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Motor City Community Credit Union in core banking tech revamp with Fiserv and Celero

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Motor City Community Credit UnionCanada-based Motor City Community Credit Union (MCCCU) has signed to implement the DNA core banking platform from Fiserv.

Fiserv’s local partner, Celero, will coordinate the migration to the new system and provide technical banking operations support for the credit union.

MCCCU is a small credit union based in Ontario. It has CAD 351 million in assets, 14,000 members, three retail branches and one corporate lending centre. According to Fiserv, the open architecture of DNA and the ease of integration were the key drivers in the selection.

Charles Janisse, chief executive officer of MCCCU, says his team is “confident that working with Fiserv and Celero will enable us to reinvent our member experience and streamline our internal processes”.

According to Fiserv, around 100 credit unions in Canada are using the DNA core platform, supplied and supported by Celero.


Top fintech stories this week – 5 January 2018

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The catastrophic catalogue of conjectures

The catastrophic catalogue of conjectures

Catch up on Banking Technology’s top five fintech stories of the week – all in one place!

Wall Street Systems takes European Central Bank to court over tech deal with rival Openlink
How to be a sore loser.

Thomas Cook and Ferratum launch mobile banking app for holidays, Sumo
Now available in Sweden. UK to follow soon.

What were we Googling in 2017?
Unicorns and more.

Fintech journalist shares pointless predictions for 2018
Warning: satire!

Magazine: RiskMinds International 2017
The first ever edition.


The latest edition of the Banking Technology magazine is out now!
Click here to read it – the digital edition is free.

Banking Technology Dec 2017 Jan 2018

Conister Bank in core banking tech revamp with TCS

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Finastra's Bankmaster core tech out, TCS Bancs in

Finastra’s Bankmaster core tech out, TCS Bancs in

EXCLUSIVE: Conister Bank, a community bank in the Isle of Man, is modernising its core banking platform, FinTech Futures understands.

The bank is replacing its legacy Bankmaster system, supplied by Finastra (formerly Misys). It is understood the new system is TCS Bancs from India-based TCS Financial Solutions.

It is understood Temenos and Sword Apak were among the contenders for the deal, but the incumbent supplier, Finastra, was not.

The deal has recently been signed and the project is now underway.

Conister Bank was established in 1935. It offers savings and lending products to Isle of Man businesses and individuals. It is owned by Manx Financial Group (formerly Conister Financial Group).

TCS already has a number of clients in the UK’s community banking space, including Capital Credit Union and Scotwest Credit Union, London Mutual Credit Union and Community Savings Bank Association (CSBA).

Eight US credit unions to move to FLEX core banking tech in 2018

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More US credit unions in core tech upgrades

More US credit unions in core tech upgrades

US-based core processor FLEX finished 2017 with the conversion of eight credit unions onto its tech and eight more signed to move in 2018.

The credit unions that moved to FLEX in 2017 are:

  • Members First Credit Union, Utah ($166.7 million in assets)
  • Caprock Federal Credit Union, Texas ($29.3 million)
  • Honolulu Federal Credit Union, Hawaii ($258.4 million)
  • Lubrizol Employees’ Credit Union, Texas ($45 million)
  • Wellspring Federal Credit Union, Texas ($53.7 million)
  • Coloramo Federal Credit Union, Colorado ($95.6 million)
  • Kings Peak Credit Union, Utah ($15.2 million)
  • Parks Heritage Federal Credit Union, New York ($29.8 million)

Darryn Hodgson, EVP of Members First CU, says “the final decision came down to the company culture. We wanted to partner with a core that would listen to our needs and help us accomplish our goals.”

Mark Munemitsu, CEO of Honolulu FCU, adds that “the management and staff at FLEX are personable and make you feel important as a partner, and not just another client that pays their bill”.

FLEX is based in Salt Lake City. It focuses on the low- and mid-tier markets in the US, and has a customer base of around 250 credit unions.

