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Bringing banks into the sustainable age

For banks around the world, leveraging an eco-mindset is becoming increasingly crucial as consumers consider their role in environmentally damaging CO2 emissions and climate change. As challenger banks, such as Starling and Monzo, drive up social initiatives and commit to net-zero pledges,  more traditional banks are shifting their public perception of climate change and making investments in greener services.

by Dr Carsten Wengel, Head of Global Sales & Distribution in the Card & Digital Payments Business, Giesecke+Devrient

In fact, the latest research by YouGov finds that 58% of consumers in the USA and 57% in the UK are now willing to spend more on sustainability in the banking sector. Banks are a mirror of the societies they serve, and as a result, they need to decide if they want to be the driver of or driven by the global trend of sustainability. But how best can they achieve this, and which methods can they adopt to win the eco-conscious consumer?

Sustainable banking cards for a sustainable consumer

Dr Carsten Wengel, Head of Global Sales & Distribution, Giesecke+Devrient

Over the recent years, more consumers have come to realise their purchasing decisions have the power to impact positive change. As such, they now expect sustainable offerings from any company they engage with. This includes banks too, with consumers increasingly demanding their banks’ support to help them shift to more sustainable payment practices. One way to meet this growing demand is for banks to introduce sustainable banking cards.

Despite a common misconception, banking cards can in fact be environmentally-friendly. They can be made of climate-friendly materials such as renewable plant fibres that are entirely compostable under industrial conditions. Even though the material has similar characteristics and strength to petrol-based plastic, it is nothing like it as no additional greenhouse gases are released during the combustion process. Compared to the production of conventional cards, sustainable banking cards can save up energy and harmful gas emissions of as much as 68%. This can significantly reduce their impact on the planet considering the volumes produced each year.

With 91% of the world’s plastic not yet recycled, sustainable banking cards can also have their bodies made entirely of recycled PVC, driving the circular economy and taking appropriate steps to end planned obsolescence. A smarter use – or re-use – of materials can help reduce waste and pressures on the environment whilst stimulating innovation and boosting economic growth.

It’s not just the physical banking card, however, that should be put through a sustainability check and replacement. Every new card requires a PIN which is often sent to consumers by post, creating more paper waste. Banks should therefore consider an eco-friendlier alternative – a digital way to send PINs. For example, by a text message, QR code or provide secure access to new PIN via the app and multi-factor authentication.

Such a step towards sustainability can not only be life-saving for our planet, but it can also act as a powerful business tool for banks. In the hands of customers, sustainable banking cards can create a successful brand multiplier effect and help reinforce the bank’s mission, purpose and commitment to becoming more environmentally friendly. Customers will naturally become advocates of sustainable lifestyle banking, helping traditional institutions stand out with their eco-offerings amongst fierce competition.

Joint efforts needed to reduce climate impact

The fight against climate change does not have to be a lonely one for financial services institutions. To ensure greater results and a real impact, banks and fintechs should create fruitful partnerships and in a joint effort, satisfy consumer demand for more sustainable means of payments and offerings. Together they could develop and promote new services that calculate how much CO2 a consumer contributes each time they buy something.

Through an API, for example, banks could integrate such calculations into their digital wallets, which would analyse all types of transactions a consumer completes each month and showcase their carbon footprint through a visual dashboard. This could not only help consumers become better informed but also prompt them to make changes. Sweden-based company Doconomy is one fintech that has been making progress in this area, giving its customers more transparency on how their decisions impact the planet, encouraging them to change their behaviour and practices into more sustainable ones.

Taking the learnings and innovations that fintechs are pioneering, traditional commercial banks should follow their footsteps and build a more sustainable financial services ecosystem in which knowledge and best practice are shared regularly. It is apparent that banks need to become partners, or even drivers of change, however, they can only achieve that with the support of other, more experienced financial institutions to create a strong, reliable and transparent environmental initiative. It could be that through introducing concrete, climate-positive policies in the near future, banks and fintechs will be more encouraged to collaborate and form such a crucial ecosystem, meeting consumer needs for sustainable banking practices and ultimately achieving the international environmental and global warming goals.

Achieving a climate-friendly banking future

Fuelled by consumer demand for a green value proposition, traditional banks have started waking up to the need to act positively when it comes to payment sustainability. Through the introduction of sustainable banking cards, leveraging technology to raise greater carbon footprint awareness amongst consumers and joint actions between all financial ecosystem players, the industry can foster a greener future and make a real, positive difference for generations to come. As banks look to become more competitive and innovative, ensuring sustainable products and services could not only be life-saving for the planet, but also a new, profitable avenue worth exploring.

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Blockchain use cases in the “real” economy

Martha Reyes, Head of Research, BEQUANT

In 2021, so much of the attention was focused on collectible NFTs, gaming and the metaverse. Their popularity took many by surprise and benefitted tokens that are linked to these powerful trends. In 2020, decentralised finance was the star of the show before NFTs stole the limelight. The DeFi ecosystem continues to expand and new opportunities open up, despite token performance not being on par with some of the newer use cases.

by Martha Reyes, Head of Research, BEQUANT 

There are several compelling protocols that should not be ignored, such as those that bridge the real-world economy to the blockchain. This can include financing for SMEs or facilitating global trade transactions. While perhaps less attention-grabbing than other token-backed protocols, the total addressable market is vast.

