ON THE CUSP OF A NEW ERA IN PAYMENTS: OPPORTUNITIES FOR BANKS
The 2023 McKinsey report on emerging payments and the opportunities for banks.
ON THE CUSP OF A NEW ERA IN PAYMENTS: OPPORTUNITIES FOR BANKS Read More »
Emerging payments rails that are often rivals to legacy systems such as the interchange, and that facilitate integration between banking and payments apps offered by many different providers.
The 2023 McKinsey report on emerging payments and the opportunities for banks.
ON THE CUSP OF A NEW ERA IN PAYMENTS: OPPORTUNITIES FOR BANKS Read More »
A slide summarizing strategies for legacy banks to compete with fintechs and emerging payments.
HOW BANKS CAN COMPETE IN THE EVOLVING PAYMENTS LANDSCAPE Read More »
This describes how the adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Open Banking applications has witnessed remarkable growth, revolutionizing the financial industry.
HOW AI CAN ADVANCE OPEN BANKING’ – TECHTALKS Read More »
A link to an Ernst & Young white paper describing how accommodating alternative payments is an essential part of any payments strategy.
ALTERNATIVE PAYMENT METHODS – A PROVEN PAYMENTS IMPERATIVE Read More »
This is a Linkedin post describing how PayPal, card companies, and banks interact with each other in the emerging open banking ecosystem.
HOW DO PAYPAL, VISA, BANKS, AND OPEN BANKING INTERACT WITH EACH OTHER Read More »
In this white paper, TINK (a Visa company) explains how PSD3/PSR is a welcome addition to the development of open banking in Europe. PSR should address standardization issues and past problems with APIs. The requirements should be passed before the summer of 2024 with enforcement happening by the end of 2025.
EUROPEAN COMMISSION INTRODUCES PSD3/PSR TO ADVANCE OPEN BANKING Read More »
A slide with a graphic representation of the state of development of various open insurance portals by leading brands.
INNOPAY OPEN INSURANCE MONITOR (OMI) – DEVELOPER PORTAL BENCHMARK 2023 Read More »
A brief description by INNOPAY of the relationship between open banking and another financial service like open insurance. The authors suggest that mandated openness will soon change otherwise slow developments.