Wolters Kluwer Indicator Survey Reveals Persisting Pain Points in Banks’ Risk Management and Regulatory Compliance Efforts

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NEW YORK, December 17, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--While virtually half of respondents continue to express high levels of concern over key risk management and regulatory compliance obligations in the U.S. banking industry, those concerns are lower than in previous years, according to results of the 2024 Regulatory & Risk Management Indicator survey conducted by Wolters Kluwer. The 2024 Indicator Main Score fell from an index level of 119 in the 2023 survey to 99 this year. The 20-point difference more closely reflects 2022 levels and was driven largely by the fact there were fewer major banking regulations introduced compared to 2023, and respondents expressing increased confidence in their ability to manage regulatory challenges.

As in the 2023 survey, complying with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Small Business Data Collection Rule, known as Section 1071, led the list of key challenges facing banks, credit unions and other lenders, with 69% of respondents citing it as a "high or moderate" concern. Keeping pace with fair lending regulations and new legislation garners considerable attention (61%), along with implementing the new Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) requirements (60%). Managing the ever-evolving landscape of regulatory changes continues as a perennial challenge dominating attention, with 64% of respondents viewing it as an issue of high or moderate concern in 2024.

The survey was conducted between July 8-September 5 garnering 258 respondents from U.S. banks, credit unions and other lending organizations.

"While there have been some encouraging signs in banking this year including the diminished threat of a recession and the Fed’s lowering of interest rates, survey respondents continue to face significant economic and regulatory headwinds," said Jason Keller, Director, Market Strategy, Compliance Analytics, Wolters Kluwer Compliance Solutions.

"Based on 2024 survey responses, interest rates, while lower, persist at levels that bring enormous challenges to borrowers and lenders alike, while managing regulatory change persistently tops the list of reported concerns in our survey. Despite the industry’s track record in dealing with regulatory changes with a high degree of resilience and flexibility, they are pressures that are unsustainable in the long run," he explains.

Notably, anxiety over economic factors dropped, with interest rate concerns falling from 74% in 2023 to 53% in 2024; inflation fell from 54% to 48%; and recession dropped from 47% to 37%. Concerns on loan default risk were on par with the prior year at 53%. Concerns over ransomware attacks fell six points to 59% this year, while operational resiliency took on added consideration, moving from 46% to 51%.