Cyber Security Regulations Are Breaking the Bank for UK Financial Service Organisations
16 Janeiro 2025 - 10:00AM
Business Wire
- Nearly Half (47%) of UK Businesses Reported Spending Over a
Million Euros in the last two years.
- Ransomware remains the greatest cyber threat to the UK’s
finance and banking sector.
- Costs also deteriorated employee wellness; regulations put
enhanced pressure on over half (58%) of UK CISOs.
Although the European Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA)
and other Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) measures offer
increased resilience to organisations, new research from Rubrik
today finds that compliance also comes with significant costs to
businesses and their employees.
The report by Rubrik Zero Labs—commissioned by Rubrik (NYSE:
RBRK) and conducted by Wakefield Research—finds that nearly half
(47%) of financial and banking organisations in the UK reportedly
have spent more than one million euros over the last two years on
the implementation of regulations such as DORA and PRA, with over a
quarter (28%) reporting spending between €501,000-€1,000,000.
Despite implementation efforts, threats still loom, with ransomware
remaining the greatest threat (46%) to financial organisations. One
in five (20%) CISOs cited third-party compromise and 19% citing
software supply chains as posing significant threats to
security.
Equally concerning is the fact that 79% of these professionals
report that it has had an impact on their mental health,
highlighting the need for a more empathetic approach to these
challenges.
Taking effect from January 17th 2025, DORA will introduce an
enforced universal framework, including a focus on Information and
Communication Technology (ICT) risk management. This framework
could transform the financial services and banking sector, given it
typically holds some of the most sensitive data across all markets,
and data.
“Given the increasing threat of ransomware and third-party
compromise, the implementation of regulations is required and
expensive. Understanding what data is the most critical, where that
data lives, who has access to it, is essential to identifying,
assessing, and mitigating ICT risks. If good hygiene practices like
these are not followed, organisations can now receive fines from
the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA),” said James Hughes, VP of
Solutions Engineering and Enterprise CTO at Rubrik.
There also appears to be a major disconnect with the rest of the
C-suite when it comes to prioritising cyber resilience, as over
three-quarters (77%) of UK CISOs feel that their IT budget is not
completely reflected by their board’s objectives to meet regulatory
requirements.
“There is a critical gap between board-level understanding and
reality. While regulators are increasingly stringent, many CISOs
feel their budgets don't adequately reflect the board's commitment
to compliance. This disconnect jeopardises not only organisations'
security posture but also their ability to meet evolving regulatory
demands,” added Hughes.
DORA mandates key provisions such as contractual safeguards and
contingency plans to minimise dependencies and are in place to
mitigate risks from partners. To ensure best practices regarding
operational resilience, regular testing of digital resilience and
attack simulations, as directed by DORA, will feed into cyber
resilience plans and reassure CISOs.
Despite this, UK CISOs have more confidence in the cloud than
their European counterparts with nearly three-quarters (73%) of UK
CISOs feeling that their client, customer, partner and employee PII
is secure in cloud environments.
CISOs, boards, and other stakeholders must work together to
ensure that cyber resilience priorities are clearly defined,
adequately funded, and effectively implemented to meet the evolving
regulatory landscape and safeguard the industry’s future.
To find out more on EU data regulations, tune in to CISO
conversations hosted on Rubrik’s YouTube channel.
Report Methodology
This research report was commissioned by Rubrik and conducted by
Wakefield Research among 350 CISOs working at companies with a
minimum of 500 employees, in the finance and banking sectors,
excluding holding companies. Respondents comprised five markets:
UK, Germany, France, Italy, The Netherlands, between November 21
and December 3, 2024.
About Rubrik
Rubrik (NYSE: RBRK) is on a mission to secure the world’s data.
With Zero Trust Data Security™, we help organizations achieve
business resilience against cyberattacks, malicious insiders, and
operational disruptions. Rubrik Security Cloud, powered by machine
learning, secures data across enterprise, cloud, and SaaS
applications. We help organizations uphold data integrity, deliver
data availability that withstands adverse conditions, continuously
monitor data risks and threats, and restore businesses with their
data when infrastructure is attacked.
For more information please visit www.rubrik.com and follow
@rubrikInc on X (formerly Twitter) and Rubrik on LinkedIn.
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version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250116491449/en/
Media Contact: Graham Day Graham.Day@rubrik.com
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