In Europe, as in the rest of the world, technology is setting the agenda for the banking sector. This year, European respondents to The Economist Intelligence Unit’s global retail banking survey identify new technologies as the primary driver of change for retail banks, both in the coming year and up to 2025, overtaking changing customer behaviour and demands for the first time.
Unlike the rest of the world, however, technology-driven change in the banking sector is following a very particular agenda, in the short-term at least: the EU’s revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2).
For citizens, the open banking mandated by many of PSD2’s provisions promises a new world of intelligent, intuitive and accessible banking services. New features and services will depend heavily on data to manage spending and personal budgets, and encourage long-term savings.
For banks, it offers long-term opportunities but, as the survey reveals, short-term challenges too. Competition from the digital sector is hotting up: a quarter of respondents believe tech giants will be their biggest non-traditional source of competition by 2020; 31% believe that will be the case by 2025.
European banks know they have no time to waste. Making open banking work, both practically and strategically, is the order of the day.
Short-term headaches
Unsurprisingly, given the mandate of PSD2, launching an open banking strategy is a top priority for the coming year for 29% of European respondents, second only in prevalence to talent acquisition and retention (30%). Open banking will still be a priority in 2025 for 26% of respondents, although more expect to be prioritising responding to regulation (35%), migrating clients to digital channels (29%) and mastering digital marketing (29%) by then.
Furthermore, the largest share of European bankers sees embracing openness as the future of the industry: 35% of respondents see acting as a true digital ecosystem—offering both banking and non-banking services that originate either internally or from third parties to customers and other financial services providers—as the primary direction in which their organisation’s business model will evolve.
But the minds of Europe’s bankers are also occupied by the short-term technical challenges that open banking presents, the survey reveals. Banks in the EU are due to deliver fully operational portals for their application programming interfaces (APIs), intrinsic to open banking, by September 2019. However, three in ten respondents from Europe identify a lack of international standards for APIs as their greatest concern regarding regulation and standards.
Indeed, the introduction of APIs in the European banking sector has not been smooth sailing so far. Banks had until June 14th 2019 to prove they had dedicated APIs available for testing by third parties. If they missed the deadline, they may have to offer fallback options and spend more IT money on secure screen scraping.
“Whether the third parties test [our APIs] is out of our control,” says Matt Cox, head of open banking at Nationwide Building Society, one of nine UK banks charged with leading the open banking push, called the CMA9.
“For us, testing is still in early days. We were one of few of the CMA9 to have the full suite ready for the March deadline. We are working with two to four different third parties and are only just at the beginning of testing payment journeys in any meaningful way,’” he says.
Mr Cox feels that the majority of European banks are further behind than the UK. He may be right; a recent survey found 41% of banks1 failed to have API testing sandboxes ready in March to allow third-party providers the chance to test them for six months.