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Technology Shift Creates Offshore Opportunities For US Core Systems
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Abstract
NEW RESEARCH REPORT BY MERCATOR ADVISORY GROUP
Recent events indicate that the US market for core banking systems will
experience increasing rates of technology change, primarily driven by offshore
suppliers. Offshore suppliers have experienced tremendous uptake for their
new core system technology in developing markets, but are now developing
strategies to penetrate the US market - and recent wins in the US market
suggests the US market is warming up to the idea.
In 2003 Fidelity Information Systems bought Alltel and acquired the Corebank
product. Corbank was rewritten in 2003 to implement a component-based
development environment that utilizes web services and modeling as
implementation and development methodologies. In August 2005 Oracle purchased
a controlling interest in i-flex Solutions product, FLEXCUBE (that implements
a component and model-based development and execution methodology), to replace
its existing core system with an eye towards lowering the bank' s operating
costs while also speeding the introduction of new bank products and services.
And just this March Metavante announced that it will implement the Temenos
CoreBanking product for large financial institutions in the US market. Tim
Sloane, Director of the Debit Service for Mercator Advisory Group and the
author of the report indicates that these events likely indicate a strategic
shift that will slowly ripple through the core system market;
"These moves by Metavante and People' s Bank are clearly the most
significant proof point that these new architectures will, at a minimum, be
carefully evaluated by US financial institutions on a very broad scale. But
it is important to recognize that these adopters have carefully investigated
and then embraced these new architectures, so it appears extremely likely that
more US financial institutions would come to the same conclusion - that these
new architectures and integration tools will simultaneously lower operating
costs while increasing the speed of deploying new and enhanced products and
business processes."
This report is 23 pages long and contains 8 exhibits.
Table of Contents
1. INTRODUCTION
2. ARCHITECTURES THAT EMBRACE CHANGE, BUT ENFORCE DISCIPLINE
- THE SLOW DISINTEGRATION OF THE DEFINITION OF A “CORE SYSTEM”
- ACHIEVING CONSISTENT & RELIABLE PRODUCTS & SERVICES ACROSS CHANNELS
- THE INVASION OF THE BRASH UPSTART CORE BANKING SYSTEMS
3. FIDELITY INFORMATION SYSTEMS - COREBANK (ALLTEL)
- COREBANK INTRODUCTION
- COREBANK ARCHITECTURE
- COREBANK PERFORMANCE DATA
- COREBANK SUMMARY
4. I-FLEX SOLUTIONS LTD - FLEXCUBE
- FLEXCUBE INTRODUCTION
- FLEXCUBE ARCHITECTURE
- FLEXCUBE PERFORMANCE DATA
- FLEXCUBE SUMMARY
5. INFOSYS FINACLE
- FINACLE INTRODUCTION
- FINACLE ARCHITECTURE
- FINACLE PERFORMANCE DATA
- FINACLE SUMMARY
6. TEMENOS COREBANKING
- COREBANKING (TCB) INTRODUCTION
- TCB ARCHITECTURE
- TCB PERFORMANCE
- TCB SUMMARY
7. CONCLUSION
List of Exhibits
- FIGURE 1: COREBANK FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE
- FIGURE 2: COREBANK OVERVIEW
- FIGURE 3: FLEXCUBE FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE.
- FIGURE 4: FLEXCUBE FUNCTIONAL INFORMATION (SOURCE: I-FLEX SOLUTIONS)
- FIGURE 5: INFOSYS FINACLE FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE
- FIGURE 6: INFOSYS FINACLE FUNCTIONAL INFORMATION
- FIGURE 7: TEMENOS COREBANK FUNCTIONAL ARCHITECTURE
- FIGURE 8: TCB FUNCTIONAL INFORMATION
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