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Paul Wallis's Blog Posts Tagged 'cio' (19)

The need for a common language in cybersecurity

In addressing, “Cyber Security and Global Interdependence”, Dave Clemente of Chatham House discusses the ‘security implications emerging at the intersection of cyberspace and infrastructure’.  One of his conclusions is that,

“Meeting these security challenges requires better shared understanding of what is critical between those who protect an organization and those who set its strategic…

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Added by Paul Wallis on May 10, 2013 at 4:28 — No Comments

Finance IT problems around the world

On New Year’s Eve 2012, late afternoon, customers of three of the UK’s largest banks were unable to withdraw cash or use internet banking - some complaining that account balances were incorrectly showing ‘00.00’.

 

There can’t be many worse times for such a “glitch” to occur, and the (further) damage to those banks’ reputations must have been considerable. The financial cost was also considerable with, for example, Lloyds Bank setting aside £125 million to “compensate…

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Added by Paul Wallis on February 14, 2013 at 2:39 — No Comments

Why does finance need a Legal Entity Identifier?

During July we attended the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, for the formation and launch of the Financial Stability Board’s (FSB) Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) Private Sector Preparatory Group.

The group was created by the FSB in response to a call from the leaders of the G20 countries to proceed with development of a, “unique identification system for parties to financial transactions.” […

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Added by Paul Wallis on January 24, 2013 at 3:35 — No Comments

Asset failure and flow

 “Assets will always fail at some point, and with any asset failure there is a chain of consequential loss which is triggered by an originating event.”

Last year, I discussed the vulnerability of the modern city to interruptions in the various critical supply flows that keep it going.

 

When key flows – water, electricity, natural gas or sewage – are…

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Added by Paul Wallis on November 22, 2012 at 3:42 — No Comments

Holding the CxO to account

Over at the FSClub Blog, Chris Skinner summarises a discussion he had with a senior manager in finance about bank operations.  He writes,

“...most firms struggle with enterprise management.

It is down to the very nature of fragmented structures, legacy systems, merged and acquired operations, that make the enterprise view hard.

Hard but achievable, so why is it not…

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Added by Paul Wallis on September 14, 2012 at 9:24 — No Comments

What explains the IT problems in banks?

The citizens of both California and Japan live in the shadow of ‘The Big One’ – earthquakes of catastrophic and devastating power that will inevitably occur, one day.

 

Before these events, numerous ‘foreshocks’ will take place, smaller earthquakes, associated in time and space with the ‘mainshock’.

 

Unless things change, the finance sector will one day suffer its own ‘Big One’ – a combination of events that will cause…

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Added by Paul Wallis on July 4, 2012 at 4:18 — No Comments

Is the financial system becoming too complex to depict?

As I walked away from the bank HQ 6 years ago, Han Solo’s famous Star Wars quote came to mind,

“I got a bad feeling about this”

During the meeting I’d just attended, a manager from the bank had explained how some transactions with other financial institutions occurred.  The transactions were very valuable, worth millions of pounds, and happened regularly.  To paraphrase,

“...basically, traders transact deals, each using their own…

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Added by Paul Wallis on June 14, 2012 at 5:04 — No Comments

Seeing the next flash crash coming

Last week, in “Systems Thinking, Safety and Risk Management”, IBM Fellow Irving Wladawsky-Berger discussed a round table breakfast about, ‘Protecting Financial Markets in the Age of the Cloud

“...Several participants cited the sharp rise in volume and speed of high-frequency trading over the past decade as an example of a current practice that is…

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Added by Paul Wallis on May 10, 2012 at 14:06 — No Comments

Finance and transparency

Strike!...Everybody Out!

 

It’s hard to imagine a group of people less likely to go on strike than the floor traders at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.  But, a few weeks ago, brokers in the Eurodollar options pit did just that.

 

They were protesting because they were unable to participate in the pricing of ‘block trades’ in Eurodollar futures, believing the system is ‘…

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Added by Paul Wallis on May 3, 2012 at 12:30 — No Comments

Dubious events in finance

The dubious events at brokerage MF Global demonstrate yet again how vulnerable investors are in today’s data flow-reliant financial markets.

