Showing posts with label interpay - equens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interpay - equens. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 06, 2015

Reflection on almost 100 years of retail payments in the Netherlands

These next few days we will be processing the last Chipknip transactions in the Netherlands. This marks the end of a period of almost hundred years of consumer payments in the Netherlands. Here is a brief reflection on this period. My hope is that we retain our innovative mindset and that we abandon old school practices like: competition on technology and inward-thinking-based marketing practices.


The beginnings
It all started out with a certain demand of the public and small retailers, around 1900. It took however more than ten years before the city giro of Amsterdam (1916) and the national giro of the Netherlands (1918) were set up. In the period leading up to this moment, the cashiers were asked whether they wished to improve their services, as this might lead to the parliament to conclude that no national giro was necessary. Their response was too meagre as a result of which they created their biggest rival: the national giro system, operated by government.

This system effectively created a benchmark for the private industry by offering (some time after it's start) payment services for free to the public. Today we would call this the Internet model, but in those days, this lead to repeated discussions on the undue competition element. Bankers and cashiers assumed that the national giro was cross-subsidized by government; while effectively the reverse became true. The national giro acted as a cash cow that covered some of the other costs for the Ministry of Transport (including the costs of post offices etc).

The city giro Amsterdam has stood out mostly for its innovations: the use of modern bookkeeping machines, the introduction of photo-imaging (in the 1930s) to process payments easier as well as the early introduction of a payment card to the public. The national giro, in turn, was early to create a mechanism of inpayments that could be used by government services, that used similar (punch card) standards.

In this respect it should be noted that the national giro, during the previous century, was plagued by several operational distortions, leading to 'giro stops'. One big one occurred in the 1920s and shut the system down for almost a year, other ones happened after the second world war. These stops instilled a big trauma into the organisation with the effect that when in 1965 a change was made to using punch cards and mainframes, this was done with meticulous scientific precision in order not to fail. Ever since, the postal giro (later Postbank) would be very keen and strong in the area of operational logistics and control.

Competition on standards and technology
For the most part of the evolution of Dutch payments, there were differences in technology used. A first attempt to bridge these differences occurred after the second world war when a commission on the integration of giro traffic tried to bridge the bankers vs giro gap. This didn't work out.

In the mid 1960s the bankers were keen to find funding in the retail market and realised they needed a better clearing system to process faster payments. While they were in the process of deliberating this move, the postal giro offered them to join/use the same standards as they were, in order to achieve uniform processing. For strategic reasons, the banks decided not to do this and chose a slightly modified technology and numbering system of their own. Remember: this was of course the age of shielding off markets by technology.

The net effect for the consumers and companies was less positive however. In the end it took some 30 years to create bridging standards/protocols to integrate the different payment standards of bank and giro. And even when the digital, networking time started (in the 1980s) banks and giro found it hard to abandon the classic competition by technology paradigm. For the EFTPOS network they did use a common standard and this also seemed to work for the Chipknip e-money products. Yet, due to misunderstandings and distrust at the board room level, the Postbank decided to jump the Chipknip ship to start the separate Chipper product. Again, the effect was that consumers and retailers were burdened with dual standards in a market that is too small to do so.

Inward based marketing of the big banks
With the deregulation of financial markets and the privatisation of the Postbank, all providers of payments were commercial companies. The Dutch banks grew bigger and with that their bureaucracies. Postbank gradually lost its touch-and-feel as a former public entity and became a bank like all others. The best event that symbolises this is the abolition of the Postbank brand by ING.

The net effect of becoming bigger and more ambitious is that straightforward customer research and marketing gets stampified. This is a word that I coined to denote the fact that in those big banking bureaucracies the responsibilities of employees - with the only exception of the board - becomes limited to the size of a postal stamp. The result is that these companies (marketing) departments require more time for internal debate, offcie politics and consensus-finding which they can't spend at finding out how to best serve the customer.

The consequence of this stampification is that the banks lose touch with their customers and reality. Our last retail payment product, the Chipknip, showed this most clearly. The ridiculous local battle between two competing e-money schemes (although perfect from a competition perspective) created so much nuisance for retailers that this inspired them to get back at the banks. Infuriated by high terminal switching costs, they found the newly set up competition authority at their side to fight the banks cartel behaviour.

