Research

clear
clear

Latest Results from /security

Sentiment Paper

Seeking Approval - Acquirers vs. Transaction Fraud

Transaction fraud monitoring lies at the heart of fraud prevention for acquiring banks, and while the effort in decreasing fraud rates has advanced significantly, so has the sophistication of fraudsters themselves. The emergence of AI within fraud solution models has come to the fore in recent years and along with it, newly realised appreciation of the value of transaction data, current and historic. Banks need to get to grips with processing and utilising these data to full advantage, to inform a robust and futureproof strategy which can both increase approvals and reduce fraud. For transaction monitoring solutions to drive value, serving both merchants and acquirers alike, intelligence on any given transaction needs to be issued in real time before the submission of authorisation. Approval rates, pricing, customer-centricity, and fraud rates are always going to be key differentiators in a very competitive market. Within these parameters, banks need to continually improve their service to remain competitive, while navigating the various tools and techniques that are rapidly emerging. Different business models prioritise different aspects of case management and scoring, using traditional rules-based methods and more data-led AI and ML approaches. This Finextra industry sentiment report was produced in association with Brighertion, a Mastercard company. It is based on several industry interviews, through which we aim to take a pulse on the industry’s general appetite for real-time, AI-driven, data-rich transaction fraud monitoring, and the various models, technologies, and priorities that shape acquirers’ anti-fraud strategies.

464 downloads

Report

The Future of Digital Banking in North America 2023

A Money20/20 USA Special Edition 2022 in North America saw a continuation of economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic, fuelled by the rapid rollout of vaccinations particularly across the US and Canada. Although the US was the fastest of the G7 economies to recover from the crisis, an enduring impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict resulted in high inflation and the subsequent cost-of-living crisis is set to continue into 2023. These macrotrends are a catalyst for digital transformation within the financial services industry as banks attempt to grapple with new payments trends, the evolution of digital identity and innovative uses of data to enhance customer experience across retail, wholesale and commercial relationships. In 2022, digital banking for the consumer is far more advanced than the products and services that are available for merchants or large corporations. In 2023, open banking must be utilised to remedy this issue. For the retail customer, although digital methods of managing money are now part and parcel of day-to-day life, the pandemic encouraged, or in some cases, forced people who may have been uncomfortable with using technology to bank on their mobile phones or desktop computers. This unfamiliarity with technology has led to consumers being in environments in which they are vulnerable and at increased risk of fraud and other types of financial crime. In 2023, banks will need to ascertain what they need to adapt and strengthen in fraud prevention while also managing new regulatory and compliance requirements. Further, the areas of onboarding that need to be automated must also be considered as part of a holistic digital strategy, striking the balance between innovation and digital noise. For instance, Web3, the metaverse, digital assets and tokenisation are no longer the monopoly of global tech giants, but are increasingly being shaped by financial players who are having their relevance threatened. This Finextra report, which features expert views from ebankIT, EPAM Systems, Infosys Finacle, and Trustly, will explore topics that impact the digital banking sector and those that will be covered at Money20/20 USA 2022 in Las Vegas. Additionally, key insights from Wells Fargo, Plaid, Green Dot, Silicon Valley Bank, FXC Intelligence, Synapse, Navy Federal Credit Union, Branch, Citi, and the New York State Department of Financial Services will cover how organisations across North America are preparing for imminent change across the digital banking landscape.

1154 downloads

Report

Banking as a Service: Predictions for 2023

Cloud strategies are changing After the financial crisis of 2008, traditional lenders experienced a drop in revenue and new players successfully gained traction after offering products that had been in high demand and long expected from existing banks. This trend advanced after regulators across the world endorsed open banking initiatives, data requirements were standardised and in turn, financial players gradually opened up to technology. With the transparency that open banking provides, banks were encouraged to offer digital services, fair pricing, and increased security. Further, they are forced to utilise application programming interfaces (APIs) for seamless information exchange between partners. This trend has since evolved: with open finance, APIs can facilitate the interchange of data, products and services in an attempt to improve customer experience, offer greater choice, and control over their finances. In 2020, the financial services industry - particularly banks - implemented emerging technologies to accelerate innovation across the infrastructure of core functions in real-time, and underlying trends that were previously being considered were utilised in weeks, rather than months or years. The coronavirus has led to relationships with consumers being reimagined and relationships with ecosystem partners being redefined; this also resulted in products and services being reconsidered. Technology providers are no longer just technology vendors: startups, scaleups and even unicorns are now viable collaborators for financial institutions. In this post-lockdown era, banks are tapping into this partnership model to enhance their digital transformation to keep pace with customer requirements and avoid being disrupted by newer, more technology-savvy, entrants. When banks work with technology companies, APIs can be built with a number of microservices that can communicate and connect with these third parties, building upon open finance solutions on cloud-based platforms. This allows financial institutions to scale on demand, pay for only what is consumed, and expand serverless architectures. Financial institutions are no longer considering the cloud – the cloud is necessary for how finance works today. An emerging yet burgeoning trend that will continue to evolve and grow in 2023 – banking as a service (BaaS) - offers a new route to market for banks and empowers them to attract new, niche customers by leveraging the cloud. BaaS also allows non-financial companies to push out financial products where and when they are needed, direct to their customers with minimal investment and with the benefit of cloud-based, pay-as-you-go pricing. This Finextra impact study, produced in association with i-exceed, explores how financial institutions and technology providers can collaborate to deploy mobile and web-based banking solutions at a faster rate.

