Friday 30 May 2008

Faster Payments service goes live on VocaLink Real-Time platform

London, 27 May 2008: VocaLink, the payment transaction specialist, announced today that the Faster Payments service has gone live with the first transactions processed successfully this morning. The ground-breaking Faster Payments service is the first application of the VocaLink Real-Time Payments Platform and is generating significant interest from major banks around the world.
The VocaLink Real-Time Payments Platform is unique in facilitating single real-time payments over a variety of channels including mobile, internet, telephone and even payment card. This will enable payments from consumer to consumer, consumer to business, business to consumer and business to business. It is likely to change both the way that people pay and the way they want to be paid.
Martin Wilson, chief commercial officer at VocaLink said: ‘’ The VocaLink Real-Time Payments Platform is one of the most revolutionary infrastructures the payments industry has seen in recent decades and has the potential to transform consumer banking behaviour and business practice across the globe.’’
VocaLink is already in discussion with banks from around the world which are looking to reduce the cost of their payments infrastructure while simultaneously future-proofing it to cope with increasing demand for more real-time, spontaneous and mobile payment services.
In the UK, Faster Payments was developed in response to the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) calling for an alternative to the existing systems. It has been a joint project between VocaLink, as the infrastructure provider, APACS, as the industry body overseeing the development, and the UK banks. The financial institutions involved in delivering the system account for 97% of all payments made. Faster Payments will run alongside existing payment schemes such as Bacs and CHAPS.
‘’The new service far exceeds the original requirements of the OFT’s Payment Systems Task Force.’’ adds Wilson. ‘’This is a payment service that maximises straight through processing and is truly self service, reducing operational cost and improving customer service.’’
VocaLink designed, built and operates two other national payment infrastructures in the UK for the Bacs Scheme (Direct Debit, Bacs Direct Credit and Standing Order), and the ATM network for the LINK scheme. VocaLink also operates a Euro clearing service that processes euro payments to and from anywhere in the world and has recently announced a payments processing outsourcing deal with BGC in Sweden.

VocaLink to process Sweden’s payments

London/Stockholm 15 May 2008: VocaLink, the payment transaction specialist, has today signed a contract with the Swedish national processor, BGC, to process the majority of Sweden’s automated payments.
Today’s announcement marks a significant change in the payment processing landscape. In a groundbreaking deal, the processing for a national payments scheme has been outsourced to a non-domestic supplier. BGC has engaged VocaLink in an outsourcing deal which will see the majority of Swedish direct debit and credit transfer payments being processed by VocaLink. Under the arrangement, BGC will continue to manage its customer relationships whilst IT development and operations will be transferred to VocaLink.
Work to migrate payments to the VocaLink infrastructure is now underway and is targeted for completion by the beginning of 2010 at which point VocaLink will manage the day to day operations of the Swedish Bankgiro system.
“Our partnership with VocaLink facilitates a very strong and modern product offering to our customers,” says Eva Gidlöf, Chief Executive Officer at BGC. “VocaLink is the leading European payment processor, with modern, currency independent and SEPA-ready products with very competitive pricing. In addition, VocaLink maintains the same high quality and security levels as BGC.”
The European payment market is undergoing regulatory change that will rationalise the payment market, improving competition and lowering prices. For companies and private individuals it will bring quicker, simpler and cheaper payments. The partnership between BGC and VocaLink is a clear step forward in the consolidating European payment market and is part of BGC’s long-term strategy to become a market-leading supplier of payment solutions.
Marion King, Chief Executive Officer at VocaLink says: “We are delighted to be working in partnership with BGC. To be tasked with processing the bulk of Sweden’s domestic payments demonstrates a new and efficient operating model in a dynamic and changing market. Our partnership with BGC is another major step in VocaLink's international growth as we bring our products and expertise to new markets.”