Remittances are one of the most widely known applications

One better-known use case that has risen to prominence is the trillion-dollar money transfer industry. Tokens’ ability to on-ramp any global fiat currency and off-ramp it into another at lower rates than the traditional transfer methods, securely and almost instantly, makes them a real disruptor in an archaic corner of finance. Strike, the company using the Lightning Network on Bitcoin rails, is one of the most successful examples, with entities as disparate as Twitter and El Salvador relying on the technology for international payments and remittances.

Global trade is an even larger market ripe for improvement

The technology can extend to other areas of the old economy. Global trade, a $5.6 trillion market and growing, is one such segment and it’s larger than remittances. Buying goods and services across borders is complex, with lengthy processing times and high transaction fees. It also requires financing, creating barriers for small and mid-size companies.

Businesses can utilize smart contracts on the blockchain, storing agreements and documents and guaranteeing traceability. Smart contracts allow the two parties to specify the terms of an agreement and ensure that those are transparent by virtue of being on the blockchain.

Many other possibilities being explored

In the NFT space, applications are not limited to digital objects but also to physical ones, hence the birth of NFT mortgages backed by real assets or tokenized ownership of real estate and expensive artworks.

Blockchain’s potential is by no means limited to these examples. Others include secure sharing of data such as medical data, music royalty tracking, real-time IoT operating systems, personal identity security, anti-money laundering tracking systems, supply chain and logistics monitoring, voting mechanism, advertising insights, original content creation, and real estate processing platforms.

What makes for a successful project?

When evaluating a project, retail and institutional investors sometimes focus on different properties of a project. Key metrics to keep in mind are the strength of the underlying technology, use cases, total addressable market and adoption trends.

One example is the XDC Network, a hybrid, delegated proof of stake consensus network, with developer-friendly architecture. As a third-generation blockchain, the technology is more advanced than some of the more established blockchains. Bitcoin can handle between 3 and 6 transactions per second, Ethereum’s blockchain can handle 12 to 16, while XinFin’s can handle more than 2000.

A use case is reducing friction and expanding access to trade financing for SMEs and creating yield opportunities for investors. Agreements and documents are stored in interoperable smart contracts, and transactions are settled on the blockchain more efficiently than in the legacy systems. There is also higher security as there is clear evidence and traceability of ownership.  The smart contract transactions feature digital tokens, which represent the value of off-chain, the bank originated assets and can generate yield for investors.

This means that when individual purchases and makes an investment into the XDC token, they are investing in the underlying technology which can be used to develop payment solutions and other blockchain apps.

Fees have also greatly reduced over the span of three generations, from $15 to $0.00001 per transaction, with confirmation speeds cut from 1-60 minutes to around 2 seconds. With an increased capacity and lower fees, the barriers to access the technology fall away. Energy consumption has also been reduced from 71.12TWh on Bitcoin to 0.0000074TWh on the XDC Network.

Many alternative Layer 1’s such as XinFin’s XDC Network, have been developed or are in development to challenge those popular in the NFT and DeFi space that have struggled with scalability issues. Developers are working to increase the number of transactions processed and reduce gas fees, as users have been stung by high costs on the Ethereum blockchain.

Now, blockchains are being developed to be cheaper, faster and more energy-efficient, albeit with compromises on decentralization, to address growing demand. Thus, they are generating interest from individual and professional investors alike. Scalability will unlock important avenues of growth in the digital economy as well as the physical one. It will be an important theme in 2022.

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BaaS and embedded finance: a $7 trillion opportunity

BaaS (Banking as a Service), is the enabler of contextual and embedded finance. It presents a huge opportunity – and threat – to all participants in today’s financial services ecosystem. Customers increasingly expect financial products and services to be brought to them, wherever they are. They expect them in the right context. With forecasts showing that the total market opportunity for BaaS will exceed $7 trillion by the end of the decade – the impact of BaaS simply cannot be ignored.

by Eli Rosner, Chief Digital Officer, BaaS and Platform, Finastra

To gain revenues from high growth sectors or geographies banks must adopt new scaling strategies. They must leverage partnerships, to get them to where the customer is and what the customer wants, today and in the future. They must meet the customer where they are in their journey, whether the customer engages directly through established banking channels, or whether the customer consumes the bank’s services contextually, as an integral part of their journey with another brand.

Traditional channels will not deliver the radical value that’s being offered by BaaS and Bank as a Platform models. These models leverage platform ecosystem advantages to create better customer experiences. Unless banks embrace these models, they will face a tougher fight for revenue in ever-decreasing addressable markets.

Outlook for BaaS

Eli Rosner, Chief Digital Officer, BaaS and Platform, Finastra
Eli Rosner, Chief Digital Officer, BaaS and Platform, Finastra

BaaS is expected to grow at more than 25% per year for the next 3-5 years. Players across the BaaS value chain are seeking to monetize the opportunity and deciding on the role they want to play.

Recent Finastra research on BaaS has found that some 85% of senior executives in the financial services ecosystem are already implementing BaaS solutions. It also identified that areas such as SME lending, corporate treasury and foreign exchange services are poised to gain the highest traction.

The research goes on to outline the key players, exploring where they are on their journey and what they anticipate in the future:

  • First you have the BaaS providers – financial institutions holding a banking license and manufacturing regulated and compliant financial products. Our research shows that some 42% of those surveyed are already in the advanced stages of implementing BaaS. These providers expect the BaaS market to grow by more than 50% per year over the next five years.
  • Next you have the BaaS enablers – usually BigTechs and FinTechs that help to embed financial services into third-party platforms and apps. Some 50% are already in the advanced stages of implementing BaaS. Enablers see high growth potential from offering payments and credit cards. In addition, 40% believe checking accounts offer high growth potential.
  • Finally, you have the BaaS distributors – consumer brands such as retailers and e-commerce brands that will supply embedded financial products to retail or corporate customers. Some 33% of these organizations in our research are already in the advanced stages of implementing BaaS. Distributors expect BaaS revenues to increase by more than 15% per year over the next five years.

