Cloud has become the backbone of modern IT – and in Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), moving to Azure, AWS, or any private hosting platform isn’t just a technology choice, it’s a regulatory decision.
The Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) allows cloud use, but only under strict outsourcing and IT risk rules that put accountability squarely on the regulated firm.
For ADGM-based CEOs, CISOs and compliance leaders, understanding what’s permitted – and how to prove you’re in control – is the difference between innovation and a compliance headache.
FSRA’s view on cloud
Cloud is not off-limits for ADGM firms, but the FSRA treats it as a form of outsourcing with clear compliance obligations.
GEN 3.3 of the FSRA General Rulebook requires firms to maintain robust systems and controls, and GEN 3.3.31 makes clear that outsourcing does not transfer responsibility – the regulated firm remains fully accountable.
FSRA’s November 2024 IT Risk Management Guidance includes a dedicated section on cloud computing. It calls for due diligence on providers, logical separation of client data in multi-tenant environments, and clear understanding of where data resides.
“FSRA isn’t against cloud – but you must prove risk and compliance are fully managed,” says Mohammad Hammoudeh of Penta.
Key risks to assess
Documentation and auditability
Material cloud hosting projects require FSRA notification and a formal outsourcing contract under GEN 3.3.32. The agreement must cover SLAs, security obligations, breach notifications, and allow regulatory oversight. FSRA guidance also stresses maintaining evidence – risk assessments, audit reports, and monitoring logs – to demonstrate control.
Data protection clauses are essential. Providers must commit to complying with ADGM’s Data Protection Regulations and supporting firms’ obligations as data controllers. Maintaining an up-to-date inventory of what data sits where is also expected.
“Having a structured risk assessment and mapped control framework is key to satisfying FSRA auditors,” notes Hammoudeh.
What works in practice
ADGM firms are finding success with:
“A phased approach works best – start with less critical systems and build maturity before migrating sensitive workloads,” says Hammoudeh.
Practical tips for ADGM firms
How Penta helps
Penta supports ADGM firms in building compliant, resilient cloud strategies. Services include readiness assessments, drafting FSRA outsourcing notifications, and designing secure hybrid architectures.
“Our role is bridging technology and compliance,” says Hammoudeh. “We help evaluate providers, draft controls and contracts, and implement continuous monitoring so firms can innovate in the cloud without compromising regulatory obligations.”
With careful planning and expert support, ADGM firms can harness Azure, AWS, or private hosting while staying fully aligned with FSRA’s IT risk and outsourcing requirements.