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Your Three Minutes In Cyber Security: New Rules Will Change EU Banks' Management Of Third-Party Provider Risk

New regulation is set to improve European banks' resilience to cyber security failures at software, services, or systems supplied by external companies, known as third-party providers (TPP).  The EU's Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) will impose a new risk management framework that demands increased monitoring and reporting of TPP cyber risk. That could necessitate changes to relationships (and contracts) to facilitate greater banking oversight of TPP, which are often core to banks operations and central to open banking initiatives.

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What's Happening

Recent incidents have highlighted banks' vulnerability to TPP's cyber risk:

  • In May 2024, Santander said that the breach of a TPP-hosted database resulted in a data theft, which was reported to have affected about 30 million customers, employees, and former employees.
  • Also in May 2024, ABN Amro said that a ransomware attack on a TPP communication group had resulted in unauthorized access to client data.
  • Attacks on TPP have also, though more rarely, affected business operations. An attack on a financial trading services group, called ION, left some banks and brokers temporarily unable to process transactions in 2023.

The TPP incidents are part of a broader increase in cyber attacks on banks that are resulting in breaches.   The European Banking Associations' July risk assessment report noted that 27% of banks in its survey had suffered at least one attack resulting in a major information and communication technology (ICT) incident in first half of 2024, up from 11% in the first half of 2023. The report also noted that, for the first time, at least one bank was subject to more than twenty major ICT incidents stemming from cyber attacks.

Why It Matters

Regulators increasingly expect banks to take an active role in managing ICT third-party risk, even when banks' own systems are not directly involved.  In Europe, DORA is likely to be the main regulatory vehicle for that shift, though the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) recently published a consultative document on bank third party risk management, suggesting it is also focusing on TPP risk.

Risks to banks stemming from a cyber breach at a TPP already include reputational damage, operational interruption, and regulatory sanctions. The changes to the rules are likely to increase regulatory risks for banks, including due to the increased potential for significant financial sanctions. Monitoring of TPP systems is currently difficult given the often arms-length relationships between banks and TPP, meaning contract revisions may be necessary to facilitate compliance with the new rules.

What Comes Next

DORA will be applied across the EU from early 2025, when the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) will also assume oversight responsibilities for TPPs designated as critical to the financial system.   EU banks will be required to have frameworks for managing and monitoring TPP-related risk, including identification of critical or important functions carried out by TPP and plans for managing the associated risk.

Increased scrutiny of TPP cyber security and cyber resilience (particularly where TPP manage banks' sensitive information or critical functions) could lead to various actions, including:

  • Demands for greater information on TPP cyber security, and potentially access to conduct penetration testing.
  • Modification of TPP products to reduce vulnerabilities and comply with banks' standards.
  • Banks shifting development of IT solutions inhouse.
  • Equity investment by banks in TPP to secure knowledge.
  • Banks reducing TPP providers to minimize the attack surface.
  • Increased certification of TPPs by cyber security experts.
  • Further development of cyber insurance for third-party data breach risk.

Related Research

This report does not constitute a rating action.

Primary Credit Analyst:Clement Collard, Paris +33 144207213;
clement.collard@spglobal.com
Secondary Contacts:Regina Argenio, Milan + 39 0272111208;
regina.argenio@spglobal.com
Benjamin Heinrich, CFA, FRM, Frankfurt + 49 693 399 9167;
benjamin.heinrich@spglobal.com

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