 

During late 2011, MF Global had been losing money on its currency market bets, and, to stay afloat, it delved into customer accounts and used customer money in attempts to cover its precarious financial position.

 

The attempts failed and the company had to file for bankruptcy.

 

According to the liquidator’s…

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Added by Paul Wallis on February 17, 2012 at 9:20 — No Comments

Finance: who's driving the bus?

During the last 15 months, here at OBASHI Think we have written a few blogs about IT in today’s data flow reliant finance industry.  For example,

 

Data flow disasters can sting

If a data flow is interrupted or compromised, it can cause chaos in the financial markets.

 …

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Added by Paul Wallis on November 18, 2011 at 11:30 — No Comments

Security: Cloud vs. On-premises

Researchers at Ruhr University, Germany, recently informed Amazon Web Services (AWS) of security holes in the AWS cloud architecture, enabling AWS to fix them before any “customers have been impacted”.

 

The research team believes similar flaws exist in many other cloud services, potentially enabling, ‘attackers to gain administrative…

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Added by Paul Wallis on October 28, 2011 at 10:24 — No Comments

Understanding connections

When you are growing up, some television programmes bury themselves deep into your brain and just stay there.

 

For me, one such was the BBC series “Connections”, by the science historian, James Burke.

 

First broadcast in 1978, the documentary explored the ways our modern technological world came into existence.

 

As a kid, I would watch fascinated, as Burke would weave a thread through historical eras, making “connections” between seemingly…

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Added by Paul Wallis on September 15, 2011 at 10:57 — No Comments

Be afraid – business as usual in Finance IT

In July, Information Age ran a roundtable debate with IT leaders to discuss various bank industry issues.  Here are comments made by some of the delegates:

“We still don’t understand what the exposure of the banks is to each other.”

 

“Some retail banks are running on 40-year-old…

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Added by Paul Wallis on September 8, 2011 at 16:05 — No Comments

It’s time to shine a light on banks’ data problems

Here at OBASHI we believe that there is a pressing need for finance to “understand precisely how its product [money/data] flows and interacts with people, process and technology”.

 

This belief was further reinforced recently by the BBC’s ‘Business as Usual’, a radio documentary about continuing complexity in the financial sector.

 

The programme demonstrated that,…

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Added by Paul Wallis on July 22, 2011 at 11:00 — No Comments

The Four Servers of the Apocalypse

Generally speaking, most human beings aren’t very good at understanding risk.

 

The odds of being killed by a shark are roughly 1 in 3,750,000

 

The odds of being killed in a car crash are 1 in 84 (USA figures, source)

 

It’s hardly an original point, but which of those are most beach holidaymakers most concerned about?

 

In business, the…

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Added by Paul Wallis on June 23, 2011 at 14:48 — No Comments

Is cloud computing ‘as safe as flying’?

Dennis Howlett blogged the other day about “Cloud computing advantages”, promoting the view that cloud is ‘as safe as flying.’

 

He uses a letter to The Economist written by Prof. Milo Martin to support the point.

 

Prof Martin compares cloud computing to commercial aviation, and compares car travel to internal IT systems.  He argues that,…

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Added by Paul Wallis on May 30, 2011 at 13:00 — No Comments

Are there really black swans in the cloud?

Gallopin’ Gertie was the nickname given to the Tacoma Narrows suspension bridge in 1940. 

 

It was so-called because shortly after being opened the bridge developed the unnerving habit of violently undulating during certain wind conditions.  After 4 months the bridge shook itself to destruction.

 

Today we know the collapse was caused by Aeroelastic…

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Added by Paul Wallis on May 26, 2011 at 11:40 — No Comments

The need to understand how IT in banking works

John Higgins is Director General of Intellect, the trade association for the UK IT industry.  Recently he wrote about, “IT’s role in avoiding another banking crisis”…

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Added by Paul Wallis on September 28, 2010 at 15:00 — No Comments

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