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Recent regulatory developments focussed on the payments sector. See also our General regulatory news in the Related Materials links.
Pay.UK published a report containing conclusions and recommendations relating to adopting the common global messaging standard for UK payments, known as ISO 20022, along with other key standards for the clearing and settlement capability that will be enabled by the New Payments Architecture (NPA).
The report is relevant to developers of ISO 20022 messages, service and solution providers, and end users (businesses, charities, and individuals). It provides a statement of Pay.UK's intentions regarding the implementation of the UK retail standard, what it has already started doing, and its plan for the next 18 months, focusing on:
The European Central Bank (ECB) has published a consultation on amendments to the Regulation on oversight requirements for systemically important payment systems (the SIPS Regulation) and two implementing ECB Decisions. The SIPS Regulation sets out the oversight requirements for both large-value and retail payment systems of systematic importance. It applies to payment systems operated both by central banks and by private operators.
The consultation is on draft versions of:
The consultation closes on 8 January 2021.
Following its consultation, the European Payments Council (EPC) has published the first version of the Single European Payments Area (SEPA) Request-To-Pay (RTP) scheme rulebook. The rulebook covers the set of operating rules and technical elements that allow a payee to request the initiation of a payment from a payer in a range of physical or online use cases. The effective date of the first release is 15 June 2021.
An EPC press release gives some important dates related to the new scheme and its maintenance cycle:
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has published a survey on enhancing cross-border payments.
The FATF explains that cross-border payment services generally face four main challenges: high cost, low speed, limited access for users and payment service providers (PSPs) and limited transparency. The FATF notes that a number of factors contribute to these challenges, including divergent national anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorist financing (CTF) measures. Identifying what works well and what needs to be improved is key to finding solutions to the challenges. This is why the FATF, in collaboration with the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS), has developed on online questionnaire.
The aim of the questionnaire is to gather information from the private sector about these challenges and possible ways to address them without compromising AML and CTF safeguards. In particular, the FATF wants information to help it identify areas of divergence in how jurisdictions have implemented customer due diligence (CDD) and other measures stemming from its AML and CTF standards. It gives the examples of inconsistent customer identity documents or sanctions screening requirements across different jurisdictions. However, the FATF recognises that some differences may be necessary or justified based on different underlying risks or different legal systems.
The FATF is seeking feedback from PSPs, banks, FinTech companies, money or value transfer service providers and others. Completed questionnaires can be submitted until 15 January 2021.
In the second phase of the project, the FATF will consider how to reduce the identified challenges by clarifying or updating its standards using various options available. These include amending the standards, issuing further guidance or best practice papers, or convening national authorities in a co-ordination body. However, the FATF does not presume that its standards will need amending.
Authored by Yvonne Clapham