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Chapter Page
1. INTRODUCTION 4
• Highlights of the 2012 Report 5
2. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 7-10
3. WHY
• Outsourcing Drivers are Changing 12
• Regulatory Environments 13
• Global Strengthening of Regulatory Regimes 14
• Regulation Breadth under RRP – Opportunities for the Industry 15
• Focal Points for RRP 16
4. WHAT
• Global Trends in Outsourcing & Offshoring 18
• Global Outsourcing Activity in FS 2008-11 19
• Regional Trends in Deal Activity 21
• FS Back Office Outsourcing Candidates 23
• BPO Trends in the Outsourcing Market 25-31
• ITO Trends in the Outsourcing Market 34-37
• KPO Trends in the Outsourcing Market 39-42
5. HOW
• FS Sourcing Strategies 44
• Achieving Strategic Goals 45
• Service Management Frameworks 46-52
• Market Analysis: Lessons Learned 53
6. WHERE
• Global Trends 55
• Focus on Africa 56-59
• Near shore out sourcing 60-61
7. WHO
• Top 15 Global FS Deals by Value 63
• Regional Analysis of Global Top 10 FS Deals 58-68
• Top 10 FS Outsourcing Deals in North America 66-68
• Top 10 FS Outsourcing Deals in EMEA 70-73
• Top 10 FS Outsourcing Deals in Asia Pacific 75-77
• Regional Summary of Key Trends 78
8. ELIX-IRR’S FINANCIAL SERVICES TRANSFORMATION CAPABILITIES IN SUPPORTING OUR CLIENTS 79
9. CONTACT US 80
10. Annex A 81
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
4. 1. Introduction
This is the third year Elix-IRR has produced Trends in Outsourcing & Offshoring in the
Financial Services Industry. This study is widely read by senior executives in financial
institutions and the service providers and consultancies within the sector.
The insights have been broadly recognised as valuable contributions to the considerations
of Financial Services (FS) institutions furthering their regional and global sourcing strategies
in the wake of the global financial crisis.
As with previous years this research will provide an overview of the trends in outsourcing
and offshoring by major financial institutions in the last 4 years, focussing in detail on
performance in 2011 and making predictions as to the conclusion of 2012. We will cover:
• The pre-eminence of regulatory focus in shaping the
Why
overall FS landscape continuing in 2012
• Functions and trends seen in the outsourcing deals
What
in 2011 outsourced/offshored
• Sourcing best practice as outsourcing arrangements
How
mature
• The popular and emerging locations for delivery of
Where
outsourcing activity
• A summary of major outsourcing transactions by
Who
key FS players and service providers
The study also provides supporting data for the current outsourcing landscape for the FS
industry. A glossary of terms has been provided in Annex A for reference.
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
5. Highlights of the 2012 Report
The following are key sections and insights to this 2012 report, bringing new perspectives and
industry insights from Elix-IRR.
New Regulation This section describes how the regulatory environment surrounding the FS industry in 2012 is
changes the way FS increasingly coming to shape relationships with service providers
institutions work with We analyse in detail Recovery and Resolution Plans, as a culmination of many of the regulatory
Service Providers objectives of the past year, and where opportunity might arise for the industry
Annual Review of We take our annual look at market activity from 2011, both new deals and renewals, and assess
Deal Activity the latest trends from BPO, ITO, KPO and geographical perspectives
Understanding some of the key levers to executing a best practice sourcing strategy is key
The role of Service
We assess how effective management of service providers lies at the heart of a successful
Management
outsourcing relationship
Global Trends in the
We cast our eye across the globe to find out where major industry activity has occurred
Market - Major
Activity Locations
Following on from our last report, our experts update the situation in Africa, an emerging location
for outsourcing activity
This section presents the top ten FS outsourcing deals for each of these regions: North America,
Top 10 Global FS
EMEA and Asia Pacific
Outsourcing Deals by
Region
Information on deal ranking, company name, service provider, total contract value, outsourcing
domain and key descriptions of activities
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
7. Executive Summary
1. Reasons for Outsourcing and Offshoring
Regulatory and market challenges ensure continued focus on cost models
The global economy continues to show signs of recovery and Ever-increasing capital requirements on banks from global
most global banks have shown improved profitability up to Q3 regulatory change are driving changes in business models
2012 causing a greater focus on cost efficiency
Global regulators continue to impose tightening regulations in Enhancing systems and platforms will help deliver full regulatory
order to affect behavioural change through policy and legislative compliance but changes to support models will be needed to
means help deliver substantial cost reductions
Tactical sourcing strategies evolve to meet the strategic change challenges
Tactical sourcing strategies have achieved cost reductions and Companies continue to look towards suppliers to help
productivity gains in the last 2-3 years commercialise their assets, but the development of internal
commercial skills in the sourcing function is becoming more
Increasing desire in 2012 to move to transformational outsourcing
prevalent
to realise enterprise-wide productivity gains, global synergies and
increased margins Internal sourcing departments are becoming better equipped to
view the business and find economies of scale to optimise
vendor relationships as a whole
A growing need to look across the change portfolio
