The Swift messaging system has long been a central player in improving international transactions, and the network now has its sights set on streamlining retail payments.
This retail push marks a shift for Swift, which has traditionally been used for larger intrabank or business-to-business payments. After collaborating with roughly 30 banks across 17 countries, Swift is rolling out new rules aimed at ensuring greater transparency and efficiency in retail cross-border payments.
Under the updated guidelines, Swift said retail users will benefit from transactions that are faster than the benchmarks set by Group of 20 (G20) countries, with roughly three-quarters of payments reaching the beneficiary bank in under 10 minutes. The system is also designed to eliminate hidden fees and, where possible, use domestic real-time payments systems to facilitate instant settlement.
The Correspondent Bank Model
There has been a surge in demand for cross-border payments as global communications channels have expanded. However, the process remains largely dominated by the longstanding correspondent banking system, in which banks hash out their own partnerships with overseas counterparts.
These partnerships can involve multiple intermediaries, making transactions in this model a slow and often convoluted process. Adding to the complexity are the manual procedures that define these relationships, which create the opportunities for delays, errors, and fraud.
“There’s a concept called nostro and vostro where you’ve got banks that have pots of cash with one another,” Hugh Thomas, Lead Commercial & Enterprise Payments Analyst at Javelin Strategy & Research, told PaymentsJournal. “The nostro is mine that sits with you, and vostro is yours that sits with me. They just sort of net and pool at the end of every day and figure out, ‘OK, you’ve got this much more vostro with me and I’ve got this much more nostro with you as a consequence of us having done these transactions.’ Those are, in many cases, manual processes.”
In the end, banks in the correspondent banking system must often rely on trust, assuming that each institution in the chain is doing its part.
Getting Payments to the Finish Line
As a messaging network, Swift’s role has been to streamline communication between financial institutions. This has had a significant impact, especially on what Swift describes as the “in-flight” portion of a transaction—though this stage represents only about 20% of the total time for an average cross-border payment.
The bigger challenge lies in the final leg, after the payment exits the Swift network. This stage is far more time-consuming, with roughly 80% of transaction time spent navigating regional nuances like regulations, fees, and domestic infrastructure.
Looking for Alternatives
Although Swift’s new framework could smooth many aspects of the cross-border payments process, many of these issues are likely to persist. This is why there have been many alternatives that have been proposed as cross-border solutions.
Visa and Mastercard have already built robust global networks to support their credit cards, and they are now leveraging these systems to—in effect—create a better version of the correspondent banking system. These platforms, dubbed Visa Direct and Mastercard Move, connect to banks around the world and have the liquidity and foreign exchange capabilities to become a compelling alternative to correspondent banking.
Other contenders for cross-border payments market share are crypto and digital assets, which allow for seamless, secure, and transparent transactions across a blockchain. Due to the lack of volatility, fiat-backed stablecoins such as those offered by Circle and Tether have established a strong use case in cross-border payments.
There are also a growing number of networks that connect domestic infrastructures, such as PayPal World. Instead of connecting financial institutions, this solution connects digital payments systems like India’s UPI and China’s WeChat Pay with PayPal’s ecosystem.
Preserving Its Role
Although there are more cross-border payments systems and solutions than ever, Swift continues to play a critical, well-established role. The network is actively upgrading its platform and, later this year, will require participants to utilize the ISO 20022 protocol, which dramatically increases the amount of data that can accompany payments.
This enhancement could drastically reduce delays cause by incomplete payment instructions and potentially save organizations millions of dollars in costs associated with delayed or failed payments.
In parallel, Swift is piloting digital asset transactions on its network, aiming to bridge the gap between decentralized and traditional finance.
Together with initiatives such as its new rules for retail cross-border payments, these developments are likely to reinforce Swift’s role in the global payments landscape. Still, it remains uncertain whether one solution will emerge as the standard for international transactions—or if cross-border payments will continue to be a fragmented market.
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