Title: Where IT, Continuity
1Where IT, Continuity Security are Headed in 06
- Presented by
- Larry Tabb
- Alex Tabb
2Agenda
- The Industry Outlook Continuity
- The Business Challenges
- A Case Study on Avian Flu
- The Conclusion
3Industry performance has been strong and getting
stronger
Recent Earnings
Earnings
Net Income Growth YoY
Earnings Release Dates
Q4 05
Q3 05
H1 05
4Indian, Korean, Japanese markets had the
greatest yearly performance
India
Asia
Korea
Japan
DAX
CAC
Europe
FTSE
HK
Hong Kong
SP 500
US
China
China
5Derivatives business are all at record levels
6Metals, Commodities, Energy have also preformed
well in 05
Gas
Oil
Gold Sliver
Commodities
SP 500
7Hedge fund performance improves over 04 as
emerging markets lead performance
Hedge Fund Performance By Strategy YE 2005
Emerging Markets
17.4
Dedicated Short Bias
17.0
Distressed
11.7
Long/Short Equity
9.7
Global Macro
9.3
Event Driven
9.0
Credit Suisse/Tremont Hedge Fund Index
7.6
Multi-Strategy
7.5
Event Driven Multi-Strategy
7.2
Equity Market Neutral
6.1
Risk Arbitrage
3.1
Fixed Income Arbitrage
0.6
Managed Futures
-0.1
Convertible Arbitrage
-2.6
Source CS Tremont
8Prime brokerage earnings can reach almost 30 of
firm earnings
Prime Broker Earnings vs. Total Firm Earnings
2004 (in US billions)
29
20
21
Source TABB Groups Hedge Funds 2005 An Inside
Look at Funding, Servicing, Trading Technology
9Regulation has and will have tremendous impact on
markets
- Past Regulation
- Order Handling rules
- Created ECN Infrastructure
- Legislated fragmentation
- Will fragment NYSE within 5 years
- Decimalization
- Reduced spreads
- Market making gt Agency
- Terrorism
- Patriot Act / AML
- Future and current
- Basle II
- Reg. NMS
- Trade-through
- Market Oversight
- Research settlement
- Sarbanes Oxley
- Mutual fund
- Break points
- Late trading
- Hedge Fund Investigations
10Regulatory scrutiny is increasing dramatically
Average Number of Investigations by Agency 2005
Average Number of Investigations by Firm Size
Source SIA
11US Equities market is moving very quickly to a
low-touch model
Order Flow Allocation 04 07(projected)
Source TABB Group Institutional Equity Trading
2005
12Data volumes are going through the roof and
milliseconds matter
2005
Aggregated One Minute Peak MPS Rates CTS, CQS,
OPRA, NQDS
Source SIAC, OPRA, and NASDAQ
13While the industry is strong, global threats are
also at record highs
14The threat of Avian Flu has firms extremely
concerned as 173 persons have been stricken
Epicenter
15Natural disasters have become increasingly common
16Political instability is spreading globally and
could impact international operations
17Data security hitting much closer to home
- CitiGroup blocked UK, Russia Canadian PIN-based
transactions of Citi-branded MasterCards March
06 - A single individual compromised 40m MasterCard
accounts June 05 - Gartner estimates that phising in the USA alone,
amounted to 2.75 billion dollars in 2005 - Malicious code threats that could reveal
confidential information rose from 74 of the top
50 malicious code samples to 80 during 2h 05
(Symantec) - BoA, ETrade, MorganStanley Schwab launch new
higher security accounts and guarantees
18IT, Continuity SecurityMaximizing your
InvestmentCase StudyAvian Flu
19Avian Flu - What will be the impact?
- What is it?
- Where is it now?
- When is it coming?
- What will be the impact?
- What can we do to mitigate the risks?
20Pandemic What is it?(or more importantly What
isnt it?)
