Asian Banking & Finance (January - March 2023)

Page 26

SECTOR REPORT: CARDS & PAYMENTS

Real-time cross-border payments edge closer to reality with ISO 20022 ISO 20022 is set to become the universal language of payments. ASIA PACIFIC

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ne of the biggest changes in the history of the payments industry is scheduled to set sail in 2023. Come March, banks and financial institutions within the SWIFT ecosystem are mandated to begin steps to fully adopt ISO 20022 guidelines for cross-border payments and cash management messages. The guidelines standardises the language and approach used by financial institutions for real-time payments, whether low or high value, across domestic, regional and international payment flows. Although it has existed for years, it is only by March 2023 that SWIFT will phase in ISO 20022 as the standard for cross-border payments and cash reporting for all banks and financial institutions under its network. As J.P. Morgan Chase Bank puts it, “ISO 20022 is expected to be the native language of payments by 2025.” Data held by SWIFT supports this sentiment. By 2023, 87% of the total value of high-value payments worldwide are expected to be made up or enabled by ISO 20022-enabled systems; for low-value payments, over half or 65% would be by systems that use ISO 20022, SWIFT’s report estimates. All aboard In terms of volume, almost 8 in 10 high-value transactions worldwide would be making use of the ISO 20022 system, whilst for low value payments, it will be 5 in 10 or 53% of transactions. These figures are just within the year of adoption–which highlight why understanding ISO 20022 is important if relevant players are to consider what the future of payments will look like. “The key value drivers of ISO 20022 are rich formatting options and the ability to capture structured and unstructured information, which seamlessly gives way to efficient processing and time savings

24 ASIAN BANKING & FINANCE | Q1 2023

By 2023, 87% of the total value of high-value payments worldwide are expected to be made up or enabled by ISO 20022-enabled systems (Photo from JPMorgan.com)

ISO 20022 is expected to be the native language of payments by 2025

Jennifer Lucas

from reduced manual intervention,” said Jennifer Lucas, Consulting Leader for EY Americas Payments; Alla Gancz, EY UK Payments Consulting Leader; and Joanna Forman, Senior Manager, Financial Services, EY. “Although migrating infrastructure to be compliant is a major change that can present challenges, banks can use this opportunity to ultimately offer better services and maintain clientcentricity, while corporations and clients can benefit from the data-rich messages,” the trio wrote in a report “Understand key challenges and benefits to ISO 20022 migration.” The most common view is that ISO 20022 should strengthen operational resiliency in payments, enhance straightthrough processing, and make the application of sanctions more efficient, according to Accenture’s

Sulabh Agarwal, Managing Director for Global Payments, and Ciarán Byrne, Executive Director and Global Head, Clearing Transformation, for J.P. Morgan Payments. Agarwal and Byrne listed potential use cases for ISO 20022 in their report “5 ways ISO 20022 could rewrite the future of payments.” The first is more accurate reporting and significantly boosted matching rates thanks to the use of automated receivables matching or ARM. The most obvious impact, of course, is that in the long run, payments, in particular, will be processed and settled more quickly, thanks to reduced errors/failures and investigations throughout the payment lifecycle, EY stated in a separate report. Automatic reports will also now come to clients when the bank receives their payments. Currently,


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OPINION PAT PATEL Economic lifeline: The coming together of fintech leaders in driving growth amid crisis

3min
pages 50-51

Steering a bank through geopolitical rapids DEREK LEATHERDALE

3min
pages 48-49

Paywatch enables early salary withdrawal for Malaysians

2min
pages 47-48

CASE STUDY 1: DBS CARD LOANS DBS HK introduces fully digital card loans for instant cash

2min
page 46

AI adoption in the banking sector is not a ‘race’ but a question of trust: HSBC

2min
page 44

EVENT COVERAGE: SFF PANEL 2 Intent vs ability: Ghana’s Kwame Oppong on why banks should shift lending models

2min
page 42

Better rates, lower fees will not be enough for digital banks to make a profit

5min
pages 40-41

EVENT COVERAGE: SINGAPORE FINTECH FESTIVAL

1min
page 39

EVENT COVERAGE: SINGAPORE FINTECH FESTIVAL Tokenised assets, stable coins central to Singapore’s crypto hub ambitions

2min
page 38

ANALYSIS: DIGITAL ADVISORY

2min
page 37

Why a hybrid platform is key to banks’ digital advisory woes

2min
pages 36-37

SECTOR REPORT: CARDS & PAYMENTS Meaningful experiences, wellness as key pillars of the return of travel: Mastercard

2min
page 34

BNPL regulations toughen debt prevention and financial literacy in Asia Pacific

4min
pages 32-33

Why the universal banking model is no longer sustainable in modern-day banking

6min
pages 30-31

REPORT: UNIVERSAL BANKING MODEL

2min
page 29

REPORT: UNIVERSAL BANKING MODEL Retail banks must operate like tech firms to thrive

3min
pages 28-29

SECTOR REPORT: CARDS & PAYMENTS

1min
page 27

Real-time cross-border payments edge closer to reality with ISO 20022

3min
pages 26-27

French fintechs tap into Asia’s booming market

3min
pages 24-25

INTERVIEW How GCash cornered the Philippines’ sachet economy with SMS-based remittance service

4min
pages 22-23

BANKING OUTLOOK: APAC APAC banking industry outlook by market

1min
page 21

Inflation, weak economies to erode Asia Pacific banks’ buffers in 2023

3min
pages 20-21

BRANCH WATCH 2: CITI HONG KONG Citi entices Hong Kong’s ultra-wealthy with first-ever Global Wealth Centre

1min
page 19

BRANCH WATCH 1: HSBC SINGAPORE HSBC Singapore’s new head office embraces hybrid ways of working

1min
page 18

How will the FTX collapse affect the cryptocurrency industry?

2min
page 16

Only 1 in 10 of banks’ energy financing deals went to renewables

2min
page 15

Revised license and laxer listing rules to rock Hong Kong fintechs

2min
page 14

P2P lending in regulatory shake-up

1min
pages 12-13

Loan demand to recover, but China’s banks still need to buff loss cushion

3min
pages 10-12

BTN’s housing loan innovation a big hit amongst millennials

3min
page 8

Daily news from Asia

1min
page 6
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