As such our retailers were quite successful: the banks were being fined and a part of the fine was channeled towards them (via a Covenant) to improve the EFTPOS situation in the Netherlands. This Covenant was even prolonged to ensure a continued collective rebate for retailers on EFTPOS fees. Effectively we could thus see the retailers as being the clear winners in the last 15 years of retail payments here in the Netherlands. [And as with today's MIF-debate we can wonder whether the benefits they derived from emptying the pockets of banks did really end up in the consumer pockets by lower prices.]

Back to inward-based-marketing: the best (and typical) example is the way the Chipknip product was initially taken off the market. Banks informed the customers that they all had to unload their Chipknips at specific loading/unloading points. This lead to a big confusion and questions on twitter. Eventually some individual banks decided to give the money back on the basis of the internal administration so that customers didn't need to bother going to an obscure loading point. And then, quickly, all banks decided to do this.

I sincerely hope that we will no longer witness these old school thinking marketing methods in the new year. Banks need to find a way to innovate and listen to clients and society or they will be trapped in old behaviour that is only comprehensible from a stampification point of view but not understandable for customers outside the bank.

Outlook
If history is anything to go by, we may well see a repetition of the SEPA-dynamics in the banking domain. What I mean with that is the following: as banks are busy lining up their internal systems in order to conform with a whole range of upcoming new EU regulation (keywords: PSD2, MIF, AML), the non-banks will be able to build all kinds of new products at the fringes of the payments market.

Most of these new products won't be made from a payments perspective but will solve a user problem. Creating a payment button in these products doesn't require much more than a direct customer relation and a European direct debit agreement. So we might well see the banks moving into a back-seat role of providers of the payment rails for non-bank providers of user services.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

ING first to announce SEPA strategy for cards/terminals - all brands allowed

Yesterdays Telegraaf contained some interesting news. ING has announced that it will sell POS-terminals and contracts to retailers which accept V-Pay, Maestro and PIN, all for the low price of todays PIN-transaction. Only one condition applies: it should be an EMV compliant terminal.

Well, this is exactly what retailers wished: clarity on future prices and terms and conditions. So one would think that would now be happy.... but are they...?

Well, no of course. The instant that a retailer gets the prices and desires he wants, he assumes that he has insufficiently bargained and that there is more left to bargain for. And he will immediately start negotiating for another round of fee cuts or what have you.

Likewise in the Dutch situation. In their reply to the ING announcement the retailers didn't spend any second complimenting ING on their vision, their fee structure or on fulfilling their previous demand. The next complaint in line is now that they find it intolerable that on the issuing side (which is completely not their concern) the PIN technology is based on magstripe and the other brands on EMV. In their view PIN should move to chip-based PIN as well....

To be continued.... I would say... until banks decide to stop participating in this retailer bargaining game.

Friday, January 04, 2008

van Hove's take on the Commission flawed interchange decision

Amidst all the political noise on the interchange decision of the Commission it is good to also see that some academics still see the whole picture and have the courage to challenge politicians where it hurts. See this article by Leo van Hove and more particularly his closing remark:

So if regulating one payment instrument can have unintended repercussions on substitutes, and a prohibition of interchange fees would be a leap in the dark, what are enlightened policy makers to do? They could simply try to ensure that market forces work, and in particular that merchants cannot be locked in by card networks. To that end, retailers should be allowed to "surcharge" and pass on interchange fees to consumers. Promoting competition among card networks as well as among various payment instruments should also be high on regulators' lists. More generally, we need policy makers who have a comprehensive vision of the future of our payment system -- and who have the political courage to make cash more expensive in order to lower its cost to society.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Dutch migration & transition scenario for SEPA published

See the article here and the transition plan (in English) here.

Essentially it describes that Dutch banks will slowly start moving towards SEPA without committing to a firm deadline. Banks stress that they will not give in to political pressure to phase out instruments quickly, but prefer a gradual migration allowing time to judge developments and develop alternatives for current domestic products. In 2009 banks and stakeholders will have a further look to determine the exact future of the domestic products. For the debit-card system PIN, this means that it will stick around for some more years; thus allowing a smooth transition. Both banks and retailers explain to the media that they're happy with this decision. And the same goes for bill payment mechanisms as acceptgiro and the e-purse Chipknip.

Meanwhile the retailer lobby against banks and credit-cards continues with a new set of questions in parliament, this time about the liability shift that accompanies the migration to EMV. And once more the whole SEPA-developments are misused by retailers to complain about regular price shifts and incentive structures in the market. It is getting to become a bit boring, although one must applaud the retailers' lobbying power (considering that over the last months I think there have been three instances where almost literal retailer complaints were fed to MP's to demand a reply by the Minister of Finance).