German retailers are against the adoption of SEPA payments

From: Payment News and Industry Social Networking - 2008 (epnn)

German Retailer Federation (HDE) is against plans to give up direct-debit payments which are settlement instruments for cash-and-carry and services bills. The method is not compliant with the standards of the European Central Banks' Single European Payments Area (SEPA).
Germans are more inclined to use direct debit, which uses data from an ATM card combined with a signature of the cardholder, instead of credit cards. An advantage of this method is that firms may make direct debit entries after receiving the approval from the customer via a phone call, without a signature or any other identification method. The German retailers fear they may be facing higher settlement costs for payments if ECB's SEPA project is adopted.
SEPA has been launched in 2008 and will be implemented across the 15 countries that share the Euro. The project aims to standardize retail payments in Euro, enabling payments under the same conditions from a single account, regardless of its location.
Germany's central bank and credit lobbyists are discussing when direct debt is to be abolished. HDE, the German Retailer Federation claims that direct debit and SEPA complaint settlement could coexist.
HDE consists of about 410,000 independent companies with a yearly turnover of more than EUR 550 billion. The German Retail Federation represents the needs and interests of the whole retail sector. It has 100,000 business members from all sectors, locations and sizes. The HDE head office is located in Berlin.

SEPA: Banks Are Building It, But Will Their Corporate Customers Come?

The Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) initiative is already live and could have a significant impact on European business. However, complaints, concerns, and finger-pointing among regulators, banks, and corporations currently prevail over progress.

In a new report, SEPA: Banks Are Building It, But Will Their Corporate Customers Come?, Celent examines how banks, regulators, technology vendors, and corporations are approaching the SEPA initiative, launched as the implementation project of the European Union’s Lisbon agenda. There is a general consensus that collaboration and cooperation will help overcome initial strife, but none of the constituents seems willing to take the first step. This report focuses on each constituent’s business focus and targets, identifying gaps and areas of convergence.

The report begins with an examination of corporate awareness about the SEPA initiative. This is supported by results from a recent survey across European operations managers, purchasing directors, supply chain executives, treasurers, and finance directors. It then examines the role played by banks and their initiatives to promote SEPA to their customers. The report continues with some consideration of SEPA’s impact on corporate supply chains, incorporating an overview of the solutions and strategies adopted by IT vendors in approaching the payments market within the new SEPA environment. Finally, the report scrutinizes the role of regulators and predicts the next steps for key stakeholders.


"Industry forces have pushed organizations to focus primarily on costs and quality under the current climate of clear economic stress," says Enrico Camerinelli, senior analyst with Celent’s banking group and author of the report. “Celent has identified the key criteria that corporate executives should adopt in order to link financial objectives with SEPA’s expectations.”

The following vendors and banks are included: SAP, Oracle, Clear2Pay, and Deutsche Bank.

The report is 70 pages long and contains one table and 18 figures. A table of contents is available online.

