12 months on from our first Supervision innovators conference seems like a good moment to take stock of what we have achieved, where things stand today, and where we are going next.
We have gained momentum and won broad support to move ahead with
ambitious plans. Now, we are on the cusp of translating an excellent
beginning into remarkable tangible benefits via the roll-out of
dedicated supervisory technology (suptech) products like “Athena” – a
platform using natural language processing technology to speed up
textual analysis – to front-line supervisors across the Single
Supervisory Mechanism (SSM).
We are now at the implementation phase, and we will increasingly
take advantage of innovative new technology in our daily supervisory
work.
I am confident that the swift progress we have seen will continue.
We have a strong group of both supervisory and technology experts from
national competent authorities (NCAs), national central banks (NCBs),
and the European Central Bank (ECB), we are selecting the pipeline of
priority projects carefully, and the leadership is determined to make
those projects succeed.
Looking back – what we have achieved so far
Our structured effort to explore advanced technologies and apply
them to banking supervision began two years ago. At that point, the SSM
did not have a coordinated approach to technological advancement, and it
was not considered a key priority in our collective supervisory work.
This left room for duplication and prevented necessary scaling up to
achieve SSM-wide benefits. Things are different today, and we are all
fully aware that we cannot thrive without the shared use of modern
technology.
In recognition of the need to pursue suptech consistently across the
SSM, a suptech team was established at the ECB. In addition, the
necessary governance structures were put in place to allow close
collaboration between the ECB and NCAs. A Steering Committee consisting
of Supervisory Board members was set up to provide high-level oversight
of suptech across the whole SSM. This provides a basis for us to ensure
that our suptech initiatives are sufficiently aligned across the system,
and has built up our capacity to generate momentum.
On top of this, a new Supervision Innovators Forum has been created,
providing a means for supervisors across the SSM to exchange knowledge.
Building on the foundations of shared knowledge, dedicated
multidisciplinary innovation teams were established to deliver on
specific projects, utilising expertise from across NCAs, NCBs, and the
ECB.
Our first major suptech milestone was setting out our vision for the
future – the SSM Digitalisation Blueprint. This blueprint outlines a
five-year action plan covering both the specific projects to be
prioritised and the enabling factors that will allow us to achieve our
goals.
To prioritise projects the SSM Digitalisation Blueprint deployed
state-of-the-art methodology to map each possible use case against two
dimensions: potential business value and ease of implementation.
Priority was given to use cases that were of higher value and easier to
implement. This assessment was carried out by mixed teams of
supervisors, IT experts and data scientists from across the SSM.
Among the enabling factors set out in the blueprint, I find two to be particularly important.
First, we are making a sustained effort to foster a digital culture
within the SSM. We have introduced a comprehensive digital training
curriculum. For example, more than 500 supervisors across the SSM are
currently participating in an introductory six-week training programme
on artificial intelligence. This is just the first cohort, and we plan
to further develop our training offer to meet the evolving needs of
supervisors in this domain.
Second, we recognise the need to enhance our “innovation ecosystem”
across the SSM. This is about extending our capacity to draw on the best
technological ideas and collaborators from across the globe in our
suptech thinking. In practice, we do this by organising and
participating in global events and by reaching out to other supervisory
authorities around the world to exchange knowledge.
To foster such an exchange of knowledge, we have actively
contributed to suptech discussions and publications in international
fora such as the Bank for International Settlements, the Basel Committee
on Banking Supervision and the Financial Stability Board. We have also
conducted bilateral workshops with other supervisory authorities. As you
can see, we have invited here today some of our colleagues from these
authorities to give them a platform to present and share their
experience.
The very fact that we are organising this conference for a second
year in a row and the interest that it has generated is a testament to
the value that experts from around the world see in connecting, sharing
and collaborating. Our discussions at last year’s conference were mainly
concerned with the beginning of a digital transformation process. This
year we will focus more on how to move from ideas to implementation.
To sum up this retrospective part of my speech, the steps we have
already taken have built a solid platform. This good start has also been
recognised externally – with the ECB’s work on the SSM Digitalisation
Blueprint receiving Central Banking’s “Techforward Award”
for 2021. This award honours the most innovative activities of central
banks and supervisors worldwide – and it is a testament to the good work
that has been done so far.
Now – moving from exploration to implementation: reaping the first benefits of digital innovation
Having set up our suptech framework, we are moving beyond the exploration phase to implementation.
As we enter this new phase, it is clear that success will require
suptech tools to be widely adopted in front-line supervision. For this
to happen, certain essential tasks need to be performed.
We must give our staff the opportunity to build skills they need to
operate current and future suptech tools. This must be complemented by
building awareness of the benefits that the various suptech tools bring,
and of the need to rely on them by integrating their use into
workflows. As they grow in confidence, the teams using a particular tool
will be able to take ownership of its maintenance and development.
Our efforts to foster a digital culture are supporting this
confidence-building effort, and we are beginning to see the rewards. A
number of front-line business areas have already volunteered to take
ownership of the tools that are most relevant to their work.
Another task relates to the smooth integration of the new tools into
our IT infrastructure. Building tools that will work well on each of
the IT systems that exist across the various SSM authorities remains a
challenge. In the long run, it will be necessary to move towards a more
integrated IT infrastructure. Progress is being made in this direction,
but it will not happen overnight. Meanwhile, we remain determined to
find solutions that will work today, utilising the IT infrastructure we
have.
A further challenge is that many of the potential technological
innovations from which we could benefit rely on having sufficient data.
The big data infrastructure that underpins our organisations is already
impressive, but, in some instances, it cannot yet meet the enhanced
demands of modern analytical innovations.
As supervisors, we are all aware of the benefits of supervisory
technology, and I am positive that we can achieve success in our
digitalisation work.
The production and system-wide roll-out of value-adding suptech tools are already underway for front-line supervisors.
Let me give you a couple of examples.
First, we have the SSM Information Management System (IMAS) Portal.
The IMAS Portal serves as the gateway to the SSM, enabling supervised
institutions to trigger supervisory procedures online. The portal
replaces an email-based procedure, providing traceability and
standardisation and opening the door to further digitalisation. So far,
more than 1,000 procedures have been launched and almost 6,000 messages
have been exchanged with supervised entities via the portal.
In addition, we have established SSMnet as the meeting point for
learning and knowledge sharing throughout the SSM. Particularly in the
current coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, SSMnet meets the supervisory
need for a user-friendly and interconnected digital environment for
teams working remotely. It also fosters pan-European cooperation and
brings even more consistency to SSM banking supervision. More than 2,300
supervisors access SSMnet every month, showing the potential for
further benefit from the tool in the future.
Of course, we will not stop there. As part of the implementation of
the SSM Digitalisation Blueprint, we are working on a number of
promising projects that are progressing swiftly through their testing
stages.
For instance, the ECB Secretariat and the SSM Secretariat are
working closely together on “Atlas”, a new digital solution for the
decision-making process. This tool will support the preparation and
follow-up of decision-making meetings, written procedures and delegated
approvals.
Another example is “Navi”, a self-service platform based on a graph
database with analytical and visualisation capabilities. This platform
will help us gain insights from highly connected data and will be
available to the SSM community and other European System of Central Bank
(ESCB) functions.
We also aim to offer supervisors across the SSM a one-stop shop for
prudential data analytics. To this end, we are working on “Agora”, a
project that will facilitate supervisory analysis by gathering all
supervisory data and master data, as well as other data relevant to
supervision, in one place.
So, we are making remarkably good progress. Value-adding tools are beginning to be rolled out, and more are coming.....
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