Technology
UK Watchdog Seeks Help To Streamline Regulatory Reporting

The UK's Financial Conduct Authority has asked for input on how a proof-of-concept streamlining regulatory reporting could be improved.
The UK’s financial watchdog is seeking views on how technology
could could make regulations “more efficient” while reducing
regulatory burden on licensed firms.
In November last year, the Financial
Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Bank of England held a
two-week “TechSprint” event examining how technology can make
regulatory reporting more accurate, efficient and consistent.
Participants successfully developed a proof-of-concept to make
regulatory reporting machine-readable and executable, meaning
licensed firms could map reporting requirements directly to data
they hold, in turn streamlining the 500,000 regulatory returns
the FCA receives yearly.
Now, the FCA is calling on the technology sector to help improve
this process.
Guy Kirkwood, chief evangelist at robotics expert UiPath, said in
an email to this publication: “Robotic process automation is
already having a huge impact on the way that financial
institutions meet regulatory requirements. These organisations
have large teams dedicated to complying with a raft of
regulations, much of which involves analysing large amounts of
data from various business lines and systems. The growth of
robotics is helping to automate manual tasks and provide higher
levels of accuracy and enhanced productivity. The future
development of intelligent robotics process automation may be
able to further replicate human decision-making and further
disrupt financial compliance.”
Submissions will be accepted until 20 June, 2018, and the FCA
will then publish a feedback statement in the following
months.
Christopher Woolard, the FCA’s executive director of strategy and
competition, said: “Technology is a powerful shaper of financial
regulation, able to make compliance simpler and more efficient.
Our TechSprints bring people from across the financial services
world together to share their collective knowledge to solve
common problems. We look forward to working with industry
participants in the coming months to drive these ideas forward."