Thursday 29 May 2008

A whiter shade of profit

A whiter shade of profit
Heather McKenzie
1 April 2008
Banking Technology

Shrinking revenues are forcing banks to optimise operations in novel ways, including outsourcing non-core activities to rival banks while retaining their own customer relationships
Outsourcing used to be something of a dirty word in the financial services-industry. While other sectors grasped the opportunity to divest themselves of ‘non-core’ tasks, such as human relations and payroll, financial institutions held firm against the trend for many years. The business of banking was far too important to let any of it be handed over to a third party.
But economic reality has long since dawned and outsourcing is now a common approach, particularly for processing-intensive tasks in the back office. To sweeten the pill, a number of terms are used as alternatives to outsourcing – white labelling, private labelling, grey labelling, and joint ventures. They all, essentially, mean about the same thing – banks can hive off elements of their business that they can no longer afford to run to specialists or scale players who can achieve results at a much lower cost.
The latest drivers of outsourcing are the Single Euro Payments Area, the European banks’ initiative to harmonise payments across the euro zone, and the European Commission’s Payment Services Directive, which provides the legal foundation for the creation of an EU-wide single market for payments and must be transposed into national law across the Union by November 2009.
The two initiatives will transform the payments industry in Europe, treating cross-border payments as local ones within euro zone countries, leading to a decline in these revenues for European banks. The World Payments Report, a survey published by Capgemini, ABN Amro (now part of Royal Bank of Scotland) and the European Financial Management and Marketing Association in November last year, estimates that direct payments revenues for European banks will decline by between 38% and 62% in some parts of the market by 2012.
In the absence of this revenue, some banks may find it is not cost effective to stay in the payments processing game, particularly as they will face greater competition from new market entrants, such as the payment institutions created by the PSD. “The Payment Services Directive and some other changes in the payments business are providing a catalyst for banks to consider whether or not they want to be in the payments business,” says Alan Koenigsberg, core cash management product executive for EMEA and the Americas at JPMorgan. “I think in the euro zone, consolidation will lead to about five big banks dominating as payments service providers.
“Many banks are looking at component outsourcing, where they will hand over a component of the business, like clearing and settlement, while retaining the customer relationship. Banks are looking to outsource the parts of the business that they feel are not value-added, but they want to continue to face the market with their brand.”
The World Payments Report found that 58% of banks already outsource or plan to outsource part or all of their payments activities within five years and 68% plan to offshore the activity as well, whether back office, IT or support functions.
Said the report: “Banks are repositioning their business models (on a European scale), enhancing their service offerings (competitive model), and optimising their delivery models to sustain their strategic ambitions in the future payments marketplace. Banks are turning to delivery models that rely on open architectures to:
▪ Enhance product offerings: flexibly add white-label products to their portfolios quickly enough to satisfy clients;
▪ Outsource payments processing to third parties, or insource others’ corporate or financial institution payments; and
▪ Permanently optimise this model by offering clients the most competitive integrated services in the market.”
Successful banks, said the report, will convert their delivery models into open architectures, which will enhance their product offerings, support the needed flexibility to bring white label products quickly to market, outsource payments processing or insource processing from others, and permanently optimise this model by offering clients the most competitive integrated service products on the market.
White labelling, which has been long established in the FX world, is attractive because it enables the bank that is outsourcing its activities to retain its brand and customer relationship.
In a paper on SEPA and sourcing challenges published in December last year, UK legal firm Denton Wilde Sapte said larger SEPA players, aiming for ‘critical mass’ transaction volumes, are focused on creating an end-to-end SEPA offering, including white label and insourcing services for smaller SEPA players. These banks would also provide the additional optional services (AOS) that are a considered an integral part of SEPA, given that they will help banks to recoup their losses. AOS may include integrated treasury systems and financial supply chain tools.
