and merely a reminder that no technology is foolproof, financial
executives, Silicon Valley vendors and analysts who work with them said.
"You can't just say if you use Amazon you get the magic cloud sauce and
everything will work perfectly," said Yevgeniy Brikman, the co-founder
of Gruntwork, a startup that helps big companies deploy cloud services.
"And similarly that if you use your own data center that somehow
magically everything will work perfectly. These are just tools."
The payoffs of using the cloud are clear for an industry engaged in
rounds of relentless cost-cutting.
Calculations performed for Reuters by research firm IDC Financial
Insights show the biggest global banks saving $15 billion by 2019 from
cloud adoption, cutting technology infrastructure costs by 25 percent.
About two thirds of global financial firms will be using cloud services
in a significant way by next year, IDC predicts. (Graphic: http://tmsnrt.rs/2nrpRoG)
Developing an application on the cloud can help reduce the time it takes
to launch from 89 days to 15 days, according to consultancy McKinsey &
Company.
JPMorgan Chase & Co, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Capital One Financial Corp
and Liberty Mutual Insurance Co are already using shared cloud services
from large technology vendors, executives and spokespeople said. So are
institutions such as Nasdaq Inc, The Depository Trust and Clearing
Corporation (DTCC) and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA),
the brokerage industry watchdog. State Street Corp is considering the
same.
Amazon is the biggest provider with 40 percent of public cloud business,
according to Synergy Research. That market totaled $7 billion in the
fourth quarter, and is growing at an annual rate of 50 percent.
FINRA now runs 90 percent of its critical applications, including market
surveillance, on Amazon's cloud, saving $20 million annually. The recent
outage did not affect its satisfaction.
"The capability and flexibility to recover quickly is much greater, and
it is far more cost-efficient than operating your own geographically
dispersed data centers," said spokesman Ray Pellecchia.
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The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics center in
Lauwin-Planque, northern France on February 20, 2017. REUTERS/Pascal
Rossignol/File Photo
TRUCKING DATA
Cost savings alone would not have been enough to lure big financial firms.
For years, the industry sat on the sidelines due to concerns about data security
and regulatory compliance as other corporations took advantage of the cloud's
benefits. Silicon Valley took notice and made changes.
For
instance, Amazon has expanded its number and locations of data centers around
the world to allow customers to choose a particular center to comply with
different countries' privacy rules. Customers can also get dedicated servers to
avoid sharing them, or can access information through private networks.
In late-November Amazon introduced the "Snowmobile," a tamper-resistant 45-foot
(13.72 m) container pulled by a semi-trailer truck that securely transports
customers' servers to its own data centers.
Amazon customers can also set up systems to automatically shift to another data
center within its 16 global regions if an outage occurs. That minimized the
impact of the recent outage, four financial customers said.
George Brady, who heads shared technology operations at Capital One, told
Reuters the bank believed big tech companies had "controls for public cloud that
are as good or better than capabilities we would provide." He was speaking
before the outage, but later said the bank had factored in occasional glitches
and remained committed to the cloud. Capital One builds all new applications on
the cloud and plans to reduce its data centers from eight to three by next year.
John
Madsen, co-head of technology at Goldman Sachs, said his bank has worked with
vendors to ensure cloud networks were secure and reliable, and was satisfied
with the results. "We've had a lot of success with those efforts," he said.
Customers, regulators and lawyers acknowledge that cloud failures could, in
theory, wreak havoc. That is why large financial institutions have mostly kept
highly sensitive data off the cloud and have back-up plans, like using multiple
vendors. An apocalyptic scenario where many data centers fail at the same time
is highly unlikely, they say.
At a conference this month, Scott Mullins, the Amazon executive responsible for
generating new cloud business from financial firms, said security has given way
to other issues as financial customers' top concern when making the decision to
move.
"About four years ago when we began in earnest talking to financial
institutions...security was the No. 1 topic," he said. "Today we don't spend as
much time talking about security."
(Reporting by Anna Irrera; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Tomasz Janowski)
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