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FedNow will be a ‘large accelerant’ for fintech - Plaid CEO

FedNow, the Federal Reserve’s new payments system that was launched last week, is predicted to bolster growth for the US fintech sector according to Plaid CEO Zach Perret.

2 comments

FedNow will be a ‘large accelerant’ for fintech - Plaid CEO

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

FedNow went live last Thursday as a new service for banks and credit unions to instantly transfer money at any time. The interbank payment system aims to provide benefits for American consumers and businesses with rapid availability to funds and cashflow management.

Perret stated in an interview with Bloomberg that he believes FedNow could act as a “large accelerant” for the fintech industry by speeding up processes which previously took up to three days and now can be done instantly, such as paying employees and transferring funds digitally.

Perret noted that widespread adoption of FedNow could take years, but it offers numerous benefits to US financial institutions. He stated: “We expect it to increase consumer choice, increase competition, increase optionality for people out there. The big question in my mind is actually how fast banks are going to adopt it.”

At its launch date, there were 35 banks and credit unions ready to adopt the service along with the US Department of Treasury’s Bureau of Fiscal Service. 16 service providers will support payment processing for banks and credit unions using FedNow.

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Comments: (2)

A Finextra member 

Look st Euro area instant payments development. The expectatiobs were largerly overstated and the instant payments are not needed to fulfill modt user needs in payments. Existing solutions like cards already cater fir many payer needs. Now the EU is preparing to issue compulsory legislation for all banks

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

By now, I'd think there's enough evidence from all over the world to suggest that A2A RTPs do very well in emerging markets with low penetration of credit card and POS terminals (e.g. UPI-IMPS in India, Pix in Brazil) and not-so-well in advanced markets with high penetration of credit card and POS terminals (e.g. PingIt, PayByBank in UK / EU).

It shouldn't be rocket science to predict the trajectory of FedNow in USA. If any more data is required, there's the performance of TCH-RTP since the A2A RTP rail was launched in USA six years ago.

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