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Bank of America bucked the Wall Street trend and made a $350 million bet on its own internal cloud — and the payoff has been striking
Business Insider - ALEX MORRELL OCTOBER 16, 2019
  • Bank of America has bucked the Wall Street trend by building its own private cloud software rather than outsourcing to companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.
  • The investment, including a $350 million charge in 2017, hasn't been cheap, but it has had a striking payoff, CEO Brian Moynihan said during the company's third-quarter earnings call.
  • He said the decision helped reduce the firm's servers to 70,000 from 200,000 and its data centers to 23 from 60, and it has resulted in $2 billion in annual infrastructure savings
Wall Street CEOs relish proving their critics wrong — and Bank of America's Brian Moynihan is no exception.
Discussing the bank's third-quarter earnings results Wednesday, Moynihan didn't hesitate to point out that many of the analysts on the call had doubted the company's capacity to shave billions off of its annual expenses.
"2.5 years ago, we said we'd operate this year on $53 billion and change in expenses, and we hit that number — and a lot of you had us in at $57 billion," he said.
How'd Bank of America do it? The company has made massive bets on technology that have had a striking payoff, including billions in annual savings, Moynihan went on to explain.
The bank, which has a $10 billion annual tech budget, has made an array of tech investments across its wide-ranging divisions — chatbots, automated mortgages, improvements to its mobile app — but Moynihan specifically highlighted the firm's decision to buck the Wall Street trend and build out its own internal cloud architecture rather than shelling out millions to public cloud companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.
This effort, which initially began in 2013, didn't come cheap. Moynihan reminded analysts the bank took a $350 million charge in 2017 in part to execute the changeover to its private cloud.
But the results have been dramatic. The company once had 200,000 servers and roughly 60 data centers. Now, it's pared that down to 70,000 servers, of which 8,000 of those are handling the bulk of the load. And they've more than halved their data centers down to 23.
"We reduced expenses by basically around 40% or $2 billion a year on our backbone," Moynihan said, adding that simultaneously they've seen their transaction load balloon.
The new, more operationally lithe Bank of America is up 86% in mobile logins and 39% in wire transactions, while digital payments have climbed 29% to $424 billion compared with Q3 2017. And the list goes on.
Howard Boville, Bank of America's chief technology officer, told Business Insider this summer that the bank will save $2.1 billion in infrastructure costs in 2019, a large part of which comes from moving a majority of its workloads from traditional on-premise servers to its private cloud.
Here's how Boville explained the cloud's benefits and cost reductions to BI:
A private cloud essentially uses software to lash together existing data center hardware into a single unified platform — making more efficient use of each individual server, while also making it easier for developers to access and scale up their resources.
It's not just cost benefits Bank of America has recognized from the move to its private cloud, Boville said. The bank also has a better sense of its client interactions — of which on the consumer side there are 26 million daily. Everything from a customer's ATM card not working to a credit card transaction taking slightly longer to be approved is monitored.
Right now, the bank estimates its private cloud is 25% to 30% cheaper than public providers, though it also recognizes that probably won't last forever. Still, the company believes the architecture it's built will give it leverage in negotiating contracts with these companies — a process which is already under way, Moynihan said.
"But so far, we're still cheaper and so far, we have to make sure that the external providers are safe, sound, leave the data just for us to use for our customers, don't mix with other people's data, et cetera," Moynihan said. "And that discussion, negotiation goes on as we speak."
Bank of America's peers haven't been as forthcoming on what they're spending on cloud services, prompting Mike Mayo, an analyst with Wells Fargo, to thank Moynihan for "providing data that others have not provided yet."
Moynihan's transparency is laudable, though of course it's easier divulging details when it involves revealing billions in savings and proving your critics wrong.
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| 2161 views | | 4 replies (last October 24, 2019) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+11EV34TC

4 replies (most recent on top)

An on-premise cloud isn't going to be cheaper, however many firms are risk averse and do not want to relinquish control of their data. In other words, they don't trust it, for plenty of reasons. You don't need huge data centers nor are they a liability. Those with security uppermost in their mind do not care or have a need about being the most agile. All you need is enough storage and computing power to manage your services and one DR site. Most growth especially for banks and law firms are very predictable so you don't need to be "elastic" and I can't remember the last time a bank or law firm had a need to be "agile" in their services. Trusting their security and data integrity is an outsider isn't something they are going to be prone to do.

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Post ID: @2xxv+11EV34TC

Banks tend to be more averse to public clouds. They typically are US only. Global corporations cannot build huge on premise data centers with availability zones like the big 3 (AWS, Azure, Google) can in the US, Canada, Latin America, Europe, and Asia. Also, the statement that on premise is "cheaper" simply is not true. Data centers are a cost center and a liability. There are all sorts of costs for not having the agility or security of a public cloud that prevent a business from moving as fast as its competition.

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Post ID: @1sps+11EV34TC

Sounds like the newest trend in cloud. Build your own. Shows you how far Oracle is behind.

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Post ID: @jbk+11EV34TC

I refuse to interact with chat bots. Insulting and often useless

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Post ID: @nkg+11EV34TC

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