Unlocking success

Monetising BaaS is a lot harder than embedding it. Not all BaaS strategies will succeed – and it’s vital to first understand the ecosystem in depth and to take a structured, programmatic approach to developing a use case in close collaboration with partners.

To succeed, financial services providers need to have an open API platform in place, as well as integrated data and analytics to support specialized digital solutions. They also need to create dynamic and compelling products that stand out against competitors. Winning in BaaS requires a focus on discrete, profitable and differentiating use cases that align to the bank’s overall strategy, and play to key differentiators, alongside a good understanding of where they will be able to exert the greatest influence over positioning and pricing.

Knowing the players and their ambitions is key to unlocking the value of contextual finance beyond just the redistribution of financial products, helping create new retail and wholesale marketplaces.

Some banks are already making significant inroads. UK digital bank Starling, for example, launched its BaaS offering in the UK back in 2018. Today it has 25 payment and banking services customers, including Raisin, CurrencyCloud, Moneybox and Vitesse, and is in the process of expanding into Europe. Starling’s ethos is simple: allowing businesses to build their own financial products on the bank’s platform while it handles the technical and regulatory demands behind the scenes.

Payment processing platform Stripe has also established itself in BaaS. The firm took the decision to work with Shopify as a distribution channel, and to partner with Goldman, Citi, and Barclays to provide Stripe treasury services globally. The Stripe example demonstrates the value to be found in partnerships and leveraging existing distribution channels which can help fuel exponential growth at speed.

Other examples include Uber working with Square, and Goldman Sachs expanding its footprint through digital lender GreenSky. In the corporate banking space, HSBC is working with Oracle NetSuite to embed international payments and expense management services into the SuiteBanking solution so that customers can access these services exactly when they need them.

In essence, the potential to create entirely new retail and wholesale offerings as a service is vast, restricted only by imagination. The most important thing is for financial services providers to start taking action today, exploring BaaS use cases and putting the tech and partnerships in place that they will need to maximise the opportunities ahead.

Hack to the future: supporting innovation in embedded finance

To help drive innovation and explore new ideas in the world of embedded finance, Finastra is inviting participants to sign up to the hackathon which opens on 8 March. This year we’ll be focusing on the three key themes of embedded finance, DeFi and sustainability. The hackathon is open to all, as everyone has a role to play in defining the future of finance.

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Banking’s challenge of change and control: how to overcome it

 It’s been said that “change is the only constant in life.” The global pandemic created a wave of change for everyone. We experienced the sudden shift to remote work, the acceleration of e-commerce, and a focus on digital capabilities.

by Michael D’Onofrio, CEO, Orbus Software 

For financial services, there was the additional challenge of tighter budget control, and increased regulations around cybersecurity and data protection, in addition to rising customer expectations for stellar digital-led delivery.

As a result, we’re seeing three key challenges emerge for financial services CIOs:

  • addressing disruption from new technologies and emerging business models,
  • achieving a first-class customer experience,
  • maintaining business as usual.

What links these challenges is the balancing act of controlling risk while enabling technology-driven transformation. Organisations with a more proactive and collaborative approach to risk management fared better during the pandemic than those with a defensive and reactive approach.2

However, Gartner notes that “almost half of global financial services organisations are still in a very early or even immature stage of their digital transformation journey”3 and rely on traditional business growth or are still working on digital optimisation (versus digital transformation) efforts. When confronted with the above challenges, those with strong Enterprise Architecture were more equipped with the tools to assess and respond.

Addressing market disruption

A 2022 Alix Partners study found that “70% of business leaders report high disruption to their company, up 11% in the past year. 94% of executives say their business model must change in the next three years.” The pace at which disruptive forces impact businesses today means leaders can no longer “wait and see.” The best-performing companies disrupt and reinvent themselves on a continual and ongoing basis.”1

Technology is the foundation of the modern bank and at the heart of much of this reinvention. But many financial services firms rely on customised and legacy systems (about 55% of enterprise applications!) and are only very slowly migrating to cloud-based options. Outdated technology infrastructure reduces agility, flexibility, and organisational resilience. You just can’t pivot or bounce back from a threat or transform as quickly.

Rising from disruption requires executing on increasingly integrated capabilities. This requires clarity and alignment on the challenge being faced, the systems, people and processes impacted, the strategy to move forward, and the shifts already underway. Many organisations don’t have the tools needed to cut through this level of complexity.

Enterprise Architecture supports the ability to execute through a shared common language across lines of business, an understanding of the layers of the organisation impacted, and a toolset to respond. A microservices and service-oriented architectural approach supports greater business agility. EA improves speed to market for application and data integrations, and the automation of business processes or workflows while establishing control over scenarios. For CIOs, speed, executional clarity and alignment make the difference in responding to change – and, planning for the future.

Achieving a first-class customer experience

To remain competitive retail banks need to ensure customers can move between communication channels easily and that they personalise online interactions to maximise customer interactions and additional revenue opportunities. McKinsey reported that 76% of US consumers moved to digital channels for the first time during the pandemic, while a survey by Accentureshowed that 58% of customers want to be able to switch between human and digital channels.

