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Five ways banks can scale Global Capability Centers for AI value

AI and GCCs are complementary forces, with AI turning GCCs from cost centers into engines of innovation, resilience and enterprise value.


In brief
  • The GCC sector is set to grow rapidly in the coming years, yet most banks have yet to grasp how it will transform their business.
  • A combination of AI-led technology, talent and strategy can unlock the potential of GCCs to act as autonomous second headquarters for banks.
  • As the GCC sector expands globally beyond India, banks will need robust and innovative location, skills and resilience strategies to fully take advantage.

For many banks, Global Capability Centers (GCCs) are emerging as a direct response to three structural challenges: persistent skills shortages, mounting pressure to demonstrate ROI from technology investments, and the need to scale artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities faster than traditional operating models allow. Rather than representing alternative strategies, the global EY organization's research shows that GCCs and AI increasingly reinforce each other, with GCCs providing the talent, scale and governance needed to industrialize AI across the enterprise.

How can we best use GCCs to transform our operations, deliver real value and be fully competitive in the new AI-powered age of banking? That’s the question finance and technology executives need to be asking as the global financial services (FS) sector looks to GCCs to build the depth and breadth of digital and AI capabilities needed to survive and thrive in the coming years.


When designed as strategic hubs, banking GCCs shift from cost centers to drivers of AI innovation, resilience and growth.


Despite growing maturity, most GCCs still have limited leadership presence in India, with nearly 80% reporting less than 10% of leadership roles based locally, underscoring the need to accelerate leadership localization for greater strategic influence. Some, mainly regional, banks still view GCCs purely as a way of reducing costs, improving operational and building functional experience (payments being one good example) or accessing scalable and affordable labor. Other larger national banks are taking a more strategic approach to GCCs by embracing right shoring to develop proprietary IP, diversifying critical capabilities such as cybersecurity and data analytics and creating new revenue streams (embedded finance being one example).

The true potential for right-shored GCCs as they scale and mature, however, is far more exciting, ambitious and achievable. The banks that fully embrace GCCs — using them as hubs to industrialize AI at scale and creating the frameworks and processes for them to operate with near-total autonomy (empowering agentic AI to make real-time decisions, for example) will reinvent their business models, unlock new streams of self-generating revenue and elevate GCCs to strategic partners — perhaps even acting as second headquarters. In one instance, a major US bank embraced an AI-first operational model at its India-based GCC that drives enterprise-wide innovation and leads on cybersecurity and risk management. Another global bank invested most of its AI talent pool in its GCC rather than its UK headquarters.


Navigating a growing but complex GCC landscape

The GCC sector is booming. It has experienced rapid double-digit growth over the past decade — enabled by an expanding financial services (FS) right shoring market that is currently valued at US$150b. Most GCCs are based in India but other nations are starting to play a growing role as the sector expands — notably the Philippines, Poland and China. This global diversification is propelled by encouraging trends, including increasing emerging marketing economic stability, a broader-skilled talent pool in right shoring locales, rapid technological innovation and new supportive government policies on inward investment and regulation.

Valuation of the FS right-shoring market
US $ 150b

Yet, as with all transformative technologies, there are risks to consider. Geopolitical instability can paralyze operations and impact global service delivery, while natural disasters and infrastructure failures can halt critical banking functions. Sudden regulatory shifts can invalidate operating models overnight, while conflicting frameworks (whether it be General Data Protection Regulation, data protection requirements or new AI legislation) can create compliance challenges. There is also the perennial issue of securing the right talent. A skills gap and limited internal workforce mobility can hamper growth, while competitors are aggressively looking to lure away talent.

To best navigate this potentially game-changing yet complex landscape, executives need to consider if their current GCCs are truly positioned to drive strategic growth or still just focused on operational efficiency. They need to have plans to scale their GCCs so they deliver innovation, transformation and enterprise-wide impact. They also need to embed the right leadership, skills and governance to drive strategy and manage compliance and integration as GCCs become more autonomous and influential in the larger business.

Five ways to prepare for GCC transformation

To navigate the complexity and take advantage of the opportunities, here are five concrete ways that executives can establish the foundations of successful GCC strategy.

  1. Anchor GCC design to value creation by focusing on long-term innovation, transformation and resilience objectives. This involves continually reviewing GCC opportunities to drive competitive advantage, cost optimization and revenue generation, in alignment with the banks’ overall strategy. One global bank, for example, recently shifted digital product management and platform enhancement responsibilities into its India GCC. As a result, the GCC reports directly into the enterprise product leadership and influences cross-region rollouts. It also requires smart risk management — establishing a clear framework to assess trade-offs around concentration risks, geopolitical risk, operational and cybersecurity risks, and third-party dependencies.

  2. Build transformation capabilities early by embedding AI, product ownership and cross-functional autonomy into your GCC mandates. That requires identifying capability gaps, defining a fulfilment strategy and assessing long-term policies around their technology infrastructure. In Bengaluru, a UK bank scaled its GCC from simply performing operational tasks to co-building AI-driven risk analytics and payment platform features that are leveraged across its global markets.

  3. Invest in mature talent and leadership to elevate decision-making, capability depth and enterprise-wide integration. This will also require bridging critical skills gaps in the wider workforce through targeted training and acquisition strategies and third-party partnerships. A number of leading banks have located senior strategic leadership roles in Indian GCCs over the past five years.1

  4. Adopt a calibrated multilocation strategy that balances talent access and cost benefits with strong governance, operational readiness and the need for business continuity. One major US bank now houses its large-scale technology engineering and platform development in India, while retaining proximity-sensitive risk, regulatory and market-facing capabilities in Europe and the US. Doing so involves considering the legal entity setup and regulatory authorization, establishing transfer pricing policies and advanced pricing arrangements, implementing automated compliance tools and fostering a culture of accountability.

  5. Future-proof GCC investments by building agility into operations so that you can respond quickly to the new growth opportunities that are guaranteed to arise. One global bank has created a multilocation GCC model that places large‑scale engineering and operational teams in India while retaining proximity‑sensitive risk, regulatory and market‑facing functions across Europe and the US. This distributed setup allows it to balance critical workloads, scale specialist operations rapidly and maintain continuity as new business opportunities or regulatory shifts emerge.

Summary

Enabled by new technologies, expanding capabilities and maturing talent, GCCs are poised to play an important role in the future growth of financial services. To achieve success, banks will need to identify and embrace the strategic opportunities offered by GCCs — especially as AI transforms operational outposts into drivers of innovation and leadership. The key will be to identify how GCCs can deliver real value, and the technologies and talent that will unlock it, while balancing the risks of regulatory compliance and resilience in our increasingly complex world.


Ready to unlock the next generation of GCC value?

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