- WHO Global Pandemic Preparedness Plan
- 6 Phased Approach
- Phase 1 No new viruses detected
- Phase 2 New virus detected limited to animals
only - Phase 3 Animal to animal spread w/limited
animal to human spread - Phase 4 Small clusters of human to human spread
- Phase 5 Large clusters of human to human spread
- Phase 6 Pandemic
- Currently status of the disease
- Initially uncovered in 1996 when a highly
pathogenic strain was isolated in Guangdon
Province, China (H5N1) - Over last few years, spreading slowly
- Since Mid 03 spread of disease has increased
markedly
http//www.who.int/csr/resources/publications/i
nfluenza/WHO_CDS_CSR_GIP_2005_5/en/
21Pandemic Flu When is it coming?
2004
2005
2006
2003
22Pandemic What will be the impact?
- Societal Impact
- Globally devastate developing nations
- Significant disruptions
- Civil society will remain functional though
stressed (1918 Spanish Flu) - Operational infrastructure
- Reduced workforce
- Degraded supply chains
- Social distancing
- Best case - telecommute
- Worst case dislocation
23Pandemic What will be the impact?
- Economic Impact
- Impact proportional to severity
- FSIs in more modern economies more sensitive to
disruptions (but better prepared) - FSIs in lesser developed economies face
significant operational risks (limited enabling
technology) - FSIs that have experienced SARs should build on
lessons learned
24Pandemic What will be the impact?
- Technological Impact
- Social distancing creates increased demand for
enabling technology - Voice/data networks will respond differently
- Increased demand for bandwidth will strain
capabilities - Increased demand for traditional phone services
- Greater reliance on VPNs Citrix solutions
- Strained technology provisioning (logistics)
25Pandemic What will be the impact?
- FSI Impact
- Vulnerable to Avian Flu
- Challenges
- Social distancing
- Maintaining complex methodologies
- Sustaining time sensitive processes (20 40
absentee rates) - Smaller institutions are more vulnerable
- International institutions are more vulnerable
- Payments system breakdown cold devastate
developing markets
26Pandemic Mitigating the risks. . .
- Managed Transition
- FSIs need to use the unique nature of a pandemic
to key their responses - Utilize the WHO Avian Flu Plan as a trigger to
initiate action - Phase 3 Collect data create plans
- Phase 4 Increase technology provisioning, test
assumptions and rework your plans - Phase 5 Begin transition from a normal work
environment to a socially distanced work
environment - Phase 6 Complete transition to a socially
distanced work environment - Leverage existing technology to create new
methods for managing work flow - Dont be afraid to rely upon proven old world
solutions for new world issues
27Managed Transition Challenges
- Update your assumptions
- Pandemic flu planning is unique
- A steady state model
- Communicating in a decentralized environment
- Leverage technology
- Utilize redundant capabilities
- Alternative solutions sets
- Managing a distributed workforce in a distributed
model - Ensure organizational control
- Resilient command control model
- Operational Authorizations
- Logistics
- Mail, procurement, HR, IT support, etc.
28Conclusions
- The industry is getting more complex BC must
keep up. - The pace of crisis appears to be increasing with
the delta between normal and crisis operations
becoming more steep. - If the sector is to keep up continuity must be
built into the normal business planning cycle. - Remember - Continuity can not drive technology .
. . Harness technology change to enhance
continuity and security. - Back to basics Strong foundation based on solid
pragmatic planning will go a long way to ensure
continuity. - Flexibility there are no set answers. Only
diminishing budgets. We must be prepared to do
more with less.
29Where IT, Continuity Security are Headed in 06
Alexander Tabb Partner TÂ 646 747-3204 MÂ 646
338-5357Â atabb_at_tabbgroup.com
Larry Tabb Founder CEO TÂ 646 747-3210 MÂ 508
579-8551Â FÂ Â 508 519-0519 UK 44 (0) 207 870
5319 ltabb_at_tabbgroup.com