Banks in the mean time try to explain to the public that yes, due to the new regulations in payments (which demands more clarity in pricing structures) there will be visible price increases in the future. But they refuse to be blamed for this, given that - as the Minister of Finance explains - it is the desire and effort of all EU politicians and EU parliament to increase efficiency in payments by means of more transparent, cost-oriented and transaction based pricing.

Saturday, June 09, 2007

EBALink (Equens) extended to SEPA

See the press release of equens to see that on June 6, Equens announced it will extend its EBALink service to SEPA. This means that through Equens, Dutch banks will be able to send and receive SEPA payments (Credit Transfer and Direct Debit) to and from banks that are connected to the Euro Banking Association (EBA), but not to Equens or one of its partners such as Seceti. Within SEPA reachability is a crucial necessity. Therefore this is again an important milestone for Equens towards the realisation of SEPA reach for the Dutch community.

The Dutch Central Bank (De Nederlandsche Bank – DNB) will continue its facilitating role as direct participant in EBA. Equens will take care of the interfacing to EBA and the clearing and settlement preparation of SEPA payments to and from the Dutch banks. Furthermore, Equens will also enable other EBA participants to make use of this service.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Equens and Italian Seceti collaborate on SEPA

See the press release here and discover that Equens and Seceti agreed on collaborating to clear their SEPA “cross community” payments via Equens and Seceti as of 1 January 2008. This collaboration allows both payment processors to offer European banks an alternative for clearing their payments throughout Europe.

Michael Steinbach, Chairman of Equens' Board of Directors: "According to our strategy we will offer a variety of clearing possibilities via e.g. an Equens clearing community, collaboration with partners and other ways to ensure reachabilty and interoperability. We can act as a single point of entry for our clients". The list of Equens’s prominent current clients includes several leading European banks such as ABN AMRO, Citigroup, DZ BANK, ING, KBC Bank, OP Bank Group, Rabobank, etc.

The client base of Equens is located in most of the European countries. “Seceti as one of the biggest domestic payment processors in Italy is looking forward to create a maximum service level for our clients. The collaboration offers an alternative, ex tremely competitive, for clearing services in Europe" stated Giuseppe Capponcelli, General Manager of Seceti. With the start of SEPA on January 1, 2008, a euro-domestic market will arise and Seceti is SEPA ready.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Equens Chairmain expects slow migration to SEPA

See this article:
During the 6th international EPCA Conference Michael Steinbach, Chairman of the Board of Directors announced the opening of Equens' first representative office in Helsinki, Finland. Equens signed a contract with OP Bank Group Finland. As of mid-2007, Equens will process EU regulation payments via its advanced ZVS-processing platform on behalf of OP Bank Group. The signing can be considered as a milestone because this is the first time that a Finnish bank outsources its payment processing to a foreign full-service payment processor. The representive office has been opened on 3 May 2007 and can be seen as a next step in the realisation of Equens' ambition to become one of the major and prevailing processors in Europe.

During this conference Equens' Chairman of the Board of Directors Michael Steinbach gave an overview of the SEPA developments in the coming years. And I noted in the article/press release that it was a realistic view. Steinbach stated: "It will take at least several years for SEPA-products to become mature. Product developments like e- and m-payments and e-invoicing for SEPA will further extend the SEPA-products. Eventually, standardised connections between the euro-domestic payments market and other major economies can lead to a worldwide standardised payment society. Beyond SEPA internationalisation will continue on a global scale. Global customers will look for global payment solutions and further scale increase can be achieved by combining volumes for example in the European and American market. This globalisation however will not have the political motivation that SEPA has. Globalisation will therefore be market-driven".

Quite a realistic sound on SEPA. Much better than all those regulators that still keep thinking 2010 is the deadline for major migration to SEPA.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

SIA-SSB merger completed

Finextra reports that SIA-SSB has merger is now completed. This constitutes a merger between Società Interbancaria per l’Automazione and Cedborsa and Società per iServizi Bancari and it may become one of Europe’s technology main players in the card processing, payments system and capital markets space. The firm expects to manage 7.3 billion transactions with debit and credit cards and payment and collection operations, 8 thousand billion bytes carried on the network and 73 million trading transactions on financial markets this year.

