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Report

The Future of Payments 2020

The Race Against Time for Payments Transformation. In the age of instant payments and with the first Request to Pay services to go live in 2020, the financial services industry needs to prepare for the impact on the European payments landscape and understand how the growth of digital payments technologies will affect the sector. This report looks at how real-time fraud can be addressed - when KYC remains a challenge – and whether initiatives such as TIBER-EU has the potential to strengthen the resilience of the financial system against cybercrime. The requirements for corporate liquidity management are shifting in the age of instant payments, making way for a more collaborative model to dominate. However, with the availability of mobile devices, payments service providers must prioritise providing their customers a slick customer experience. In parallel to this, financial players must understand the challenges of managing risk in an instant world, which is a paradox that correspondent banking faces. This is where adaptable payments architecture and a smooth standards migration can help banks focus on strategy, rather than the day-to-day processes. Problems with operational efficiency can be overcome with leveraging APIs, but a question is posed when considering whether banks are ready for this technology to be customer-facing and if they would allow account access to third parties. Finextra’s The Future of Payments report will explore how new business models, new operating models and new forms of collaboration are the catalyst for the 2020 payments ecosystem, which in turn, will help banks and payments providers to establish a clear strategy for the future. Organisations interviewed in this report: Bank of England, BNP Paribas, Deloitte, Deutsche Bank, Erste Group Bank AG, EY, ING, JPMorgan, Santander, SEB, Standard Chartered, SWIFT. Download your copy of the report below now to find out more.

570 downloads

Report

Accelerating Enterprise-Wide Innovation with Cloud Migration and Data Governance

A Finextra Research Impact Study in Association with Collibra and Amazon Web Services (AWS). In today's environment, data is produced and consumed at a rapid pace. However, the way it is currently being stored, accessed, and processed is inefficient. Migration to the cloud promises to change this reality for financial institutions, but there are several obstacles tied to digital transformation that must be addressed in the process. The exponential increase in data generation is set to continue in the coming years, especially as the adoption of mobile technology rises. The risk and opportunity introduced by big data to the financial services industry are unparalleled. As the most data-intensive sector in the global economy, the ability of financial institutions to obtain, process, and analyse their complex data assets – structured or unstructured – is becoming fundamental to market success and remaining competitive. Moving data to the cloud with a partner such as Collibra establishes a governance foundation for banks as ungoverned data lakes can quickly become data swamps. Data intelligence vendors can provide a platform that helps banks gain a unified view of data assets to unlock their true value. These technology companies can help improve trust in data to strengthen analytics and hasten time to insight through machine learning powered features such as automatic data classification, guided stewardship, and auto-discovery functions. Cloud migration and services such as those offered by Amazon Web Services (AWS) should be at the centre of banks’ digital transformation, but challenges around lack of executive alignment, technical skillsets, and data lake experience must be overcome in order to become masters of their data.  Download your copy of the Impact Study below to learn more.

309 downloads

Report

The Future of Identity 2020

Technology, Security and Regulation Driving Trends of Tomorrow. Financial institutions must balance speed with security at all points of connection and communication with the customer, but while the incumbent player is known for laboured onboarding, fintech challengers are coming to the fore with slicker processes, more so now than ever before as a result of Covid-19. Identity is integral to mature digital transformation and fulfilling customer needs, especially when mandates such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and the Second Payment Services Directive (PSD2) are too limited in their coverage and arguably introduce friction, as evidenced by Strong Customer Authentication (SCA) and Two-Factor-Authentication (2FA). Increased information exchange has also posed the pertinent question: who owns this data, when banks continue to be the trusted providers of identity and history dictates that ID solutions need a commercial edge? In addition to this, do we need to create a truly digital borderless economy? However, we are not at that stage and with verification being the first point of contact for the customer, abandonment rates are up by a staggering 40%. Banks are further along in the digitisation of infrastructure but are slow in ensuring that the same experience is provided across mobile, tablets and desktop computers. Some financial institutions are tackling this with the use of point solutions such as biometrics and analytics to maintain behavioural records, examining how customers hold their mouse, keystrokes and conducting liveness checks. In order to combat sophisticated ID scams, banks must learn how to recognise behaviour. Account takeover fraud and synthetic fraud are both growing abuses of identity and social media connectivity is increasing the number of access points for bad actors. However, banks believe that this problem can be resolved by educating customers about the risks involved with data breaches. What is the right formula? A ‘KYD’ – Know Your Device – approach. Infrastructure must be sophisticated, leveraging artificial intelligence and machine learning; the days of false positives are over. Download your copy of the report below now to find out more.