1001 downloads

Report

Mainframe to Cloud: How to shift applications

The shift to the cloud The financial services industry is increasingly turning to the cloud to resolve challenges involving the movement of money. However, some banks, payments providers, capital markets firms and insurance companies are still questioning why an accelerated shift to the cloud is required. Further, what are the conditions, circumstances and considerations that should be taken into account when looking to migrate applications? It’s not just about technology. It’s about culture and the talent that is needed to transform from a legacy-based infrastructure and deal with a more agile method of operating and collaborating with partners in a cloud environment. This generational repositioning should be managed in an efficient manner to facilitate a successful, safe passage of moving from one domain to another. The mainframe, or the central repository, in an organisation’s data centre is usually linked to its users through workstations or terminals. Although the presence of a mainframe often implies a centralised form of computing, they are in dire need of modernisation. Those with awareness of how to transform the mainframe, how to consume the cloud, and who are able to to establish a strategic blueprint for their digital transition will be better positioned to retain their customer base. Each financial institution will have a different journey to the cloud: some will opt for a hybrid model, others will transform with the cloud or to the cloud. Mainframes present vast opportunities, but the time has come for the self-written applications and the mainframe-based business processes to be modernised. To explore these opportunities, specialists gathered for a Finextra webinar, ‘Mainframe Modernisation: The cloud shift’, that was hosted in association with Deloitte and Amazon Web Services (AWS). The webinar panel looked to discuss how mainframes can provide mission critical functionalities for financial institutions and the very specific challenges that come with modernising mainframes. This event report outlines the findings from that session.

331 downloads

Report

Onboarding, KYC, and Digital Identity: the Bottom Line

Technology is continuing to evolve at a fast rate. Consumers have evolved and now expect a digital onboarding process. This presents an opportunity for banks because enhanced customer onboarding can boost a bank’s retention rate. It is the first interaction that a customer, instead of a prospect, experiences and if conducted correctly, it can lead to multiple purchases and build customer loyalty. Regardless of how seamless the process is for a customer to be onboarded, it is only revenue that will result in a return in investment. While automation can supplement an excellent customer experience, nation-wide digital identity schemes can also improve the process. Across the world, governments have played an important role in helping set the scene for digital ID solutions, but a government-only solution is unlikely to be successful. Banks, fintech firms and technology providers must collaborate to ensure identity solutions are utilised. However, while customers want an easy onboarding process, organisations must capture, validate, and monitor customer identities — without increasing customer friction. Taking collaboration further, within the organisation, digital transformation, risk management, data security, and compliance teams must put best practices in place to balance digital onboarding with fraud prevention. This Finextra impact study, produced in association with VeriPark, explores how despite the emergence of digital channels, onboarding is still occurring in a fragmented manner.

809 downloads

Report

The CIO’s guide to architecture modernisation through portability, resilience, and flexibility

