Major German banks to switch domestic payments to EBA's Step2 ACH

A core group of seven German banks are to use EBA Clearing's pan-European Automated Clearing House Step2 for processing Sepa-compliant domestic payments in euros.

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Major German banks to switch domestic payments to EBA's Step2 ACH

Editorial

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Under the plans - announced today by representatives from the private banking, savings banking and cooperative banking sectors at the payments conference EBAday in Berlin - Step2 will support at least seven German payment banks in exchanging national credit transfers and direct debits in the Sepa formats.

The new system will progressively replace the direct bilateral exchange of national mass payments currently taking place between the individual financial institutions under the 'Garagenclearing' process.

Christian Rhino, divisional board member, banking operations, Commerzbank, says: "Concentrating our mass payments on one central platform allows us to minimise our administrative and monitoring efforts and to improve our liquidity management in this area."

In anticipation of a surge in domestic Sepa payments volumes, EBA Clearing says it will open a third processing site, and introduce a German customer support service from its offices in frankfurt.

Currently, about one third of all Sepa Credit Transfers and almost 75% of all Sepa Direct Debits processed by mass payment systems in the eurozone are exchanged via Step2. Apart from cross-border payments, the platform also processes the domestic payment traffic of the banking communities in Finland, Luxembourg and Ireland.

EBA Clearing says that effective July, it will redcue the fallback time from four to two hours between its current two processing sites as part of a major resilience enhancement programme.

The third site is being implemented in co-operation with SIA and IBM and will be available for testing by November 2013.

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Comments: (1)

A Finextra member 

This could be an interesting story if we were told who the banks were. I heard that eight major French banks were going to use STET, and several Spanish banks were planning on using Iberpay. This is all highly confidential of course.

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