Sbanken chooses Nets to support open banking

Source: Nets

Norwegian bank Sbanken has selected Nets to support open banking with Nets Access to Account Services (NAAS) – a single platform that enables access to banks across the Nordics and Europe.

The revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2) will facilitate new services and better overviews of finances for bank customers. Nets’ single integration solution will give Sbanken access to account information in all banks in Norway and beyond through banks PSD2 APIs, enabling Sbanken (as third party) to develop innovative new services for its customers as PSD2 opens up the banking infrastructure.

Frode Åsheim, Head of Corporate Services at Nets, comments: “Banking as we know it will change radically due to the new regulation. Consumers and corporates will be able to access all their bank accounts in one place to have a better overview of their finances, and it will facilitate development of new services that benefit everyone. We have developed a standardised platform that provides third parties with the tools needed in this new world of open banking.”

Christoffer Hernæs, CDO at Sbanken, adds: “Taking an offensive position and leveraging PSD2 as a business opportunity is a top priority for the bank, as most Norwegian customers on average use more than one bank. By connecting to other Norwegian banks, we enable our customers to perform their top tasks such as getting a full overview of their financial health and paying their bills as easy as possible. Sbanken has chosen Nets since their platform provides easy access to the full market through one unified connection.”

Access to accounts

PSD2 requires banks to provide authorized third parties with access to accounts to provide account information and payment initiation services. With this access, third party providers can build financial services on top of the existing infrastructure. One example is account information aggregation, which gives consumers a full overview of all their payment accounts in one place - such as the mobile banking app they already use.

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