Why CIOs need to shelve short-termism in favour of smart modernisation Every architecture decision a CIO makes directly impacts their bank’s competitiveness and success. This is truer than ever as competition and disruption from agile, fast-moving players continues to increase and they scoop up customers who are eager to interact in new ways with their financial services providers. The infrastructures on which the traditional financial services industry - and banks in particular - have been built aren’t holding up to this pressure. Their response? Singlethreaded point solutions, and lots of them. However, these aren’t solving problems for the long-term - or, arguably, even in the short-term. Rather, they’re exacerbating a growing architectural issue, adding to the inefficiency and lack of scalability of their IT environments. They’re also making it harder to get a clear, unified view of the whole estate. Instead, banks continue to accumulate technical debt, create integration headaches on a colossal scale, and ultimately fail to rise to the challenge that today’s financial services ecosystem demands. Of course, banks have legacy infrastructure to consider. Abandoning these investments isn’t an option. But building alongside them using cloud and new technology is. Banks need to consider how to bring together the operational domains of customer, application, infrastructure, and security. Through modernisation and automation - and combining the best of existing and new – they’ll be able to connect data silos, integrate systems, and enable real-time visibility to deliver improved services faster and more securely. The bottom line is, banks’ CIOs need to do more than merely resource the next project. They should be working towards increased visibility on all levels to provide long-term resilience for their organisations and most importantly, their customers. And whether success means enabling their global workforces to work from home today, tomorrow, or next year - or upping the game when it comes to customer interactions - they’ll be able to do that, and more, underpinned by a modern infrastructure. Download this Finextra impact study, produced in association with Tanium, to learn more.

397 downloads

Report

The Future of Digital Identity 2022

Inclusive, Secure, Fit For Purpose Digital identity will be the catalyst for financial institutions wanting to navigate the data ecosystem in an increasingly sophisticated manner. In addition to an equivalent or replacement to physical identity documents, digital identity has also become a way to provide verified personally identifying information (PII) for software to read and process. Alongside this, over time, digital identity is also being utilised to enhance privacy protection and reduce financial crime through authentication. While biometrics are now part and parcel of life in 2022 – with the prevalence of mobile payments with Face ID and Touch ID – the concept of real-time and frictionless processes is what is driving the future of digital identity forward. According to the World Economic Forum, good digital identity has five key components. These five components form the basis of this report: Useful Inclusive Secure Offers choice Fit for purpose With expert views from CGAP, Citi, EPAM Continuum, HSBC, KPMG, London School of Economics, Loughborough University, The Purple Tornado, and the United Nations in this report, you will learn from industry leaders about the events and trends defining digital identity in 2022 and beyond.  

1077 downloads

Report

Cloud, the Critical Component to Power New Business Models

Today, every company is a technology company. No organisation can modernise products, deliver services, or meet customer expectations without harnessing the benefits of technology. Financial institutions are now learning from leaders in other industries and applying acquired best practices for successful cloud adoption to their business models. The financial services industry is at an inflection point in its use of technology and banks have already started to seize this moment and embark on their transformation journeys. With the increased agility that the cloud offers, products can be brought to market much faster and in a cost-efficient manner, which is what has led to traditional financial institutions adopting and migrating to the cloud with urgency. Key drivers, in addition to resilience, include the desire to be more efficient from a developer productivity standpoint and raising the bar on security has been equally important. To workshop these best practices, experts gathered for a Finextra webinar, ‘Modernise, innovate and transform on the cloud’, hosted in association with Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) and Amazon Web Services (AWS). The panel looked to explore how financial services organisations are leveraging the cloud to transform existing businesses and bring innovative new solutions to market.

395 downloads

Report

The Future of Regulation 2022

From Innovation to Execution The fire for innovation in financial services has long been raging, and regulators, having transformed their modus operandi to keep pace with the force of technological change, are carefully approaching their role in the great rewiring of the financial system. The fear once invoked by terms like artificial intelligence, cloud computing, or data sharing, has been relegated to the past, and the role of technology in the future of financial services is now accepted as being intrinsic to its success. With Open Banking reaching new realms of maturity, players have begun questioning how best to measure its success in a post-pandemic world. While Open Finance edges ever closer to pulling all focus away from the original Open Banking objectives, innovators are looking for ways to unbridle all pretence tied to our traditional view of what finance should achieve. Instead, they are placing impeccable user experience at the centre of their offering. This unbridling is also becoming apparent in the burgeoning appetite for decentralised finance offerings by retail and institutional investors. Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) inject another layer into this mix, as central banks and governments carefully weigh up the advantages and risks of diving straight into the opportunity they present. Regulators are caught in the middle of these rapidly evolving trends and forces, attempting to stay the regulatory course by ensuring stability and security, while also motivated to remain at the forefront of this technology. Resilience has never been a more important focus for regulators, who are shifting responsibility directly onto market players to ensure strength across intertwined systems. Selecting a handful of areas tied to fintech that are either ripe for, or undergoing seismic regulatory evolution, we’ve compiled a wealth of insights from industry experts who have shared their views on the changes we can expect in 2022. This new Finextra report features commentary from industry experts across a breadth of financial, technology and regulatory firms, which include contributions from Accenture; A&O Consulting; Bird & Bird; Change Gap; Coutts; Herbert Smith Freehills; Hogan Lovells; Plaid; Proskauer; P2 Consulting; McDermott, Will & Emery; Noll Historical Consulting LLC; Société Générale; State Street; and The DPO Centre.  