In order to achieve a first-class customer experience, financial institutions need to focus on delivering true omnichannel: offering the same services to customers across all digital and offline channels, synchronising their data for reuse across channels in real-time. For many FIs, this trend accelerated the need for digital transformation and increased focus on digital customer experience.

The challenges CIOs face here are threefold:

  • Cost and complexity of adopting omnichannel technology often spiral out of control
  • Omnichannel technology projects are sometimes impeded by disconnected silos of enterprise information
  • Security and compliance risks are not always visible and not accounted for

The delivery of integrated channels and seamless end-to-end transactions relies on Enterprise Architecture. Enterprise Architecture can not only help with the delivery of such things but also enable the creation and deployment of digitally-enabled business strategies and new operating models using those technologies.

Enterprise architecture can help control investment across IT portfolios, create a single source of truth of all enterprise information from all areas that are to be integrated, and gain visibility into compliance and security to anticipate and prevent potential threats.

Reinventing Business-As-Usual

According to an FT article from last summer, banks in the US and Europe were starting to show signs of being back to Business as Usual, moving away from the negative effects of the pandemic. This does not mean we are out of the woods. But it is a start.

The pandemic highlighted two things: the need for and benefits of cross-departmental collaboration, and the importance of “as is” and “to be” planning. Organisations need to start moving away from a reactive business model to a proactive one where the focus is back on winning against the competition. This is also the time for financial services firms to reassess the short-term fixes they put in place over the last two years and look at long term designs.

We know change is a constant. What differentiates resilient organisations is the ability to endure and even benefit from change. They have the agility to align IT assets with risk, resiliency and business processes & programs around an actionable plan.

Enterprise Architecture is the missing link between technological resilience and operational resilience. Enterprise Architecture provides organisational clarity to accelerate this transformation in a strategic and purposeful way, mapping the process of a desired future state. Overcoming these challenges in the coming year will be key for FIs in order to be truly resilient and be able to weather the next storm.

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What’s next for digital money transfers?

As lockdowns, social distancing guidelines and a wave of uncertainty swept the world in early 2020, experts at McKinsey predicted that global payments industry activity could drop by as much as 8% to 10% of total revenue due to the then-emerging COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, the opposite occurred.

by Jairo Riveros, Chief Strategy Officer and Managing Director for the USA and LATAM, Paysend

Between 2020 and 2021, the global digital payments industry grew $5873 billion, a compound annual growth rate of 16.1%. In addition, we saw a record amount of funding with payments startups raising an estimated $31.9 billion in 2021.

The growth of digital payments and digital money transfers shows no signs of slowing. As we enter a new year of exciting growth in the space, we can continue to trace the path that digital payment innovation has taken since the industry’s explosive growth in 2020.

How we got here

Jairo Riveros, Chief Strategy Officer, Paysend

With social distancing in effect, it’s no surprise that the COVID-19 pandemic helped digital payments skyrocket in popularity. However, what’s important to note is that three trends contributed to digital payments’ spike in utilization: rise in online consumer spending, the move to digital currency and the shift from brick-and-mortar to digital storefronts.

First, digital payments were already growing in popularity. In 2019, Americans spent about $360 billion on eCommerce transactions, and 77% of people used one or more types of mobile payments. While the pandemic caused digital payments to soar in popularity, the stage was already set for the rise of digital payments even before March 2020.

Second, physical money lost favour worldwide during the pandemic. Globally, cash use decreased to account for only 20% of all face-to-face payments. But in the U.S., it just wasn’t available—the U.S. Mint lowered its coin production from March to June 2020 to keep Americans from being exposed to COVID-19. A national coin shortage ensued that summer, but many businesses stopped accepting cash as a form of payment.

Third, lockdowns and stay-at-home orders forced us to take our financial needs from physical storefronts to digital storefronts. While this led to an uptick in eCommerce, lockdowns affected far more than just retail—60% of international and domestic cash transfers, for instance, took place online in 2020.

The trends we’ve seen

Digital payments carried this momentum into 2021 – 82% of Americans used some form of digital payment in 2021, up from 78% in 2020.

In addition to digital payments as a whole, several practices within the digital payments umbrella term have also grown more popular. The rise of the “buy now, pay later” option on eCommerce has struck a chord with consumers – about 33% of shoppers between 18 and 37 in a survey said that the option to pay in phases influenced their choice to complete their online purchase.

Further, remittances as a whole have increased in 2021, with the World Bank predicting in November that remittances would increase by 7.3% in 2021. But sending them digitally is also popular among those issuing remittances. In fact, a 2021 Visa survey showed that digital payments were the most popular method for sending money outside of the country. 23% of survey takers reported that they’d used digital payments to send money outside of the country, while 65% said they planned on doing so for the 2021 holiday season.

Digital payments have become so widespread that it’s causing some to purposely leave their wallets at home. For example, 15% of digital wallet users reported that they regularly leave their residences without bringing their physical wallets with them. With the federal government discussing standards for digital driver’s licenses, consumers will truly be able to live day-to-day without bi-folds, tri-folds, or clutches.

Where we’re headed

In 2020, digital payments became a necessity that also increased the efficiency of payments. By 2022, streamlining digital payments even further has become a hallmark of the sector’s evolution. It’s an exciting time for the digital payments industry, and we can expect several trends in digital payment innovation to emerge or continue in 2022.

Catering to customers as a whole will continue to be a focus for fintech companies as they improve their product’s user experience. Because digital payments already make financial processes more efficient compared to in-person processes, we can expect this efficiency to increase even further. For example, startups will begin to make fintech services a more seamless experience for users, as embedding financial services into non-financial companies becomes more commonplace. Additionally, both payments and credit processes are poised to become even more efficient for consumers.

