What does the future hold for social media-powered payments?

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The rise of embedded finance is driving a renaissance of interest in social media-powered payments, while fraud and scams continue to plague many platforms.
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Elon Musk is close to winning money-transmitter licenses in key states including New York and California to enable peer-to-peer payments on the social media platform X, while Block CEO Jack Dorsey envisions developing a "social bank" and PayPal is nearing the launch of a new app expected to capture more of the features of its social media-centric Venmo P2P service.

It's a lofty ambition weighed down by regulatory uncertainty and unproven business models, which have foiled various firms' attempts to connect social media users with secure financial services. Meta, formerly Facebook, has tried and failed many times over the years to drive broad adoption of payments through its platform via P2P and a cryptocurrency venture.

While many of those obstacles remain, the emergence of embedded finance and its ability to connect to banking services within all types of media is renewing the ambitions of certain czars in social media, P2P payments and blockchain technology.

Musk is pushing ahead with plans to roll out a P2P service and his company X, formerly Twitter, will soon secure a money-transmitter license in New York and is a few months away from getting one in California, Musk reportedly said at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on March 7.

X already has money-transmitter licenses in Pennsylvania, Utah, Kansas, South Dakota and Wyoming, and the firm is working on obtaining permission in all of the other U.S. states.

The challenges ahead

Along with rising waves of fraud and scams plaguing existing P2P services and social media platforms, observers see other reasons to doubt X's chances for getting many users to rely on its P2P services.

"X is starting from a deep hole, and I am skeptical of their ability to scale up with the level of competition in the market," said Aaron McPherson, a principal with AFM Consulting, adding that he sees no compelling reason for consumers to turn to X for P2P services.

"What is X's competitive differentiator in P2P? The level of toxicity on the platform means that it will be consigned to niche status, because merchants will be worried about their brands appearing next to offensive content," McPherson said, noting that X has no consumer financial services foundation to build on.

X would also face fierce competition from established P2P providers already rooted in financial services with their own footholds in social media.

For example, despite ongoing reports of sporadic fraud, the bank-owned P2P service Zelle has become so well entrenched since launching in 2017 that its transaction rate reached $100 million an hour during the final quarter of 2023. PayPal and its Venmo P2P unit, which pioneered social payments by enabling users to broadcast their transactions in a social media-like feed, also has a huge head start on X, McPherson said.

PayPal has been at work for years trying to develop an all-in-one app that would combine P2P, shopping, deals and links to social media. Under new CEO Alex Chriss, the firm recently said it plans to sell off extraneous businesses and refine financial services for PayPal and Venmo users.

Block aims to do something similar. Dorsey recently said he plans to create a "social bank" by linking Block's various financial services resources — its Square payments and commerce platform for small and midsize businesses, the popular Cash App P2P product and the Afterpay buy now/pay later services — in a central hub.

Cash App is "inherently social," with users posting their Cash App address on social media, emails and other channels, Dorsey told analysts last month when announcing fourth-quarter 2023 earnings, and he's aiming to make Cash App the hub of the social bank, which would connect consumers directly to Block's growing range financial services, including Square checking, savings and loan products.

"Being a social bank [we're] starting with peer-to-peer, but expanding beyond that and really getting in the neighborhoods and local communities," Dorsey said.

But the biggest obstacles each of these concepts face right now is fraud that's infecting online shopping portals, as well as a growing number of fake websites masquerading as legitimate e-commerce portals. All of these are spread through social media.

A question of trust

The Federal Trade Commission recently said social media platform-based scams accounted for $1.5 billion in losses last year, and the Wall Street Journal this month reported that Facebook Marketplace is swamped by fraud-driven bots and other schemes. 

Lawmakers are pushing for interventions — Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee have asked Zelle parent Early Warning Services to clarify its consumer reimbursement policies related to scams, and federal regulators reportedly are probing gaps in Cash App's security protocols — just as Musk and Dorsey prepare to launch social media-powered payments.

Block has a multi-layered approach to preventing fraud and scams leveraging Cash App, and late last year, the firm launched a social media campaign with three 30-second spots educating consumers about risks and red flags.

Meta also provides Facebook users with a raft of fraud-prevention tools and warnings about scams, but several U.S. banks and credit unions have recently warned consumers about associated risks.

"Trust is a very important element for adding financial services to social media," said Galia Beer-Gabel, a partner at Tel Aviv-based Team8, a venture capital and company-building firm, who says that most existing P2P services cannot expand further on social media without achieving breakthroughs in security and interoperability. 

Recent advancements in real-time payments around the world — including Pix in Brazil, UPI in India and broad adoption of instant payments in the U.K. — demonstrate the potential for building secure domestic P2P payments networks that connect to social media, but they are still evolving and unique to each country, she said.

Meta tried to achieve such a breakthrough in 2019 by founding a cryptocurrency consortium called the Diem Association, which aimed to create a global cross-platform payments network, but it folded two years later.  

Ultimately, a big-tech firm like Apple or Google, or even Meta, may find a path to create an interoperable cross-border P2P service because of their existing mass adoption and direct connections to consumers, "but each has their own complexities and there's the problem of having too much power concentrated in the hands of for-profit companies," Beer-Gabel said. 

Cryptocurrency and blockchain firms could also develop trusted and secure P2P systems, if they can convince users to look past crypto's current volatility, she said. "Crypto and blockchain in general are decentralized, without giving governments or banks or companies too much power, but today no one can point to one mass-adopted crypto service."

Building consumer trust, improving security and expanding the utility of these services through faster payments will be key to their adoption on social media platforms, Beer-Gabel concluded. "It comes down to who can connect the dots most effectively," she said.

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