1112 downloads

Report

Getting tech right: Selecting the right software products to fulfil the digital demands of banking

While the global pandemic may have been a shock to the system for incumbent financial institutions, it only served to reinforce the growing pressure to digitally transform their operations. Thanks to rapid digitisation of services across industries the profile of the typical consumer is evolving into a far more sophisticated and demanding user. As a result of this evolution, retail consumers and corporate clients alike are hoping to leverage more from the relationship they share with their banks. While younger, digitally native financial institutions are well positioned to adapt and mould their offering in line with this shifting profile, incumbents weighed down by legacy technology and infrastructure are finding the pivot more challenging.  Rather than resisting change, incumbents that accept that the ubiquity of big tech and the client-centric ecosystem are permanent, are likely to reframe their mindset into delivering consumer-centric services effectively. Download your copy of this Finextra impact study, produced in association with SunTec Business Solutions, to explore the key trends shaping the push toward a new financial services industry, and the key technologies that banks can deploy to evolve into more customer-centric institutions.

422 downloads

Report

Will banks use digital security as a post-pandemic differentiator?

Banks large and small, old and new, have come a long way in a short amount of time. Prior to the pandemic there wasn't a bank or financial services provider worth their salt who did not have some kind of digitalisation strategy as a core part of their operations planning. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic catapulted banks and their clientele into instantaneous cashlessness, forcing many organisations and customers to adapt at speed. A year and a half on, how much of this urgent transition will remain permanent is a key indicator of financial organisations’ success in responding to an unprecedented situation. Furthermore, whether the key pillars of trust and security upheld by banks have not only survived but positively thrived such that they stand taller and prouder, will be a key differentiator in a thoroughly modern banking landscape. These factors will illustrate how consumers and the industry have truly evolved as a result of unimaginable change. We take a pulse on these themes and questions by interviewing senior experts at several banking service providers across Europe and Asia. Download your copy of this Finextra report, produced in association with Feedzai, to learn more.

376 downloads

Report

The Future of Digital Banking in Asia 2022

After the 2008 crisis, the financial services industry faced low interest rates, low credit growth, increased regulation, increased compliance requirements and a lack of trust from customers. This paved the way for banks in Asia to dominate the sector, surpassing the European and US banks that were formerly the largest by assets in the world. The financial crisis and the Asian boom threatened the traditional financial services industry and allowed fintech startups and platform-based companies, that prioritised competition to provide better services for the retail consumer, flourished. Alongside consumers opting to forego visits to bank branches, the more innovative players in banking focused their digital transformation efforts on the utilisation of information technology and big data to offer digital payments and advisory services. The speed at which these digital technologies were adopted was at a remarkable rate and this continued to accelerate amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Of course, Asia was ahead of the curve. While financial players in the region exhibited true disruption and extended banking services to previously underbanked segments of the population, traditional institutions on other continents were left with potentially obsolete legacy technologies, unable to serve the customers they had. To thrive in the future, incumbent banks must keep pace with the fintech newcomers and Big Tech players that have already started to gain market share in Asia. They can do so by leveraging application programming interfaces (APIs) which have enabled faster payments, simplified unbundling of services and improved data sharing for open banking. Also, cloud computing has supported the storage and sharing of data with the aim of improving customer experience and financial accounting in areas such as payments and credit scoring. Integration with mobile devices and digital wallets is equally crucial. In Asia, payment apps serve billions of users across the e-commerce, chat, delivery, food ordering and ride hailing industries. Globally, although Visa and Mastercard retain their lead in the transaction space, the likes of PayPal, Apple and Google are blossoming in the financial services industry. Further, as usage of cash declines, interest in digital currencies is increasing – with Alipay and WeChat Pay facilitating the introduction of cryptocurrencies and stablecoins in the corporate market. Banks now recognise that the route to digital transformation starts with digital payments and digital currencies, and the evolution of digital banking in Asia provides the blueprint for other regions searching for successful paths to innovation. This Finextra report, The Future of Digital Banking in Asia, in association with Infosys Finacle and OneSpan, explores these themes with commentary from Citi, DBS, livi bank, and Mox Bank.