Systems integrators will increasingly find opportunities to support By taking a strategic view of the entire change portfolio in 2012,
technical change across global technology platforms companies are starting to achieve greater synergies and will be
able to inter-lock the strategic change agenda with the service
Suppliers and vendors have continued to develop benefits from
management framework for a sustainable Total Cost of
process and technology innovation to improve the ‘speed to
Ownership
market’ of new products and services because innovation comes
at a cost
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
8. Executive Summary
2. Trends in Functions Outsourced / Offshored
Financial Services outsourcing returns to growth overall
FS Outsourcing market trends are showing signs of continued In 2012 we have seen a rise in BPO and ITO deals, with some
recovery also landing in 2013, as well as a number of renewals pending
In 2011 companies were prudent and looked to ‘traditional’ cost As macro-economic instability continues however with further
reduction opportunities in the outsourcing market. In 2012 this is state-aid investments made to boost growth, many large banks
continuing with a rise in ITO and BPO deals have initiated the design activity for innovative large scale
outsourcing or further transformation of their existing support
New entrants to outsourcing were ‘mid-tier’ banking and
models
insurance institutions
3. Operating Models for Outsourcing and Offshoring
Operating models are maturing and companies new to outsourcing have a shorter learning curve
Legacy outsourcing approaches are now being challenged to The front line business areas are increasingly engaging internal
leverage global synergies and economies of scale without falling sourcing resources in the forward planning for change to ‘achieve
foul of cross border restrictions and cross border data restrictions more with less’
FS companies are building upon their existing, internal sourcing Tightening margins are generating increased demand for
skills by increasing commercial skills, negotiation techniques and transformational solutions with a rapid pay back
challenging suppliers to be more innovative
This puts renewed pressure on suppliers to deliver current
solutions quicker than they would have previously
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
9. Executive Summary
4. Popular and Emerging Destinations for Delivery
Traditional offshore locations of choice are under pressure
India remains the dominant location, particularly for ITO services Increasingly the middle office processing requirements
however in the last two years salaries have risen circa 10-15% and KPO are being considered for outsourcing to
(in $ terms), despite the slow economic recovery achieve further savings on labour arbitrage for perceived
specialist skills although near shore solutions are seen as
Increasing pressures to near-shore in USA and EMEA brings
preferential
opportunities for markets in Asia, South America, Africa and
Eastern Europe. Drivers for these opportunities include Africa emerging as a BPO location generating significant
timezone benefits, higher quality and greater customer market interest
satisfaction
Providers are coming away from traditional markets faced with
political pressure in advanced economies to ‘bring jobs home’
5. Major Outsourcing Deals and Key Service Providers
Service provider acquisitions in 2012
Leading service providers continue to achieve increases in We begin to see early acquisitions in the African region, with
revenue, operating margin and headcount through acquisitions in contact centres, customer care and business continuity
niche, analytical software, specialist processing services and services targeted
cloud–based technologies
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
10. Executive Summary
5. Major Outsourcing Deals and Key Service Providers (cont)
Indian providers invest in emerging markets
Large Indian players are adding to their capabilities in both ‒ Governmental incentives
onshore and nearshore locations and growing their presence When factored in these incentives have the potential to reduce
outside India. Benefits include: costs to a comparable level with India
‒ High-quality, medium-cost back office and call centre
capabilities A recent example of an Indian provider investing in emerging
markets includes WNS’ recent acquisition of South African
‒ Availability of skills to service offshore clients is high
BPO provider Fusion Outsourcing Services
‒ Industry knowledge and experience
IBM displaced in 2011 for largest new deal won (despite renewing the largest deal with BNP Paribas)
Looking back on 2011, IBM lost its prime position in terms of However IBM extended a significant joint venture deal with BNP
high-value contracts in North America and Asia Pacific Paribas for data centre outsourcing
‒ In North America, T-System Services were awarded a
Near-shoring strategies by companies have had an impact upon
US$1.7bn ITO contract by Capital One
global service providers who offer ‘best shoring’ on the basis of
‒ In Asia Pacific, the outsourcing downturn was evident with the
leveraging sales based on cost reduction through labour
largest outsourcing deal at US$307m, awarded by HDFC
arbitrage
Bank to Reliance
‒ In EMEA, IBM retained the top new deal with US$1.3bn with la
Caixa and a total regional value of $1.5bn
Sources: Elix-IRR analysis, IAOP, BPeSA, IDC, press releases
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
11. 3. Why:
Why the Regulatory Environment is
continuing to drive the shape of
Financial Services Outsourcing in
2012
11
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
12. Outsourcing drivers are changing, becoming more varied
and global in their reach
In our last report we focussed on outsourcing deals with innovation triggers resulting in product & process outputs.