The new group is composed of the parent company and the subsidiaries Kedrios, Perago, RA Computer, SiNSYS and TSP, which will maintain autonomous corporate structures. Hungarian firm GBC will be added to the group pending authorisation by the local market antitrust authorities.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Keyware partners with RBS to increase acquiring competition in Belgium

See the article here to find out that Keyware acquired BRV NV in a move to expand its processing of card transactions from retailer cards (Aurora and PASS for Cetelem), Diners card to Visa and Mastercard. It will use BRV's Visa and Mastercard license. And is bound to also compete for the debit-card transactions. Leaving the Belgium market of currenly 716 million transactions in the hands of players such as the Bank Card Company, euroConex, Europabank, Keyware and First Data.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Unisys introduces new Open Payments Platform for banks: cooperates with Clear2Pay

Unisys issued a press release, outlining that they've developed a service oriented architecture to help banks migrate their current processing to a new platform. It should work fine with all kinds of technologies and database platforms. Interesting part is that Unisys has also decided to become value-added reseller for Clear2Pay. This confirms Clear2Pays prominent position.

While the news may appear to be a bit techy, the consequences are clear. We're heading towards an open panEuropean market, with open technology solutions that help achieve low costs for banks. Quite a bit different from the old days where IBM was the main provider of integrated proprietary hard/software.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Small bank BNG continues and prolongs outsourcing to Ordina

See this article (in Dutch) which informs us that Bank Nederlandse Gemeenten (BNG, with a lot of municipalities as customers) chose to outsource their payments and support ICT to Ordina for a period of 10 years rather than the intended seven. A signal that it is quite likely that the SEPA-move will lead to a number of small banks outsourcing their systems (because they don't want to bothered with al upcoming changes in reachability, regulation an what have you).

First Data security chief calls for changes in security standard

See this article in information news here that outlines that:
First Data has a hard time becoming compliant with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards (PCI DSS). First Data has spent quite some money on compliance initiatives to lock down systems from hackers trying to gain access to the constant stream of credit card data that passes through the company's massive systems. Mr Mellinger of First Data calls it an uphill battle since attacker methods are growing in sophistication and attacks come in so many forms.

Deadlines have been set for merchants to prove compliance by the end of the year. But so far industry estimates show that more than 60% of merchants fail to meet the current standards. Thus, Mellinger, who developed the precursor to the current PCI DSS rules, is calling for an overhaul to eliminate subjectivity and ease restrictions to get more merchants to meet the standard. "I would rather they set the bar lower and then raise it once more merchants have complied," Mellinger said. "The more people we can get compliant, the better off we are."

Mellinger is also calling for a PCI DSS status directory in which compliant merchants and processors are publicly listed. Opponents say such a directory could be used by hackers to find vulnerable companies to attack. But Mellinger insists that it would reward businesses that are compliant and get others to move faster on compliance projects.

Well, life ain't always easy if you want to move transactions around. I think some day we will look back on this and actually be astonished by how we did it old-school style (with hardly any protection at all).

Friday, April 20, 2007

Lost in transactions: LogicaCMG report on reachability SEPA

See the LogicaCMG website here and download the report lost in transactions. A survey done by LogicaCMG established that:
35 per cent of all retail banks (33 per cent in the “pure” eurozone excluding Sweden and the UK) anticipate problems in the correct addressing and processing of SEPA payments through banks and intermediaries. Perhaps optimistically 44 per cent expect the problems to ease over time when domestic payments volumes migrate to SEPA schemes. But 48 per cent expect the situation to stay the same during this process. In addition, 17 per cent of the banks surveyed expect difficulties in identifying the correct intermediary routing information for receiving banks, accepting that there will be operational failures.

A headline figure for the operational costs to the industry could reach between €650 million and €1.3 billion per year. This is based on conservative estimates of STP rates and payment volumes, together with the banks’ own estimates for cost of failed transactions – as evidenced by the survey.

Well, it looks as if LogicaCMG are not just investigating this for fun or for the public good. They are also among the first to address the concern that they raised themselves. Because it accidentily happens to be the case that they set up, In cooperation with CB.net, the so-called SEPA Directory. This SEPA Directory will:
- improve straight-through processing for SEPA transactions with comprehensive, premium-quality data you can trust,
- route payments with ease with a complete, granular BIC11 database,
- enrich payment instructions with IBAN to BIC validation and lookup.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

First Data to compete with Banksys this year

See this article in Trends.be and find out that First Data will start competing with Banksys this year for point of sale transactions.

