JPMorgan
chief operating officer Matt Zames is setting his sights on Silicon Valley.
In a letter
titled "Redefing the Financial Services Industry" in JPMorgan's
328-page letter to shareholders, Zames ran through the bank's tech strategy.
Zames said
attracting tech talent from Silicon Valley and technology firms is an integral
component to that strategy. The letter said:
"Attracting,
retaining and developing top technology talent is paramount, and we cast a net
far and wide to find the best and the brightest. In 2016, 32% of our senior
hires in technology came from non-financial services firms. We had a 10:1
applicant-toposition ratio for our Technology Analyst Program, which targets
graduates of global universities that have strong technology programs."
The bank
spends more than $9.5 billion on technology, according to the letter, with an
increasing percentage of that budget going on new investments and innovation.
"Our
strategy is a combination of build, buy and partner in order to continue
delivering the best digital products and services at scale," Zames said.
"Our relationships with the external technology ecosystem helped drive
value across our technology focus areas, including next-generation data and
analytics platforms, such as Hadoop and Spark."
Zames
highlighted a number of fields such as machine learning and robotics in which
the bank made huge inroads with new initiatives.
Here are
some of the highlights from the letter (emphasis added):
New design
standards
"We are
also defining design standards to provide a common technical framework for
development of applications of a particular type, for example, big data
analytics. This will significantly reduce rework and duplication in the
software development life cycle where, previously, application developers have
had to create their own one-off frameworks."
A new
private cloud
"In
2016, we launched a new private cloud platform called Gaia, designed to provide
developers with rapid agility – so that they spend more time developing and
less time provisioning infrastructure and application services. Over 5,000
developers already have begun to use Gaia. By the end of 2017, we expect to
more than double the number of applications hosted on the platform."
New global
data center strategy
"In
2016, we invested in a new global data center strategy to consolidate our
existing facilities into fewer, larger, more modular sites. In early 2017, we
opened our first new state-of-the-art data center, which is the strategic model
for all future builds globally."
New Market
Risk platform
"Last
year, we re-engineered our Market Risk platform, one of the largest in-memory
risk analytics platforms in the world. The platform now manages over 1 billion
risk sensitivities and provides visibility 17 times faster than the prior
system while delivering a more granular and holistic view of the firm’s risk
exposure."
Robotics
"We
established an internal center of excellence to drive best practices around a
growing pipeline of robotic process automation, including systems access
administration, for which we expect to automate 1.7 million requests in 2017.
We have line of sight into more than $30 million run rate saves from robotic
process automation in 2017, a savings that, coupled with other optimization
efforts, will continue to increase substantially in the years to come."
Machine
learning
"We are
initiating pilots for a broad range of machine learning use cases – from
detecting anomalies for fraud and cybersecurity, to generating targeted trading
strategies to share with clients, to optimizing our clientservicing channels.
We are only at the very beginning of tapping the potential capabilities of
machine learning and its benefits to our business."
(Business
Insider)
No comments:
Post a Comment