In this report we note that the drivers for outsourcing continue to be affected by market headwinds and having to
comply with increasingly stringent regulation. As a consequence banks are looking for innovative sourcing
solutions that change the support cost paradigm while enabling focus on regulatory compliance.
We will be assessing regulatory drivers and how they provide new opportunities for the outsourcing industry.
COMMENTARY
Our report will be focussing on
the regulatory environment and
its effect on the outsourcing
market
We see increasing scrutiny
from regulators contributing to
decreasing RoE requiring
banks to emphasise cost
cutting
In turn this leads to a reduction
in investment appetite, even for
the regulatory and compliance
solutions
The cyclical nature of these
prevailing conditions is
amplified as they constrict and
tighten on banking operations
further. The over-riding risk
therefore is loss of competitive
advantage and market share
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
13. A greater variety of factors are now driving the
regulatory environments surrounding Financial Services
Regulating to ensure financial institutions can support
themselves in times of stress and not depend on public money
Political Damaged reputations caused by on-going and highly publicised Three conclusions for the FS
incidents Outsourcing Industry present
themselves:
Increased capital requirements levied by regulators
Direct/indirect cost-cutting in response to bottom line pressure 1. Coupled with downward
Economic Lack of investment appetite driven by regional market instability pressure on margins,
and the cost of capital pressures regulatory pressures are
driving reviews of operating
Regulators prioritising protection of socio-economic stability costs, headcount and
Head count reduction necessitates fewer people doing more business rationalisation and
Social Key personnel have more personal regulatory responsibility transformation
and less time available to focus on strategic direction
2. The investment budget for
Reduction in investment programmes, priority given to change and innovation will be
regulatory compliance focused on regulatory,
Technological Complex highly integrated infrastructure leads to high indirect compliance, cross-border data
costs of change programmes protection initiatives and cost
reduction
Regulatory pressure globally
Emphasis on risk mitigation (financial and reputational) 3. Focussing on core banking
Legal Volcker Rule, FATCA, Dodd Frank, Basel II & III, RRP competencies will provide an
Client Money Segregation, Transaction Reporting, KYC opportunity to evolve new and
existing shared services and
outsourcing arrangements;
Head count reduction and off-shoring
driving financial institutions to
Environmental Focus on building footprint in faster growing markets
‘do more with less’
Ongoing buy side out-sourcing of processes and services
Given global regulatory
Regulators supporting customer freedom to switch between pressure these opportunities
banks are universal…
Customer Sustained loyalty less assured as customers are better informed
to buy financial products and services
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
14. Greater variety of regulatory drivers are matched by a
global strengthening of regulatory regimes
EU Regulation COMMENTARY
• EMIR – aims to increase stability within OTC derivative Globally, regulators have
markets
• PRIPs – aims to achieve consistent and effective standards introduced greater levels of
for investor protection stringency to banking
US Regulation • MiFID – aims to enhance investor protection, improve cross-
border market access and promote competition in the financial operations in order to
• Dodd Frank
• Volcker Rule markets across the EU safeguard consumers and
• • AIFMD – to impact how AIFMs distribute funds and operate
Financial Stability Oversight Council
business public funds
• Securitization Reform
• Derivatives Regulation – increased In addition, a perfect storm is
transparency The concept of being created by natural
• Consumer Protection Reform regional regulation Basel III
• Credit Rating Agency Reform Aims to strengthen regulation, supervision,
downward pressure on margins
is almost a moot
• Capital Requirements point for global risk management and transparency by as the result of lower growth
• Living Wills regulatory standards on:
players with
• Capital adequacy
occurring at the same time
entities & clients
spread across the • Stress testing The challenge for Financial
world • Liquidity Stability Services firms becomes how to
increase shareholder value
Bank Levies
First proposed by IMF in 2010 Recovery & Resolution Plans (RRPs) whilst satisfying regulators
• UK Banks will be required to produce RRPs to give regulators a This presents significant
• France crisis management plan setting out necessary steps and
• Germany powers to ensure bank failures are managed in a way to avoid opportunities for the
• Austria financial instability and to minimise public costs outsourcing industry as banks
• South Korea • Regulated under the Dodd-Frank in the US
• Proposed – Netherlands ~2013 • June 2012 - European Commission adopted a legislative
look to how they can rationalise
• Possible EU Financial Transaction Tax proposal for bank recovery and resolution and consolidate their activities
THE SOURCING OPPORTUNITY
Smart players in the outsourcing industry will increasingly be seen tying outsourcing offerings to compliance requirements and bottom
line growth
Robust sourcing strategies and outsourcing firms’ capabilities offer a breadth of support that will be well placed to support Financial
Services clients meet their regulatory and financial challenges
The following section will focus on the rise of Recovery and Resolution Plans (RRPs). Perhaps one of the most relevant developments
in regulation for service providers in the last 12 months. RRPs are also one of the most wholesale from a compliance point of view,
bringing together many of the components of other regulatory initiatives (e.g. capital adequacy, robust liquidity positions, balance sheet
stability) with the practical measures to achieve either Recovery or Resolution. RRPs provide a stern challenge from the point of view of
both compliance and ongoing execution of business strategy
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
15. The breadth of regulation under Recovery and
Resolution Plans creates opportunity for the Industry
Global regulators are moving to safeguard the wider global economy from the fallout of another financial crisis in
the future. Analysis of the rise of RRPs reveals that alternative sourcing models can play a major role.
