In our previous post, we looked at how high-risk work gets delayed, rerouted, or pushed into workarounds when secure environments aren’t available. The full Exception Economy report shows that this pressure cuts across industries, but financial services stands out for a specific reason: it has some of the most mature compliance processes in the market and still struggles with the same underlying operational gaps.
Financial services is often treated as the model for disciplined security governance. In many ways, that reputation is deserved. Formal approvals, documented exceptions, compensating controls, and regulatory scrutiny are all part of the operating environment.
Replica Cyber’s latest research found that even in this sector, process maturity has not closed the operational gap. The controls are real. The delays are real too.
The Exception Process Is Mature
Among financial services respondents, 80% said they use formal, documented security exceptions with time limits and compensating controls. That is well above the cross-industry average and reflects how seriously the sector treats governance.
AI is stalling where the stakes are highest
Financial services respondents were among the most active in AI and automation, yet 48% delayed AI and ML deployment in the past year because they could not conduct the work securely. That is the highest rate of any vertical in the survey. In one of the most tightly governed sectors, one of the most strategic areas of investment is still being slowed by the lack of the right environment.
Leadership keeps pulling the brake
Eighty-four percent of financial services respondents said leadership and legal risk appetite always or often slows high-risk digital work. The result is a sector that has built a mature process for managing exceptions but still has not solved for the environments needed to do sensitive work safely and on time. Formal process can reduce disorder, but it does not remove the underlying operational constraint.
The gap between process and practice
Every exception granted, every workaround adopted, and every delay accepted is a compensating control for infrastructure that doesn’t yet exist. In a sector where regulatory scrutiny, deal sensitivity, and AI competition are all intensifying at once, compensating controls are an expensive way to run.
See how financial services compares on exceptions, delays, and friction in the full report.