Regulatory technology (RegTech), the application of innovative solutions by financial groups in order to achieve regulatory efficiency, experienced major growth against the backdrop of the post 2008 crisis. In 2017, BCG found over 200 regulatory changes occurring per day, either new legislative filings or amendments to existing leading regulations like Basel 2 and 3, Dodd-Frank, MiFID II, Solvency II, and GDPR. And earlier this year, the Economist reported on the dramatic rise in major banks’ core agenda focused on RegTech, as measured by the number of times the word “compliance” was mentioned in their 10K reports (BNP Paribas and Credit Suisse both recorded under 20 times in 2006 and nearly 250 in 2018).
Notwithstanding the prevalence of financial crime, the digital communication revolution has largely served as the impetus for the RegTech boom with cheaper and faster means of communication with customers and employees from the rise of layers like SMS and Email, or encrypted mobile applications like Whatsapp and Telegram. Banks, like any other enterprise, see the value in maximizing all those channels with customers and employees to scale their business. The only caveat is that these new regulations require firms to monitor, track and report data on virtually all communication and business activities, burdening firms to increase their compliance staff and impeding their operational efficiency. Solving this tradeoff is Israeli startup Shield, which has developed an Artificial Intelligence (AI) based software solution to automatically monitor all electronic communication and ensure financial institutions meet full compliance, without impacting operational performance.
Shield, founded in late 2018, developed a data management platform that utilizes machine learning and natural language processing (NLP) algorithms to monitor all communication channels employed in their firm as well as transactions, and understand the data’s context in order to detect and prevent violations.
The startup was founded by Shiran Weitzman (CEO) and Ofir Shabtai (CTO) having previously worked with financial institutions to solve communication compliance problems.