Globally financial authorities are taking a legislative, policy driven approach to transforming regulatory regimes
to ensure that banks “Too Big to Fail” can do so in an orderly manner thereby minimising risk to consumers,
the CONTEXT taxpayers and deposit holders
This is being compounded by a general shift in emphasis from Bail “Out” to Bail “In” where large banks faced
with potential failure are being urged by Central Banks and regulators to recapitalise using private capital, not
public money. This results in significant restructuring of balance sheets and risk management portfolios
RRPs are being mandated in order to recover a bank from severe threats to its survival (Recovery) or wind the
bank up in an orderly manner protecting consumers and the public purse (Resolution)
Systemically Important Financial Institutions (SIFIs) are the banks which will invite most scrutiny, particularly
SIFIs with global reach (G-SIFIs), due to the disproportionate consequences of disorderly failure from a
the FOCUS political, economic or socio-economic perspective
The complexity of achieving compliance is magnified when set against a backdrop of existing and
unprecedented regulatory change driven by major legislative or policy events such as Dodd-Frank, Basel III,
the Vickers Report (UK) and tightening margins
All areas of banks will require both strategic and detailed analysis to understand which entities do what
business, how they are funded and how they might be allowed to fail
the COMPLEXITY
IS & IT strategies will form a core component to winding entities up as infrastructure, applications and users
will need to be segregated
Significant consideration will also need to be given to how can staff be safeguarded against the failure of a
particular entity so that they can continue to support surviving business
Changes to Operating Models, the need to segregate entities and the risk sharing potential of
executing the right sourcing strategies can lie at the heart of future compliance efforts
the CONCLUSION
Systems integrators and major outsourcing firms have both the industry expertise and the technical
insight to play a major role in the diagnostics, planning and execution of RRP strategies
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2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
16. The focal points for RRPs are opportunity areas where
sourcing and outsourcing specialists can play a role
Elix-IRR’s work with major global banking institutions reveals recurring themes which come under scrutiny in
developing RRPs. Our analysis asserts that a number of these hold opportunities for the major outsourcing players.
RRP FOCUS AREAS KEY SOURCING CONCLUSIONS
Group Risk Assessment Future commercial models will need to provide evidence of compliance to regulators, compounded
by ongoing scrutiny on cross-border data protection. However we envisage suppliers being able to
Analysing the bank by entity to define the
leverage this as an opportunity to innovate.
most critical parts and any retail impact
Liquidity Recovery The importance of liquidity utilisation and it’s many drivers and usages is an area where banks are
struggling to provide the necessary data. Innovative vendors will be able to create utility solutions
Ensuring a robust liquidity position exists in
to this emerging issue.
times of stress
Capital Recovery
Banks will be keen to remove assets from their balance sheets in order to aid their capital ratios
Ensuring capital adequacy during times of leading to broader opportunities for vendors to take over human capital & IT assets.
stress
Support & Business Contingency Robust sourcing strategies can help alleviate the pressure on CIOs to understand how to configure
their future IT landscape. In light of 20+ years of technology and group integration efforts careful
Ability to be able to segregate IT effectively consideration will need to be given to how technology assets can be unwound in the event of
in failure without harming BAU elsewhere failure of a specific entity or group of entities.
Governance
Establishing management structures to The complexity of corporate structures and organisational design drives a level of complexity
operate during times of severe stress which will be very challenging to unwind. Outsourcing players already engaged in BPO / HRO for
multiple parties should position themselves as solution providers able to support the wind-down of
entities whilst safeguarding staff from the failure of any particular entity and continuing to support
People & Organisation the remaining business.
Reviewing entity employment
arrangements and safeguarding the future
16
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
17. 4. What:
Global and Regional Trends
Sourcing Market Analysis (BPO, ITO and KPO)
17
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
18. Global Trends in the Overall Outsourcing & Offshoring
Market
Overall growth of the outsourcing industry is picking up despite global economic pressures.
Growth in Outsourcing Market, 2008-2011
The outsourcing market grew by a nominal 8% from
US$bn CAGR +8% 2010 to 2011, an indication that the industry has
picked up pace after a fall in size from 2008 to 2009
500 +4%
422 EMEA and Americas still account for the majority of
378 389
400 371 the outsourcing market – though the Americas’ market
share is decreasing with a 5% growth rate from 2010
300 to 2011 compared to 12% in EMEA and 8% in Asia
Pacific. This reflects larger transaction values and the
200
trend towards expansion of contracts at renewal
100 Financial Services is the largest vertical for outsourcing
services accounting for some 20% by value
0
2008 2009 2010 2011 The US is the largest outsourcing consumer by country
and this will be the case for the foreseeable future
2011: Outsourcing Market breakdown by • Cost is still the main driver for outsourcing; however,
US$bn type, region and vertical there are an increasing number of other factors that
500 play a role in the outsourcing decision process, e.g.
