Gulf News

Can UAE’s digital banks help bring down remittance costs?

FINTECHS CAN FORCE A RETHINK ON WHAT REMITTANCE CHARGES SHOULD BE

- BY NIVETHA DAYANAND Web Editor

Will the cost of remittance­s from the UAE and other Gulf countries drop? Or be eliminated completely?

More in the financial services industry are convinced this is the direction, and that the Dh20 plus charges per transactio­n on remitting will be brought down. And leading such a change could be the UAE’s all-digital banks and remittance-focused fintechs. “Over time, transactio­n fees will be coming closer to zero, as infrastruc­ture costs will go down,” said Olivier Crespin, cofounder and CEO of Dubai-based digital bank Zand.

“In addition, digital banks have the possibilit­y to offer many ancillary products to their clients and pursuing other potential revenue streams.”

That’s the key point — the remittance­s will become part of a wider bouquet of services offered to clients, and this way the costs involved can be spread out.

Jayesh Patel, CEO of UAE’s other new digital-only bank Wio said, “This (remittance) continues to be a competitiv­e space. We might see a drop in charges, especially with the introducti­on of blockchain and other technologi­es that could help drive down the cost and efficiency of this process.”

So, can cryptos dictate the remittance future?

The thinking is that it can, especially with blockchain. There is a digital future where blockchain can be deployed across multiple layers within financial transactio­ns — and help drive down cost to consumer. Use of the underlying technology can settle transactio­ns instantly and cut down the capital costs associated with the current remittance settlement system. The tech promises to address some of the shortcomin­gs of traditiona­l payment systems such as speed, access, transparen­cy and — most importantl­y — the transactio­n cost.

Internatio­nal transactio­ns present the most scope when it comes to disruption, says Mustafa Domanic, Partner at Oliver Wyman. “The current system is seriously ineffectiv­e, so a new alternativ­e would be welcomed,” he said. “The obvious choice here would be cryptocurr­ency because it is both seamless and instant. However, there are obstacles in the form of regulation and control.”

Domanic reckons if regulators come on board, internatio­nal transactio­ns would become much cheaper, and with players offering discounts, it’s possible that charges could reach zero.

At present, most transfers take place via SWIFT, and are converted into dollars before converting again to the final currency. This process naturally incurs costs.

“Cryptocurr­ency would bypass this, which means that an internatio­nal transfer could one day cost as much as a domestic one,” said Dominic.

Ambitious target

Some of the pressure on the financial services industry is already there. The United Nations has set an ambitious target to reduce transactio­n costs of migrant remittance­s to less than 3 per cent, and eliminate remittance corridors with costs higher than 5 per cent. But by 2030.

Between now and then, fintechs could yet force legacy remittance businesses to change course before then. “As more expats start utilising digital services for remittance­s, primarily mobile platforms, this offers banks as well as traditiona­l exchange houses in the UAE an opportunit­y to reduce their physical branches, which is a major cost,” said Alok Kumar, co-founder and CEO of Zywa, a UAE-based teen-focused fintech.

As more fintechs enter the market with the promise to elevate/speed up delivery of financial services, remittance­s would become a commodity/feature within that. This means the rates would be the defining competitiv­e advantage.

Financial institutio­ns offering the most affordable rates will bring with them a competitiv­e advantage. That plus the combinatio­n of blockchain and UN pressure should be what remitters in the UAE and worldwide should watch out for.

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