Harrods Bank acquired by challenger Tandem

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Farewell, Harrods Bank

Farewell, Harrods Bank

UK-based challenger bank Tandem has acquired Harrods Bank following regulatory approval.

Tandem says it will “benefit from around £80 million of capital coming into the business”. It will provide Tandem with a banking licence and Harrods’ customers. The deal also brings it a £375 million mortgage book and over £400 million of deposits.

The purchase has today (11 January) been completed following approval from the Prudential Regulation Authority, a division of the Bank of England, and the Financial Conduct Authority.

The Harrods brand will disappear and the bank will operate under the Tandem name and brand.

“The acquisition will allow us to scale the business and ensure we can introduce as many people as possible to a new way of banking,” states Ricky Knox, founder of Tandem.

Earlier in 2017, Tandem lost a major investor, upmarket retail chain House of Fraser, and with it a potential investment of £35 million.

It also surrendered its deposit-taking (i.e. banking) licence and axed 30 jobs.

Harrods Bank, meanwhile, was looking for a buyer to help its struggling business. The bank had been ramping up losses over the years – in 2015 its losses were £4.9 million, and in 2016 they grew to £8.4 million.

The bank was also at one stage in the process of implementing a new core banking system, Temenos’ T24.

Tandem is a user of the Agiliti platform from Fiserv. Agiliti is a shared Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) offering, hosted by Blue Chip. It has around 18 Fiserv and partner applications, including Fiserv’s Signature core banking system.

During its system selection a couple of years back, Tandem also evaluated Temenos and its T24 platform, FinTech Futures understands.

This story was previously published on 7 August 2017 with the same headline. It has been updated to reflect the regulatory approval.

Member Driven Technologies adds four US credit unions

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Four credit unions in the US have selected Member Driven Technologies (MDT) to host the Symitar Episys core banking platform and provide IT solutions for their institutions.

The quartet comprise People Driven Credit Union and OUR Credit Union – both in Michigan: and Cardinal Credit Union in Ohio, and Tennessee-based Veritas Federal Credit Union.

Tina Dix, president and CEO of OUR Credit Union, says MDT has a “strong reputation within the industry” and it needed a system that would “improve operational efficiencies and a platform that would grow and evolve with us”.

According to MDT, it currently provides core processing to approximately 93 credit unions with more than $22 billion in assets and approximately two million members.

It says it has a “hybrid approach” to outsourcing as it reduces the resources required to host IT services in-house, and provides every credit union client with a private server.

EFG and BSI unite on Temenos T24 core banking system

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EFG and BSI unite on Temenos' T24 core banking tech

EFG and BSI unite on Temenos’ T24 core banking tech

Swiss private bank EFG International has competed the migration of all former BSI business onto its technology platform, Temenos’ T24.

The BSI business was moved from Avaloq Banking Suite, supplied on a hosted basis by Temenos’ rival Avaloq.

EFG bought BSI from Brazil’s troubled Grupo BTG Pactual for CHF 1.33 billion ($1.38 billion) in spring 2016. In its turn, BTG Pactual took a stake in EFG of around 20%.

The combined bank manages around CHF 170 billion ($176.6 billion) in revenue-generating assets.

EFG is a long-standing user of Temenos’ T24 core banking system. It was actually one of its very first takers. EFG’s former COO and currently member of the board, Ian Cookson, is Temenos’ non-executive and independent director.

According to a joint presentation by EFG and BSI in May 2016, the IT and operations platform integration and migration project will run until Q4 2018 and cost CHF 80 million ($83 million).

At the time of the takeover, BSI’s annual spend on IT and operations stood at CHF 160 million ($166 million), whilst EFG’s spend was CHF 80 million ($83 million). So BSI’s expenditure in this area was twice as much for a similar number of employees and assets under management (AUM).

PostFinance in core banking tech upgrade

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PostFinance updates core banking tech

PostFinance updates core banking tech

PostFinance, Swiss Post’s financial services arm, will be updating its core banking software over the Easter weekend.