422 422 422 achieving speed, agility, flexibility and innovation as
400 Asia Pacific FS well as access to technical and/or industry specific
BPO 78 (19%) 83 (20%)
153 (36%)
expertise and skills
300
Americas • We believe outsourcing advisory firms increasingly
201 (48%) influence the decision-making of buyers of outsourcing
200 ITO Non-FS
339 (80%) services
258 (61%)
100 EMEA • ITO and BPO outsourcing activity continue to generate
143 (34%)
KPO the largest proportion of revenue in the outsourcing
0 11 (3%) market
2011 2011 2011
Source: Evalueserve, 2011, IDC, 2012 & Elix-IRR analysis, 2012 18
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP Note: Vertical-specific BPO not included
19. Global ITO and BPO Outsourcing Deal Activity in FS
BPO deals continue to show growth while ITO deals are declining from a high in 2010. Market activity in 2011, as in
2010, was driven by renewals and extensions and not by new outsourcing deals.
New Deals: TCV of Global ITO vs. BPO ITO New Deals: Avg Contract Value of Global ITO vs. ITO
BPO BPO
BPO BPO CAGR
20 19.1 19.1
17.9 -10%
16.5
ITO CAGR
15 +8%
9.4
ACV ($m)
TCV ($ Bn)
14.3 13.3 150
10 12.7 107.0 114.7
90.9 92.6
100 74.3 66.8
5 39.5 44.3
8.5 50
3.8 4.7 5.7
0 0
2008 2009 2010 2011 2008 2009 2010 2011
In addition to the increase in Total Contract Value of BPO deals and decrease of
While the Total Contract Value of deals remained the same between 2010 &
TCV of ITO deals, we see a similar trend in the average contract value between
2011, we have seen an increase in the proportion made up of BPO deals
2010 - 2011
ITO activity fell for the first time in 2011 when, despite growth in North America
Where nervous markets saw BPO average contract values decrease 40% from
and EMEA, the value of ITO deals in Asia Pacific fell by over 70%
2008 to 2010, we see a trend towards recovery with BPO average contract values
BPO continues to trend towards previous 2008 highs, buoyed mainly by robust
up almost 50% in the last year
growth in North America, particularly in the insurance sector
North America is the only region to have recorded a fall in average ITO contract
value, having a marked effect on the global average
ITO new deals BPO new deals
Global ITO Deals New vs. Renewed Global BPO Deals New vs. Renewed
ITO renewed deals BPO renewed deals
100 100
% of TCV
% of TCV
34% 44 % 29%
66 % 68 % 51 % 59 %
71 %
50 50
66% 56 % 71%
34 % 32 % 49 % 41 %
29 %
0 0
2008 2009 2010 2011 2008 2009 2010 2011
The trend towards a greater proportion of value coming from renewed deals The strong trend towards increased renewed deal proportions has continued, with
continues, with roughly two thirds of ITO TCV in 2011 being renewals a full 71% of BPO TCV coming from renewed deals in 2011
This is likely indicative of a maturing of the marketplace, with most companies The North American BPO market was biased towards new deals from 2008-2010,
already having some level of outsourcing in place before a sizable shift in 2011 to 80% of value being derived from renewals
The majority of contracts in the Asia Pacific region are new, possibly indicative A similar shift occurred in EMEA in 2010 and was sustained in 2011, possibly
of the emergent market for outsourcing there indicative of market maturity
19
Source: IDC 2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP Note: The data above excludes South America
21. Regional Trends in New Deal & Renewal Activity 2008-11
The North American outsourcing market has shown a strong return to growth between 2010-11 as it recovers to 2008
levels. However, growth in EMEA has slowed down substantially, whilst no mega-deals over $500m have taken place in
Asia Pacific. Of the $19.1bn of new deals in 2011 $6.1bn were in North America, $12.2bn in EMEA and only $0.8n in Asia-
Pacific
Asia Pacific
North America -74%
TCV CAGR TCV CAGR
Total Contract Value ($ Bn)
+56%
Total Contract Value ($ Bn)
+4%
-12%
10 106 150 35 35
3 40
No. of Deals
No. of Deals
91 85 26 25 30
100 2
5 62
$ 8.8 $ 3.0 20
50 $ 2.5
$ 6.1 1
$ 4.4 $ 3.9 10
$ 0.7 $ 0.8
0 0 0 0
2008 2009 2010 2011 2008 2009 2010 2011
EMEA
Whilst outsourcing activity has still not Whilst over the period there has still been
0%
returned to 2008 levels, the Total Contract TCV CAGR growth in Asia Pacific, we have seen a
Total Contract Value ($ Bn)
Value (TCV) increased by over 50% +14% very substantial decline of almost three
between 2010-11 143 quarters of TCV over the past year
15 150
This positive trend is visible in both ITO 112 The most substantial fall was in BPO
and BPO activity, with BPO showing very 88 89 activity, losing over 98% of total contract
No. of Deals
10 100
substantial increases value due to new contracts halving
$ 12.2 $ 12.2 compared to 2010
5 $ 8.4 $ 9.5 50
0 0
Colour Key: 2008 2009 2010 2011
Growth in Outsourcing is highest (hot)
The previously strong upward trend has flattened in
Outsourcing activity is high and still growing (warm)
the past year, with a slight fall in Total Contract Value
Outsourcing activity is decreasing (cooling) EMEA deals accounted for ~ 64% of all global deals
