Regulators in the U.S. might be hesitant to mandate an outright move toward open banking, but several factors are pushing the financial services industry in that direction.
For starters, 65% of bankers viewed open banking as more of an opportunity than a threat,
Opinions, however, diverge when it comes to execution and how financial institutions can best shape open banking to their advantage.
For example, Deloitte identified
Currently, community banks and credit unions are unable to meet the full range of digital activities that consumers want due to a lack of digital maturity within their systems.
But this does not mean that the market ripe for disruption by new fintech competitors. Many new fintechs actually rank lower for digital maturity than established financial institutions, because of a limited solution stack, according to the same Deloitte 2018 study.
In reality, community banks and credit unions need fintechs; and fintechs need financial institutions.
As open banking continues to evolve, both industry players will find a more streamlined environment for partnerships to form to support a cooperative and customer-centric banking operation.
Consumer preferences could push open banking partnerships into the forefront of operational strategies faster than many community banks and credit unions anticipate.
One in three customers would like a consolidated view of all of their financial accounts, even those held at different institutions, according to
However, without direct access to banking data, apps and online services that help consumers streamline financial management are inefficient and sometimes risky.
Open banking, on the other hand, supports direct data sharing between fintechs and financial institutions
However,
This is another area where financial institutions could easily benefit from fintech partnerships by using third-party technology to adopt open API functionality.
Banks and credit unions can also partner with larger fintech service providers to co-create APIs. Such an approach can also involve third-party partners to help develop products that the financial institution can later offer to customers.
Through these partnerships, financial institutions can also offer support services and applications that customers are already using, streamlining both the banking journey as well as financial management as a whole.
Early adopters of open banking will see the biggest advantages. For community banks and credit unions, partnerships are the best option toward realizing first-adopter status, along with all of its rights and privileges.