BRUSSELS, 6 February 2023 –The European Banking Federation has published its position on the Commission’s proposal for Instant Payments Regulation (amending the SEPA Regulation). Instant payments are an important building block of the future payments landscape, with the potential to contribute innovative digital payments. The EBF position highlights that a balanced and proportionate legal framework that will support the market on the continued roll-out and development of instant payments in Europe is needed.
Building the rails for instant payments requires significant investments and adaptations by PSPs, banks in particular. Therefore, it is important that the implementation burden and cost of all the proposed measures are calibrated to ensure proportionality of cost and benefit. Indeed, we propose that the legal requirements should be limited to mandating reachability and to mandating the sending of single payment transactions through one online channel in the euro area. This would meet the intended objectives of stimulating instant payments and innovation while still offering the opportunity to compete when offering instant payments. We also believe that measures on capping pricing are inappropriate.
As regards sanctions screening, we support the proposal to move from transaction screening to client database screening. The screening of PSUs with regard to Union sanctions in case of instant credit transfers underlines the Commission’s intention to make the screening process for instant payments more efficient. However, this goal needs to be aligned with compliance obligations under other pieces of legislation and appropriate safeguards need to be in place, with sufficient alignment with applicable legal transaction-based screening requirements from other regulations and regulators’ expectations in that respect.
For more information:
Anni Mykkänen, Senior Policy Adviser – Innovation & Payments, a.mykkanen@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
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]]>BRUSSELS, 14 June 2017 – Responding to the EU consultation on financial technology, also known as FinTech, the European Banking Federation is submitting a response which underlines its desire to see the creation of a customer-centric and inclusive ecosystem in which all actors, ranging from small start-ups to established multinational banks, are committed to serving clients with innovative financial services.
The EBF applauds the European Commission for initiating this consultation and for creating its FinTech taskforce. The taskforce serves not only a bridge between policy makers and the industry but also as an essential horizontal connection between policy makers in financial regulation and the digital agenda in the EU.
Says Wim Mijs, Chief Executive Officer of the EBF:
“There is no denying that financial technology is the DNA of our industry. Banks actively embrace FinTech to serve clients with new products and services, and it’s great to see how fresh competition helps us keep our focus. If we as Europeans really want to play a role in FinTech globally we need to create room for innovative financial services in a flourishing Digital Single Market. As I’ve said before: we need action at an overclock speed please. This consultation marks a key moment. It’s now time to overclock Europe.”
In its response to the EU consultation, the EBF emphasises the following:
Media contact:
Raymond Frenken, Head of Communications, +32 2 508 37 32, r.frenken@ebf.eu
Nahuel Mercedes, Communications Officer, +32 2 508 37 48, n.mercedes@ebf.eu
About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, uniting 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent some 4,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – employing about 2.1 million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that securely handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to creating a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
2 June 2017: Banks support ecosystem of interoperable APIs in EU: EBF underlines importance of privacy and security under PSD2
23 May 2017: Data Protection Impact Assessment: EBF comments on Article 29 Working Party guidelines
16 May 2017: EBF asks Commission to support ban on screen scraping
10 May 2017: Digital Single Market: EBF supports innovative, competitive strategy giving confidence for consumers and businesses
26 April 2017: EBF Key messages on European Commission’s Consultation on Building the European Data Economy
14 November 2016: Innovate. Collaborate. Deploy: the EBF vision for banking in the Digital Single Market
The post EU FinTech consultation: put needs of end-users first appeared first on EBF.
]]>On 26 September the pre-conference of the European FinTech Awards took place in the European Parliament, hosted by MEP and FinTech rapporteur Cora van Nieuwenhuizen. Addressing the room full of FinTech entrepreneurs, Mrs. van Nieuwenhuizen shared her motivation to take the individual initiative to report on financial technology and reminded everyone that the financial industry is better off looking to the future instead of the past.
EBF CEO Wim Mijs, also a judge deciding on the Top 100 European FinTech firms, outlined the current state of FinTech in Europe and the role that banks are currently fulfilling. It became clear that Europe on itself has a unique ecosystem with lots of talent and potential. Nevertheless, the need for smart regulation remains a prominent topic on the agenda for financial technology providers.
EBF CEO Wim Mijs was asked to give his perspective on the thriving use of financial technology in Europe.