in 2011
There has been an increase in the number of deals,
but a concurrent fall in their average value
21
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
Source: IDC BuyerPulse Contracts Database, August 2012
23. FS Back Office outsourcing candidates
In Elix-IRR’s experience, processes that are repeatable, high-volume and administrative in nature are potential
candidates for efficiency gains arising from outsourcing. In the following section we analyse the overall outsourcing
market in 2011 and then focus on the application of the following three sourcing types: BPO, ITO and KPO
OPERATIONS
Investment Banking Wealth Management Retail Banking
SUPPORT FUNCTIONS
HR Finance Procurement FM & Real Estate
CONTROL RESEARCH AND ANALYTICS
Research &
Governance and Assurance Legal & Compliance
Analytics
IT
Management Application Infrastructure Helpdesk
Key
23 BPO ITO KPO
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
25. BPO Trends in the FS Outsourcing Market
Financial Services has been a critical driver in the growth on BPO volumes and values in the past. Elix-IRR believe there
is still significant value to be obtained by extending the scope of BPO to a broader set of functions across the back
office. Below we describe a selection of major processes which are typically retained, possible outsourcing candidates or
processes that are often outsourced
OPERATIONS*
Investment Banking Wealth Management Retail Banking
• Business Development • Account • Sales Generation
• Operations • On boarding AML/KYC • Confirmations
Services • Strategy
Control Management • Settlements
• Business • Cash and Liquidity • Customer • Origination /account • Data
opening Management • Customer Queries
Development Management billing
• Investor Custody • Account servicing • Clearing and • Reconciliations
• Service • Payments
Services • Cash and Liquidity Settlements
Management Processing • Statements
• Collateral Management Management • Payments
Processing • Card Manufacture
SUPPORT FUNCTIONS*
HR Finance Procurement FM & Real Estate
• HR Strategy • Budgeting Process • Category • Leasing • Buildings
• Business Partners • Regulatory Reports Management • Network and Space Maintenance
• Collateral • Tax Filing
Management • Cleaning
• Spend • Reception
Management Units • Treasury Management
• Recruitment • Payments • Landlord Services
• Procure to Pay
• Case Management • Accounts Payable • Communications
• Reporting
• Account Receivable • Transport Services
Key:
*Selected processes are intended to be indicative of the business areas under discussion. We do
not purport to be representing the totality of capabilities undertaken in the course of daily banking = Typically retained
business = Possible candidate for Shared Service/Outsourcing
25 = Suitable for Shared Service/Outsourcing
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
26. Overall BPO Trends in the Outsourcing Market
Banking and Financial Institutions along with central and federal government clients, were critical in driving the
demand in the BPO market.
Total BPO Spend Globally BPO outsourcing has seen a moderate 3% growth over
the past few years, though this has picked up in 2011
CAGR +8%
There has been a noticeable increase in the number of
+3% BPO deals over the last 12 months in both North
160 153 America and EMEA
Total Value of Outsourcing Spend ($ Billions)
140 142
140
138 Asia Pacific experienced a downturn in 2011 as the
global recession impacted the region
120 South Africa have introduced incentive schemes for job
creation and India service providers are increasingly
100 interested in the region for alternate delivery models
BPO demand in Financial Services is driven by demand
80 for credit card processing, insurance services,
investment bank processing and payment processing
60
Buyers are increasingly looking at bundled ITO/BPO
options, which reflects increasingly integrated sourcing
40 strategies
20 BPO vendors focus on strengthening operational
excellence capabilities, platform BPO assets, and
business analytical services as levers for the expansion
0
of existing deals, new deals and renewals
2008 2009 2010 2011
Latin America will continue to increase in attractiveness
Note: Vertical BPO figures are not available within total global BPO spend figures. as a near-shore destination for the US
However, the following pages show the break out of vertical BPO versus other
outsourcing domains for new deals. With the rise and increasing importance of vertical
BPO deals in FS over the past decade, we estimate that, for the FS market, vertical
BPO is at least as large as traditional BPO domains
26
Source: Evalueserve, 2011, IDC, 2012 & Elix-IRR analysis, 2012 2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
27. FS BPO Activity by Outsourcing Domain
There has been a substantial rise in the value of Vertical BPO activity in North America. The same domain has shown
substantial falls in value in EMEA and Asia Pacific, respectively – it is, however, still the dominant BPO activity in all
regions.
