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Sources: Julius Baer will replace Swiss IT system by Temenos.

Four people with knowledge of the matter have confirmed that Julius Baer chose Temenos as the software provider to replace its aging core banking system on the Swiss domestic market. The bank is updating critical infrastructure to meet increasing regulatory requirements.

In June, CEO Stefan Bollinger revealed that the bank has set up a digital business transformation department and begun a project in Switzerland to modernise the IT infrastructure. He did not reveal the name of its supplier.

Bollinger stated that "it has to be done" and that he wanted to accomplish a significant portion of it in the current cycle, which ends in 2028. Bollinger cited more regulatory requirements as one of his drivers.

Two sources confirmed that the bank has aligned its Swiss systems to Temenos T24, which Julius Baer uses already in Singapore and Luxembourg.

According to a source, Julius Baer will also add a Temenos Wealth Management interface for relationship managers as well as high-net worth clients.

The bank refused to comment on Temenos or individual systems. Temenos declined comment.

Reto Huber is an analyst with the financial consultancy Research Partners. He says that Temenos sells most new contracts today using a subscription-based model. Cash flows are spread over a five-year period.

According to the financial regulator FINMA, Switzerland introduced a new rule in 2016 that requires banks to use a computerized system to monitor transaction. This means that customer data must be digitised.

Julius Baer has said that there is no connection between the IT upgrade, and the ongoing assessment.

It said that the IT infrastructure program in Switzerland was not a risk-management issue but rather an effort to achieve strategic flexibility for the bank's goals. Reporting by Marleen Kassebier in Gdansk and Ariane Lutti and Oliver Hirt, Zurich, and Jesus Aguado, Madrid. Editing by Alexandra Hudson.

(source: Reuters)