The system is TCS Bancs supplied by India-based TCS Financial Solutions – PostFinance signed for it back in 2011 and went live with it in spring 2014.

PostFinance says the upgrade will “lay the foundations for simple, digital products which will be available to customers more quickly”. The work means there will be restrictions in services from 29 March to 2 April.

“Our payment systems will be available on a limited basis,” PostFinance says. “We will ensure that the transition from the old banking software to the new is as smooth as possible.”

PostFinance embarked on its core platform modernisation nearly a decade ago. A two-year system selection process, which involved 14 vendors and an in-house option, culminated in choosing TCS Bancs to support PostFinance’s domestic and international payments, core banking and account management.

At the time of the contract signing in 2011, Enrico Lardelli, then CIO of PostFinance, referred to TCS Bancs as “a modular, highly configurable system” capable of handling high performance requirements and “widely spread over a lot of countries and businesses”.

Lardelli described the venture was “one of the biggest projects in PostFinance’s history” and “an IT heart transplant operation”. TCS Bancs replaced a legacy solution developed by a small local outfit in co-operation with PostFinance 20 years ago.

“TCS was also chosen because of the good price ratio and the short migration plan, and it is the most economic option for PostFinance,” he added.

PostFinance is the largest payment transactions provider in Switzerland, handling nearly a billion transactions a year. It has 2.9 million customers, including 309,000 business ones.


Finabank in core banking tech revamp with Temenos and Sofgen

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Temenos and Finabank

Eblein Frangie, Finabank (left) and Enrique O’Reilly, Temenos (right)

Finabank in Suriname has signed for a front-to-back office suite of tech from Temenos to drive its “multi-lingual [Dutch and English], multi-currency expansion” across the country.

Finabank operates in the retail, commercial and private banking space and has three branches. It is currently the country’s fourth largest commercial bank, but its ambition is “to become the number one provider of financial solutions in Suriname”.

Temenos’ T24 core banking system, Temenos Connect digital banking platform as well as business intelligence (BI) and financial crime mitigation tools will “help propel Finabank’s efforts”, the vendor says.

The implementation project is scheduled for 18-24 months and will be carried out with the input from Sofgen, a Swiss consultancy firm and system integrator and Temenos partner. Sofgen also assisted Finabank with the selection.

According to Eblein Frangie, CEO of Finabank, during the selection process Temenos demonstrated “a clear understanding” of the bank’s business objectives and how to achieve them.

“With the flexibility of the new platform, we will be able to respond to market needs and create new value-added products and services as we grow,” Frangie states. “Our customers will gain a modern front-end experience, with greater accessibility across channels, while receiving the value that comes from a secure, streamlined technology foundation on the back-end.”

Banking Technology February 2018 issue out now

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Banking Technology February 2018

Banking Technology February 2018

Vision dreams of passion. And all the while I think of fintech.

The latest edition of our flagship magazine – Banking Technology – is out now, packed with news, analysis and insights, case studies, research and expert commentary.

A note from our editor-in-chief, Tanya Andreasyan:

With the fintech industry being all the rage, European firms are spoilt for choice about where to set up their operations.

France and its capital Paris are putting a stake in the ground with the annual Paris Fintech Forum, which is said to gather over 2,000 delegates from 45 countries – with English (!) as the main language of communication.

French president Emmanuel Macron “shocked” the world, according to some media outlets, by addressing a European Union conference in English and switching between French and English at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos.

French and UK governments are also planning to host a joint digital conference later this year to promote deeper integration in the digital economy. France has made “big strides in creating new tech businesses and encouraging entrepreneurs”, the two parties say, with Paris’ newly built Station F, a former railway station hosting start-ups, multinationals and investors.

As a testament to France’s flourishing tech scene, SAP has pledged €2 billion investment into its operations there for its digital and innovation ambitions.

If you prefer a hub on a smaller scale, there’s Amsterdam – “a global village”, in the words of the city’s deputy mayor for finance, Udo Kock.