“Whichever strategy is chosen, effective systems and sourcing will be a key component of a successful SEPA strategy,” said the Denton Wilde Sapte report. “SEPA will demand significant IT investment by banks and careful reviews of their organisational processes. As the SEPA schemes are independent of underlying payments infrastructures, banks can secure competitive advantage by developing leaner mid-and back office payments operations, more efficient customer fulfilment and data routing functions and greater product innovation.”
Among the banks that are aiming to be major players in the SEPA environment is Deutsche Bank, which offers financial institutions the chance to leverage its global branch network and domestic clearing memberships. Corporate clients open accounts with Deutsche Bank, which are embedded in a single customer service and relationship management interface through the financial institution. Deutsche Bank provides its full set of cash management services, including the option to white label db-direct internet, the German bank’s web-based electronic banking system and its liquidity management technology.
Colin Digby, director of wholesale solutions at Deutsche Bank, says a dozen banks are already using the whitelabel option and it is being rolled out in a “number of other banks” as well. The key advantage of a white label service, he says, is that it retains the same look and feel of the client’s bank.
The implementation of white labelling differs from bank to bank, says Digby. “In some cases, the bank will use only the front end system to receive transactions which they then execute on their own book. They will also provide reporting and data back to their clients in the same application,” he says. “Another category of user takes the front end and complements that with Deutsche Bank’s processing capabilities.”
Way back in May 2004, Deutsche Bank stole a march on its European rivals when it announced a strategic partnership with Barclays Bank that allowed the UK bank to provide its larger corporate customers with cash management services across Europe. The deal was hailed as a first in Europe, with Deutsche Bank offering its cash management franchise to another financial institution to serve its corporate clients.
The main drivers for white labelling or outsourcing, says Digby, are cost, time to market and the level of expertise required in-house. “If you intend to build or buy an electronic banking system, you need a supporting infrastructure around it, which needs to take into account IT, bug-fixing and future development plans. Regulatory requirements in the payments industry are becoming more stringent and the development piece is therefore more complex,” he says.
Digby says many more clients are happy to say “we know you are a global transaction bank and you have developed these systems yourself and we will buy that and will be able to go to market immediately and be future-proofed against further developments in the industry.”
Only stage one of SEPA – credit transfers – has been achieved to date. By November 2009 the PSD is scheduled to be in place as will be SEPA direct debits (which need the PSD to be in place). Until then, and perhaps for a couple of years afterwards, most observations about SEPA and its impact will be speculation.
In a speech at a conference organised by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City in the US in May last year, Getrude Tumpel-Gugerell, member of the executive board of the European Central Bank and one of SEPA’s main cheerleaders, raised the issue of non-banks and their role in SEPA, something that has concerned Europe’s financial institution incumbents. She said: “Non-banks offer complementary services to banks, basing their success on economies of scale. It is also conceivable that a bank may establish its own ‘non-bank’ and confer upon it part of its payment functions. Thus, the questions raised are to what extent outsourcing could expand, and whether banks in the future would maintain commercial relations with their clients, as is the case in the IT business nowadays.”
JPMorgan’s Koenigsberg has a similar view. “White labelling, joint ventures and outsourcing have become plays in the SEPA environment. The Payment Services Directive creates payments institutions and there is no reason these cannot be created as subsidiaries of banks. The PSD will be a catalyst for banks in deciding whether or not to play in the payments space. Depending on the size of the institution, it could outsource its own payments to another provider, or could create a payments factory and insource, thus creating a truly private label business.”

