U.S. House lawmakers ask regulators to scrutinize bank cloud providers
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[August 23, 2019]
By Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two U.S. lawmakers
have called on a top financial regulatory panel to consider direct
oversight of the cloud services big tech companies provide to banks,
saying they have become a critical component of the global financial
system.
In a letter sent on Thursday evening to the Financial Stability
Oversight Council (FSOC), Democratic House Representatives Katie Porter
and Nydia Velázquez said Amazon.com Inc's Amazon Web Services, Microsoft
Corp's Microsoft Azure and Alphabet Inc's Google Cloud should be
considered systemically important like payment and settlement services.
"Cloud services have become an essential element of our modern banking
system and should be overseen commensurately," the pair, who both sit on
the House Financial Services Committee, wrote in the letter seen by
Reuters. "Cloud services are not currently subject to an appropriate and
enforced regulatory regime."
The letter follows a massive data breach at Capital One disclosed last
month that has raised questions over the risks posed by banks' reliance
on third-party cloud providers. While FSOC is not obliged to act on the
letter, it signals financial policymakers are also growing wary of big
tech firms, which are already in the crosshairs over privacy and
competition concerns.
Porter and Velázquez said FSOC, a panel comprised of top federal
regulators including the Treasury and Federal Reserve, should consider
designating the three cloud services providers as "systemically
important financial market utilities."
Federal law allows FSOC to designate firms whose failure could result in
significant liquidity or credit problems spreading among financial
institutions. Currently, eight utilities are designated as systemically
important, which carries strict risk management and governance
requirements.
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A Google Cloud logo outside of the Google Cloud computing unit's
headquarters at the Moffett Place office complex in Sunnyvale,
California, U.S., June 19, 2019. REUTERS/Paresh Dave/File Photo
Adoption of cloud computing has intensified in the financial
services industry in recent years, with banks running everything
from trading applications to capital calculations on platforms
provided by third parties. In 2017, Bank of America Corp said it
planned to move 80% of its technological workload to cloud and
virtual platforms in the next several years.
Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud account for
57% of the cloud market, the lawmakers said in the letter, citing
analysis from Synergy Research Group.
The lawmakers said the outsized presence of these firms in the
financial services sector made them similarly critical cogs as
payment and settlement firms, meriting more scrutiny.
Speaking to Reuters in an interview, Porter said a disruption at
any major cloud computing platform could compromise the stability of
the market and that policymakers needed to pay attention.
"It's a very fundamental, entrenched part of financial
institutions, but the policymaking is not there," she said.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder in Washington; Editing by Michelle
Price and Matthew Lewis)
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