Technology
Financial Institutions Smile On Open Banking Model

A study of several jurisdictions examines the model of open banking, and finds that the financial services sector is strongly positive, although there are variations between specific places.
Research by fintech platform Finastra among 785
professionals at global financial institutions and banks finds
that the model known as “open banking” is eagerly sought, with
the United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong and Singapore among the most
enthusiastic.
Open banking is a term describing how third-party financial
service providers, such as insurers or credit card firms, open
access to consumer banking, transactions, and other financial
data from banks and non-bank financial institutions. Open banking
is becoming a major source of innovation which is poised to
reshape the banking industry.
Globally, more than nine in 10 financial institutions said that
open banking is important to their organisation. Moreover, this
year only 1 per cent of respondents said the model hadn’t made a
significant impact on their organisation, down from 13 per cent
last year.
Open banking is seen as a “must have” by over half of financial
institutions around the world (51 per cent), with the UAE leading
the way in terms of open banking’s importance (68 per cent),
followed by Hong Kong (58 per cent) and Singapore (56 per cent).
Whereas, on average, half (51 per cent) of European markets say
that open banking is “important but not essential” for their
organisation.
The findings are from the Financial Services: State of the Nation
Survey 2021. Research was conducted in March this year.
Considering wider trends for the next 12 months, Banking as a
Service (BaaS) is anticipated to have an impact on 85 per cent of
global financial institutions, of which 40 per cent say there
will be a significant impact. Whilst all markets broadly expect
BaaS to be impactful, Hong Kong (92 per cent), the UAE (90 per
cent) and Singapore (87 per cent) expect the impact to be
greatest.
The cost of development/expense regulations being too tight and
management or decision-maker thinking remain core barriers.
However, the cost of development/expense of R&D is a growing
concern year-on-year – previously 37 per cent in 2019, 43 per
cent in 2020 and now at 47 per cent this year, the report
said.
It has been argued that open banking could benefit wealth
management by easing pain points such as onboarding. Wealth
managers need considerable data for onboarding, and much of the
more standard information is held in a retail bank. Open banking
models might unblock some of the process.
Overall, complex regulations have been identified as the number
one barrier this year, with 40 per cent of global financial
institutions agreeing. Intricate regulatory frameworks and
differences between markets within the financial sector are also
illustrated by France (47 per cent), Singapore (45 per cent) and
Germany (44 per cent) selecting complex regulations as their
number one barrier.
The security of open banking is concerning – it has been identified by 39 per cent of all institutions as a barrier to adopting the open banking approach.