Chain reaction - Integrating the physical and financial supply chains will have benefits for both.

Chain reaction
David Bannister
1 April 2008
Banking Technology

Integrating the physical and financial supply chains will have benefits for both.
Over the past few years, no self-respecting conference in the payments world would be without some focus on the topic of the “financial supply chain”. Yet for all the delegate-hours expended on the topic, the industry often seems no nearer to defining what this supply chain is, let alone how banks can match their services to it.
There is a consensus, however, that it is important, and that if banks don’t get to grips with it they will lose out in a world that is moving quickly and in which new payment methods are appearing all the time.
So what is this “financial supply chain”? Surely it must have a beginning and an end? Even there, there is debate: does it begin with a request for proposal? An invitation to tender? An order?
Some even argue that there is no such thing as a financial supply chain –“there is just a supply chain that needs financing at various points”, in the words of one conference delegate.
This view has some merit, if only as a starting point. “I tend to agree with it to some extent,” says Richard Spong, financial solutions manager at Sterling Commerce, a provider of business process services. “The ‘financial supply chain’ is a phrase that has been lifted out of the corporate banking dialogue and is used to summarise something that doesn’t really exist as an isolated concept. Our view is, roughly, that in the course of supply chain activity there are activities and events that have financial consequences from time to time. These are not necessarily linear, in the sense that they are not always sequential and can’t always be linked right through, but what is emerging in the financial services sector is an interest in being able to push additional services into that interactivity, where it is appropriate and where it is profitable.”
But banks have not yet been all that successful in determining where those profitable opportunities are. “It is a very inexact science,” says Spong. “So much of the process happens on the wrong side of the corporate firewall. Banks have enough problems as it is providing electronic connectivity for customers.”
George Ravich, vice president of marketing at Fundtech, takes a slightly different view. “We do think there is such a thing as the financial supply chain, and we’ve been very active in it for a couple of years now,”he says. “The bottom line is that that yes there is a physical supply chain, but in the physical world it is all about just-intime inventory, to have all the right components on the factory floor at the right time. The parallel to that in the financial world is that it is really about just-in-time cash, so that you don’t have too much sitting around not making interest, or not taking out loans for too long.”
Ravich says that bringing these parallel streams together is the real goal of the debate, and that it will be profitable for both sides “Our vision is to expand the role of the banks. Their boundary has traditionally been with some sort of cash management and payment processing. We think that the opportunity for the banks is to extend their boundary to include e-invoicing.”
“There is a long way to go in providing the interactivity that some banks would like to push, and some, but not all, corporates would like to buy,”says Spong. Part of the issue is that large corporates tend to have multiple banking partners and not all the services from one bank are going to satisfy their needs. “The large UK supermarkets, for instance, may like the interactivity they get from HSBC, but also want to use a specific service from Barclays, say. When they are multi-banked, they can’t always get apples or pears from one supplier to compare.
“There is clearly a benefit in providing electronic interactivity between financial services and supply chain events, to both the consumer and the banks. But the technology bridges that are needed to manage that on the corporate side are quite fragmented – or don’t exist.”
And where things don’t exist, opportunities do. Spong says that Sterling will shortly announce a product development in the e-invoicing area, intended to support pan-European commercial activity, including things like multiple VAT regimes and auditing. “This is an area where there is emerging interest in dematerialising commercial paper across the European Union. E-invoicing is one example of this, but it is only one piece: what’s the next step in the chain? Providing a continuous service around this is trickier.”
A striking characteristic about this market is the role of the vendors, who are increasingly introducing generic products for both banks and their customers. “Banks have enough trouble trying to manage their internal technology without having to worry about something that is speculative and might not get any take-up. We play both sides of the fence; we sell e-invoicing directly to corporates with no financial services involvement at all. On the other hand, if banks want to provide clients with a service direct, perhaps as a hosted service, then they are able to add other services like factoring and discounts.”
Ifor Williams, director of sales and marketing at Accountis, recently acquired by Fundtech, says that invoices are just part of the paper chase. “It depends on your perspective as a buyer or as a seller, but you could start with the raising of a purchase order, purchase order acquisition, and all the way through to goods delivered and e-invoicing. It’s also things like the actual contract – the terms and conditions, facilitating agreement on the exchange of contract and things like that; all the business processes that go to make up a transaction.
“Obviously there is a focus on e-invoicing at the moment, because it’s easier to pick one of the transaction types and focus on it, but the proposition actually encompasses all of the elements of the business transaction.”
On top of that, there are the idiosyncrasies of different industries to contend with. “How a particular process tends to occur will vary in different verticals,” says Williams. “Another aspect is the issue of body-shopping, where basically you’ll get a timesheet back with the invoice. It does vary from industry to industry, so you need to have flexible management for the document workflow.
“It is about getting rid of any paperwork in any business transaction: in an ideal world, business would be transacted without any paper whatsoever.”
Simon Bailey, director of payments at Logica, says:“There is a supply chain, but it is a chimera, made up of different parts. The real point of integrating financial services into the supply chain is to reduce the cost to corporates, and that comes down to the dematerialisation of paper-based processes, and a lot of those processes have a financial element, like invoices. That’s what it is really about.”