“Banks got a kick at the right moment and are moving in the right direction” @Wim_Mijs at the #FinTechEU Awards pre-conference pic.twitter.com/Vso4ya8MMS
— Nahuel Mercedes M. (@nahunicolai) September 26, 2017
EBF at the European FinTech Awards 2017 pre-conference in the @Europarl_EN: telling the story of #FinTechEU to a room full of innovators! pic.twitter.com/GeFDCLDEHN
— Nahuel Mercedes M. (@nahunicolai) September 26, 2017
Wim Mijs @EBFeu sharing his insights about collaboration between all actors in the #fintech space @bhive_eu @FinTechNL #EFTA17 #wakeupcall pic.twitter.com/XtkKlhu8FG
— Fabian Vandenreydt (@FVandenreydt) September 26, 2017
“The dinosaur standing in the way of #finserv & the customer is a complex regulatory environment” @Wim_Mijs at #FintechEU Awards pre-conf. pic.twitter.com/EIEHSvmfgK
— Nahuel Mercedes M. (@nahunicolai) September 26, 2017
Tomorrow European #FinTech Awards & Conference! Discover amazing speaker lineup & pitches and get tickets: https://t.co/JPK46t9tda #EFTA17 pic.twitter.com/H463weP92e
— EU FinTech Community (@FinTechNL) September 26, 2017
Follow the European Fintech Awards on Twitter: Click here.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>EBF PRESS RELEASE
BRUSSELS, 31 October 2017 – Survey results released today by the European Banking Federation shows that European banks as of end 2016 had invested more than €18 billion in software, despite being forced to accept prudential rules that require software investments to be treated as costs instead of an investment.
The survey, conducted to bring clarity on the size of these investments, shows that European banks had invested more than 18.2 billion euro in software as of 2016. The EBF survey was conducted voluntarily and is based on a sample of 108 banks of different sizes with different business models in 12 European countries.
Software has become a core asset in bank business models and banks are recognized as significant investors in software and information technology. Some projections in recent years placed the total IT investments by European banks well above €50 billion per year, a significant part of which was invested in software.
The current regulatory capital framework for credit institutions in the EU treats software as a cost rather than an investment, stifling innovation in financial services. Prudential rules do not recognize the value for capital purposes, despite evidence indicating that software has value even in the case of liquidation of a bank.
European banks instead are required to match their software investments with an almost equal amount of capital to maintain their capital ratios. This requirement makes software investments by a European bank more expensive when compared to other competitors such as Fintech and US banks, distorting the level playing field in global banking.
Because of the existing rules, roughly every euro that an EU bank invests in IT, be it for innovation or cybersecurity, needs to be backed with one euro of the most expensive category of funding. This is not only a significant disincentive for investments but also leads to unfair competition between major players as well as jurisdictions.
As representative of the European banking industry, the EBF has invited EU policy makers in Brussels to consider the need for a level playing field when it comes to the prudential treatment of software investments. Software investments should be excluded from the general regime applicable to intangible assets under the definition of regulatory capital. The current revision of the Capital Requirements Regulation presents an opportunity for Europe to establish a fair competition and compete for the global leadership in the digital innovation in this area.
Media contact:
Raymond Frenken, Head of Communications, +32 2 508 3732, r.frenken@ebf.eu
About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, uniting 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent some 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that securely handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to creating a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>31 October 2017
The International Banking Federation appreciates the opportunity to comment on the consultative document issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) in August 2017: “Sound Practices: implications of fintech developments for banks and bank supervisors” (the Consultative Document).
The IBFed acknowledges that the Consultative Document provides a concise, high-level summary of both the current landscape of technical innovation within the financial services sector, and many of the key important challenges to the business models of banking institutions and non-bank technology companies.
The IBFed wishes to highlight three fundamental points that must inform these policy discussions:
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
2 June 2017: Banks support ecosystem of interoperable APIs in EU: EBF underlines importance of privacy and security under PSD2
23 May 2017: Data Protection Impact Assessment: EBF comments on Article 29 Working Party guidelines
16 May 2017: EBF asks Commission to support ban on screen scraping
10 May 2017: Digital Single Market: EBF supports innovative, competitive strategy giving confidence for consumers and businesses
26 April 2017: EBF Key messages on European Commission’s Consultation on Building the European Data Economy
14 November 2016: Innovate. Collaborate. Deploy: the EBF vision for banking in the Digital Single Market
The post Basel Committee FinTech consultation: IBFed response appeared first on EBF.