262 downloads

Report

Digital Transformation Accelerated

A Sibos 2020 Report produced by Finextra in association with Intel. As the global coronavirus pandemic pushed the annual Sibos event into virtual mode for the first time in 2020, it’s not surprising that everyone was keen to talk about how this has changed things in the key areas that the industry gathers to review at this time of year- technology, digitisation, innovation and the future of finance. There was broad consensus that COVID-19 has led to two years’ worth of digital transformation in just two months, as the lockdowns kicked in at the end of March. Financial institutions were affected internally, with a major emptying-out of financial centres and distribution of their IT estates amid rigorous oversight of new workflows, security practices and productivity. But they also had to react to the new expectations and behaviours of retail customers in lockdown and corporates who have themselves had to embrace remote and hybrid working for their financial and supply chain management. As the situation demanded- and continues to demand- flexibility, and economic fears push cost and efficiency to the fore, change resistors within financial services organisations, corporate customers and regulators alike have been forced to become change adopters. 2020 has been far from a positive year for many. But if financial industry and technology people are looking for a silver lining, it could be found in the results of this forced digital transformation. It will be interesting to see how much can be achieved through this accelerated change by this time next year. Download the full report below to find out more.

710 downloads

Report

Payments Transformation: Immediate, Intelligent and Inclusive

The Finextra Annual Payments Survey Report 2020 in association with Fiserv. The pandemic has changed how we think about payments and the way people move and manage money. Not surprisingly, you see its influence in our payment trends this year. This year's Payments Industry Survey shows a change in focus, from the implementation of large infrastructure changes, such as instant payment systems, ISO 20022 adoption and open banking, to an emphasis on how those changes can drive value for payment users. The payment experience has become the focal point. Understanding how financial institutions can improve the services they deliver is central to the current direction of the payment industry. While COVID-19 has added impetus, the customer-centric, payment-user-first trend has been gaining prominence. Financial institutions are moving the discussion on from the provision of instant payments to focus on how they can bring value to the payment users as they interact. While the move to instant (real time) payments was a key trend identified in previous Fiserv payments surveys, as they become a reality, the attention is moving towards how they can be utilised to address the evolving needs of payment users and support payment users who traditionally use nonelectronic forms of payment. This year, the survey focused on two areas: The role that overlay services have in addressing the needs of payment users. Inclusion of all payment users in electronic payments. Download the report of the results from the recent Finextra Annual Payments Survey 2020, by Finextra & Fiserv, below to learn more.

1139 downloads

Report

Can Strong Customer Authentication open the door to new end user experiences?

Much has been discussed about the European payments industry's mandated shift to Strong Customer Authentication (SCA). The technical demands, constraints and consequences for the various parties involved in the chain, from the issuers and banks large and small, to the end user, to merchants, are far-reaching. The challenge of implementing SCA alongside myriad other projects such as digital transformation journeys, migration and compliance deadlines and generally trying to re-hone businesses in a time of great flux, are reflected in the extension of the deadline for SCA. Yet the user experience is undoubtedly the biggest challenge around implementing SCA. What the industry needs is a more compelling perspective, an incentive beyond compliance with the promise of new customer journeys and services that may emerge from the shift to SCA. Download your copy of this Finextra white paper, produced in association with Okay, to learn more.

565 downloads

Report

Personalisation-as-a-Service: Harnessing Data in the Banking and Payments Industry

A Finextra Research Impact Study in Association with FICO and Amazon Web Services (AWS). As customers increasingly experience more consistent, personalised treatment from companies across a wide variety of industries, it is natural for them to expect—and require—the same of financial services providers. Consumers do not want disjointed experiences across auto loans, credit cards, and HELOCs any more than they want them when shopping for different categories within the same online retailer. Aside from consistency, 84% of customers revealed that being treated like a person, not a number, is important when winning and retaining business. That’s according to Accenture Global Consumer Pulse Research, which also found that 73% of consumers expect specialised treatment for loyalty and anticipate rewards for past interactions, as well as for sharing their preferences or personal information. However, only 22% believe that customer experiences are tailored effectively by organisations, and 50% fewer consumers perceive their bank as a trusted partner today than in 2018. Thus, there is a significant opportunity for savvy financial services companies who can meet consumer expectations. At the same time, financial institutions that fail to satisfy those standards are in jeopardy, as customers are re-evaluating their choice of financial providers given an increasingly diverse and non-traditional range of alternatives. Ultimately, consumers want financial providers to offer personalised services and integrated offers that address their most relevant needs at the right time, such as when they are buying a car, getting married, purchasing a home, continuing their education, etc. The financial institutions that can anticipate customer needs and deliver service that is personalised and consistent across channels will be well positioned to thrive in the digital age. Download your copy of the Impact Study below to learn more.