We’ve been here before, of course: standardising the paperwork and processes pre-dates the electronic processing part – IBM has its very roots in automating the paperwork for a US census. The 1980s saw considerable efforts going into developing Electronic Document Interchange standards, with governments and their activities – tax, healthcare and social security spending departments to the fore – attempting to kick-start a revolution through their purchasing power.
These efforts met with limited success, so what’s different now? Williams thinks a number of things have changed, not least the ubiquity of computing and communications power. “EDI has worked well for very large companies, but every connection is a bespoke project, and it’s point-to-point. Where it falls down is when you have large numbers of small companies – and some of our customers have 40,000 suppliers,” he says. “One of the drivers now is widespread broadband internet connectivity, the mass adoption of ERP financial systems – and increasing numbers of people like ourselves providing ERP connectivity over the internet for corporates. There is also an increasing number of legislative changes that are allowing people to conduct business electronically.”
This has created something of a shift in power. Where once it was the purchasing power of large government departments that could drive change, the past few years have increasingly seen the power of the large corporates, which are now allowed access to the Swift network through assorted mechanisms. Thus far, such connectivity has largely been the preserve of the global mega corporations, and this has attracted criticism, particularly in the US where there are a number of consultants saying that the message needs to be spread among the smaller companies too.
This may be happening without outside help. The widespread interconnectivity that Williams points to is pushing this further into the SME business world, where some in the banking world argue that the industry should be making more efforts (see panel). Others take the view that there will be some sort of trickle-down effect, with large global companies like the car manufacturers interacting with their smaller brethren in the component supply industries, and so on down the pyramid. How far down the pyramid? “All the way to the window cleaner,” says Williams. “Window cleaners have broadband access these days.”
“With all the technology that’s available on every one’s desktop, the evolutionary issue here is that it is easier for smaller companies, who can’t necessarily afford an EDI system, to be brought into the ecosystem,” says Ravich.
So, there is a physical supply chain, and there is a set of financial services that have to be mapped to it. Given that the debate has already spanned decades, and that in the last five years there has been an accelerating trend for the web to generate whole new payment paradigms, how long is this mapping going to take?
“Will there ever be an end point? It’s a good question,” says Williams. “It is obviously an evolutionary thing and there will be greater and greater adoption. What will eventually drive it will be the back-end infrastructure supporting the communications of these documents, and that is really where the banks come in. They already have global infrastructures for the communication of payments. What we are really driving for now is that they will also have global infrastructures for the global communication of all the business documents that surround those payments.”
Talking points: the view from the Financial Supply Chain Forum
The arrival of the Single Euro Payments Area has led to the creation of a split between what banks are providing and what businesses want. This fragmentation will be further compounded in the build up to the introduction of the Payment Services Directive.
The changing relationship between banks, corporates and other players, such as the card and payment networks, formed the basis of a recent discussion held by the Financial Supply Chain Forum, part of the London-based Financial Services Club. Chaired by Eric Sepkes, recently retired as global FI strategy director EMEA, Global Transaction Services at Citi, the discussion centred around what issues banks face in bridging the gap that is still left between them and their customers.
Sepkes expounded the idea that a bank’s role is not to pay for things, but to enable those who want to buy or sell something to be able to do so, and asked how SEPA and other changes in the eurozone help people to buy and sell things?
Ashley Dowson, managing director of the SEPA Consultancy, opened with a view of how SEPA relates to the supply chain. Most banks, he suggested, think B2B means bank to bank rather than business to business. “What you should really do is rename SEPA as SEBA – the Single Euro Business Area,” he said. That said, there is also a split in the corporates between those who have embraced the paraphernalia of SEPA, such as IBANs, and those who say it has nothing to do with their business.
Some banks, generally in the top handful, have been working to capitalise on this in a business land grab, but what is more worrying for the banking industry is the entry of new players offering the services that corporates want. “There are new players out there, some of whom you’ve never heard of, which will be payments institutions in this space, such as Travelex,” Dowson said. “Travelex.com USA is all about FX but Travelex.co.uk is all about being a payment services provider – they’ve built an invoice management capability, and they’re leading the way for the future.”
With the delayed advent of the PSD will come further opportunities for new players who will harness themselves to the banks and become the big players in their turn.
Looking to 2015, the landscape is starting to look like it will consist of infrastructure players, such as the European Bankers Association, or an evolution of that; a handful of large banks like Deutsche; and a few players not currently in that space.
A second line of development is the coming together of cards and other payments players. Businesses are unlikely to be willing to continue to pay for double infrastructures from Visa, MasterCard, VocaLink and others, when they can do it all for much lower cost business-to-business, or even for free.
The forum also considered the role of government and public sector agencies. One comment, from a government agency, was that many in that sector felt that SEPA has nothing to do with the PSD, but they had been working on e-invoicing for over 25 years. Internally, this is starting to lead to the development of a mini-civil service bank.