Ahead of the Compliance Curve
Ahead of the Compliance Curve
Learn more about with the impact of the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) initiative:
Case Study: Commerzbank Powers Payments Growth with a Pan-European PTS/SEPA Solution (PDF 212KB)
CSC Whitepaper: SEPA – Reaping the Benefits of Strategic Payments Management (PDF 595KB)
CSC Payment Technology Helps European Banks Compete
Introducing the Euro in 1999 gave Europe a common currency and money policy. However, non-cash payments between the countries — mainly credit transfers, direct debits, and credit and debit cards — have been expensive and complicated to transact, and a barrier to European monetary integration. The Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) project is designed to eliminate national differences in payment instruments and processing infrastructures in Europe, and harmonise fees for cross-border and domestic Euro transactions. SEPA aims to transform individual national retail payment markets into one pan-European market.
SEPA must be fully implemented in 29 European countries by December 2010. The ultimate goal is to deliver harmony in all financial transactions across Europe and create the conditions for much greater standardisation in the movement of money across the world.
The potential cost savings from SEPA for corporate and public sector customers is huge. For banks, however, there have been fears that SEPA represents a punitive compliance cost and could lead to a serious threat from new competitors. Lost revenue from pure payments offerings will have to be recouped elsewhere as mandates will restrict the rates that can be charged for cross-border payments.
A New Vision of SEPA Compliance
“CSC focuses on the positive view of payments harmonisation,” said Roger Ward, principal consultant with the London office of CSC’s Financial Services Sector. “Leveraging SEPA requires a new vision of payments as a cost lever.
Germany’s Commerzbank Leverages SEPA Compliance for Business Expansion
Some banks are acting now to gain competitive advantage from SEPA today and tomorrow. When Europe’s financial industry committed to SEPA and standardised processes, Commerzbank, based in Hamburg and with more than 8 million customers worldwide, saw an opportunity.
As it built a SEPA-compliant system based on CSC’s Payments Transaction System (PTS), Commerzbank also created a platform to develop and expand its corporate payments business. CSC’s PTS/SEPA is standard yet customisable Web-based software that enables banks to get ready for SEPA without huge investment. It delivers efficient and cost-effective straight through processing of global electronic payment transactions.
“Our payments management specialists are very pleased with CSC’s PTS/SEPA system,” said Horst Rinkenberger, Commerzbank’s vice president of IT. “They believe it gives Commerzbank the platform to exploit SEPA opportunities — not just in the ‘mature’ branches, but in the fast-growing Eastern Europe units too.”
A Blueprint for Global Payments
The execution of SEPA across Europe has enormous opportunities and challenges for corporate business, the public sector, and the banking and associated financial services industry that serves them. Some observers view SEPA as more than a uniquely European initiative. It could be the blueprint for future global payment transactions, affecting processes, technology standards and industry structure, and driving major business efficiencies worldwide.
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Find out more about CSC’s PTS/SEPA solution.
