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Top 5 Cyber Resilience Findings from the FCA’s 2025 Insights (And What They Really Mean)

Five operational lessons from the FCA’s latest cyber resilience findings

Cyber resilience hasn’t become more complex. It’s become more connectedThe latest insights from the Financial Conduct Authority Cyber Coordination Group (CCG) don’t introduce new regulation. They summarise real-world lessons from over 140 firms across financial services.

And when you step back, a clear pattern emerges:

Most organisations aren’t failing because they don’t know what to do. They’re failing because they can’t do it fast enough, together, and at scaleHere are the five findings that matter most:

 

  1. Incident Response Breaks Down at Scale
 

Most firms have incident response plans. But when multiple systems, teams, and third parties are involved, those plans start to fracture. The FCA highlights a growing focus on incident response and recovery at scale not just initial containment.

What this means in reality:

  • Processes that work in isolation fail in complex environments
  • Communication becomes the bottleneck
  • Recovery takes longer than expected
 

This isn’t a tooling issue. It’s a coordination issue.

 

  1. Recovery Is Now as Critical as Detection
 

Detection used to be the benchmark of maturity. Now it’s just the starting point. The shift in the FCA insights is clear:

Firms are being judged on how effectively they recover, not just how quickly they detect.

Because in a real incident:

  • Downtime = financial impact
  • Delayed recovery = reputational damage
  • Poor coordination = systemic risk
 

Resilience isn’t about stopping incidents. It’s about continuing despite them.

 

  1. AI Is Expanding Risk Faster Than It’s Being Understood
 

AI is now part of the cyber conversation, but not always in a controlled way. The FCA identifies AI and emerging technologies as a key area of both opportunity and challenge.  And the issue isn’t just technical. It’s operational.

  • Firms are adopting AI faster than they can govern it
  • Security teams don’t always have visibility into AI usage
  • Risk frameworks are struggling to keep up
 

At the same time, regulators are warning that AI-led attacks are becoming a growing riskSo, the gap is widening:

Between what organisations are using… And what they can secure.

 

  1. Insider Risk Remains One of the Least Mature Areas
 

For all the focus on external threats, insider risk continues to surface as a major concern. The FCA calls out insider risk management as a core theme in 2025.

And the challenge is consistent:

  • Over-privileged access
  • Limited monitoring of internal behaviour
  • Weak integration between HR, IT, and security
 

Insider risk isn’t just malicious. It’s accidental, operational, and often invisible until it’s too late.

 

  1. Cyber Resilience Is Now a Shared Responsibility
 

One of the most important shifts in the report isn’t technical, it’s structural. The Cyber Coordination Group itself exists to bring firms together to share insight and improve collective resilience.

That reflects a bigger reality:

  • Cyber incidents don’t stay contained within one organisation
  • Third-party dependencies increase systemic risk
  • Collaboration is becoming a necessity, not a choice
 

Resilience is no longer something you build alone.

 

Final Thought

The FCA isn’t warning that organisations are unprepared. It’s showing that preparedness doesn’t always translate into performance.

Plans exist.
Tools exist.
Controls exist.

But when pressure hits, what matters is:

  • How quickly teams align
  • How effectively systems respond
  • And how well organisations adapt in real time
 

Because in modern cybersecurity, failure rarely comes from a single weakness. It comes from everything not working together when it needs to.

Want to understand what these findings actually mean for businesses and security teams?