Just noticed something pretty significant happening in how banks actually operate at a fundamental level. The infrastructure they're building on is completely changing.



Banks dropped $623 billion on technology in 2024, and here's what caught my attention — for the first time ever, more than half of that went to digital infrastructure instead of maintaining physical assets. We're talking cloud computing, APIs, cybersecurity, data platforms replacing data centres, branch networks, and ATM fleets. That's a massive shift.

The numbers back this up. A McKinsey survey of 200 bank CIOs showed 78% plan to move their primary banking workloads to public cloud within five years. That's wild compared to just 35% back in 2020. The acceleration is being driven by cost pressure, regulatory requirements, and the fact that there's going to be 3.6 billion digital banking customers by 2028.

Let's break down what's actually changing. Cloud migration is replacing traditional data centres that banks have run for decades. These facilities cost tens of millions annually to maintain. When banks move to public cloud, Accenture estimates they cut infrastructure costs by 40-60%. HSBC signed a major AWS deal in 2024 and expects to save $300 million a year once it's done. Capital One already went all-in on AWS back in 2020 and shut down every single data centre — their tech operating costs have dropped every year since.

APIs are the next big shift. Banking used to run on closed proprietary networks connecting branches, ATMs, and back offices. Now open banking APIs are replacing that with standardised interfaces. The UK's open banking ecosystem has over 370 regulated providers and 7 million active users. Think about how this works in practice — when someone applies for a mortgage through a broker's website, APIs instantly pull their account data, verify identity, check credit, and start the application. No branch visit needed. This infrastructure is what lets 30,000 fintech companies worldwide build on top of banking rails.

Digital identity verification is another piece. Opening accounts used to require physically visiting a branch with documents. That's basically gone now. Companies like Onfido, Jumio, and Veriff use AI to verify identity documents and match them to selfies in under 60 seconds. Gartner reports 85% of new bank accounts in developed markets now open through digital channels. India's Aadhaar system gives digital identity to 1.4 billion people — accounts open in minutes instead of days. Brazil's digital identity framework does the same thing. This is the new banking infrastructure foundation.

Real-time payment systems are replacing batch processing too. These now operate in over 70 countries. India's UPI processed more than 12 billion transactions in a single month last year. Brazil's Pix handled 42 billion transactions for the entire year. The EU's SEPA Instant system is expanding to cover all eurozone banks by 2025. Payments that used to take 1-3 business days now settle in seconds.

What's happening is pretty clear — the entire banking system is shifting from physical infrastructure to digital banking infrastructure built on software. It's cheaper to operate, faster to update, and can serve billions of customers without being limited by geography or branch locations. The vault and the mainframe are becoming the API and the cloud instance. That's the real story here.
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