Business Day

HSBC tests tool to defend data from cybercrimi­nals

- Sinead Cruise and Lawrence White

HSBC has completed what it says is the world’s first trial of a tool designed to protect highly sensitive financial data from cybercrimi­nals seeking to harness the power of next-generation quantum computers to launch future attacks.

The British bank said it used the tool to safeguard a trade on its proprietar­y platform, HSBC AI Markets, exchanging €30m for dollars.

The test shows how banks are trying to get ahead of cybercrimi­nals who could use advances in computing to access trading data in global financial systems such as the foreign exchange market where about $7.5-trillion is traded daily.

“While we take the view that we are some distance away from quantum computers being able to break traditiona­l encryption, the time to prepare for this is now,” said Colin Bell, CEO of HSBC Europe.

HSBC’s test ran on a network created by British telecommun­ications company BT Group, using devices developed by Toshiba as well as support from Amazon Web Services.

The test is an important step in demonstrat­ing the commercial applicatio­ns of the technology using current fibre networks, said Andrew Shields, head of quantum technology at Toshiba Europe.

Howard Watson, chief security and networks officer at BT, said it was critical that digital infrastruc­ture remained secure against new quantum-based threats.

HSBC said the test helped it plan how it could roll out to some of its trading systems in a form of encryption known as quantum key distributi­on (QKD). QKD uses particles of light to deliver secret keys between parties that can be used to encrypt and decrypt sensitive data, said the bank.

“The protection of both the bank’s data and our clients’ data is something that we take with the utmost seriousnes­s,” said Richard Bibbey, global head of foreign exchange, emerging market rates and commoditie­s at HSBC.

“Were someone to be able to eavesdrop on the flows that go across the largest foreign exchange institutio­ns, they will have a significan­t amount of informatio­n, the capacity to manipulate the market and to understand what trades have been executed before they have been risk-managed.”

Quantum computers promise to be millions of times faster than today’s most powerful supercompu­ters, potentiall­y revolution­ising everything from medical research to battling climate change.

Banks worldwide are working on how to take advantage, as well as how to protect themselves against any risks.

About 297 patents for socalled Post Quantum Cryptograp­hy, or systems resistant to quantum computing attacks, have been filed in the US since 2015, according to John Egan, CEO of independen­t BNP Paribas research subsidiary L’Atelier.

Some experts are sceptical of the immediate practical implicatio­ns of the QKD technology for financial markets.

Authoritie­s say its specialist hardware requiremen­ts make QKD impractica­l for many potential end users, said Martin Albrecht, professor of cybersecur­ity at King’s College London.

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