| New regulations and needs for cost efficiency are putting payment systems
under pressure. While many of the payment infrastructures currently employed
by banks are siloed, they are under increasing pressure to be more versatile
and need to support both internal and external due diligence. This article
looks at how the payments industry can handle the future demand.
This article is based on a roundtable discussion on the payments
infrastructure held at SIBOS.
The payments infrastructures employed by banks today are a reflection
of the past. They have served the industry well over the years but are
becoming less suitable for the future. These infrastructures were designed
to support the payments business as it was, primarily focused on supporting
internal needs of the bank, but they do not provide easily for the continuing
changing regulations and due diligence needed for today.
The new infrastructures need to be very versatile. They must provide
for multiple and changing channels providing existing and new services.
They must accommodate industry changes and new market infrastructures
such as Target 2 and EBA Step 2. They have to provide a platform for
cost reduction in an environment of increasing and changing customer
demands. Most importantly they also have to cater for the needs of external
bodies, in particular the due diligence required by regulators and government.
As Ray Mulhern of Wachovia commented: "It's not dead, but it's certainly
very inefficient in many areas."
This is a fundamental change and means that a new environment needs to
evolve. The move toward this has to be considered in the context of a
risk management framework that balances risk, cost, capability and future
requirements.
Regulation
New regulations create serious issues for banks. There is no choice
to supporting new regulations - it is a price of being in the payments
business. New regulations create great pressure on banks - they are the
biggest challenge and can prove very costly to deal with.
Regulation changes, such as those created by SEPA, OFAC, Basel II, IAS,
Sarbanes-Oxley and other authorities, need to be implemented across multiple
payment types and affect multiple bank products. SEPA alone has resulted
in over 40 legislative directives. With the current silo-based payment
infrastructures this can result in one regulatory directive being implemented
numerous times, this is a costly and risky exercise. The focus is now
on managing the changes needed for due diligence and regulation.
Pressures
Besides regulation, there are other pressures on the payments industry
that are considerable. New market infrastructures, such as EBA, ISO20022,
create the need for further changes that cannot be avoided. Cost pressures
are relentless, for example, the advent of the EU rules for SEPA has
created pressures that will increase further as the industry is forced
to implement more competitive structures. Eight per cent of revenue is
now spent on compliance according to Wachovia's Mulhern.
Customers themselves create further pressures. They are looking for better
services at lower cost and for shorter payments cycles. In some instances
they are driving the industry with groups such as TWIST. Commercial customers
are looking to integrate their back office systems with the banking systems,
to create automatic payments from ERP systems and this introduces additional
requirements for the payments systems - for example, the preservation
and transmission of reference data. The issue these create is again the
need to be able to respond in a timely way, minimizing risk and cost.
Again the current infrastructures do not easily facilitate this.
Existing Systems
The existing systems have served banks well for years and there is an
understandable reluctance to change them. These payments systems have
worked well and can continue to work well within the limits of what they
do. But their decentralized and siloed nature makes change difficult
and time consuming. "The challenge is in the legacy siloes, how
do you retool the infrastructure?" said John Mesberg at IBM.
Modern payments systems are no longer just about processing payments,
they have to support both internal and external due diligence. The range
of regulations is going to increase, not decrease. Sarbanes-Oxley, Know
Your Customer, liquidity management, new EU directives and new EU terrorist
legislation are all adding to the problem.
The structures for the future will need to process the payment itself,
but they also need to be flexible and allow changes, such as those forced
by legislation and governance, to be accommodated quickly and easily.
The current infrastructures do not make this easy - they are rigid, expensive
and risky to change. "The banks have been good at adapting, but
we are about to go through revolutionary change,” commented Edward
Glassman at ABN AMRO.
Exploitation of Current Strengths
Some aspects of the current systems have great strengths:
- Volumes are catered for
- Proven reliability
- Well understood by business operations and IT department
For example, a bank may have a very good system for foreign exchange
systems, liquidity management, or limit management that they have depended
on for years. These quality systems should be retained and exploited,
but they should be treated as components and utilized as service points.
They can then be combined with other services within a more flexible
infrastructure that orchestrates the services to achieve the processing
needed.
Often a bank will have several systems fulfilling similar or identical
roles, in this case then the best should be chosen and the others retired.
This way banks will be able to change only that which has to be changed,
to solve weaknesses, or to add new function, such as new regulatory requirements,
while retaining the strong parts of their existing systems. "We
must utilize the best of what we have, but make it available to many
users,” says ABN AMRO's Glassman.
Positioning for the Future
The aim is to increase cost effectiveness, improve flexibility and the
ability to be dynamic - enabling response to market and environmental
pressures. The approach has to be one of rationalization through incremental
change within a managed risk framework. "Banks cannot sustain the
current cost structure," says IBM's Mesberg. The aim being the ability
to utilize the best of what exists today, while adding and supplementing
that with new capabilities that can be utilized in a common framework
across the many products and channels. "We need tools to help us
link the silos so, for example, we can share an OFAC filter," says
Wachovia's Mulhern.
The exploitation of reusable components as service points within a common
framework and the underlying infrastructure to support this are the key
elements needed.
Risk of Change
How to organize change without risk or, more importantly, minimize risk
is a key concern. Management of risk is critical, but the risk profile
is changing, it comes from many areas: customers, industry, internally
and regulatory.
Different banks will have different profiles and will put emphasis in
different places. But it is moving to the point where making a series
of small (and sometimes not so small) forced changes to accommodate new
regulation across the range of systems is becoming increasingly risky.
It is reaching the point where it may be less risky to evolve to a new
environment which can orchestrate the payments flow, utilize the best
parts of the current systems and enable new functions to be easily embedded.
The impending changes need to be managed very carefully.
A Way Forward
"Banks have invested too much in their infrastructures to simply
enter into an era of wholesale replacement," claimed ABN AMRO's
Glassman. According to Wachovia's Mulhern, "We will see better connectivity
(via message brokers and the like); consolidation of redundant applications
into a best of breed at enterprise level; and selective replacement where
technology is clearly outdated and replacement is more economical and
faster to market.”
The challenge is to identify where and what to change. Identify the most
critical areas that need to be replaced and do this using a new platform
that is component-based and can be reused in other areas. By identifying
the most critical areas that need to be replaced, banks can plan their
approach to gain the most benefit, with the least risk.
This could be single areas such as directory services, routing or validation,
or a set of areas making up a major part of the processing. This needs
to be established within a cost/benefit framework as well as a risk and
capability analysis. Banks need to consider if they can make these changes
themselves or get help from outside and, for example, utilize external
components rather than create their own.
There is sometimes an understandable reluctance to do this, since they
have been dealing with these issues internally for many years. But this
in itself can be a risk, the market is moving so quickly that an internal
focus can create difficulties. It is easy to lose sight of the market
and miss key opportunities.
There is also the question of capability. With so many changes
being required at the same time, many banks will not have the resources
or skills to do all that is required. There is therefore a strong argument
for considering outside assistance, especially for the 'industry' low
value-add aspects. |