Majority of banks and insurers struggle to maximize the value from their cloud investments

In This Article:

Capgemini SE
Capgemini SE

Press contact:
Fahd Pasha
Tel.: + 1 647 860 3777
E-mail: [email protected]

Majority of banks and insurers struggle to maximize the value from
their cloud investments

  • Less than 40% of financial services executives say they are highly satisfied with their cloud outcomes

  • Most banks and insurers adopt cloud solutions with the primary objective to drive operational efficiency (84%)

  • Protecting customer data and maintaining privacy is a challenge for the industry

Paris, November 14, 2024 – The Capgemini Research Institute’s World Cloud Report for Financial Services 2025, published today, reveals a clear divide between how traditional and new-age financial institutions1 view their cloud technology investments. Most banks and insurers adopt cloud solutions with the primary business objective to drive operational efficiency (84%), while fintechs and insurtechs are pursuing cloud to accelerate sales (62%). The analysis further suggests only 12% of financial services organizations can be considered ‘cloud innovators’2.

Financial institutions are facing a challenging environment, ranging from data collection and management inefficiencies, cybersecurity gaps, regulatory complexities, to evolving customer expectations. According to the report banks and insurers are increasingly turning to cloud solutions to mitigate these risks. This is evident in a 26% increase in the mention of cloud-related terms in the annual reports of the top 40 tier-one banking and insurance firms globally between 2020 and 2023.

Roadblocks to realizing value
However, firms face roadblocks in maximizing cloud value as operational challenges continue to influence C-level decision-makers, slowing down the return on cloud transformation initiatives and investment. Fewer than 40% of executives say they are highly satisfied with their cloud solution’s outcomes broadly, including its ability to provide reduced operational costs (33%), enhanced scalability (27%), accelerated innovation (26%), advanced data and analytics (24%), and improved security and compliance (21%).

The report highlights that challenges arise due to financial institutions taking a lift-and-shift approach to cloud migration, rapid scaling that produces higher-than-anticipated costs, complicated pricing models, and inefficient governance and management practices.

Cloud adoption should be viewed as the start of a transformative journey that fuels long-term business growth, rather than the end game or destination. What’s clear from our research is that while the technology is seen by financial institutions as a building block, some firms still consider cloud a cost-saving measure, whereas innovative disruptors leverage it to redefine their operations,” said Ravi Khokhar, Global Head of Cloud for Financial Services at Capgemini. “By taking a cloud native approach to foster a culture of innovation, banks and insurers will be better placed to deliver new products and services, enter new markets, and increase customer satisfaction. With generative AI now top of the boardroom agenda, a cloud-based technology foundation can also help the industry maximize investment in new technologies at scale.”