Nutanix, an enterprise cloud computing, today announced the financial services industry findings of its second Enterprise Cloud Index Report, measuring financial firms’ plans for adopting private, public and hybrid clouds. The report found the financial sector outpaces all other industries in hybrid cloud deployments – hosting workloads in both private and public cloud – but trail others in their use of multiple public cloud services.
Most financial services companies must adhere to strict regulatory requirements and government mandates. Not surprisingly, 60% of respondents called out security as the single biggest influence on future cloud strategies. Additionally, because so many organizations struggle to migrate workloads between environments, financial services companies have the highest percentage of traditional data centres (59%) delivering key applications. Yet, in the face of digital transformation, the sector faces mounting pressure to modernize IT and to make services more convenient for end-users. Together, this explains why nearly 18% of financial companies have deployed hybrid cloud today, while 51% plan to shift investment to hybrid cloud in just three to five years.
Additional findings of this year’s report include:
Flexibility to move applications as needed is critical. Nearly three-quarters of financial companies surveyed (71%) shared their plans to move one or more applications running in a public cloud back on-premises. In the financial services industry, regulatory requirements are constantly evolving, meaning companies must keep pace with changing regulations that govern where these companies can store and manage their data. Respondents also ranked hybrid cloud as the most secure IT operating model (27% of the time), signalling the importance of flexibility, alongside security, in this ever-changing environment.
The future of work and digital transformation plays a role in the financial sector’s infrastructure decisions. Financial services selected “support for remote/branch office users” as a motivator for cloud decisions nearly 30% of the time, a significantly higher percentage than cross-industry averages, pointing to the increasingly remote workplace landscape and the role of digital transformation in customer experience. In the short term, respondents listed lack of adoption stemming from concerns around nascent tools for managing hybrid environments (66%), a lack of hybrid cloud skills (30%) and a lack of cloud-native development skills (23%).
Security is paramount for compliance and regulation. Data showed that financial companies are running the highest percentage of data centres today, with just over 59% of financial companies. Accounting in part for this trend is dissatisfaction with public cloud, with only 39% of financial services companies reporting public cloud services were completely meeting their expectations.
Munish Blaggan, Head Technology Management Group at ICICI Bank said, “Legacy systems and processes are unable to retain their relevance in terms of meeting current business requirements. In India, the BFSI sector has identified the necessity of new technologies like Hybrid cloud, HCI, ML and AI to stay relevant. Hybrid Cloud is imperative for our IT vision and strategy at ICICI Bank in order to maintain agility and provide cutting edge solutions for our stakeholders.”
"The number of transactions in a given timeframe and the average cost per transaction are the two key parameters for the Indian BFSI vertical. Access to the right technology capabilities is now a critical element for the growth and survival of India's BFSI sector," said Balakrishnan Anantharaman, VP and MD-Sales, India and SAARC, Nutanix. "As a result of the COVID-19 outbreak, banks and financial services companies are looking to improve operational efficiency, and accelerate time to market, while keeping IT costs and spends in check – and they are relying on the cloud and apps to deliver it. In this new multi-cloud, new business reality - hybrid cloud has become the infrastructure of choice as the BFSI sector prepares for even greater disruption ahead.”
The respondent base spanned multiple industries, business sizes, and the following geographies: the Americas; Europe, the Middle East & Africa (EMEA) and the Asia-Pacific (APJ) region.