Furthermore, we can also expect efficiency to be extended to international banking. Digital technology has made places around the world more accessible than ever before. Fintech is already doing its part to grow this global accessibility, with multiple banks beginning to offer multi-currency digital wallets to enable greater financial flexibility for global citizens.

At the same time, it will be important for the sector to address immigration and financial inclusion. One way the sector can innovate in this area is by introducing instant, low-cost and hassle-free remittance transfers in Latin America since digital transfers are still a budding practice in the region. Making digital payments in the region easy and inexpensive will let remote, low-income households in the region make and receive payments both quicker and more securely.

The biggest issue plaguing consumers right now are expensive transfer fees. Take the U.S. as a prime example. Consumers who don’t utilize traditional banks spend about $140 billion per year on unnecessary fees. In order to promote financial inclusion for all, it’s imperative that providers lower service fees.. We’ve seen some movement on this front within banking recently – Capital One announced in December that it was giving up $150 million in annual revenue to do away with its consumer overdraft fees.

Lowering service fees won’t impact digital payment ROI, as the global digital payments industry is expected to hit $2.9 trillion in 2030. Digital payments are also poised to continue their stark ascent in usage – one study estimates that by 2024, cash will account for under 10% of U.S. payments and only 13% of payments worldwide. Meanwhile, the same study estimates that digital wallets will be used in 33% of all in-store payments.

It’s an exciting time for the digital payments industry, and if the past two years have shown us anything, it’s that the sky’s the limit for innovations in the field.

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Digital B2B marketplaces can help tackle supply chain squeeze in commodities sector

Commodities have long been considered a good hedge against inflation and, true to form, with inflation in many countries now at its highest level in decades, those businesses that failed to invest in minerals, energy sources, livestock and foodstuffs face a financial squeeze to keep their supplies chains operating.

Paul Macgregor, Head of Sales, NovaFori

by Paul Macgregor, Head of Sales, NovaFori 

Yet, even for those businesses with foresight, that have planned and hedged, the current inflation-based pressure points on the global economy are accentuating stresses and strains that already existed in global supply chains and business value chains. Long-standing inefficiencies were exposed by the pandemic and became even more visible with the onset of the post-pandemic period. These inefficiencies could be significantly reduced by harnessing intelligent digital marketplaces.

In the world of commodities, this is particularly noticeable. It shows the use of traditional analogue as a way for businesses interact with customers, suppliers and intermediaries to be outdated and in need of a rethink. For this sector, a new way of offering efficiency, transparency and good practice is needed.

The rate of inflation in the UK reached 5.4% year-on-year in December, a 30-year high, and is sure to rise further in April when a 54% rise in the UK fuel price cap takes effect. In the US, meanwhile, consumer prices rose 7.0% in December, the highest level since June 1982. Against that backdrop, coffee, crude oil and aluminium prices have risen well over 100% in the past year, while cattle, copper and gas are up more than 50%.

Most eye-catching is lithium, up by close to 500% since the start of last year. Demand for lithium has jumped as demand for electric vehicles (EVs) has soared. Lithium is used in the batteries, which typically also include nickel and cobalt, prices of which have also risen significantly – nickel up over 30% in the past year and cobalt up almost 100%.

Fusion of analogue and digital marketplaces

Taking metals as an example, the value chain can go from mining to processing and then on to fabrication, transportation, storage and consumption, and finally, it is hopefully recycled. The more verticals within the chain that a business owns, the more scope there is to benefit from significant efficiencies.

There are points in the value chain where most businesses deal with intermediaries or brokers to advise them on both sales and purchases depending on where they fit into the cycle. These intermediaries play an important part in the process with their local knowledge, business relationships and understanding of the metal in question. Their involvement is typically in a more traditional analogue form.

Three key metals used in batteries are nickel, cobalt and lithium. All three are mined in remote parts of the world; The Democratic Republic of Congo is the world’s largest cobalt producer. The world’s largest reserves of lithium are in Australia, Argentina and Chile, while significant amounts are to be found in China and sub-Saharan Africa. Major deposits of Nickel are found in Indonesia, Canada, Russia and Brazil.

Amid the rapid growth of the EV sector globally, demand for lithium-ion batteries has soared. The rate of increase in the price of nickel, cobalt and lithium reflects, to an extent, the nature of the market in which each exists.

Given the geographies, the logistics and the local market complexity, such as grade of materials, shipment times, insurance, pricing and other local issues, intermediaries play a key role, by utilizing digital marketplaces to grow the geography of their client base. It may seem counterintuitive, but their analogue processes can in fact complement digital marketplaces with their local knowledge. The two go hand-in-hand, expanding access to the market, increasing the number of participants and adding liquidity. The result is greater price competition and a more efficient market.

Digital B2B marketplaces trusted to transact billions

Digital business-to-business (B2B) marketplaces are trusted to transact billions of dollars worth of goods annually across a wide variety of industries, including vehicle sales, leasing and re-leasing through to luxury goods and food products. They have a role to play in improving marketplaces for physical commodities.

Digital B2B markets widen distribution networks, help to ensure competition and liquidity in the marketplace, and enable price discovery using various auction methodologies. At the heart of it, buyers compete for goods or services by bidding incrementally upwards before finalising the price. The bidding process can be open or closed, during which it’s possible to capture every activity of potential buyers, including lots searched or browsed, bids submitted, and lots won or lost.