]]>Brussels, 7 November 2017 – The European Banking Federation has responded to the European Banking Authority’s consultation on the aim of seeing the creation of a customer-centric and inclusive ecosystem in which all actors, ranging from small start-ups to established multinational banks, are committed to serving clients with innovative financial services.
FinTech refers to “financial” and “technology” meaning the application of new technologies to financial services. It is however sometimes understood as referring only to start-ups or tech-giants that develop innovative financial services solutions. Innovative financial technology based solutions and services are increasingly being developed by banks. This is why it is important to point out that the “FinTech” concept should be understood as finance enabled by or provided via new technologies, affecting the whole financial sector in all its aspects, in line with the definition proposed by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) in its report on Fintech published in June 2017 and the one proposed by the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision (BCBS) in its consultation document published in August 2017. Whereas the value chain increasingly includes alternative actors such as start-ups or tech giants, any actor can be a FinTech, regardless of the kind of legal entity it is. The FinTech concept should be connected to the products and services offered to the client and is therefore activity/services based. Banks are also FinTech companies.
Consumers around the world are quickly becoming digital. They want to manage their money more proactively, to simplify and streamline the management of their financial portfolio, and be able to derive tangible benefits from their service providers. As a result, consumers expect a new kind of service proposition from banks, fitting to the digital age.
In response, banks – and other providers – are assessing, developing and using innovative and technological capabilities (such as open APIs, blockchain, robo-advice and machine learning) to develop new delivery channels as well as to enhance services and products that deepen the relationship with their customers.
In this fast changing environment, consumer protection should remain the key priority. A level playing field has the role of ensuring consumers are not put at risk and that financial stability is maintained, irrespective of the service provider. Development in the field of FinTech could lead to a series of changes to financial services with new players, new solutions and new products / services. However, any changes must not undermine consumers’ data security nor their confidence in the European financial sector.
The Digital Single Market is an opportunity for all operators willing to embrace the digital transformation: authorities, FinTech (banks, non-banking FinTech/FinTech start-ups) corporates and consumers. The same regulatory conditions and supervision should apply to all actors (large digital players, financial institutions and start-ups) who seek to innovate and compete in the FinTech system. Any regulatory framework must keep barriers to entry to a minimum, and should also not hinder incumbents’ ability to innovate and develop. The principle of “same services/activities, same risks, same rules and same supervision” should always be applied in order to ensure consumer protection and market integrity. Regulation should also be neutral regarding technological developments and business models. For competition and a Digital Single Market for financial services to succeed, improvements are needed in current legislation, and regulatory requirements must be proportionate to ensure the current framework does not hamper innovation and competitiveness. Market incumbents must preserve a level playing field allowing some degree of connectivity to newcomers, however it is important to ensure that all market participants contribute to the appropriate level of investment in infrastructure.
We are likely to see increasing cooperation and partnership among banks and new FinTech start-ups providing innovative products and services to the market. Indeed, the arrival of FinTech start-ups and the establishment of digital platforms has spurred innovation, accelerated the transformation of banks and opened a door to new win-win collaborations. While there are still good reasons for banks to rely on internal IT departments, there is considerable potential to create value — for themselves and the economy at large — by nurturing an ecosystem of start-ups and technology innovators that can assist banks in developing shared platforms thereby increasing resilience and cost effectiveness of banking and payment systems. Banks have a lot to offer to FinTech start-ups, in particular, specific financial expertise (risk assessment, evaluation and management), scalability owing to their large customer base, as well as many years of experience in providing clients with operational security in a highly regulated sector, not to speak of financing needs. The respective strengths of both banks and FinTech start-ups mean that both will often do better by cooperating rather than by competing.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
2 June 2017: Banks support ecosystem of interoperable APIs in EU: EBF underlines importance of privacy and security under PSD2
23 May 2017: Data Protection Impact Assessment: EBF comments on Article 29 Working Party guidelines
16 May 2017: EBF asks Commission to support ban on screen scraping
10 May 2017: Digital Single Market: EBF supports innovative, competitive strategy giving confidence for consumers and businesses
26 April 2017: EBF Key messages on European Commission’s Consultation on Building the European Data Economy
14 November 2016: Innovate. Collaborate. Deploy: the EBF vision for banking in the Digital Single Market
The post EBF responds to EBA discussion paper on FinTech appeared first on EBF.
