Banking outages happen because banks ‘can’t keep up with tech’

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Banking outages happen because banks ‘can’t keep up with tech’

Online banking outages are happening because banks are finding it “too hard to keep up” with fast-moving technology, an industry expert has said.

On Monday, Lloyds Bank (LLOY.L) and Halifax were hit by an issue that left customers unable to receive payments and came in the wake of a major Barclays (BARC.L) outage that began on Friday and continued into the weekend, leaving many unable to access funds on payday.

People walking past a branch of Lloyds Bank
Lloyds Bank confirmed its systems were back up and running after an outage on Monday morning (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

Lloyds said its systems had returned to normal by late morning, but the incidents have been the latest in a growing number of online banking outages in recent months.

Financial technology expert Chris Skinner said the vast array of technology systems needed to operate in the modern banking world meant banks have “such a smorgasbord of things they have to work with” that the “competence of keeping up with these changes is really challenging every bank”.

He told the PA news agency that clusters of incidents were also more likely because of the shared financial IT infrastructure and close links between institutions.

Mr Skinner said it meant that situations similar to the CrowdStrike (CRWD) outage in 2024 – where an issue within one infrastructure firm caused a global IT outage – were now more likely in the banking sector.

“If you look at what happened in the US last year (with CrowdStrike), it was like a house of cards,” he said.

“There was a linked organisation that failed, and then other organisations failed on the back end of their failure, and I think that’s where we are today – we have this house of cards where you’ve got an awful lot of institutions working co-operatively with each other, but if one messes up the system, then the whole system fails.”

Crowdstrike homepage
The CrowdStrike outage in 2024 caused global systems to fall ‘like a house of cards’ (Yui Mok/PA)

Mr Skinner, who also runs the industry blog The Finanser, added that the recent flurry of outages, a number of which have occurred on Fridays and close to paydays, was likely because firms plan software updates for the weekends as it tends to be quieter, but said cybercriminal activity could also be playing a role.

“I think there’s a couple of things in the background – one is that the banks have to regularly update their systems to keep up with infrastructure providers, and when they do that, they normally would target a Friday evening, on the basis that the weekend is the quietest time for transaction and processing,” he said.

“So a Friday is probably the most likely day to have an instance where a system update causes a problem and then they have to reboot the system to get it back to where it was before the update to fix it.

“And I think the second thing is the largest banks in the world are the ones targeted the most by the criminal community in the dark web and elsewhere.

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