Featured Product

    UK Committee Sets Out Recommendations for Next Phase of Open Banking

    April 17, 2023

    The Joint Regulatory Oversight Committee (JROC), comprising the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and the Payment Systems Regulator (PSR) as co-chairs and the HM Treasury and the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) as members, published its recommendations for the next phase of open banking in the UK.

    In the UK, over 7 million consumers and businesses (of which 750,000 are small to medium-sized enterprises or SMEs) are using innovative open-banking-enabled products and services to manage their money and to make payments. The JROC report sets out views, recommendations, and the joint actions required to successfully transition to the next phase of open banking and maintain the international leadership of UK. To deliver on its vision, JROC introduced a roadmap that sets out a three-phased delivery approach, through which open banking can continue to evolve and grow in a sustainable way within the next two years, ahead of the long-term regulatory framework being established. The report contains a roadmap of priorities over the next two years, covering five key themes:

    • Leveling up availability and performance
    • Mitigating risks of financial crime
    • Ensuring effective consumer protection
    • Improving information flows to third-party providers and end-users
    • Promoting additional services, using non-sweeping variable recurring payments (VRP) as a pilot

    These five themes are underpinned by 29 actions outlined in the roadmap. UK will deliver on these via a three-phased approach, which would commence in 2023 and end in 2025:

    • In 2023, the focus will be on collectively improving visibility and understanding around the level of financial crime across the open banking ecosystem and the availability and performance of application programming interfaces (APIs) across different Account Servicing Payment Service Providers (ASPSPs). Focus is also improving the functioning of the open banking ecosystem—for instance, by ensuring consistent error messaging—and enabling better understanding of consumer concerns and possible future developments through consumer research.
    • Next year, the aim is to lay the groundwork for the end state by improving data-sharing to prevent fraud and financial crime, supporting the development of commercial and liability frameworks and improvements in information flows to third-party providers on API calls and payment messages.
    • The following year a sustainable commercial model is expected to have been developed and piloted, with the new innovative business models having been tested. Some of these actions may require the long-term regulatory framework and/or other regulatory intervention.

    The report also outlines principles for establishing a long-term regulatory framework for open banking, which the government is intending to legislate for. The long-term regulatory framework will set out the role of the Treasury and the respective roles that FCA and PSR will have in providing oversight across the open banking ecosystem, including over the future entity. It will also set out the roles and obligations that firms and the future entity will play and have within the ecosystem. Going forward, JROC plans to measure success through stakeholders’ ongoing commitment and delivery of the actions in this report, including the development, testing, and piloting of a commercial model for open banking and the establishment of the future open banking entity. The plan is to implement a multilateral agreement or rulebook for premium application programming interfaces or APIs by the fourth quarter of 2025. JROC will monitor progress against all activities in the roadmap and will publish a progress report in the fourth quarter of 2023. Also, in the fourth quarter of 2023, JROC will set out a detailed plan for the future entity and the Open Banking Implementation Entity (OBIE) transition to it. 

     

    Related Links


    Keywords: Europe, UK, Banking, Open Banking, Regtech, OBIE, Future Entity, HM Treasury, FCA, PSR, CMA

    Related Articles
    News

    BIS and Central Banks Experiment with GenAI to Assess Climate Risks

    A recent report from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Innovation Hub details Project Gaia, a collaboration between the BIS Innovation Hub Eurosystem Center and certain central banks in Europe

    March 20, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    Nearly 25% G-SIBs Commit to Adopting TNFD Nature-Related Disclosures

    Nature-related risks are increasing in severity and frequency, affecting businesses, capital providers, financial systems, and economies.

    March 18, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    Singapore to Mandate Climate Disclosures from FY2025

    Singapore recently took a significant step toward turning climate ambition into action, with the introduction of mandatory climate-related disclosures for listed and large non-listed companies

    March 18, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    SEC Finalizes Climate-Related Disclosures Rule

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has finalized the long-awaited rule that mandates climate-related disclosures for domestic and foreign publicly listed companies in the U.S.

    March 07, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    EBA Proposes Standards Related to Standardized Credit Risk Approach

    The European Banking Authority (EBA) has been taking significant steps toward implementing the Basel III framework and strengthening the regulatory framework for credit institutions in the EU

    March 05, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    US Regulators Release Stress Test Scenarios for Banks

    The U.S. regulators recently released baseline and severely adverse scenarios, along with other details, for stress testing the banks in 2024. The relevant U.S. banking regulators are the Federal Reserve Bank (FED), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).

    February 28, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    Asian Governments Aim for Interoperability in AI Governance Frameworks

    The regulatory landscape for artificial intelligence (AI), including the generative kind, is evolving rapidly, with governments and regulators aiming to address the challenges and opportunities presented by this transformative technology.

    February 28, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    EBA Proposes Operational Risk Standards Under Final Basel III Package

    The European Union (EU) has been working on the final elements of Basel III standards, with endorsement of the Banking Package and the publication of the European Banking Authority (EBA) roadmap on Basel III implementation in December 2023.

    February 26, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    EFRAG Proposes XBRL Taxonomy and Standard for Listed SMEs Under ESRS

    The European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG), which plays a crucial role in shaping corporate reporting standards in European Union (EU), is seeking comments, until May 21, 2024, on the Exposure Draft ESRS for listed SMEs.

    February 23, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    News

    ECB to Expand Climate Change Work in 2024-2025

    Banking regulators worldwide are increasingly focusing on addressing, monitoring, and supervising the institutions' exposure to climate and environmental risks.

    February 23, 2024 WebPage Regulatory News
    RESULTS 1 - 10 OF 8957