At Pay360, Swift Reported Continued Progress Toward ISO 20022 Mass Adoption
|
NEWS
|
According to Swift, MT 101 is being replaced for the following reasons: “The adoption of ISO 20022 will bring a number of changes and benefits to the financial sector. ISO 20022 messages, including camt.053/camt.052, will provide more structured and detailed information. This will improve data quality and enable automated processing of statements in customers' IT systems. It will also allow [including] the additional transaction-related information, such as the purpose of the money transfer or the addresses of the counterparties, in a structured way that was not adequately supported by the old Swift format.”
Why Is the Current System Being Replaced?
|
IMPACT
|
ISO 20022 replaces the exiting ecosystem of MT/ISO coexistence. The ISO is set to become the sole standard for instant payments by November 2025, marking a crucial point for full adoption of the new standard.
The global adoption of ISO 20022 continues to accelerate. In December, there was an average of 1.4 million CBPR+ payments exchanged daily, spanning 150 sending and 220 receiving countries—a testament to the truly global nature of this adoption. The final quarter of 2024 saw adoption rates up by an impressive 6%, taking the total up to 32.9% overall.
How ISO 20022 Brings Positives over MT 101, but Also Important Challenges
|
RECOMMENDATIONS
|
ISO 20022 brings many benefits compared to MT 101 that make it a more attractive way to process instant payments:
- Enhanced Data Quality: ISO 20022 provides enriched data, which improves the accuracy and detail of payment information, facilitating better decision-making and reporting.
- Improved Interoperability: The standard promotes enhanced interoperability between different payment systems and financial institutions globally, making cross-border transactions smoother and more efficient.
- Greater Efficiency: By standardizing payment messages, ISO 20022 reduces the complexity and cost of processing payments, leading to more streamlined operations.
- Innovation Foundation: The enriched data and interoperability capabilities of ISO 20022 serve as a foundation for innovation, enabling the development of new payment solutions and services.
- Regulatory Compliance: Adoption of ISO 20022 helps financial institutions meet regulatory requirements more effectively, as the standard is designed to support compliance with various international regulations.
- Future-Ready Payments Landscape: ISO 20022 prepares the payments ecosystem for future developments, ensuring that systems are capable of handling evolving payment needs and technologies.
Alongside the positive gained from the transition to ISO 20022, there are also several challenges that are becoming more apparent as more companies switch to the new standard:
- Implementation Complexity: Transitioning to ISO 20022 requires significant changes to existing systems and processes, which can be complex and resource intensive.
- Cost of Transition: The initial investment in technology upgrades, staff training, and process reengineering can be substantial.
- Interoperability Issues: Ensuring seamless interoperability between legacy systems and new ISO 20022-compliant systems can be challenging.
- Data Migration: Migrating existing data to the new standard without loss or corruption requires careful planning and execution.
- Regulatory Compliance: Adapting to new regulatory requirements associated with ISO 20022 can be demanding, especially in regions with stringent financial regulations.
- Stakeholder Coordination: Coordinating the adoption process among various stakeholders, including banks, payment processors, and corporate clients, can be difficult.
- Timeline Pressure: Meeting the deadlines for full adoption, such as the November 2025 deadline for the end of MT/ISO coexistence, can create pressure on organizations to expedite their transition.