Bank of England to push for enhanced operational resilience to cyber incidents at banks

Maria Nikolova

The Bank wants financial services firms to be able to demonstrate that they have concrete measures in place to deliver resilient services.

The Bank of England is setting the ground for new requirements concerning firms’ resilience to cyber incidents. This becomes clear from a speech given by Lyndon Nelson, Deputy CEO of the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA).

He concedes that there has been an increase in the number of operational incidents – be they caused by internal failures or from external attack. In terms of operational outages the financial sector in the UK has had RBS in 2012 which suffered a major outage in its Irish operations and more recently, of course, TSB. In between, there have been many short-term outages.

Given the circumstances, Lyndon Nelson underlined how important it is that regulators set out their expectations of firms in respect of their operational resilience. The Financial Policy Committee, for example, has been considering its tolerance for disruption to the key economic functions that the finance sector performs, he said. As part of this work, it is likely that the FPC will set a minimum level of service provision it expects for the delivery of key economic functions in the event of a severe but plausible operational disruption. The outlining of supervisory expectations may then be used as an input to guide firms’ actions in managing their own operational resilience.

Lyndon Nelson said he expects that these tolerances will use a combination of time, volume, market share and measures of interconnectedness.

“We have also been developing a suite of supervisory tools that can be used to assess firms’ resilience against our expectations and also inform the supervisory priorities we agree with firms”. Lyndon Nelson says.

He said the Bank was also trialling some other diagnostic tools.

Mr Nelson said the work will start with a Discussion Paper – joint with the Financial Conduct Authority. Although he would not elaborate on the details of the paper, he gave his perspective on these expectations.

“I would like our firms to be on a WAR footing: withstand; absorb; recover”, says Lyndon Nelson.

Firms will be expected to set their own tolerances for key business services. These tolerances will have to be in the form of clear metrics indicating when a disruption would represent a threat to a firm, to consumers or to financial stability. The Bank expects firms to test their tolerances and demonstrate to their supervisors that they have concrete measures in place to deliver resilient services.

In addition, firms will need to clearly define and regularly test their approaches to incident management. These should also include good communication plans both internally and externally.

And firms need to be able to recover from an operational incident. This requires viable, tested contingency plans for the resumption of critical functions.

Lyndon Nelson also made some remarks on the response to cyber incidents. The UK authorities have a response protocol called the Authorities Response Framework (ARF). It consists of the Treasury, FCA and the Bank. In cases of cyber events the National Cyber Security Centre is also a member. Any member can trigger the ARF and it has three response levels: monitor, engage and manage. A few years ago the ARF was rarely triggered, Nelson said, but more recently this has been increasing. This is partially due to the lowered barrier for triggering the mechanism but also because of the greater frequency of events.

Read this next

Fintech

Bitcoin payments app Strike launches in Europe

Bitcoin blockchain-based payments app Strike launched in Europe on Wednesday, allowing users in the region to buy, sell, and withdraw bitcoin (BTC).

Chainwire

Bandit Network’s Points SDK and Brave Ads Power Astar zkEVM’s Quest Platform “Yoki Origins”

“Yoki Origins,” supported by Bandit Network and Brave Ads, introduces a gamified and rewarding experience for Astar zkEVM users, marking a significant milestone in Web3 adoption.

Digital Assets

Crypto ETFs to debut in Hong Kong next week

Hong Kong has authorized six cryptocurrency-based spot ETFs set to launch on April 30, according to Bloomberg.

blockdag

BlockDAG Among The Best New Crypto To Invest In Post 8 Billion Coins Sales; More On Bitcoin Cash Futures’ Launch & Solana Positive Predictions

Explore Solana’s ATH predictions to see whether it can rise after a $17B dip? BlockDAG sells 8 billion coins in presale as Bitcoin Cash Futures launch.

Fundamental Analysis, Market News, Tech and Fundamental

Global FX Market Summary:USD, FED, German IFO ,Gold April 24 ,2024

Mixed US economic data and Fed rate hike uncertainty are causing volatility in the EUR/USD pair, while the Eurozone and gold prices add another layer of complexity.

Market News, Tech and Fundamental, Technical Analysis

EURCHF Technical Analysis Report 24 April, 2024

EURCHF currency pair can be expected to rise further toward the next major resistance level 0.9840, which stopped the pervious waves C and B, as can be seen below.

Digital Assets

Binance’s CZ could stay in prison until 2027, wife begs for mercy

Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, the founder and former CEO of Binance, has apologized for his decisions and accepted “full responsibility” in a letter to U.S. District Judge Richard A. Jones.

Digital Assets

Monex Group expands crypto business with 3iQ takeover

Monex Group has completed the acquisition of a majority stake in 3iQ Digital Holdings, Inc., a Canadian digital asset investment fund manager, as part of its strategy to expand its crypto business.

Education, Fintech, Inside View

How to Get Into Fintech: Best Tips to Succeed

The Fintech sector is experiencing significant growth, with fresh opportunities emerging rapidly.  Innovations such as machine learning and cryptocurrency are revolutionising finance, leading to a need for trained experts.

<