Banks Recouping Market Share In Growing Global Money Transfer Industry, Says Celent

Banks are recapturing global money transfer market share from the traditional money transfer agents, say consultants Celent in a new report on the subject. Celent also predicts that by 2007 more than 40 per cent of foreign born households will

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Banks are recapturing global money transfer market share from the traditional money transfer agents, say consultants Celent in a new report on the subject. Celent also predicts that by 2007 more than 40 per cent of foreign-born households will bank online, and at least half this number will use an online or card service to send remittances.

In the new report, Global Money Transfers: Getting The Formula Right When High-Tech Meets High-Touch, Celent provides an assessment of the current remittance market landscape. The report examines a new paradigm emerging in the marketplace whereby “sponsor banks” are teaming up with card processors and distribution companies to overcome traditional barriers to entry: large origination and distribution networks, scalable technology platforms, and stringent compliance issues.

The emerging models come from both public and private companies that will take a best-of-breed approach to money transfer, partnering with specific banks, processors, and distributors to ensure that critical requirements of their business are met. ATM card/POS terminal processing, Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) guidelines, stored value card compliance, and agent distribution can all be handled by a set of partners. This will allow entrants to conduct large-scale competition without highly capital-intensive investments.

Celent finds that while there will be downward pressure on pricing due through increased competition and bundling of products and services, the money transfer market will remain profitable due to its sheer size and fragmentation. The remittance market should grow from US$256 billion in 2005 to US$281 billion in 2006 while flows from unlicensed entities continue to decrease due to increased regulatory scrutiny.

“This year, we will see entrants with a combination of business processes, local distribution, and new technology that should finally bridge the “high-tech, high-touch” divide in the marketplace and win with the right formula,” says Dan Schatt, a senior analyst in Celent’s banking group and author of the report.

The report finds that there is a growing divergence of opinion in the US marketplace over how best to reach remitters. The high-tech camp emphasizes technology and price as a primary consumer decision factor, while institutions in the high-touch camp emphasize ongoing personalized contact and rely primarily on walk-in traffic to their agent locations.

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