]]>When you are in banking you know that dealing with criminals is part of the job. Because banks have always been a popular target and we all know why: because this is where the money is. However, most of our money is not any longer behind thick walls or vaults. As money is becoming virtual, it sits behind a button, moves around through fibre cables and is stored in data centres. Accordingly, the modern bank robber no longer needs a mask or weapon. He now hides behind a computer screen and his bullets have become evil bytes. When it comes to banks, cybercriminals are the bank robbers of the digital age. It is clear that the need for cybersecurity cannot be ignored.
The digital revolution has brought many opportunities for the banking sector and its customers but also new risks to consider. From the onset of the first online banking services, banks have been at the forefront in the fight against cybercrime. Fortunately, banks are not alone in this fight; cybersecurity now has become a pressing issue on the political agenda in Europe, but also in the rest of the world. Mid-September the European Commission published its Cybersecurity Package outlining important proposals to build a more cyber resilient EU.
October is also the European Cybersecurity Month, a month full of projects and events initiated by Europe’s Agency for Network and Information Security (ENISA). As a close partner of ENISA, the European Banking Federation organised, on 10 October, the second annual Cybersecurity Conference “Managing Risk. Deploying Awareness”, which turned out a great success with many attendees. One of the main goals of the conference was to show the state of play of cybersecurity in the financial industry and to discuss how banks, central banks and different authorities (government, regulators, law enforcement) are working together on different dimensions. The success of this event confirmed the fact that cybersecurity in banking has become an extremely relevant topic for all.
Traditional crime is not new for the banking sector. Cybercrime, however, is more complex. Attacks take place on all fronts, often in an incredibly well-organised way. Cybercriminals are extremely smart and creative people and have a wide arsenal to attack: malware, ransomware, DDoS attacks, phishing, social engineering, trojan viruses and can even make ATMs generate money at will. This is all real and it is becoming more sophisticated every day. But more importantly, let’s be aware that cybercrime has no borders and this makes it an issue of global relevance. The recent WannaCry attack affected thousands of computers in more than 150 countries.
We see that throughout Europe many banks have their own cybersecurity practices. Some countries, such as the Netherlands and the United Kingdom have disaster exercises in place or national cybersecurity agencies to turn to. Partnerships between law enforcement and the financial sector have led to several operational successes in many countries in terms of prevention, intervention and prosecution of cybercriminals. But this is not the case in all countries.
Coordinated action starts with sharing information, getting everyone informed at the same time with expertise, statistical data or even specific details on attack methods. You can learn from each other’s experiences and make faster decisions. We promote industry initiatives to create cyber intelligence sharing platforms, while working closely with Europol’s cybercrime centre (EC3) to facilitate communication with the sector. Evidently, the quicker an organization can share information on a cyber threat, the more other organisations can protect their systems better and quicker. However, sharing of cyber threat intelligence between the industry, law enforcement agencies and other stakeholders often comes across legislative obstacles mainly related to the kind of data that may or may not be shared. Trust is an important component that needs to be created. We cannot legislate trust, only build it, and we must do that together.
Report those incidents!
We believe there is a need for a common reporting taxonomy and to this end the EBF facilitates the exchange of information and practices between its members and maintains a dialogue with supervisory and regulatory bodies in the EU. The European regulatory frameworks and various national legislations have introduced reporting requirements of cyber incidents by banks. At first sight, this is a positive development but it also has created a complex reporting grid where a bank must report an incident to national and European authorities, in different timeframes and with heterogeneous data. That is why we need a consistent and harmonised legal framework across all jurisdictions and different regulating entities in Europe.
Humans are the weakest link
In most cases, the weak link in the prevention of a cyberattack are humans. Almost half of the European population lacks basic digital skills, which are necessary to protect ourselves once we go online. Small mistakes can have consequences; not using the same password for multiple accounts and downloading software updates are only two very common examples of simple safeguards that we ignore and thus make us all vulnerable. Creating awareness is the answer to tackle this problem. We want to enhance digital skills of existing and future customers and employees; hence we promote and create awareness-raising campaigns, notably with the EC3 and its campaigns on money muling, ransomware and malware. Also, we have become a member of the Digital Skills & Jobs Coalition of the European Commission and we are already working to add digital literacy to our financial education initiatives, during the European Money Week.
