Systemic third-party dependency: Difference between revisions

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* [[Financial authority]]
* [[Financial authority]]
* [[Financial institution]]
* [[Financial institution]]
* [[Financial Market Infrastructure Entities]]
* [[Financial Market Infrastructure]]
* [[Financial stability]]
* [[Financial stability]]
* [[Financial Stability Board]]  (FSB)
* [[Financial Stability Board]]  (FSB)

Latest revision as of 11:36, 18 January 2024

Risk management - risk identification - supply chain - financial services - systemic risk.

Systemic third-party dependency is dependency on services provided by a service provider where their disruption or failure has been identified by a relevant financial authority as having potential implications for financial stability.

(Source - Financial Stability Board (FSB).)


"If many firms rely on the same third party for material services, the failure or disruption of this ‘critical’ third party could have a systemic impact across the financial sector.

Moreover, firms’ dependency on a limited number of critical third parties for key services within the financial services sector has increased in recent years and continues to do so.

As of 2020, for example, over 65% of UK firms used the same four cloud providers for cloud infrastructure services."

Critical Third Parties to the Finance Sector, Policy Statement, June 2022, HM Treasury.


See also


Other resources