524 downloads

Report

The Future of Fintech 2020

Disrupt, reset, re-launch. The fintech industry has evolved from competing and collaborating with banks and has now entered a new era of partnerships, with those at the forefront of digital transformation prioritising technology and legacy participants working with new financial players. In addition to this, traditional financial institutions are partnering with challenger banks to provide refined products and services that attest to putting the customer first. However, questions have been raised about how an alliance with a neobank would be preferable to a merger or an acquisition. The concept of a ‘challenger bank’ will also be examined in this report, and why, after years of development and progress, it has become difficult to differentiate between the vast number of neobanks in the industry because their offerings are vastly similar. Finextra’s The Future of Fintech 2020 report will explore how banks have embraced innovation and what benefits have emerged from establishing technology initiatives, partnering with neobanks and investing in fintech firms. Further, the report explores what and how the industry should behave in the face of a crisis and how to bounce back stronger than ever. We will also consider whether customers would benefit from financial institutions merging all their services onto one application as the digital age welcomes the platform ecosystem, which has seen success in Asia and is being gradually implemented in Europe and the US. Download your copy of the report now.

959 downloads

Report

How to Prevent Payments Fraud amid Global Disruption

Economists predict the disruption caused by the coronavirus pandemic will be felt well into 2021. Banks have been left vulnerable and have to contend with fraudsters who are using Covid-19 as an opportunity to commit financial crime, exploiting consumer fear and the increase in digital payments. Fraud losses need to be anticipated and prevented as banks move from the lockdown to the recovery phase. What must be done to ensure the secure use of alternative payment options? In the age of open banking and real-time payments, funds can be transferred to fraudsters’ accounts immediately and the victim does not notice suspicious movements until it is too late. It is evident that with faster payments methods, the benefits for consumers far outweigh the disadvantages, but hackers will continue to exploit this area. Fraud analysts within a bank must pivot and adapt to working in a new environment to ensure that teams integrate efficiently and decrease human error through a lack of physical communication. Data is a vital tool in a bank’s armoury and must be considered an asset. AI and machine learning can also play a part in fraud and financial crime prevention, consuming disparate unstructured data and creating structured insight and conclusions. Coupled with traditional fraud techniques, banks need to pivot their payments fraud strategy to a tech-driven approach. This research paper by Finextra, in partnership with Feedzai, gathers the views of several experts from Bank of the West, Barclaycard Payments, HSBC, ING, Nationwide and Nordea on how to prevent payments fraud during a pandemic. Download the full report below to find out more.

635 downloads

Report

Onboarding next steps for new and established Digital Banks

Customers want the onboarding and account opening process to be as easy as possible. A certain amount of friction is to be expected when it comes to identity and security checks, reassuring them that their prospective financial service provider takes security and their data seriously. Signing up for a new financial services product shouldn’t be as simple as providing a username and email address. But nor should it always require reams of paperwork, branch visits and forms signed in triplicate. In the past five years, banks of all shapes and sizes have invested significantly in streamlining their processes so that the regulatory checks such as Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti Money Laundering (AML) can be met while minimising, where possible, the number of postal and in-branch interactions required for establishing identity and product suitability. Depending on the market segment and product, this process can be done 100% online and ideally via a mobile device – a channel that now dominates for even traditional banks with established, older customer bases. Digital onboarding is just the start, however. Banks, both new and established, are looking to improve the integration of identity at onboarding with ongoing authentication credentials, and adopt a risk-based approach to security throughout the customer lifecycle that can adjust the balance between protection and convenience for customers. Download the full white paper below to find out more.

838 downloads

Report

Is Request to Pay the System for a World of New Norms?

With faster payments going live in the UK in 2008, one could regard the decade-long recovery from the financial crisis as being a journey towards realtime payments. The last few years has also seen the advent of Open Banking, firstly in the UK and subsequently across Europe and elsewhere.  Request-to-pay (RtP) is an example of harnessing Open Banking to serve financial institutions, SMEs and consumers in removing some of the frictions relating to sending and receiving payments for lenders, businesses and individuals. Ahead of its introduction later in 2020, RtP was billed as an integral tool to the transformation of the payments landscape across the world. RtP is being widely promoted in the UK, Europe, the Nordics and the USA, all of which have active industry programmes.  This paper will explore the opportunities for lenders, businesses and consumers provided by RtP as well as the hindrances and challenges that would need to be addressed to move to widespread adoption.  Download the full report below to find out more.   

