CGI wins contract with Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
CGI, a management and technology consulting firm, has won an IT consulting contract with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) within the US Department of the Treasury.
CGI Federal, the firm’s US-based subsidiary devoted to contracting with federal agencies, was awarded a blanket purchase agreement to modernize the OCC’s content management system and digital services.
The OCC was established in 1863 and “charters, regulates, and supervises all national banks and federal savings associations as well as federal branches and agencies of foreign banks,” according to the bureau’s website. The OCC’s remit includes ensuring the soundness of the national banking system, fostering competition, and enforcing anti-money laundering and anti-terrorism financial laws that apply to national banks and federally licensed branches and agencies of international banks.
CGI’s new cloud-based platform will help enhance the OCC website’s performance, strengthen security, and increase transparency via tracking of key metrics.
"CGI employs a phased approach built on scalability and sustainability, addressing immediate needs while simultaneously laying a foundation to meet future demands," said David Kwon, VP consulting services for Treasury, CGI. "In this phase, CGI will deliver a secure, digital infrastructure ready to support the OCC’s long-term mission."
CGI Federal has approximately 8,000 professionals who support federal agencies in defense, civilian, healthcare, justice, intelligence, and international affairs. The unit has practices across systems integration, AI, cybersecurity, cloud and IT modernization, and managed services, among other areas.
CGI was founded in 1976 and is based in Montreal, Canada. The firm has 93,000 consultants globally delivering services across business consulting, applications, systems integration, infrastructure, business process services, and managed IT.
CGI recently won a contract with the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts to implement a new software-as-a-service (SaaS) enterprise financial system.

