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  1. American Continental Group, LLC
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  3. Bracewell & Giuliani LLP
  4. Bunge North America
  5. Cardinal Resources
  6. Cisco Systems
  7. The Coca-Cola Company
  8. The Eurasia Foundation
  9. Holtec International
  10. Kennan Institute
  11. Kyiv-Atlantic Group of Companies
  12. Marathon Oil Corporation
  13. Marks, Sokolov & Burd LLC
  14. Northrop Grumman
  15. Open World Leadership Center
  16. Shell Oil Company
  17. TD International, LLC
  18. The State Export-Import Bank of Ukraine
  19. U.S. Civilian Research & Development Foundation (CRDF)
  20. U.S.-Ukraine Foundation
  21. Ukrainian American Bar Association (UABA)
  22. Ukrainian-American Environmental Association
  23. Ukrainian Development Company
  24. Vanco Energy Company
  25. Ukrainian Federation of America
  26. UPS
  27. Softline Company
  28. International Tax & Investment Center (ITIC)
  29. MaxWell Biocorporation
  30. Baker & McKenzie
  31. Dipol Chemical International Inc.
  32. Och-Ziff Capital Management
  33. MJA Asset Management, LLC
  34. General Dynamics
  35. Lockheed Martin Corporation
  36. Squire, Sanders & Dempsey
  37. Halliburton
  38. DLA Piper Ukraine, LLC
  39. EPAM Systems
  40. DHL
  41. Air Tractor, Inc.
  42. Magisters
  43. Ernst & Young LLC
  44. Umbra, LLC
  45. US PolyTech
  46. Rakotis
  47. Crumpton Group
  48. Vision TV LLC
  49. Standard Chartered Bank
  50. American Councils for International Education
  51. Intercontinental Commerce Corporation (ICC)
  52. TNK-BP Commerce LLC
  53. Nationwide Equipment Company
  54. IMTC-MEI
  55. First International Resources LLC
  56. Doheny Global Group
  57. Foyil Securities, Inc.
  58. KPMG
  59. Asters Law Firm
  60. Solid Team LLC
  61. R & J Trading International, Inc.
  62. Vasil Kisil & Partners Law Firm
  63. AeroSvit Ukrainian Airlines
  64. ContourGlobal Ukraine
  65. Winner Imports Ukraine, Ltd.
  66. The Anemone Group
  67. 3M
  68. CEC Government Relations
  69. IBM Ukraine
  70. Edelman Europe
  71. RZB Finance LLC
  72. SoftServe, Inc.
  73. The Washington Group
  74. SE Raelin/Cajo, Inc.
  75. Mars Ukraine L.L.C.
  76. AnaCom, Inc.
  77. Pratt & Whitney – Paton
  78. Zurich Surety, Credit & Political Risk
  79. AGCO Corporation
  80. Aitken Berlin LLP/HSIA
  81. Microsoft
  82. Kyiv Mohyla Foundation of America (KMF)
  83. Ukraine International Airlines (UIA)
  84. DRS Technologies, Inc.
  85. Defense Technology Inc. (DTI)
  86. Dunwoodie Travel Bureau, Ltd.
  87. Commonwealth Energy Partners
  88. International Services Corporation (ISC)
  89. Broad Street Capital Group
  90. Charles H. Camp, Esquire, Law Offices of Charles H. Camp, Washington, D.C.
  91. Baker Tilly Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine
  92. Maryland Department of Business & Economic Development, Division of International Investment & Trade
  93. Ukrainian American Coordinating Council (UACC)
  94. Blufer & Associates
  95. Foundation for International Arts and Education (FIAE)
  96. Chevron
  97. PetRus USA, LLC
  98. United Coal Company/System Capital Management
  99. Kyiv Global
  100. Eurasia Business Consultancy
  101. Amity Technology
  102. Eli Lilly and Company
  103. Louis Dreyfus Commodities
  104. Raytheon Company
  105. Providence Equity
  106. Raytheon
  107. Eli Lilly
  108. InterContinental Kyiv


Welcome to the U.S.-Ukraine Business Council

VAST MAJORITY OF BANKS LACK ENTERPRISE-WIDE VIEW OF RISK          
Risk management functions in Ukrainian banks are receiving ever increasing levels of attention and executive management support, especially as the Ukrainian market goes through various stages of challenge and evolution.

Ernst & Young, New York, NY, Kyiv, Ukraine, Monday, December 22, 2008

[Click to download .doc]

NEW YORK, KYIV - Only 14% of respondents in a survey of top executives at nearly 40 global banks indicated they have a consolidated view of risk across their organizations. According to Ernst & Young’s second annual study on risk governance entitled Navigating the Crisis, the current economic crisis has exposed inherent weaknesses in risk management, forcing banks to improve their risk governance processes, increase the collaboration between risk and finance functions, and make instilling a risk culture a true priority.