973 downloads

Report

Shifting to the New Normal in Card and Digital Payments

It is an interesting time for the cards industry and for issuers there is a similar narrative to that of legacy banks and digital transformation. There have been several drivers of innovation in recent years, very much accelerated by the current pandemic and the various demands and transitions that have been wrought on the entire industry in different ways, as well as on the consumer and client base. What are the key factors for survival as competition increases and regulatory compliance bears down on security measures around customer data and fraud as well as on a looser and more empowered user experience? Utilising new data that can be more easily captured and carried with transactions can inform and shape new services, and better overall understanding of customer behaviour, leading to increased personalisation and an array of added features. As integration into retail commerce platforms and an increased demand for frictionless and invisible payments takes hold, is the physical card becoming obsolete or can issuers create new propositions to retain their position? Competition in the cards industry has evolved from terms such as interest rates and fees, to balance transfer products, to loyalty and rewards and more recently has been diversified by new fintech providers. This research paper by Finextra, produced in association with FIS, is based on several interviews with cards industry experts, to formulate a view on how issuers can compete in the digital world as payments continue to proliferate and fintechs disrupt the status quo. Download the full report below to find out more.

891 downloads

Report

Instant Payments: Why Covid-19 is Bringing the Roadmap Forward

Business continuity has never been a more valuable asset for financial institutions. Fundamental changes to 'business as usual' as a result of Covid-19 have exposed the need for resilient, reliable, and efficient systems to maintain essential payment services and protect the interests of all ecosystem participants, from consumers to the largest corporations. At the same time, in the lead up to the European Single Market Infrastructure Gateway's (ESMIG) 'big bang' migration at the end of 2021, EU financial institutions are understandably consumed with ensuring that they are appropriately equipped to manage the systemic changes the migration will demand. While ESMIG provides a hard deadline to work towards, every institution bears unique targets and objectives, making the structure and execution of these plans more challenging than ever. In this context, it might seem that the adoption of real-time or instant payments—immediate settlement of account-to-account payments on a 24x7 basis, domestically and cross-border—should reasonably take a back seat to more pressing existential concerns. After all, while the ESMIG migration is mandatory, instant payments are not, and financial institutions could be forgiven for focusing solely on compliance-driven projects at the expense of optional ones. This impact study will outline why the reverse is true: that in fact, the move to instant payments takes on an increased urgency in the coronavirus age. It explores the benefits of instant payments for banks' internal operations as well as their customer value propositions. It also examines shifting approaches to business case development, and the increasing relevance of cloud and as-a-service models for instant payment processing. Find out more by downloading your copy below.

639 downloads

Report

A 3 Step Guide to Driving Customer-Centricity with Big Data

As a result of increased competition and rapidly changing consumer expectations, banks are under increased pressure to develop the way they target and appeal to customers and in turn, maintain a profitable personal relationship. In addition to this, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in Europe and the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) in the US have set a foundation for data consent management and ensuring that customers’ personal information is always protected and secured. Now they are breaking down their data silos, banks are struggling to harness the information that is key to unlocking customer relationships in this ever-changing market. While they are navigating their way through such a volatile environment, traditional financial services companies are often reluctant to change and may find it difficult to implement new technology from which they can derive value. This is partly because they have had bad experiences with tech projects in the past that did not deliver or bring changes as expected. However, smart technology and out-of-the-box solutions in the form of powerful customer data platforms (CDPs) are readily available and deliver a competitive edge and value to financial institutions. Find out more by downloading your copy of the research paper below.

406 downloads

Report

A Panorama of the Changing Banking Landscape in EMEA

Fintech players have proved that mass-market growth is achievable and are now providing other financial service entrants with a blueprint of how to scale exponentially. What sets the newer banks apart from incumbent providers is that they adapt their offering to meet the needs of their users. There is no universal formula for success that can work across all business models, and across the entire EMEA region. The most common way of generating revenue is charging customers, which would work well in a startup model as these organisations are unencumbered by legacy infrastructure and cost structures. However, untrusting customers want more than an improved customer experience, and companies need to establish revenue sources that can be diversified over time. Additionally, banks must give their customers a reason to bank with them. This research paper by Finextra, in association with Mambu, gathers the views of several experts from Bain Capital, Barclays, Citi, EY, OakNorth, Santander InnoVentures, SEB, Starling Bank and Tink on how to build a bank in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Download the full report below to find out more.

1186 downloads