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IPC Survey Reveals Biggest Challenges for Financial Services Firms

A survey conducted by IPC Systems at TradeTech Europe (April 2017) has found that 77 percent of financial firms surveyed believe their company is ‘prepared’ or ‘very prepared’ to enforce MiFID II regulations when they come into effect on 3rd January 2018. However, nearly half (45 percent) of respondents claim they need to do additional research to fully understand the impact of MiFID II on how trading communications need to be recorded and stored.

The study, which surveyed 103 individuals* also revealed that compliance, compliance-related tasks and risk management comprise three of the top five biggest challenges for firms in 2017. Interestingly, there appears to be a slight difference in focus between buy-side and sell-side respondents. Buy-side ranks compliance-related issues higher while sell-side respondents are more concerned with gaining efficiencies and uncovering new sources liquidity.

Finally, 82 percent of those surveyed believe the use of the cloud will grow within financial markets, with 40 percent considering using the cloud for communication needs. 92 percent of those asked feel confident or very confident that they can capture and archive data to meet compliance regulations.

Robert Powell, director of compliance at IPC Systems, has the following comments:

“MiFID II is increasingly dominating financial firms’ agenda – and rightly so. These regulations don’t involve small updates that require little or no effort; they are driving major changes in the industry that could have severe repercussions if not adhered to. What’s interesting in this survey is that over three quarters of those asked are confident that they’re prepared for MiFID II, but this is contradicted by nearly half claiming they need to do more research into how this will impact communications. MiFID II is wide and varied, and businesses need to make sure they are aware of all of the articles. Stricter governance requirements and enhanced investor protection will be key under these regulations, but communications should  not be overlooked. MiFID II will ultimately transform the way trading communications are recorded and stored.

“It’s no surprise that compliance is a consistent challenge for firms, particularly as the financial industry regulation becomes much less forgiving. Moving, or considering a move to the cloud, is a sensible step. The cloud has matured over recent years and is increasingly being recognised as the next wave of innovation in fintech. It provides greater flexibility and maintains a level of security and efficiency that the financial markets industry requires under regulations such as MiFID II.”

*Individuals surveyed were a mixture of traders, CEOs, IT managers, brokers and other job functions related to the trading process

An infographic detailing the results can be found here: https://www.ipc.com/ipc-insights/infographics/cloud-solutions-expected-grow-financial-markets

About IPC

IPC is a technology and service leader that powers financial markets globally. We help clients anticipate change and solve problems, setting the standard with industry expertise, exceptional service and comprehensive technology. With customers first and always, we collaborate with each to understand their individual needs to help make them secure, productive and compliant within our connected community. Through service excellence, long-developed expertise and a focus on innovation and community, we provide agile and efficient ways for our customers to accelerate their ability to adapt to the ever–changing requirements for advanced networks, compliance and collaboration with all counterparties across the financial markets. www.ipc.com

Certain statements contained in this press release may be forward-looking statements. These statements may be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “should” or “will” or similar terminology. Any forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, assumptions, estimates and projections. Such forward looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control. Actual results may differ materially from any future results expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements.

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