Organizational silos, decentralization of resources and decision-making, inadequate forecasting, and lack of transparent reporting were cited as major barriers to effective enterprise-wide risk management. The need to create a risk-aware culture throughout the institution emerged as a top priority in the study – three-quarters of all respondents cited its vital importance – as banks struggle to develop a consolidated view of risk across business units and various risk dimensions.

“In light of recent events, there was strong agreement that managing risk effectively requires both top-down oversight and bottom-up involvement from front-line risk takers,” says Bill Schlich, leader of Ernst & Young’s Global Banking & Capital Markets practice. “In order to create and instill a culture of risk awareness within banks, risk management must become everyone’s business.”  

ERNST & YOUNG UKRAINE
Roman Tatarsky, Business Risks Services Leader with Ernst & Young Ukraine, adds: “Banks and other financial institutions have been leaders in the Ukrainian market with respect to initiating, building and evolving their risk management functions and instilling a risk-aware culture within their organisations. This is due partly to the nature of the banking business itself but also due to close coordination and regulation by the central bank of Ukraine.

Having said this, risk management functions in Ukrainian banks are receiving ever increasing levels of attention and executive management support, especially as the Ukrainian market goes through various stages of challenge and evolution.

"Shareholders, executive management and all stakeholders are demanding more comprehensive, timely, collaborative and forward-looking risk management information and analysis of all parts of the business. The evolution of enterprise-wide risk management as a strategic management tool is particularly relevant during these times of financial turmoil.”

To do that, respondents agreed that the discussion of risk must be elevated to the strategic level with much closer collaboration across functions, business units and risk classes. Eighty-six percent of those surveyed indicated that their banks are implementing a variety of projects designed to provide a more comprehensive approach to risk. However, only 16 percent said they have a well-defined, shared vision of what it would look like.

Respondents consistently cited the need for better information flow and reporting in the area of risk. Poor data quality, gaps in data flow, and the sheer volume of data are just a few challenges banks face.

Sixty-seven percent of executives indicated that they were under way with the process of implementing consolidated risk reporting across their organizations but only 9% felt they have truly been able to aggregate data across the enterprise. Survey participants agreed greater transparency, faster delivery and better synthesis of data must be top priorities. 

“In last year’s study, identifying emerging risk was reported to be a relatively low priority on the path to better risk management,” says Hank Prybylski, head of Ernst & Young’s Global Financial Services Risk Management practice.  “The current crisis demonstrates the need for firms to focus on emerging and unforeseen risk.”

A vast majority of this year’s survey respondents said that their organizations do not have well-defined, rigorous processes for forecasting risk. However, all recognized the need to strengthen forecasting by developing more formal processes and more forward-looking risk assessment tools.

This includes implementing more frequent executive risk committee meetings to monitor issues and events, creating detailed scenario modeling, and mandating periodic portfolio reviews to monitor leading risk indicators. 

Many of those interviewed said this crisis might ultimately lead to more robust risk governance. The crisis is already acting as a catalyst by dismantling silos, promoting more dialogue between risk and finance, and stimulating broader discussion of risk as a core issue. As one executive observed, “The survivors of this 500-year flood will emerge as much stronger global institutions.”

ABOUT THE STUDY 
Ernst & Young commissioned Broderick & Company, an independent market strategy firm, to conduct a global market survey of key industry opinion leaders from leading banks.  From May through October 2008, Broderick completed in-depth, qualitative interviews with 48 senior executives from 36 major banking institutions around the world. 

Interviewees included a mix of senior executives in each organization, including chief financial officers, chief risk officers and heads of business units, as well as heads of functional divisions including finance, operational risk, internal audit, compliance, legal and strategy. 

ABOUT ERNST & YOUNG
Ernst & Young is a global leader in assurance, tax, transaction and advisory services. Worldwide, our 135,000 people are united by our shared values and an unwavering commitment to quality. We make a difference by helping our people, our clients and our wider communities achieve potential.

In Ukraine Ernst & Young established its practice in 1991. Ernst & Young Ukraine now employs more than 570 professionals providing a full range of services to a number of multinational corporations and Ukrainian enterprises. For more information, please visit www.ey.com/ukraine. Contact: Natalia Partach, Ernst & Young Senior PR Specialist, Kyiv, Ukraine, Natalia.Partach@ua.ey.com.                                                   

Ernst and Young is a member of the U.S.-Ukraine Business Council (USUBC), Washington, D.C. www.usubc.org.

 

 

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