1017 downloads

Report

The Reinvention of Card Payments

Responding to Innovation: Where will the impact be? Payment innovation coupled with the pandemic's digitisation drive, is spurring card issuers to reinvent themselves. With the mushrooming options for consumers and merchants, it is challenging for issuers to navigate this landscape and know, with certainty, what the future will hold. It is crucial they get it right, however, since payments for banks and non-banks alike are a key touchpoint with the customer; they are the ‘in’ to a long-lasting - and profitable - relationship.  Issuers must adapt to the increased expectations of the customers, which have shifted since the pandemic. Buying behaviour fundamentally changed once lockdowns went into effect, with in-person purchases plummeting and online sales skyrocketing.  The pandemic gave the impetus that many needed to make the switch to contactless, and limits were increased.  The contactless trend is set to continue. In Asia contactless is more likely to take off in developed markets, whereas QR codes are expected to take off in emerging markets. These trends, of course, are an acceleration of a shift that was already underway. The dwindling of cash has long been documented, along with the steady increase in electronic payments. And for issuers keeping track of the various payment forms, there is growth expected across the many types in the years to come.  Download your copy of this Finextra report, produced in association with FIS, to learn more.

1207 downloads

Report

Future-Ready Payments Solutions: Remaining competitive with reusable technology

Over fifty years ago, when the original payment pioneers built electronic funds transfer (EFT) platforms to enable card services, they had a single use in mind. Reliable and secure card payments were achieved, but the architecture was so closely bound to card transactions that it is now becoming incompatible with today’s colourful payment universe.  As mobile and contactless payments, Quick Response (QR) codes, digital currencies, Request to Pay (R2P), Real-Time Payments (RTP), Buy-Now-Pay-Later (BNPL) and peer-to-peer (P2P) payment applications take off, banks are forced to build separate in-house silos, in order to process these new payment types. Given a plethora of dedicated systems are already in place to process cash, cheque and card payments, management of these silos and ‘add-ons’ is becoming a complex undertaking. Forward-looking banks are tackling this challenge by deploying modern payments platforms that are comprised of a set of re-useable services. These have the capacity to not only consolidate numerous payment schemes onto a single platform, but they can also future-proof businesses by facilitating easy adoption of new payment types. As the payments race heats up – and banks wrestle with the emergence of new digital currencies, payment instruments, funding methods and payment types – those with the most agile, secure, and reusable platform will be rewarded with a strong competitive edge and improved margins from being able to control when, how deeply and how long to take part in any new payments venture. Download your copy of this Finextra impact study, produced in association with Diebold Nixdorf, to learn more.

788 downloads

Report

Building the Road to a Hybrid Cloud Future

A recent survey conducted by Finextra and Red Hat showed that 82% of the financial services respondents say they are embracing and implementing hybrid cloud infrastructure company-wide. Many are now deploying open source technologies to support and enhance the inherent capabilities of a hybrid cloud infrastructure, which include agility, resilience, portability, automation, speed to market and continual testing and iterative improvements at speed in isolated, protected environments. The open hybrid cloud adds interoperability to this, and is a factor cited by leading practitioners as increasing their ability to attract developer talent. These attributes, however, will mean very different things to different business stakeholders and will therefore be prioritised in differing orders by different business lines. Speed of development and speed-to-market will likely be of greatest importance to digital programme strategists and developers, whereas portability will be more important to someone leading system recoveries or performance outages, where operational resilience is key. Where these priorities conflict – or complement – each other needs to be identified and communicated to the board, for a cohesive, top-down strategy to be fulfilled with a consistent approach. There will be different challenges in executing that strategy across different parts of the business - there could be gaps in knowledge, understanding or expertise, hence where these challenges lie and for whom becomes a compelling question to answer. Overcoming different hurdles and identifying the different benefits is a key part of a strategy to fully realise the potential of cloud architectures. And all strategies need to take a long-term view – the migration from on-premise systems in bank-owned data centres to a cloud service provider and on through hybrid cloud environments is a dynamic culture shift rather than a quick decision to migrate a few workloads and reap the benefits. Financial organisations need to know and understand the value of what hybrid cloud can deliver to what part of their business and overall operations, and they need to identify the different gaps and challenges in order to achieve the required outcomes. It is no small journey or undertaking, but the benefits can be universally acknowledged as a clear incentive. This research paper from Finextra, in association with Red Hat, is based on several interviews with senior leaders from diverse areas of the banking business to explore and understand some of the key questions around hybrid cloud.

251 downloads