Once in operation, B2B markets can incorporate data science in the form of machine learning with the capability to make recommendations on products, buyers and timing, thereby helping sales teams to operate more efficiently.

Recommendation algorithms also point buyers to possible substitute products if they exist. For example, with EV batteries it could recommend another supplier with a similar specification and price. This enables sellers to satisfy customer demand where previously the transaction would not have been completed. The use of data science in such a way can broaden understanding of the marketplace and the wider industry.

It is fair to say that for some industry sectors, including the EV battery sector, without an efficient and digitised supply chain, achieving the end goal of a carbon-zero future becomes a far greater challenge. The issue goes beyond what is good for business, it has a real societal impact too.

In the post-pandemic environment, the commodities sector may retain some of its traditional characteristics that smooth the works of the market, but they will also have changed for good with increased digitalisation. As the world eyes the prospect of ‘building back greener’ with net-zero emissions targets, digitising the multi-billion-dollar commodity value chain has a part to play. Markets will be created where they didn’t previously exist and enhanced where they do exist. Inevitably, there will be disruption, but that will be accompanied by opportunities for those who embrace change.

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Buy Now Pay Later is here to stay, but the rules which currently govern it aren’t

Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) – a new form of credit giving consumers increased flexibility when paying for goods and services – has seen growing popularity over the past year.

by Amon Ghaiumy,  CEO and Co-founder, Ophelos

Amon Ghaiumy,  CEO and Co-founder, Ophelos

With BNPL allowing customers to pay now, later, or in instalments when making a purchase – the service has seen a recent surge of use as people use it to purchase goods, or when facing difficult financial situations, as an alternative to high-interest credit cards. According to TSB, this has seen one in five adults in the UK now using it at least once a month, and one in ten using it weekly.

Whether a FinTech revolution or simply a shift in spending habits, it’s clear that BNPL is here to stay. However, regulatory changes are on the horizon with implications for both providers and consumers. Demand for BNPL will no doubt continue to rise in the long term, but as with any form of credit offering, there comes the unavoidable risk of debt.

In light of this, it is worth addressing changing trends in the BNPL space, how impending regulation could shape its future, and why BNPL providers should be putting the financial care of vulnerable customers at the forefront of their operations – particularly when it comes to debt resolution.

The growth of BNPL spending

The combination of necessity, accessibility and the fact it is a cheaper alternative to credit cards and payday loans is seeing customers increasingly opting to use BNPL products.

Following its surge of use in 2021, data is already pointing to a further increased uptake in 2022. A recent survey from BNPL provider Splitit for example found that over half of UK respondents (54%) are planning on using BNPL services in 2022.

BNPL’s increased availability is largely contributing to this growth. Gone are the days when product-specific credit would be used exclusively for ‘big ticket’ items such as appliances, electronics, cars or holidays. Nowadays, it’s possible to use BNPL to pay for all manner of consumer goods including everyday essentials, clothes and even food.

Banks have also jumped on the growing BNPL trend. Monzo, for example, became one of the first UK banks to begin rolling out a BNPL service to its customers, whilst its rival Revolut confirmed it was “at the early stages” of developing a BNPL feature for Europe last year. Similarly, Santander is launching its own BNPL app called Zinia across Europe this year, starting in the Netherlands.

However, it’s not just convenience that has led to a surge in BNPL’s use. Against the backdrop of the living crisis in the UK, we are seeing more people use BNPL for everyday purchases they need but can’t necessarily afford.

Research from TSB shows that one in four customers say they rarely have the money in their account to pay in full for the things they are buying, and also suggests that some are worryingly resorting to BNPL when they are struggling financially.

With many BNPL providers being observed to have little or no affordability checks – concerns are rightly being raised around already-vulnerable customers ending up in positions where they are struggling to manage financially.

This lack of diligent screening alongside growing supply and demand has pricked the ears of the FCA and the regulator is expected to introduce new rules as early as 2023.

What could these regulations look like?

It’s early days, but initial research from the FCA has indicated that as many as half of the people who enter into BNPL are already behind on payments, so it’s possible that regulation may call for stricter vetting from providers on customers to minimise risky loans from the outset.

With BNPL products currently unregulated, customer screening is largely done on a provider-by-provider basis, with some taking more measures than others. Under FCA guidance, this will likely change and should do, being vital that providers detect and protect vulnerable customers from the outset.

Also, many customers who miss payments are unaware of the implications it might have on their credit rating. As such, providers may be required to better communicate risks to their consumers at the point of purchase.

Either way, the FCA aims to implement rules that protect the consumers first and foremost, so providers should think about how they can get ahead of the curve now.

Using debt resolution as an asset

A simple change that providers can make today should be to reimagine their debt collection processes.

While fintech has given rise to innovations in customer experience at the point of purchase or lending, debt resolution is yet to adopt cutting-edge technology or modern ethical standards.

Still today, businesses often rely on outdated debt collection agencies who find it difficult to recover outstanding debts, spend too much resource on inefficient operational processes, or lack the tools, intelligence and insights to support financially vulnerable customers.

Meanwhile, financially vulnerable customers lack control throughout the debt collection process due to inflexible repayment options, an absence of digital tools for managing their debts and antiquated communication methods used by traditional collectors.

At Ophelos, we blend behavioural science with AI to help businesses identify and manage vulnerable customers who may be facing issues with debt. This approach ensures that customers can help devise their own bespoke payment plans, communicate with their providers in a way which suits them, and ultimately feel more secure in the arrangement.

