Banking giant HSBC is increasing the amount it spends on IT innovation because of an expected $200m (£106m) reduction in operating costs.
HSBC’s global chief information officer (CIO) Ken Harvey told investors last week that the bank’s plan to cut 10 per cent from per-transaction operating costs is on track because of unprecedented IT investment.
‘We will now be spending less than half our money to run the shop, and the rest will be spent on innovation, new software and new deployment,’ he said.
Operating costs have decreased from 52 per cent of the IT budget in 2005 to an expected 48 per cent in 2007.
‘Every time you move operating costs down one per cent, that is $50m (£26m) that goes into innovation,’ said Harvey.
Investment in application development and innovation for global and regional systems has increased, he says, with further savings arising from 40 per cent of development taking place in countries such as India, which can offer a cost-competitive and reliable workforce.
Harvey says HSBC grew IT budgets by nine per cent during 2005-6, and expects a four per cent increase next year.
‘We have invested significantly in IT and we are now in the implementation and yield stage, so you will start to see a deceleration in spend,’ he said.
HSBC has achieved economies of scale and reduced operational costs by consolidating four global and two regional data centres.
‘Without the data consolidation programme we would now have 126 data centres,’ said Harvey. ‘We have reduced the cost of operation through standardisation and process improvement.’
The bank also saves operational costs by running systems on a proprietary global data network, which costs one-seventh of the equivalent public network.
What do you think? Email feedback@computing.co.uk
Further reading:
Two Californian solar farms find buyer for 800MW of solar power, two years before they even come online 18 Aug 2008
Cutting global emissions by 50 per cent by 2050 to cost 1.1 per cent of average annual global GDP according to new International Energy Agency report 06 Jun 2008
As Greece is suspended from UN carbon trading scheme, verification firm insists mechanism is on track to deliver over 2.7bn tonnes in emission reductions 23 Apr 2008
Chancellor urges faster action on emissions trading as he increases funding for low carbon technologies and flood defences 10 Oct 2007
Report claiming solar panels take over 100 years to recoup their value is just plain wrong, say manufacturers 05 Sep 2008
Republican attempts to highlight differences over energy policy as both candidates pledge to deliver US energy independence 05 Sep 2008
Once your company has gathered up all the low-hanging fruit, what comes next? Sarah Fister Gale finds that the answer lies in everything from multi-million dollar energy efficiency programmes to printers powered by exercise bikes 03 Sep 2008
Slow journey times mean airships are highly unlikely to replace passenger jets, but, as Danny Bradbury discovers, a flotilla of new companies are convinced that low-fuel costs mean the old-fashioned aircraft could have huge appeal to freight operators 02 Sep 2008
Recent claims from the oil giant's chief executive suggesting tar sand extraction is required to slow the shift to coal may have caught the eye, but as BusinessGreen.com discovers they do not make much sense 28 Aug 2008