See also this older ePaynews story: that outlines that Euronet Worldwide has won its first deal to provide SEPA (Single Euro Payments Area) compliant cross-border transaction processing in Central and Eastern Europe. The Leawood, Kansas-based processor has signed a multi-year contract with Austria's OMV Refining & Marketing, which operates a network of petrol stations in Central Europe.

So the signs of further competiton and consolidation in the processing market are all around.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

PBS signs agreement with China Unionpay (CUP) to accept their cards in the Nordic countries

See the PBS press-release to find out that PBS has signed an agreement with China Unionpay (CUP), China’s largest card company. China Unionpay is the issuer of the CUP card, which is found in the pockets of 1.3 billion Chinese, making it the equivalent of Denmark’s Dankort. The agreement means that Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and Icelandic merchants who have entered into an agreement with PBS on the acceptance of international cards will be able to accept the CUP card in future. (..) From the autumn 2007, Chinese cardholders will be able to use their CUP card in over 30,000 shops in Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Iceland that have entered into an agreement with PBS on the acceptance of international cards.

I recall that China Unionpay also had an agreement in the Netherlands with Paysquare, as apart of the move where CUP extends its international network of countries and merchants which accept the CUP card. A logical move given the expected increase of Chinese tourists to Europe.

Friday, April 06, 2007

Technical mishap at Equens makes Postbank clients suffer

BN/DeStem reported on April 3 that Postbank clients were unable to pay wih their debit-card at the offices of the railways, gas stations and so on. This unavailability originated at Equens where an unattetive system operator made an error. Which meant that all payment authorisations to Postbank were off-line until 8.30.

A friend of mine reported that the situation at Utrecht Central Railway Station was quite interesting. All automated ticket machines were out of use and people just stepped in without buying a ticket. Which makes one wonder about liabilities. Would the railways now be able to recoup the unpaid tickets at Equens..?

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Atos Origin wins Equens outsourcing contracts

Finextra reports that: Atos Origin wins Equens outsourcing contracts. The Dutch bit of Equens has outsourced its mainframe operations and office workstation automation to Atos Origin. Which is likely to be a further step towards optimizing size/costs of Equens.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

PBS and BBS merge card processing operations

See also the Finextra article:
Norwegian payments processor Banking and Business Solutions (BBS) and Danish payments body Payment Business Services (PBS) are merging their respective card processing operations to form a new company called Northern European Transaction Services (Nets).
Nets will offer card payment processing services in the North European markets and aims to increase annual volumes from three billion transactions to five billion transactions by the end of 2008.


BBS and PBS will each own a 50% stake in the venture and say Nets will also seek additional investors to fund further expansion in Europe. The new company will be headed by PBS EVP Klaus Frandsen.


Well, there was already one sheep (TAI/Interpay--> Equens) over the bridge, so more are bound to follow.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Equens to trial German-Dutch link between POS-systems

Equens, the former Interpay and TAI, was in the news today. A brief article in De Telegraaf mentions that Equens will hook up the German and Dutch POS-switching services directly, rather than via the international card networks. This is a trial now, but may become market reality later. A number of similar trials from Germany to Italy and Spain are also running.

For Equens this is a logical move as it has German and Dutch banks as its customer and it may want to use a single technology/protocol rather than continue operating two similar ones. But also the Commission and ECB may be happy. The linking of domestic POS-networks, which started out as the Berlin Gruppe, has their warm support (or anything else for that matter which could countervail the 'US-oriented' Visa and Mastercard).

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Ministry of Finance confirms: no difference in execution time between banks and former Postgiro

Our Ministry of Finance was asked in Parliament whether or not the fact that it had moved its payment contract from Rabo to ING/Postbank had resulted in longer execution times. Not a strange question, because since day and age (about 90 years) the execution time of payments between (former) postgiro to banks looked like 2 days while the reverse route could be done in 1 day. This is due to technical booking conventions (when is the beginning of a new booking day....) applied by the different institutions

Yet, the Ministry of Finance now informs Parliament that as of mid 2005/2006, due to changes in the interbank clearing and settlement cycles, the payment execution time from and to former postgiro (ING) and vice versa is equal. Whilst there have been some complaints of companies with the Tax Authority that execution times differed, those companies were unable to delivery any hard proof or information to the Tax Authority, backing those claims.