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How Can a Bank Start Offering BaaS

While COVID has thrown traditional banking operations in disarray but it has also established new fintechs in the financial services business.

 

With the Central bank’s push toward digitalisation, we can safely assume that this trend will inevitably make fintech proliferate deeper into the incumbent bank’s market.

 

Fintechs like Open, Bajaj Finance, Razorpay, PayTM and Cashfree have already created new benchmarks for customer experience and transparency

 

On one end traditional banks are losing market share - some of the visionary banks have acquired technology platforms to open up their infrastructure to facilitate 3rd parties (finetchs).

This collaboration is popularly known as Banking-a-as-a-Service (BaaS).

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What is Banking as a Service (Baas)

BaaS is an end-to-end model that allows third parties to connect with bank systems directly via API so they can build banking offerings on top of the providers’ regulated infrastructure.

 

Banks usually open up APIs to facilitate specific banking functions like

  • Loans
  • Cards
  • Deposits
  • Insurance
  • Payments

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Advantages for Banks

Adapting BaaS open up new revenue streams for incumbent banks and increases their customer reach.

The two main monetization strategies for BaaS are:

  • Monthly fee for access to the platform

  • A la carte for each service used.



Advantages for Fintech

 BaaS is cheaper and faster for Fintechs

Fintech can focus on customer experience without investing in the long and expensive process of taking regulatory licenses and compliance.

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What are the Regulations

European countries have already introduced PDS2 and open banking regulations

Big banks like HSBC and JP Morgan are working with solution providers like Salesforce to create a non-profit consortium – BIAN (Banking Industry Architecture Network)

 

In India, data privacy and BaaS regulations have yet to be formulated.

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BaaS in India

BaaS is not new in India. YesBank and RBL Bank were leaders in the industry by opening several APIs to developers as early as 2013.

 

Currently, in India, API offerings exist from all major private banks like HDFC, ICICI, and Kotak,

These days BaaS is nothing short of a revolution in India.

  • State Bank of India partnership with Uber to provide vehicle finance to drivers.
  • RBL Bank collaboration with Razorpay for digital merchant onboarding.

  • OPEN uses ICICI Bank APIs to manage payments, billing and accounting for startups.

  • RBL is collaborating with Bajaj Finance to give vehicle loans across India.

  • Snapdeal and Freecharge partnership with Yes Bank to provide instant refunds.

  • State Bank of India initially partnered with Cashfree for payouts and cash withdrawals.

 

SBI recently invested in Cashfree making them India’s 1st public sector bank to do so.

There are multiple BaaS FinTechs platforms that have raised huge funding and are all set to become Unicorns soon.

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Banking-as-a-Service Industry Outlook

An open banking API ecosystem is not the end goal but just the start. It has opened up immense possibilities to embed financial services in every customer application.

 

It is expected that BaaS will reach a value of $7 trillion by 2030.

 

Those that act fast and secure the best strategy model to incorporate this newly designed banking will experience a substantial upside.



BaaS is a full-blown gold rush, and everyone and their mother is jumping on the bandwagon - Ron Shevlin   

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How Can a Bank Start Offering BaaS?

Banks need to transform their infrastructure into a composable Lego-like architecture where every block denotes a banking functionality consumed via an API.

To technically achieve such flexibility, banks need to modernize their core systems which can be a tedious task and requires investment.

If this modern platfom uses single codebase. Check the befenits of using single base in my post here 

 

At the organizational level, a product-centric approach is required for each banking function, rather than different teams managing the front end, backend, data, and infrastructure.

 

Finally, Banking leadership needs to incorporate deeper technical understanding and decision making to construct the right strategy backed by sufficient investment and a partner ecosystem to leapfrog ahead of the competition.

 

At the organizational level, a product-centric approach is required for each banking function, rather than different teams managing the front end, backend, data, and infrastructure.

 

However, those that wait for the right time may feel left behind in the fast-moving banking domain

 

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- Author of this article is Abhinav Paliwal CEO of PayNet Systems, one of the leading White Label Digital Banking and Payments Solution Provider. ( www.paynet.pro)

 

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Abhinav Paliwal

Abhinav Paliwal

CEO

PayNet Systems

Member since

08 Jun 2021

Location

India

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This post is from a series of posts in the group:

Open Banking

Open Banking regulation, innovation and technology and it's potential to revolutionise the Financial Services Industry.


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