A
bank-wide centralized payment services hub: Will it be just a dream or reality?
Payments have been an
integral part of banking services ever since the advent of monetary system and
this has been evolving along with the number of services and channels banks
have kept adding over the years. With the transition and increased acceptance
of electronic cash over the years with multiple channels at its disbursal like
Mobile banking, Internet banking, Cards, it has become an increased necessity
for banks to have an enterprise wide payment services hub (PSH) to effectively
monitor the flow of cash and thus to provide transparency and traceability of
monetary movements which will help in measure of its risk exposure. Banks are also hard-pressed to find the
most efficient means to fulfill payments and to provide the best customer
experience possible.
Currently,
more than 40% of payment services hub projects are at large financial
institutions with assets exceeding $100 billion, and nearly 56% are in Western
and Northern Europe, based on data provided by nine leading PSH vendors.
However, banks of all sizes and from all geographies are starting to consider
how to adopt PSH concepts in their payments businesses, according to the Celent
report, “Payment Services Hubs: The Bank’s Perspective.”
To have a standardized and
simple solution has brought in the initiative amongst banks towards
transitioning to a unified enterprise-wide payment solution. The
focus is on creating payment hubs which will serve as a single platform that
operates across all customer relationships, channels of interaction and payment
alternatives. But few financial institutions
actually have implemented a true, single global payments hub.
What's
holding back banks from making an infrastructure improvement that could create
value for their payments operations while improving the customer experience for
clients? The reasons cited are many which holds back banks from making an
investment in payments modernization or rather say payments consolidation are
like the huge onetime cost, the region or country specific regulations and
business complexities, the limits of legacy systems and finally the uncertainty
of the end result or success rate of implementing a Payment Services Hub (PSH).
Defining
a Payment Services Hub (PSH):
A PSH is
“the centralisation of payments services within a bank to support processing
all types of payments through all payment mechanisms globally,” according to Richard
Davies of Finextra.
A
PSH is an intelligent central engine that uses workflows to capture, map and
route payment information through clearing, settlement and risk mitigation,
according to Gartner.
Current
State and the Need for Change:
Most
payment infrastructures today consist of two main components as defined below:
§ Customer
Interaction Channels – Any system used by a customer to deliver
payments to a bank is defined here as a Customer Interaction Channel. These
channels may be interactive or file based. Examples of an interactive channel
include a retail Internet banking site where a customer is paying his or her
monthly bills and a teller entering a remittance payment to Mexico on behalf of
a branch customer. A file based interaction would be one in which a collection
of payments is sent to the bank via a file transmission, such as a corporate
customer sending a file containing payroll, wire transfers, and International
payments for processing.
§ Payment
Execution System – An execution system is system used by the
financial institution to actually process the payments sent to the bank through
the Customer Interaction Channels. These systems are connected to the payment
processing network, and each bank typically has multiple Payment Execution
Systems that correspond to different types of payments. Examples here include a
US Wire Transfer System (connected to FEDWIRE), an International Wire Transfer
System (connected to SWIFT), and a UK low value payment system (connected to
BACS).
The past ten years has seen a proliferation of
Customer Interaction Channels. Payment instructions can now be received by the
financial institution through a myriad of routes, including Retail Internet
Banking, Corporate Internet Banking, Remote Capture Check Truncation, and “on
behalf of” customer service payments. Typically, each of these interaction
channels has had to connect directly to a Payment Execution System, creating a
’spaghetti effect’ of integration complexity. In addition, many components of
the payment processing workflow have been buried in the Payment Execution
System code, preventing reuse across different payment types. For example,
processes like duplicate checking, OFAC checking, AML, and IBAN validation are
not centrally located.
The requirement for
modernization of this existing payments infrastructure is driven by need to
handle a changing payments world efficiently and cost-effectively with a clear
focus on improving customer service levels. Payment infrastructures need to
support new initiatives such as the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA), Pan-European
ACH (PEACH), and UK Faster Payments. Adaptation to new regulatory and risk
management practices (OFAC, AML, IBAN Validation) need to be made in one
location and apply to multiple payment types to save both the cost of initial
implementation and future maintenance. In addition, customers demand better
visibility into the end to end payment process, as well as increased
straight-through processing and the ability to repair and resolve issues
independently.
A payment
services hub addresses the current issues in a number of ways. COST; by focuses on industry standards
hardware and software one can reduce costs. By focussing on the commonalities
across all payments and spread investment across all payment types rather than
making card investments then duplicating them to an ACH investment and then an
international payment investment. In a nutshell, we can make a considerable
difference in terms of cost savings by standardizing payments through a PSH.
PSH can reduce the COMPLEXITY by
bringing the multiple systems / environments that banks presently run to
process their payments into one single environment thereby reducing cost and
better monitoring. Adopting a PSH approach really enforces the need to look at
payments as whole rather than across business types. As HYBRID payment systems
like Faster Payments, PayPal and iDEAL becomes more endemic in banks, a PSH can
be brought in to reduce the complexity.
Payment
Services Hub Vendors:
In evaluating PSH software vendors to support payment services hub implementations, banks must align the strengths and weaknesses
associated with the vendors market for coming up with a decision on choosing a
particular vendor as payments remain the backbone of any banking organization.
It’s the bank’s decision what type of software service provider they
would like to choose to partner with. Payment Services Hub (PSH) vendors can be broadly classified into three types based a their industry focus: a). Payments/transaction banking focus - examples includes Clear2Pay, ACI, Fundtech and Dovetail b). Broad Financial services focus - examples include Polaris, Misys, and c). Broad industry focus - examples include Tata Consultancy, Logica, Infosys to name a few.
According to Celent, majority of PSH implementations are to be seen in
Europe and North America with Asia following the latter two as per the diagram
below.
It’s now to
be seen that these payment services hub long talked about that were considered
just a dream is turning into reality with a few successful implementations
across the globe. What distinguishes a hub from just another payments
component is genuine flexibility. It’s being able to fit into a complex
environment and talk to other systems including the legacy applications. It’s
using data from these applications to enrich the payments process. And it’s
making what banks already have in place work more effectively – improving
payments services. This level of flexibility means the hub can work in
conjunction with processing, accounting and reporting systems, while also
linking to other services, such as FX.

