Bank pins recovery hopes on high-performance IT

04 Dec 2008

Comment: 1

A Computing logo
Lloyds TSB branch
Lloyds TSB will use Windows HPC Server to improve risk management

Lloyds TSB is using high-performance computing (HPC) technology to improve its risk management and valuation capabilities while the banking industry comes to terms with the turmoil across the sector.

These two key areas of wholesale banking will be among the main priorities for the financial services giant in the coming year, as it seeks to adjust to fundamental structural changes in the industry caused by the downturn.

Further reading

The introduction of HPC to support the bank's global derivatives infrastructure has been accelerated as it faced increasing pressure to simulate a growing number of risk scenarios, said Ricky Higgins, IT director in the products and markets group at Lloyds TSB corporate markets division.

"The determining reason to introduce a high-performance environment was the need to add scale to the [derivatives] platform and rapidly bring new products to market," he told Computing.

"One of our most complex products uses a tree-like structure to generate valuations and is very memory intensive, so if you are limited on that front, you will see a slowdown in your competitive performance."

Lloyds TSB's decision to roll out Microsoft's Windows HPC Server 2008, as opposed to Linux - which is used by most financial services firms - was based on its long history as a Microsoft customer, said Higgins.

"If I were to use Linux, I would need a different skill set and it would add to the number of tools we have, therefore increasing costs rather than decreasing them," he said.

The implementation of Windows HPC Server for the bank's derivatives platform was carried out overnight, followed by a two-week pilot preceding the switchover of production loads to the new environment.

The migration follows an IT infrastructure upgrade at Lloyds TSB, which includes the consolidation of its risk management and simulation platforms to be completed by the first quarter of next year. By that time, the use of HPC will be extended to other areas of the corporate markets division, such as fixed income.

By using the technology, the bank has achieved a 50 per cent increase in trading volumes through the reduction in time spent on risk valuations, said Higgins.

"The response has been positive so far. Our head of trading and chief executive were impressed by the fact that we have managed to deliver an innovative solution very rapidly and increase revenue to the business," he said.

Financial services firms are set to increase investment in risk management initiatives in 2009, and software platforms to help integrate and manage their efforts will be crucial to their success, according to research by risk and compliance specialist OpenPages.

"Companies are focused on converging disparate risk management efforts to improve their visibility into the risk inherent within the business. Further, despite the economic slowdown, companies are willing to invest in technology to improve risk management capabilities," said the report.

Reader comments

Shocking

I find it absolutely shocking that an IT Director for an organization such as Lloyds TSB would choose a tool simply based on in-house knowledge. This is simply a case of someone who lacks self confidence and is afraid to take on difficult, challenging projects to deliver a truly superior platform.

And, I bet all their "HPC" platforms are written in .NET. It's a completely laughable notion to see a business tie themselves to another company that is not interested in technical merit, but simply revenue for their investors.

Microsoft churn their platforms and development tools every too often for this purpose. Everyone knows true HPC systems need maximum configurability and flexibility -- Windows doesn't meet this by a long shot.

Choose the right tool for the job. I would never try to push Linux to the desktop in my organization at the current state, and I'd never try to push Windows on systems that need true technical merit and openness. Lloyds -- you're in a hole so the most cost effective option is to keep digging.

Nothing to see here but more safety-net decision making by clueless pencil-pushing IT Directors.

Posted by: Justin Cook  17 Dec 2008

Have your say on this article

All fields required. Your email address will not be displayed on the site.

By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions

  • Digg
  • Tweet

Newsletters

Sign up for our FREE newsletters

Will Google’s new privacy policy impact how you use its services?

Google recently said will consolidate more than 60 of its privacy policies into one, unifying customer data across most of its products. The announcement has met with a backlash in the US, while EU officials have asked Google to put its plans on hold so it can assess the privacy impact for users. Will you consider not using Google in the future as a result?

50 %

25 %

0 %

25 %