As the cost of living crisis continues, how BNPL providers manage their approaches to debt resolution and vulnerable customers will increasingly be in the spotlight. Utilising technology to aid them in this process and partnering with ethical organisations in the space, will allow them to maintain their reputation among their customers, while also increasing their yield.

And so, while BNPL certainly has a place in our lives – providing convenience and flexibility at a lower cost when it comes to our finances – the businesses providing it must think carefully about the care of their customers. The question is: will it take regulation for firms to make this change, or will they lead the change themselves?

CategoriesIBSi Blogs Uncategorized

How a clean data environment is key to a successful merger

There were 208 US bank deals with an aggregate deal value of $77.58 billion in 2021, the highest level since 2006, according to S&P Global Intelligence. Having a clean data environment prior to a merger is crucial. Strategic technology partners can be beneficial during this time, as they can help banks get a holistic view of their data, while saving them both resources and time.

by Bob Kottler, Executive Vice President and Chief Revenue Officer, White Clay

What are the reasons behind the surge in M&A  activity? Bank executives are trying to offset losses triggered by the pandemic. Net interest margins are down to record levels due to the large demand for savings accounts compared to loan applications, forcing banks to pay out more interest than they’re receiving. Executives are aware of the opportunities that come with an M&A and are more eager than ever to take advantage of them. Having an aggregated clean data environment can help a newly formed bank maximise the benefits of the merger, ultimately leading to portfolio diversification, an increase in revenue and higher shareholder return.

Bob Kottler of White Clay discusses the benefits of a clean data environment
Bob Kottler, Executive Vice President and Chief Revenue Officer, White Clay

Merging two banks brings operational challenges, one of which is needing to integrate data from two different core and ancillary systems to get a consolidated view of banking relationships. The success of the newly formed entity depends on the accuracy and complexity of this data, as the leadership team will use it to make long-term strategic decisions.

The key benefits of a clean data environment include:

  • Getting pricing right – By unveiling the difference in pricing practices, the two banks can learn from one another and proceed with the pricing method that is more profitable and impactful to the bottom line. For example, the two banks might have similar or even overlapping customers, but are pricing loans completely differently, leading to a significant difference in customer profitability. A good technology partner will provide the newly formed bank with such insight, uncovering the most profitable path for the future.
  • New market penetration – Having organised information about customers, including what products and services they have and don’t have access to, will enable the banks to cross-sell and market their offerings into the other bank’s customer base and expand their client portfolio. Additionally, a holistic view of customer data will allow banks to see if their existing customers are actually using the products and services they offer, and if so, market and sell more of those, leading to an increase in revenue. This will also help banks avoid regulatory penalties on unused banking products.
  • Building better relationships with customers – Curated customer data will also allow banks to meet their customers where they are, providing crisp and relevant offerings that will help increase customer retention. For example, a married couple that banks with the same financial institution but has separate accounts expects the bank to be aware of their alliance and offer products and services based on their household needs. However, this is rarely the case. Technology partners can help newly formed banks get a clear overview of their client accounts, empowering them to make the necessary links that will lead to long-term, trusting relationships and increased profitability over time.
  • Incentivising optimal banker performance – Data on banker performance will give the newly formed leadership team an overview of each department and individual banker, helping them quickly become familiar with the staff of the organisation they recently merged with. Tracking banker performance will also enable managers to set best practices, coaching staff better and ultimately helping the bank become successful, faster. Lastly, data will also give the board an accurate idea of how the newly formed leadership team is performing.

Banks are profitable when customers use the products and services they offer and when they sell new products, assuming that those products and services are priced appropriately. Having a clean data environment that enables banks to price products better, cross-sell deeper and deliver a personalised experience to their customers is necessary for a bank at any time in its lifecycle but is especially crucial during a merger. Bank executives are right to look at consolidation to offset challenges in today’s banking environment and add to their bottom line. However, without a universal view of their data, the benefits of a merger or acquisition may well be limited.

CategoriesIBSi Blogs Uncategorized

Global payments go green in the cloud

Since the early days of the digital movement, technology advancements have revolutionized work environments to achieve more efficient and profitable organizations. We now see business leaders moving beyond the bottom line, using technology to create environmentally favourable operations.

cloud
Phillip McGriskin, CEO, Vitesse

by Phillip McGriskin, CEO, Vitesse

This is true for global payments, where some of the earliest digitization efforts focused on automating simple manual tasks. In doing so, businesses were able to eliminate paper-based processes to consume fewer environmental resources.

As the digital movement exploded, process automation grew to encompass entire workflows, streamlining operations while also reducing waste and improving the environmental impact. For instance, businesses could initially scan an invoice into software to reduce the need for data entry, but advancing technology soon made it possible to send invoices electronically, automatically extract and store information, and even pay vendors without the need for paper documents or payments.

As businesses began to lessen their environmental impact through the use of technology, interest in conservation grew. According to an Accenture CEO study on sustainability, 44% of CEO respondents are now working toward a net-zero future for their organization. For many, technology will lead the way toward a greener future, particularly as cloud technologies make it easier to adopt cutting-edge advancements in payments technology. Gartner predicts that spending on cloud technologies will have grown over 23% in 2021 and that 75% of all databases will be deployed in or migrated to the cloud in 2022.

Making greener payments in the cloud

In order to understand all of the hype around cloud technology, it’s necessary to introduce some of the basics. Quite simply, the cloud is an off-premise location where organizations can store data, facilitate transactions or even consume software applications provided by external vendors. The magic of the cloud occurs from a very real-world technology called application programming interfaces (APIs).

