Thomson Reuters announced on 14 March 2014 the findings of its annual “Cost of Compliance” survey which revealed that 53% of compliance officers feel their personal liability has increased; a reflection of increased focus on senior individuals at the supranational level.
According to the survey, this perceived increase in personal liability may be a contributing factor of costs associated with senior compliance officers continuing to escalate.
The findings highlighted the diverse pressures on compliance functions, with shifting supervisory expectations, no let-up in the volume of regulatory change and the start of many of the big implementation programmes for major complex legislation.
Thomson Reuters surveyed more than 600 compliance practitioners from financial services firms including banks, brokers, insurers and asset managers across 71 countries covering Africa, the Americas, Asia, Australia, Europe and the Middle East. It builds on annual surveys of similar respondents conducted over the course of the last five years, offering year-on-year trends and developments.
Key findings from the latest report include:
- 66% of respondents expect the cost of senior compliance professionals to increase in 2014.
- 75% of respondents expect an increase in the amount of information published by regulators.
- 26% of compliance teams spent less than an hour a week amending reports for the board (26% in 2013).
- Globally, compliance functions again reported spending little time liaising with the internal audit function, a growing cause of concern.
- The number of compliance teams spending more than 10 hours a week tracking and analysing regulatory developments has nearly doubled in the US (13% in 2013 and 25% in 2014) and the Middle East (8% in 2013 and 18% in 2014).
“The ability to comply with confidence and transparency is integral to building trust in the financial services sector,” says Chris Perry, managing director of Risk, Thomson Reuters. “Compliance leaders are being held to increased accountability amid an ever-increasing volume of regulation, the expectation to move and comply fast, and the exposure to record fines for non-compliance, now regularly totalling in the billions. It has never been more important that boards support their compliance function and its senior leadership with the budget, resources and tools to help ensure transparency, trust and a lasting change in behaviours throughout firms.”
Increased cost of compliance
Investment in effective risk and control functions is extremely important. Given the volume of anticipated rule changes combined with a shift in regulatory expectations regarding culture, it is unsurprising that 66% of those surveyed expected the cost of senior compliance professionals to increase in 2014. The competition for senior, experienced compliance officers is likely to be heightened as regulators seek to increase their in-house skills. Furthermore, 64% of respondents thought that the total compliance team budget would increase in 2014 and 20% of respondents thought it would be significantly more in 2014. The results year-on-year suggest that not only are compliance salaries rising across the board, but that the size of compliance teams may also be growing.
Complex regulatory change
Working in an ever-changing regulatory environment has become the norm for financial services firms. In 2013, 81% of respondents expected an increase in the amount of information published, while for 2014 expectations have eased off slightly to 75%. The results are positive in that they show expectations are not quite as high as they were in 2013, but the reality is that any regulatory material which does appear in 2014 will simply add to the vast amounts of regulatory information with which compliance officers already struggle with.
Overall, almost a quarter of firms are spending more than 10 hours per week reviewing the implications of all this new information (22% in 2013). There were some regional variations in this area, however. For instance, the number of US compliance teams spending more than 10 hours a week tracking and analysing regulatory developments nearly doubled (13% in 2013 and 25% in 2014). There were similar results in the Middle East with 8% of compliance teams spending 10 hours or more tracking and analysing regulatory developments in 2013 compared with 18% in 2014. Of equal note was the relative reduction in the number of UK firms spending 10 hours or more on this task.
Increase in reporting
Reporting in all forms is set to increase in importance in 2014. Regulators have placed a stronger focus on culture, conduct risk and tone from the top, and by association raised expectations with a firm’s abilities to identify, measure and report. According to the survey, 26% of compliance teams spent less than an hour a week editing reports for the board (26% in 2013). Asia has experienced the most change in terms of time spent on board reporting, in the last year the number of firms in Asia spending more than a whole working day each week creating and amending reports for the board has increased from a fifth to more than a third.