Key:
HR = Human Resources
F&A = Finance & Accounting
BPO Sub-Domain Outsourcing Activity – based on 2011 TCV ($m) Vertical BPO = BPO specific to FS Industry
North America EMEA Asia Pacific
Total: $3.3bn Total: $2.5bn Total: $4m
There has been a substantial ($2.2bn) rise in the value of Vertical BPO activity in North America, and consequently, its share of all BPO
contract value has risen from 36% in 2010 to 82.8% in 2011. There were significant extensions to existing, large scale deals for periods
of 5 – 7 years, indicating a deepening of established relationships
Customer care contracts increased from a low base to $297m in EMEA, with a small number of deals in North America and none in
Asia Pacific. Globally, this has more than accounted for the fall in this domain in North America, showing an increase of 2% of global
BPO activity
HR Outsourcing fell by almost $400m in North America, having accounted for 46% of deals in 2010 to only 7.1% in 2011. This reflects
that the early advantages of HR outsourcing have been achieved and our experience is that new entrants to outsourcing will come to
the market with a multi-sourcing transformational strategy rather than labour arbitrage
F&A Outsourcing fell in Asia Pacific from 56% of all BPO deals in 2010. The trend for all support functions is to create organisation-
wide synergies with sourcing strategies
27
Source: IDC, 2012, Elix-IRR analysis, 2012 2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
28. Regional Analysis of FS Industry BPO Activity
Overall activity in FS-specific BPO (banking and insurance operations processes*) has dipped below 2008 levels with
the majority of new deals being in EMEA.
North America
$ CAGR
-16%
Total Contract Value
55 54 While the number of deals happening each year has been
No. of Deals
6,000 55 60
41 relatively constant over the period, the TCV has varied
($m)
4,000 40 substantially
5,539
2,000 3,282 20 There has been a substantial increase between 2010-11, although
1,180 1,423 TCV is still at around 20% below 2008 levels
0 0
2008 2009 2010 2011
EMEA
$ CAGR
No. of Deals
-4% The TCV of BPO has seen relatively little change over 2008-2011,
Total Contract Value
3,000 60 with a slight overall decline
40 42
2,000 31 30 40 It will be interesting to see whether 2012 and 2013 analysis will
($m)
2,803 2,963
1,000
2,453 2,460
20 show whether patterns of growth followed by decline persist
0 0
2008 2009 2010 2011
Asia Pacific
$ CAGR
-67% BPO activity has stalled in Asia Pacific, with TCV falling by 98%
Total Contract Value
No. of Deals
400.0 13 15 from its high of 2010
11
300.0
7 10 Only three BPO deals occurred in the region in the last 12 months
($m)
200.0 359 compared to 13 BPO deals in 2010, highlighting the effect of the
3 5
100.0 157 economic crisis which has now hit the region (particularly Australia
109
0.0 4 0 and Japan)
2008 2009 2010 2011
*NOTE: Banking and Insurance operations processes include but are not limited to
– trade processing, loan administration, billing services, payments services, 28
document and data management, account processing and reconciliation etc. 2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
Source: IDC BuyerPulse Contracts Database, August 2012
29. FS BPO Average Contract Analysis by Region
Average Contract Value for BPO deals is far lower than ITO – particularly for renewals. The upturn in KEY
Asia Pacific in 2010 has come to a halt – there were only three new deals in 2011. New Deals
Renewals
North America
Average Contract Value
200 190
159
150 BPO activity showed a substantial decline 2008-2009, which was sustained into
($ million)
+20% 2010
100 83
-72%
50
Renewed contracts rose by 20% from 2008 to 2011, although new BPO contracts
31 26 28 23
17 have fallen further still and are now at 72% below 2008 level
0
2008 2009 2010 2011
EMEA
Average Contract Value
200
174 New deal figures in 2011 have still not returned to their 2008 highs, but have
150 +132% picked up in the last year
($ million)
117
102 94
100 76 -65% Data on renewals shows more fluctuation than that of new contracts, but despite a
50
50 26
35 fall from the spike of 2010, Average Contract Values remain well up over the
period. This is a reflection of the number of contracts expanded on renewal.
0
2008 2009 2010 2011
Asia Pacific
Average Contract Value
60
50
40 34 • After a promising 2010, figures for both new and renewed contracts in 2011 have
($ million)
30 crashed. In total there were three new deals in 2011, with an average value of just
19 +37%
20 17
12 13 17 over $1m, and no renewed contracts.
