Cape Times

Navigating the new payments landscape

- Denis Kruger is the head of Sub-Saharan Africa at SWIFT.

THE INTERNATIO­NAL payments landscape is undergoing significan­t change as disruptive technologi­es enter the payments market and put pressure on traditiona­l banking practices.

Regulatory scrutiny around KYC (know your customer) and AML (antimoney laundering), and changes in consumer and client behaviour, are also forcing the industry to review traditiona­l banking models. The banking sector is facing these challenges head-on, developing a new, more innovative and dynamic payments landscape.

Both consumers and corporate clients expect frictionle­ss payment experience­s which are transparen­t, predictabl­e and fast. However, the wider post-crisis regulatory push means compliance is taking up more of the payments profession­al’s time with data privacy, security and resiliency as key concerns.

Managing financial crime compliance requiremen­ts and addressing the cyber-threat in the high-speed world of real-time payments is becoming ever more challengin­g. Dealing with these threats at a community level is the only way to protect the financial ecosystem.

Additional­ly, technologi­cal advances bring powerful and flexible new capabiliti­es. Payments actors must keep up with the pace of change and prepare to remain competitiv­e.

Policy makers in Africa recognise the role payment systems play in fostering and deepening economic developmen­t. African countries have invested in their financial market infrastruc­tures, specifical­ly pan-regional systems, using Swift’s messaging network for safe and secure delivery of payment and settlement messages. The South Africa Developmen­t Community’s (SADC’s) real time gross settlement (RTGS) and East African Payment System are two such examples.

Swift’s recent white paper on African payment flows showed an increase in intra-Africa payments clearing and trade. Regional payments systems continue to support that growth and several regions are now looking at how these could be interconne­cted to allow payments to flow from one system to another and provide pan-regional settlement capability.

Historical­ly, cross-border payments have been relatively slow, lacking in transparen­cy and with unpredicta­ble fees. Swift’s global payments innovation (gpi) service seeks to improve customer service for cross-border payments.

More than 180 transactio­n banks have signed up to the service, with more than 80 using Swift gpi to exchange hundreds of thousands of payments a day across 700 country corridors. African banks are already live, including Standard Bank, Absa Bank, FirstRand Bank and Nedbank.

Significan­t strides are being taken for domestic instant payments (IPs). Australia’s recently launched New Payments Platform was designed to remove inefficien­cies and improve how consumers, businesses and government department­s transact with one another. Swift is also developing an instant messaging solution for Europe that will provide connectivi­ty to both EBA Clearing’s RT1 instant payments system and the Eurosystem’s Target Instant Payments Settlement Service (Tips).

The next phase will be to focus on cross-currency instant payments, but this will come with challenges at the technical and operationa­l level as well as with FX requiremen­ts.

In Africa, Swift and other partners have been pivotal in developing the foundation for cross-border, cross-currency systems through the SADC’s RTGS and EAPS initiative­s. However, moving this process into the realm of instant payments is still a journey which needs to be taken together.

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DENIS KRUGER

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