“We don’t deny that we’re competing with other cities – such as Barcelona, Berlin, London and Paris. But you have to be realistic and say that London and Paris are global cities. Amsterdam is not a global city. It’s a metropolitan city. It’s a global village,” says Kock.

Or how about Lithuania and its capital Vilnius? The country’s central bank and regulator, Bank of Lithuania, has recently launched a regulatory and technological sandbox platform, LBChain, for blockchain testing.

It has also taken a number of practical steps to encourage fintech firms to set up shop in the country, including a three-month application process for an e-money or payment institution licence, direct access to the payment infrastructure of Bank of Lithuania, favourable visa regime and initial capital requirements.

The February 2018 edition of Banking Technology features: 

Payments commentary
The ups and downs of cryptocurrencies.

Case study: Sberbank
No longer just a bank, but a tech company.

Comment: faure to fintech
What music can teach us about communicating the benefits of tech.

Fintech tour Amsterdam
Refreshingly direct (and no jargon).

Interview: Udo Kock, deputy mayor for finance
What makes Amsterdam a “global village”.

Banking Technology Awards 2017
Glitz, glamour, photos and winners!

Spotlight: core banking upgrade
NLB pioneers Temenos’ T24 R17 system.

Comment
Immigration in the banking tech industry – a positive story.

Analysis: correspondent banking
The global network under pressure.

And not to forget the Regulars of course:

Appointments – the movers and the shakers.
Industry events – mark your calendars!
Out of office – curiosities, frustrations and mishaps of the fintech world.

Register to read the digital edition of Banking Technology February 2018

Just a couple of clicks and a complimentary copy is all yours!

Case study: Sberbank – tech them on

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SberbankSberbank now benchmarks its performance against technology companies not other banks. Despite massive market share, it sees plenty of threats and it is seeking to respond at speed and scale.

Everything about Sberbank is big. It dominates its domestic Russian market, as reflected in a host of metrics, such as more than 110 million retail customers, 60 million visits per month to its 14,500 branches (which span eleven time-zones) and 13 million visits per day via its digital channels. It also has massive resources (including 11,500 developers among its 311,000 employees) and, at its investor day in London at the end of last year at which it unveiled its Strategy 2020, it was promising 20.8% return on earnings for 2017, with a target of at least 50% dividends by 2020.

In a market that is hard for non-domestic banks to penetrate and with, to date, no sign of any government plans to break its stranglehold, you’d think it might be sitting back and basking in a comfort-zone that most other banks can only dream about.

In fact, it has major ambitions for technology and for building an ecosystem outside of its core banking activities. Its comfort-zone looks less cosy when evaluating the potential threat from technology companies and, indeed, the main stated goal of its Strategy 2020 is “to push Sberbank to the next level and ensure our ability to compete with global technology companies, while remaining the best bank for customers and businesses”.

From bank to technology company

Herman Gref, Sberbank

Herman Gref, Sberbank

For all the talk of innovation, the bank still has at its heart a lot of legacy systems that it has been struggling to overhaul and replace. The attributes of its new core platform tick the right boxes – cloud-based, open source, a group-level common data source and in-memory computing – and it has a massive ongoing implementation of SAP ERP, having also implemented Wolters Kluwer’s Riskpro for risk management. Nevertheless, the core project is running late and most of the innovation that has happened to date has been around the edges.

Despite the legacy and piecemeal core, its cost-to-income ratio has just edged below 40% with the ambitious target of having this below 30% by 2020. “Is there a single bank of our size at 30%?” asked CEO, Herman Gref, at the investor day. “Unless we have this, we won’t be around because I know society will not pay for our inefficiencies.” If there is an opportunity to buy a service cheaper, customers will always take it, he said.

Gref has identified three stages in the bank’s evolution. Ten years ago, “a different life”, it had long queues, no automation and customer service was from behind bullet-proof windows. From here, it set about becoming leaner without impacting customer value and seeking to remove barriers, both physical but also those “in people’s minds”.