APIs act as a connection layer, providing users with a single point of entry to the available functionality on the cloud. So, whether you’re accessing your own stored data, utilizing that data to fuel third-party applications or connecting to other users on the platform, it’s possible to enable all workflows from a single portal.

We can see the impact of the cloud on recent payments innovations. Vitesse, for instance, makes it possible for organizations to send and receive payments via a global domestic partner network. Communication with and movement of payments through the network occurs in the cloud, allowing businesses to more seamlessly transfer money, with payments made in local currencies.

However, while cloud technologies are streamlining processes and offering definite financial benefits to business organizations, such as a 30-40% decrease in the total cost of ownership, the cloud is also good for the environment, potentially reducing CO2 emissions by as much as 59 million tons per year. That’s the equivalent of taking 22 million vehicles off the roads.

The environmentally friendly aspect of cloud technology occurs by capitalizing on the economies of scale. Not only do cloud centres utilize far fewer servers than you would require to run your on-premise applications, but they’re also now doing so in a far more efficient manner:

  • Cloud data centres can be positioned closer to the facilities from which they draw power, preventing power losses associated with long-haul transmissions and reducing overall usage.
  • On-premise software is designed to handle high-intensity usage spikes. However, much of the time, systems sit idle, utilizing high levels of energy. Cloud servers, on the other hand, have higher utilization rates, meaning very little downtime and more efficient energy usage.
  • Because cloud centres are typically engineered to use energy more efficiently than most on-premise applications, they can operate with less of an environmental footprint. One recent study determined that the energy required to run business email, as well as productivity and CRM software, could be reduced by as much as 87% of all business users moved these applications to the cloud.

Business organizations can more easily improve their own environmental accountability by moving processes, such as payments, to the cloud, while boosting internal efficiency and turnaround times for equal bottom-line results.

CategoriesIBSi Blogs Uncategorized

Hybrid working and the security challenge for financial organisations

With hybrid working seemingly set to stay, can complete discovery of data and devices and ongoing monitoring of asset behaviours across highly dispersed financial service estates mitigate remote security concerns in the new hybrid working world?

by Andrew Gehrlein, Chief Financial Officer, Park Place Technologies

Across the conclusions of a recent McKinsey report on the future of the physical workplace it was clear that the majority of employees (52%) would prefer a continued hybrid model of working. McKinsey expanded the definition of hybrid workplaces to include the usage of flexible workspaces that are physically located outside existing company office locations to include home office workspaces alongside hub working and communal space works. How do banking infrastructure leads accommodate this ongoing transfer of working conditions, especially with the increased security parameters that the world of trading demands?

Andrew Gehrlein, Chief Financial Officer, Park Place Technologies
Andrew Gehrlein, Chief Financial Officer, Park Place Technologies

Since the initial rush to accommodate working from home mandates in March 2020, these IT infrastructure leads have now had the benefit of time and experience to consider, mitigate and control the security impacts that continued hybrid working poses in finance. Today, these leads are proactively focused on developing a clear, structured, and continued strategy for those organisations and employees who elect to work outside of company facilities in an environment where speed, security and increased regulatory pressures are paramount considerations in each financial exchange.

Hybrid staff continually need to access devices and exchange data above and beyond the usual elaborate security firewalls that these organisations typically embrace from within fixed corporate networks. Now, on a permanent basis, these IT leads must identify all possible ingress and egress points in their newly expanded dispersed network before holistically deploying enhanced next generation security and cyber services that give increased protection from hostile activities. This also includes systematic and ongoing understanding of endpoint usage, and endpoints themselves need to be capable of being restricted and isolated quickly, to avoid further contamination should a security breach occur.

Within a hybrid working strategy, organisations also need to develop a clear understanding of usage of cloud accounts, yet the nature of cloud service provision means that much of this is dynamic, and complex to track. Additionally, public network usage provides further challenges in settings such as communal spaces. Data transfer to a wireless printer inside a secure corporate facility poses relatively little risk yet place the same wireless printer within a hub space and the possibilities for hostile activities increase exponentially.

Equally in the home environment additional vulnerabilities exist. Routers can have exposed modem control interfaces; or staff using BYoD that may fall outside of patching windows; or the increase in domestic IoT exposure points, all of which need additional consideration. Faced with the level of challenges, it becomes quickly apparent that finance IT leads essentially need a real-time, always-on, centrally managed discovery and monitoring system of devices and data.

How can this be achieved? Pre-Covid, IT Asset and inventory device management was limited largely to a manual discovery and tracking that assisted with security and audit requirements. Faced with the complexity and threats outlined outside of corporate locations, today this discovery must be conducted as an ongoing service, in real-time, expanded across multiple remote locations for immediate discovery, automating and simplifying asset disclosure without manual IT inventory collection. In short, discovery needs to provide complete visibility into financial services’ data centres and cloud environments, and should include servers (physical, virtual and cloud), desktops, peripherals, edge devices, alongside the infrastructure services.

Discovery is the first step. Monitoring networks this complex is the second. Network monitoring tools have become increasingly specialised and siloed towards departmental usage, neglecting the holistic cross-departmental requirement that hybrid working needs. What’s required today is proactive and predictive generic monitoring across hardware and software that gives leads immediate and actionable insights to gain the greatest level of controls allowing identified new devices to be quickly added to the fold and protection. Only then, when IT leads understand what hybrid workers are using at any given point in time, can appropriate security solutions be confidently layered, safe in the knowledge that there are no gaps within defences.

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