We knew it was bad, but IT investment by UK financial services firms over the next 12 months is predicted to be the weakest since 1992. Vanilla Ice was a not-so-distant memory, Nirvana were in their hey-day and, of course, we were just emerging from two-year recession.
In contrast with optimism surrounding the financial sector generally, the latest quarterly report from the CBI and PricewaterhouseCoopers shows an overall balance of -28% of respondents predicting an increase in IT investment.
The report says: "Demand uncertainty is the greatest investment impediment."
Hardest hit was the banking sector, which hasn’t seen such negative sentiment towards technology investment since September 1992. A balance of -60% of respondents anticipated spending more on IT in the next 12 months, the previous low was -41% in December 2008.
Investment management is also shying away from technology spend, with a balance of -41% of respondents anticipating an upturn in investment.
Even the previously buoyant insurance sector has tightened the technology purse strings. In January, a balance of 58% of respondents expected to spend more, but this has shrunk to -11% in this quarter.
Only the life insurance sector is likely to spend more (albeit only slightly). "Replacement and compliance with legislation and regulation were noticeably higher as reasons for investment, behind only the usual favourite of increasing efficiency," said the report.
UK

How about asking the question – “Will the Regulators force IT enabled process change and will this dramatically increase IT spend?” the answer should be 100% YES. The article focusses purely on discretionary spend. Only three things are certain at the moment …… death, taxes and increased regulation!
Strongly agree with Wizard, historically the buy-side at least have been reluctant to spend on tech. that would enable STP with any one or many of their brokers but the massive (pending) internal & external regulations will force the issue as the standisation of process’s (esp in derivs) will hugely influence buy-side tech budgets
Yes, this has been evident for several months although we are seeing investment in Client Reporting investment. Investors are demanding more quality and timely reports while Investment Managers are selling this as a differentiator.