The Regulatory Framework
Financial institutions operate under multiple overlapping regulations that govern IT asset disposition. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) Safeguards Rule requires financial institutions to develop, implement, and maintain a comprehensive information security program — including the secure disposal of customer information. SOX Section 404 demands internal controls over financial reporting systems, which extends to the disposition of systems that processed financial data.
PCI-DSS Requirement 9.8 mandates the destruction of media containing cardholder data when no longer needed for business or legal reasons. SEC Rule 17a-4 governs retention and disposal of broker-dealer records. FFIEC examination procedures specifically evaluate IT asset disposal controls.
What Makes Financial Services ITAD Different
- Fiduciary obligation — IT disposal is a governance requirement, not an optional operational task
- Multi-branch complexity — Regional banks and credit unions with 50-200 branches face distributed disposition challenges with per-location chain of custody requirements
- Trading floor infrastructure — Bloomberg terminals, HPC systems, and specialized trading hardware require witnessed destruction protocols
- ATM and branch equipment — Teller terminals, check scanners (which cache deposited check images), and ATMs contain financial data requiring certified destruction
- Witnessed destruction — Enterprise financial institutions increasingly require on-site, witnessed destruction with video documentation
Morgan Stanley’s $60 million penalty for improper decommissioning of data center equipment — where unencrypted customer data was found on decommissioned servers — remains the most significant enforcement action in financial services ITAD history.
The SureDispose ITAD Readiness Assessment evaluates your financial institution across six dimensions tailored to GLBA, SOX, and PCI-DSS requirements.