AI Regulation Fuels Rising IT Costs in Finance
The Costly Intersection of Innovation and Compliance
Celent research shows IT budgets in financial services are increasing as firms fund AI projects, legacy modernization and compliance programs. AI regulation amplifies cost pressure by creating new technical and governance requirements. Model documentation, explainability tooling, audit trails, real-time monitoring and third party risk controls add engineering hours, specialist hires and vendor spend. Generative AI and emerging agentic systems introduce extra layers of verification for output provenance, hallucination mitigation and content filtering, all of which must be logged and retained for regulators.
Sector-Specific Pressures and Strategic Priorities
Insurance Leads Spending Amid Regulatory Scrutiny
Insurers report some of the largest IT budget increases. Use cases such as automated underwriting, pricing engines and claims automation accelerate AI adoption while attracting regulator attention on fairness and model risk. The result is parallel investment in innovation and compliance: new model governance, data lineage tools and batch plus real-time reconciliation.
Budget Constraints in Capital Markets and Corporate Banking
Capital markets and corporate banking face distinct demands. Low-latency trading models, counterparty risk analytics and transactional surveillance require rigorous model validation and explainability. KYC, AML and operational resilience rules increase costs for data integration and lineage. Pressure to modernize legacy stacks to support AI workloads further strains budgets.
Strategic Imperative: Mastering AI, Legacy, and Regulatory Demands
Forward-Looking Strategies for Sustainable Growth
Finance leaders must treat AI regulation as a core planning variable. Effective approaches include risk-based prioritization of projects, building shared model governance platforms, investing in data governance and observability, and negotiating stronger SLAs with AI vendors. Cloud migration and API-led architectures can lower long-term operations cost but require upfront spend. Balancing innovation with disciplined control will determine which firms capture AI value without overwhelming IT budgets.
Celent’s findings underscore a simple reality: compliance and capability are now inseparable drivers of technology spend in financial services.