What is next for banks?
Three years ago, we saw the need to join forces on a European level and believed it was time for organisations and countries to work more closely together. In all our work at the European Banking Federation, we stress out the need for cross-border collaboration. That is why we signed an MoU with European law enforcement agency Europol and work closely with its cybercrime unit EC3 but also with ENISA, FS ISAC and other actors in the cybersecurity field. And we see the positive results of these kind of partnerships. Therefore, we must aim for more Private-Public Partnerships (PPPs) in all countries. The insights from the private sector can benefit other industries and governments. Best practices in banking can be used for all the stages of creation, implementation, evaluation and review of cybersecurity frameworks.
The next cyberattack is probably already on its way. But if we keep raising awareness and involve all stakeholders, with the right security tools, rules and governance in place, the industry can be prepared.
This article was originally published in the InforBanca Magazine.
You can find the full document below:
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>The European Banking Federation, responding to the European Commission’s Inception Impact assessment for a legislative proposal for an EU framework on crowd and peer to peer finance, sees this plan as a good starting point considering that crowdfunding has the potential to be a key source of financing for SMEs over the long term.
The combination of crowd-based activities, social media and automated matching platforms that apply innovative technology may significantly change the way consumer/SME credit is contracted. It also changes the way equity investment flows into start-ups, scale-ups and SMEs, as they offer new gateways to finance for individuals and small companies facing difficulties to tap the traditional banking channels.
We believe it would be desirable to have a consistent EU wide regulatory framework for consumer protection and considering/reviewing whether specific categories of crowdfunding service providers are in fact subject to existing financial regulation appears prudent actions to a positive way forward.
Therefore, the EBF would support the Policy Option 3 indicated in the Inception Impact Assessment. This option would define a comprehensive EU framework by introducing a specific license for crowdfunding with passporting rights will contribute the most to: (i) reduce existing divergences across Member States, and (ii) achieve a level playing field in which the same activity is subject to the same regulation. Options 1 and 2 would not suffice to address the issues that are correctly identified by the European Commission: (i) these would not contribute to crowdfunding reaching a
cross-border scale and (ii) would not help in providing an effective risk management framework that ensures sector integrity and trust. Option 4 could facilitate the scale-up of crowdfunding platforms across countries, but would not go as far as option 3 in achieving a level playing field across borders, and could lead to the prevalence of different standards in terms of investor and consumer
protection in those platforms that choose to conduct only national business.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>EBF STATEMENT
BRUSSELS, 27 November 2017 – The European Banking Federation notes that the European Commission on Monday adopted its regulatory and technical standards for the second EU Payment Services Directive, known as PSD2, designed to allow consumers to access more convenient and innovative payment solutions.
Considering client needs at a time when cybersecurity becomes increasingly important, banks fully support a safe online payments landscape in the EU Digital Single Market. Such a system needs to be based on an efficient and effective ecosystem of payment interfaces, known as APIs, so that online payments can be secure and that communication via the banks’ infrastructure between third-party service providers and clients can be reliable.
The EBF had asked EU policymakers to introduce the rules for PSD2 in such a way that privacy of client data and security of bank accounts both are fully respected. In its initial assessment of the adopted standards EBF notes as positive the recognition of the importance of APIs for the online payments landscape in the EU. APIs[1] are the only secure and reliable way possible for letting competition unfold in the EU single market.
EBF notes the Commission said it will end the unsafe practice of screen scraping by third party service providers. EBF however does not consider the ‘fall-back’ solution adopted by the Commission as a practicable. The criteria that would trigger the fall-back appear to be incompatible with operational reality. This solution also does not ascertain that the information accessed by the third-party provider is limited to what is needed for execution of the service they provide.
Media contact:
Raymond Frenken, Head of Communications, +32 2 508 3732, r.frenken@ebf.eu
About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, uniting 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent some 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that securely handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to creating a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
[1] EBF video: What APIs mean for banking http://www.ebf.eu/what-do-apis-mean-for-banking/
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]]>Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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