The second phase saw technology applied to serve customers but Gref admits it wasn’t a straightforward story, with much outsourcing to vendors and often long delays. However, in parallel it started to lay the foundations to break down the walls between the business and technology and move to an in-house development model.

This has paved the way for the current third phase. It is seeking radical change in four key areas, Gref says: the client relationship, the quality of its products, its channels (including social media) and efficiency.

SberTech, which has housed the bank’s development resources since 2011, has 46 centres and has more than 550 active projects, with around 17,000 implementations per year.

Lev Khasis, Sberbank

Lev Khasis, Sberbank

“We have less and less dependence on external vendors,” says the bank’s COO, Lev Khasis. “We are creating a completely different time-to-market.” This includes adopting Agile on a massive scale, with 1300 teams and with all development staff due to have completed training by 2020. It is described as the “largest Agile transition project in banking”.

Recruiting and retaining staff is a challenge. It works closely with Russian universities and also has its own internal academy. While its overall headcount declines, it will have more than doubled its number of IT, data and risk management staff between 2008 and 2020. In addition, all 35,000 Sberbank managers are going through IT and data training to acquire these skills. Also aiding the “cross-fertilisation”, every business unit now has at least one chief data scientist.

The bank expects to apply artificial intelligence (AI) to recruitment, including shortlisting, and to staff management, moving to a single cloud-based HR platform. Its IT budget as a proportion of overall costs is expected to be 15% by 2020, compared with 12% at present, with overall bank-wide staff costs falling from 59% to 55% in the same period.

Gref claims Sberbank delivered on its previous three-year strategy in only two years, driven on by a sense of urgency. Technology companies are its main concern. Sberbank today compares its results not with its peer group of banks, says Gref, but with technology companies. “They are our main competition” so the bank must be brave enough to use them as the benchmark. “Silicon Valley eats banks’ breakfasts every day,” he says. Sberbank in turn wants to eat other banks’ breakfasts. “We can definitely say Sberbank isn’t just a bank any more, to an extent it is a technology company.”

So for all the rhetoric, how far has it come? It admits that the overhaul of the core, which started in 2014, has proved to be harder than expected. Gref describes it as a “gigantic evolution” that the bank couldn’t truly comprehend at the outset. He admits there is also still work to do in terms of its speed and agility to develop and deliver new products.

The revised timetable for the core, according to Khasis, is now for all coding and hardware to be in place during 2018, followed by test migrations in 2019 and full-scale launch in 2020.

This will facilitate on-going efforts to reduce its back office. Where it had 58,000 back office staff in 2008, it now claims 10,000 across seven centres, with the aim of fewer than 6000 staff and a single shared service centre to coincide with the “complete departure” from the legacy systems.

For digitalisation, Gref claims “enormous steps at great speed” but admits to being a relative newcomer, so with work still to do. Similarly for data analytics, four years of effort have made it one of the leading entities in the Russian market, he claims, but this is also still work in progress. Overall improved productivity is, in Gref’s words, “a limitless journey”.

Building the “ecosystem”

If you can’t beat them, join them, seems to be the ethos when it comes to technology companies. Gref envisages the likes of facebook, Amazon and Google making major plays in the financial services space in the next year. “Everything we have seen before has been a warm-up.”

Part of the bank’s response has been the build-up of an ecosystem to facilitate a rapid move into broader financial services, allowing the bank to diversify as others come for its traditional core business. “We want an attack strategy,” says Gref, moving the other way as new competitors come onto its turf.

One area of focus has been real estate, with the launch in January 2017 of Domclick.ru, which is meant to support all aspects of buying or renting a property, including associated documents, electronic registration and insurance, through to renovation and furniture. It claims a share of new mortgages of more than ten per cent in its first year (50,000+).

There are seven stages to buying a flat, says deputy chairman, Maxim Poletaev, but banks traditionally only cover two of these – the mortgage and payments. “We need to cover the whole chain.”

It bought into the healthcare sector, in the form of DocDoc, an app-based aggregator that links customers with 28,000 doctors and 1000+ clinics. It claims a 60% share of online health services in Russia. Sberbank also has more traditional subsidiaries for pensions, insurance, asset management and depository services.

