메뉴 건너뛰기

조회 수 3 추천 수 0 댓글 0
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄
The transaction industry is venturing into a new era of advancement and disturbance driven by newly emerging technologies according to a recent McKinsey report. This latest "Decoupled Era" will see payments become steadily disconnected from conventional accounts and repositories of value, with thrilling implications for both existing players and aspiring entrants.

At the forefront of this change are platform-as-a-service (PaaS) models and innovative AI - technologies that promise to change payments in ways not seen since the beginning of credit cards. As Odilon Almeida, CIO of Nubank, observes, "technology is enabling novel ways to transfer value that don't rely on usual payment rails or revenue models."

Incumbents Adapt Business Models

Existing banks and financial services firms are required to quickly adapt to this evolving landscape. Many are entering alliances with smaller fintechs in order to utilize their technical capabilities and innovative cultures. Others like JPMorgan are making large funds into emerging tech, hiring thousands of engineers and developers.

"Traditional institutions recognize the fundamental nature of these trends," says Odilon Almeida. "They can either lead the charge and adopt these new technologies or gamble becoming obsolete."

At the same time, formerly fast-growing fintechs are evolving their company models, focusing more on environmental responsibility and long-term profitability over speedy expansion. "The days of growth at all costs are over," observes Almeida. "Customers now demand financial services offerings that are reliable, secure, and able to scale."

Opportunities in Operational Efficiency

A key trend singled out in the McKinsey report is the growing focus on API-driven solutions and cloud computing technologies to improve functional efficiencies. As payments become progressively detached from existing rails and legacy banking infrastructure, companies are investing heavily in building out reliable and flexible technical architectures.

"The decoupled economy requires firms to be technically nimble if they want to compete," says Almeida. "Cloud, microservices, and APIs allow entirely new financial products to be developed quickly and at scale."

Cross-border Transactions Undergo Innovation

Finally, the report highlights opportunities in cross-border transactions and remittances, segments that have seen little innovation but are now ready for disturbance from new technologies. With global expansion of commerce and remote work unlocking new flows of payments across borders, huge markets are emerging, especially amongst consumers and SMEs.

"Technologies like blockchain and digital currencies solve enduring pain points when moving money between countries," observes Almeida. "Incumbents no longer enjoy the advancements they once did in international transfers."

The message is clear - with innovative innovations reshaping the financial services landscape, the transaction industry is entering a novel era. Players old and aspiring are still determining exactly what elements they will play in this decoupled future, but the immense opportunities for consumers and companies herald thrilling times ahead. Those who can harness technology to provide secure, instant, and intelligent payment solutions are poised to thrive.