10 -100%
1 0
0
2008 2009 2010 2011
29
Source: IDC Research, 2012, Elix-IRR analysis. 2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
30. Examples of BPO Outsourcing Activity
Wing Lung Bank outsources ING sign new deal with BACS payment debit HCL Technologies set
operation management to Cognizant to provide an and credit processing up back-end processes
Accenture (deposits, loans, insurance and finance services are for loans, financial
payments and customer business process centre of outsourced by LBG products and customer
servicing) excellence to Parseq (2011- service at Citi (July
2014) 2012)
MidSouth Bank outsources payroll and Zurich used Procurian and Genpact to ISS manages and delivers facilities management services
HR services to Inova Payroll restructure and manage procurement to Barclays operations in the UK, Europe, the Americas,
infrastructure Asia Pacific and the Middle East (July 2012)
30
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
31. Future Trends in BPO in Financial Services
BPO - Generic
• There will be a major focus on customer data sovereignty and the rapidly changing legislation on physical location of
data and its use. This has the potential to impact some BPO deals until specific countries / regulatory bodies clarify their
stance
• Service Management professionalisation – organisations will realise the value of a skilled, retained organisation to lead
on the refinement of supplier relationships and the longer term outsourcing benefits
• Emerging geographies in Asia Pacific, Africa and Latin America will contribute further in the next 12 months
BPO - FS Specific
• Ongoing regulatory pressures and reducing margins have resulted in wholesale banks looking for
opportunities across their environment
• Banks are looking beyond labour arbitrage and seeking broad ranging productivity gains to:
• inter-lock the business strategy with sourcing approaches
• Obtain significant, step change savings over time Snapshot: Trends in BPO Payments Processing
• An increasing move to outsource payments processing in the
• Outsourcing will be more focused at achieving productivity gains sector
(and financial savings) across the enterprise • Considerations must be made in regards to data protection
and regulatory issues, as well as customer’s perceptions of
• KYC and Single Customer View strategies will develop further off-shore data access
and require elements of business process re-engineering prior to • Larger U.S. banks often have their own payment ‘factories’
• Further outsourcing and offshoring is being considered by
outsourcing banks and credit card operators to reduce cost and improve
margins
• Increasingly a move to outsource payments processing in the • New banks and innovative mobile payments operators have
sector more flexibility and have the potential to establish lower cost
payments operations by optimising locations world-wide
31
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
33. ITO Outsourcing: In Summary
As with BPO, Financial Institutions combined with central and federal government clients drove the demand in the
ITO market in 2011.
IT* Management Application Infrastructure Helpdesk
• Service Management • Change • Business • Development • Data Centre • Tier 1 call centre
• Strategy & Management Requirements • Testing • Network Management • Incident
Architecture • Solutions • Maintenance • VOIP Management
• Disaster Recovery
*Selected processes are intended to be indicative of the business areas under discussion. We do not purport to be representing the totality of capabilities undertaken in the course of
daily banking business
Key:
Total Information = Typically retained
Technology Outsourcing CAGR +8% = Possible candidate for Shared Service/Outsourcing
Spend Globally = Suitable for Shared Service/Outsourcing
+4% 258
Total Value of Outsourcing Spend ($ Billions)
260 There has been moderate growth in the total ITO spend
238 over the 2008-2010 period, with growth picking up
240 232 226
substantially to 8% in 2011
220
200 The key market drivers for ITO are cloud computing and
Remote Infrastructure Management Outsourcing (RIMO)
180 as well as consumerisation of data storage and social
160 media solutions
140 Industry-specific offerings will continue to increase, and
120 vendors must improve their knowledge of their client's
business and industry
100
80 Competition is fierce and margin pressures grow higher,
even as the market begins to improve
60
Striking the right balance between offshore, near-shore
40 and onshore offerings will be key to vendor success
20
ITO customers are still “testing” to find the right balance
0 between captive centres and outsourcing
2008 2009 2010 2011 33
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP
34. FS ITO Outsourcing Domain Activity
Infrastructure services continue to dominate ITO activity in all regions followed by Applications Maintenance in North
America and Network & Desktop Outsourcing in EMEA and Asia Pacific.
KEY:
ISO = Infrastructure Services Outsourcing HAM = Hosted Application Maintenance
ITO Sub-Domain Outsourcing Activity – based on 2011 TCV ($m) AM = Applications Maintenance
NDOS = Network & Desktop Outsourcing
HIS = Hosted Infrastructure Services
North America EMEA Asia Pacific
Total: $2.8bn Total: $9.7bn Total: $755m
Infrastructure services, as in previous years, continue to be by far the most common form of IT outsourcing. ISO now accounts for over
80% of all ITO market activity, having risen by $550m in North America and $1200m in EMEA since 2010
In North America ISO dominates with 92.6% of market activity share
In EMEA and Asia Pacific, whilst still dominant, NDOS and AM activity also represent non-trivial proportions of activity
Other Sub-Domains do not contribute significantly
Market uncertainty and the pressure to improve bottom line returns from infrastructure estates is likely to be fuelling the dominance of
ISO. From a rationalisation perspective focussing on hardware procurement is an attractive option for quick savings, fuelling
outsourcing activity
Source: IDC, 2012, Elix-IRR analysis, 2012
34
2012 © Elix-IRR Partners LLP