It also invested in biometrics specialist, VisionLabs, and a year or so back created its own cybersecurity company, branded as BI.Zone. The latter is providing commercial services so that only around ten per cent of its business is with the bank itself. It has gained accreditation from Swift and has an agreement with Interpol to share intelligence data.

Khasis points out that the bank does not always need to be the provider of services. “Our role is to become the orchestrator of the ecosystem.” An example is a recently inked joint venture with Yandex, for e-commerce, with expectations that other partnerships will follow. It is known to have held talks with the Chinese mega-company, Alibaba, but with no tangible outcome to date – “sometimes two elephants find it difficult to dance a tango”, says Gref.

Khasis sees a lot of potential for growth of e-commerce in Russia, as it only currently accounts for around 4% of commerce, versus over 20% in, for instance, China. The aim is to turn Yandex’s current shopping comparison site into a fully-fledged e-commerce platform.

Other areas of innovation

“Mass personalisation” is one rallying cry, moving from the traditional segmentation of customers by groups, typically based on the balance in their accounts, to much more nuanced analysis, that includes data about their habits, hobbies and social behaviour, and allowing real-time offers based on triggers. It claims to have made more than 500 million personal offers to clients in 2017, with this intended to be more than one billon by 2020.

Poletaev describes the change as moving from financial profiles to social profiles, built up through customers’ interactions with the call centre, branch and channels as well as social media. By 2020, it wants to have “fully-filled profiles” of 95% of its customers and to have 90% of its sales consultations based on these. Often it has made the wrong offers, via the wrong channels to the wrong customers. Among new approaches, it is placing a lot of emphasis on targeted two-minute video campaigns.

For credit cards, it has more than one million point-of-sale terminals and now takes one to three days to install new software, such as for AndroidPay and ApplePay. It is diversifying here, with a transportation app to support public transport payments and with others to support university campus cards. It also foresees a shift away from physical cards, ultimately to facial, fingerprint and voice activated payments…


This is an excerpt. The full article is available in the February 2018 edition of the Banking Technology magazine.
Click here to read it – the digital edition is free!

Banking Technology magazine Feb 2018 banner

ION acquires treasury management tech vendor Openlink

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Openlink acquired by ION

Openlink acquired by ION

Openlink Financial, a provider of trading and risk management tech for the energy, commodities and financial services industries, has been acquired by ION Investment Group.

The seller is Hellman & Friedman, a private equity firm that has owned Openlink since 2011 (it purchased the tech firm from another PE company, The Carlyle Group).

ION, via its ION Trading technology subsidiary, already owns most of the key treasury management software (TMS) providers, including Wall Street Systems, IT2 and Financial Software Systems (FSS). The two exceptions at present on the international scene are Calypso and Murex.

Although Andrea Pignataro, ION’s CEO, describes Openlink’s solutions and expertise as “highly complementary to ION’s business”, Openlink directly competes with Wall Street Systems in the financial services/banking space. Most recently, both companies bid for a project at the European Central Bank (ECB). When Openlink emerged as the winner, Wall Street Systems – the incumbent tech provider to ECB – took the bank to court.

“Openlink is in a great position to capitalise on its track record, strong customer relationships and the substantial investments made in its product portfolio,” says Ben Farkas, partner at Hellman & Friedman.

UBS Investment Bank acted as exclusive financial advisor to ION and provided committed financing in support of the transaction.

Centerview Partners acted as exclusive financial advisor to Openlink.

Linklaters served as legal counsel to ION, while Simpson Thacher & Bartlett served as legal counsel to Hellman & Friedman and Openlink.

Myanmar Citizens Banks signs for Temenos’ T24 core banking system

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New core banking tech deal for Temenos in Myanmar

New core banking tech deal for Temenos in Myanmar

Myanmar Citizens Bank (MCB) has signed for Temenos’ T24 core banking system, FinTech Futures understands.

