@BobLyddon: LOL:) I've noticed that. At the height of cash crunch caused by de/remonetization in India in Nov-Dec 2016, the retail payments industry regulator cum bank consortium NPCI launched BHIM, a mobile payment app that supports A2A fund transfer without entering cumbersome account, sort code details. Functionally the equivalent of EU's PayM / Zapp, which took several months / years to launch, BHIM happened in 45 days.
27 Feb 2018 10:19 Read comment
What're those services? If TPPs could flourish without PSD2 / Open Banking, why're they clamoring for regulation? Why don't they continue with the past situation?
27 Feb 2018 09:39 Read comment
"This is indeed a novel approach - we are not aware of any other case when new competitors in an industry have been obliged to rely on a specific API controlled by the incumbents," says a statement.
Seriously? Can the European Fintech Alliance name a single industry - apart from finserv, that is - in which the incumbents are mandated by regulators to share their customer info with their competitors? Yes, Amazon with Overstock.com, anyone? Facebook with Twitter? There was so much hue and cry when WhatsApp wanted to share its user info with its own owner Facebook.
IMO, the European Fintech Alliance shouldn't look the gift horse in the mouth.
26 Feb 2018 18:00 Read comment
Nice post. Is there really "anything in it" for banks in Open Banking? I keep hearing about the potential for banks to build ecosystems etc. but I haven't heard of many concrete benefits to banks from Open Banking. OTOH, there are many disadvantages of being forced to give away customer data to third parties. I wonder what'd happen if regulators forced the Amazons, Googles and the LinkedIns of the world to share their customer data with third parties, however "licensed" or empaneled they are.
26 Feb 2018 15:32 Read comment
Great post. Has helped greatly in my understanding of the anatomy of PNB fraud.
Would be great if you could share your thoughts on what's the most common combination of systems and workflow used by other banks to prevent even a single instance of this fraud from happening, let alone multiple instances over several years?
AFAIK, human users initiate payment transactions on core or other payment processing systems, after which the message is untouched by human hands as it is submitted automatically by those systems to the SWIFT Gateway system, which then sends it out to the SWIFT network. But, even in that workflow, I'm guessing sysadmins can still input a payment directly on the SWIFT Gateway. Sounds easy. But if it were really so easy in actual practice, the sky would've fallen long ago. Any idea how banks have prevented that from happening over their 30+ years of usage of SWIFT?
22 Feb 2018 12:01 Read comment
@HiteshThakkar: Thanks a lot.
21 Feb 2018 17:37 Read comment
@HiteshThakkar:
TY for your comment, which has helped elevate my understanding of the anatomy of the PNB scam a little bit. Would be great if you could share your thoughts on (1) How did this fraud go undetected for so many years? (2) What's the most common workflow used by other banks that'd prevent even a single instance of this fraud?
AFAIK, human users initiate payment transactions on core or other payment processing systems, after which the message is untouched by human hands as it is submitted automatically by those systems to the SWIFT Gateway system, which then sends it out to the SWIFT network. But, even in that workflow, I'm guessing sysadmins can still input a payment directly on the SWIFT Gateway. Any idea how a bank can prevent that from happening?
21 Feb 2018 16:41 Read comment
TY for your kind words @AnonFinextraMember.
On a side note, I must add Cash is the enemy to the list of counterproductive actions from the "War on Cash" Brigade that has pushed out the cashless / lesscash outcome further away.
21 Feb 2018 13:11 Read comment
To paraphrase Al Capone (a former Mafia Don), you can get a lot more done with cash and cashless than with cashless alone.
Since I'm a payments tech professional, I have a vested interest in the growth of cashless / lesscash. However, IMO, silly, reality-defying and headline-bait posts like this are the enemy in the drive to achieve that outcome. I've shared some alternatives in How To Really Kill Cash.
21 Feb 2018 11:48 Read comment
@DavidGodfrey: I don't know the exact figures but I can bet that the amount lost to criminal activity associated with electronic payments is 10X more than that associated with cash. If SWIFT is not an MOP, neither is cash - as someone who lived in India in November 2016, I only know too well how suddenly sovereign guarantees can be revoked. Besides, the point is moot: The PNB scam involved no cash and that's the real point - fraud can happen with any way you pay and not just when you pay with cash.
18 Feb 2018 18:29 Read comment
Manoj KheerbatFounder and CEO at Gropay
Gilbert VerdianFounder and CEO at Quant
Kimmo SoramäkiFounder and CEO at FNA
Suruchi GuptaFounder and CEO at GIANT Protocol
Walid HosniFounder and CEO at GXEGY
Welcome to Finextra. We use cookies to help us to deliver our services. You may change your preferences at our Cookie Centre.
Please read our Privacy Policy.