Looking into the crystal ball: What will NFR management look like in 2030?

Sebastian Fritz-Morgenthal, Hagen Rafeld and Gerhard Schröck

Contents

Foreword

Preface

Introduction

Introduction to Part I: The origins of non-financial risk management

1.

The complete history of operational risk regulation (abridged)

2.

Financial institutions and non-financial risk: Learning from the corporate approach

3.

The painful financial side of NFR

4.

“Risk management is about managing risk” and “It’s all about people”: Psychology might be more important than models

5.

The confusion of Babel: What’s in the name NFR – taxonomy

Introduction to Part II: Governance of non-financial risk management

6.

“It’s the culture, stupid”: Risk culture as the key building block of NFR management – and why some banks have come through the Covid-19 pandemic better than others

7.

Do you know who is who? Three lines of defence in the context of NFR

8.

Herding cats? NFR divisions as truly diverse units

9.

“Just do it!”: Partially self-organising governance structures for NFR frameworks

Introduction to Part III: Tools and instruments for non-financial risk management

10.

A risk by any other name: Identification, classification and agendas

11.

Old but gold? Mastering the RCSA despite Covid-19

12.

Biases in scenario analyses and how to mitigate them

13.

When scenarios are not severe enough: Stress testing for non-financial risk

14.

Ending NFR in NFR: From Excel sheets to professional IT systems for NFR management

15.

Breaking up with risk management: Using the power of controls for good not the prevention of evil

Introduction to Part IV: Focus areas of non-financial risk management

16.

It won’t be over after Covid-19: Pandemics and operational resilience

17.

Dealing with IT complexity and innovation: Delivering business resilience and customer outcomes

18.

Protecting the new gold: Information security

19.

Conduct risk and the impact of Covid-19

20.

From lawsuits to models: Compliance risk and financial crime

21.

Others are doing it cheaper: But can they really? Opportunities and risks in outsourcing

22.

Managing reputation and stakeholders

Introduction to Part V: The future of non-financial risk management

23.

ESG risk as a new (and very important) trigger for NFR

24.

Looking into the crystal ball: What will NFR management look like in 2030?

25.

This time will be different: An alternative future of NFR management

26.

Right time, right place: The drive for change in operational and non-financial risk

“Prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future.” Niels Bohr

If we fast-forward to the year 2030, the banking and the banking market will look very different – reflecting the new balance and collaboration of the banks that survived, along with financial technology (fintech) companies and the big technology (bigtech) companies. In this brave new world, the importance of non-financial risks (NFRs) will have significantly increased compared to today. This will create challenges and have significant implications for chief risk officers (CROs) and their risk organisations as to which changes to the current set-up for managing NFRs will have occurred by then, and when most of the existing banking processes will have been automated, with all day-to-day decisions being made by algorithms rather than humans, and instantaneously at the point of sale (POS).

FUTURE BACK: THE BANK OF 2030

If we look back to 2010, we might get some idea of the speed of change that has occurred in banking. Back then, the branch was still the centre of gravity and mobile banking was in its infancy: people still used transaction authentication numbers (TANs) from a piece of paper when

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