![]() ![]() The solution includes access to pre-built PSD2 and Open Banking APIs and facilitates ongoing compliance through API version control, release management and distribution, the company said.įiserv added that the white label developer portal enables financial institutions to engage TPPs. “Sound strategic choices taken while these regulations are in their infancy will allow institutions to manage their resources to ensure compliance today, and to focus on innovation and competitiveness long-term.”Īccording to Fiserv, FinKit for Open Banking is a complete, fully managed service to run, monitor and support the application programming interfaces (APIs) needed to share information with trusted third-party providers (TPPs), while also facilitating business services and enabling developers. “Though PSD2 and Open Banking are chiefly viewed as regulatory requirements, they represent a significant opportunity for banks to partner with trusted third-party providers to integrate financial services into their customers’ everyday lives, while also driving more innovation inside the banks,” said Ken Paterson, vice president, Special Projects, Mercator. But does that reflect the view from within the banks themselves? That’s what we wanted to find out when we undertook some research (with independent research firm LM Research) into senior banking executives’ priorities, challenges, and future plans.Fiserv said FinKit for Open Banking is designed to enable immediate and long-term compliance with these regulations and put in place the capabilities required for banks to maximize the opportunity of open banking. We asked senior figures at 15 major UK banks and other financial institutions about the issues that keep them up at night, their perspectives on the impact of Open Banking and competition in the retail banking sector, and their attitudes towards investment in innovation. The results point to a conflicted and divided industry.Ĭonfusion and contradiction over regulation, Open Banking, and the shifting competitive landscape is typical of an industry in transition. ![]() Those that are preoccupied with their peers are holding on to notions of banking as a protected industry where the barriers to entry (such as regulation and security) are too high to allow new players in. Others are looking further ahead and seeing that banking could be set to face the same fate as so many other industries that have been upended by the rapid rise of digital-only entrants. The pressures of ensuring they remain compliant with complex and ever-changing financial services industry regulation are the biggest thing keeping senior decision-makers awake at night, with 60 per cent putting this at the top of their list of worries. That’s ahead of competition (53 per cent), fraud and criminal activity (53 per cent), and their organisation’s Net Promoter Score (53 per cent). What is surprising, though, is that, despite transparency and competition being at the heart of the CMA’s introduction of the Open Banking regime, only 27 per cent of senior figures actually believe Open Banking will enable their business to become more competitive, and only 13 per cent believe it will allow them to offer their services to customers of other banks. ![]() Preoccupied with the same old facesĭespite the swirling hype around recent entrants into the consumer banking market and the potential for even more organisations to tool up as financial services providers once the Open Banking regime comes into force, the incumbents are more concerned with looking over their shoulder at traditional rivals than they are about the new competitors coming over the horizon. Tech legacy and leadership prompt further confusion 80 per cent see their traditional banking rivals as their main competition for the future, and only 33 per cent anticipate emerging digital-only players such as Atom Bank and Monzo, or larger businesses such as Amazon or Facebook applying for banking licenses under Open Banking, turning into their primary challengers. It’s all but impossible to have a conversation about digital services and transformation with anyone in the banking sector without hearing about the problems caused by banks’ continuing reliance on legacy technology systems - so it was surprising to see only one-fifth of senior figures in financial services name outdated or failing technology as a key business challenge keeping them awake at night. ![]()
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