| Financial services CEOs say management should spend more time on risk and compliance | 
      Date:  Tuesday, January 22, 2013
      Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek    
	Nearly half of financial services CEOs (48 per cent) believe that senior 
	managers should be spending between 20 per cent to 40 per cent of their time 
	on risk management and compliance, but 31 per cent of this group admit that 
	this standard is not being achieved.
	 
	This number climbs even higher for chief risk officers (CROs), 43 per cent 
	of whom believe that senior management is not spending enough time in this 
	area. Kinetic Partners’ Global Regulatory Outlook research study reflects 
	the views of senior executives within the banking, asset management and 
	hedge fund industries, and includes contributions from Howard Davies and 
	Howard Flight.
	 
	Andrew Shrimpton, regulatory compliance member at Kinetic Partners and one 
	of the authors of the study, says: “Strong business performance is clearly 
	important for CEOs and the board, but senior management needs to have a 
	sound understanding of risk and compliance in order to be truly effective. 
	In particular, effective non-executive directors need to understand the key 
	regulatory issues and questions they should be raising with their CEOs. The 
	business leaders that participated in our Global Regulatory Outlook study 
	say that they welcome regulation in this area, understand the need for it, 
	and want to work with lawmakers to improve transparency and restore consumer 
	confidence. However, many of these executives still have strong reservations 
	around the challenges involved in building next-generation regulation into 
	effective business processes.”
	 
	Additional findings from the Global Regulatory Outlook research study also 
	highlight the vital role that risk management and compliance play within the 
	business:
• More than three-quarters (77 per cent) of the business leaders questioned felt that investment in their internal compliance arrangements would help to strengthen their reputation
• More than two-thirds (65 per cent) of these same respondents felt that 
	investment in internal compliance arrangements would increase the company’s 
	competitive performance over the long-term.
	 
	Shrimpton says: “These findings not only highlight the need for a tighter 
	focus on risk management at board level, but also suggest that improvements 
	in this area will offer benefits that go far beyond compliance alone. The 
	fact that so many CEOs believe that senior management is failing to spend 
	enough time in this area should act as a wake-up call for any firm that 
	wants to achieve greater transparency, restore consumer confidence and 
	improve its competitive performance overall.”