Banks will spend 3.2 percent less on technology this year than
they did last year and they will try to trim costs with "domestic
outsourcing" to areas such as the MidWest, according to an IDC
Industry Insights forecast teleconference today, Jan. 5.
"There will be four key areas of focus for banks in 2009:
expense reduction; risk management; M&As; and client
acquisition and retention," David Potterton, vice president of
global research in IDC's Financial Insights unit said.
IDC's pan-industry overview, the first in a weeklong series by
sector, noted that industry wide technology spending was "almost
flat," being up 0.9 percent.
However, that average was weighed down by the retraction in
financial services where the securities industry IT spending is
expected to fall 9.9 percent this year, having grown 5.6 percent
last year. The second biggest IT spending decline forecast is for
banking, down 3.2 percent this year, whereas it was up 3 percent in
2008.
Outsourcing to less expensive labor markets represents "an
interesting dynamic," Potterton said, alluding to the Obama
Administration's objections to offshoring. This may play out in the
U.S. with East Coast banks outsourcing to the Midwest, he said.