The implementation partner is Techmill Technologies, an India-based system integrator and Temenos partner.

It is understood the MCB will also implement the vendor’s front-end software for digital channels, Temenos Connect.

Temenos already has a number of takers of its flagship T24 platform in the country, namely Co-operative Bank (CB Bank), Myanmar Oriental Bank and Fullerton Financial.

New go-lives and clients for core banking tech vendor BML Istisharat

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New core banking tech go-lives and clients for BML Istisharat

New core banking tech go-lives and clients for BML Istisharat

Lebanon-based BLC Bank has ousted the legacy Ambit Treasury Management (Quantum) system from FIS/Sungard in favour of BML Istisharat’s ICBS.

BML already supplies its flagship ICBS solution for core banking operations at BLC Bank. Now, the system’s treasury and capital markets modules support placements/deposits with correspondent banks, interbank transfers, fixed income (bonds and treasury bills), and Swift interface and integration with the main core system through web services at the bank.

Elsewhere, Liberty International Bank, a start-up venture of Société Générale in Abu Dhabi, has gone live on the ICBS core banking system.

Also, Bank of Jordan, a long-standing user of ICBS in Jordan and Syria, has selected the system for its newly established subsidiary in Bahrain.

Further afield, Peterhouse Securities in the UK, also opted for the ICBS core.

Meanwhile, BML is now venturing into Asia Pacific with its core banking platform – Malaysia-based Vastcomp has recently become its distributor in Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Brunei and Singapore.

BML currently has one customer in that region – Malaysia-based Bank Simpanan Nasional (BSN) – to FinTech Futures’ knowledge. The project dates back to 2011/2012, when BSN chose ICBS for a major core banking transformation project, to replace a number of legacy systems, including the ICBA solution from local developer Infopro.

The deal came through Heitech Padu, BML’s distributor in Malaysia and Indonesia, and the project is expected to cost MYR 100 million ($32 million).

BSN is a government-owned bank, with around 400 branches, 5,100 employees and almost ten million accounts.

Banco Postal implements Fiorano’s integration software

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Fun with flags

Fun with flags

Banco Postal, Angola’s ethical bank, has implemented Fiorano Software’s platform “to tackle integration challenges in its digital transformation journey”, according to the vendor.

Banco Postal runs two core banking systems, TagPay and Temenos’ T24. The bank opted for Fiorano “for its native integration with T24”, the vendor explains.

The bank also needed to integrate with Angola’s national payment subsystem, Empresa Interbancária de Serviços (EMIS), from scratch, including the mobile application to enable mobile and utility bill payment services for the customers.

“Banco Postal is built on a strong commitment for financial inclusion in Angola. Having such an innovative approach to banking, the technical challenges were one of the biggest constraints to the success of such implementation,” says Marcelo Barreto, head of IT, Banco Postal. “Fiorano enabled us to swiftly tackle these restrictions.”

He also compliments Fiorano’s “collaborative environment and deep commitment”, which enabled the bank to deliver the required integrations in under two months.


Techmill and Temenos to deploy new core banking system at CHDB

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CHDB signs for Temenos

Construction and Housing Development Bank (CHDB) in Myanmar is replacing its legacy core banking system with Temenos’ T24.

The bank will implement the R17 version of the system.

The new platform will support retail banking operations at CHDB as well as internet and mobile channels.

The implementation will be carried out by an India-based system integrator and Temenos’ partner, Techmill Technologies.

Recently, Techmill and Temenos scored another new customer in Myanmar – Myanmar Citizens Bank (MCB).

Five new core banking tech clients for CSI

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Five new banking tech clients for CSI

Computer Services Inc (CSI), a US-based provider of banking software, has signed five new banks for its core processing and digital banking tech.

These are:

  • Studio Bank, a start-up bank in Tennessee;
  • Kensington Bank in Minnesota;
  • United Community Bank in Minnesota;
  • Neighborhood National Bank in Minnesota;
  • Victory State Bank in New York.

It is understood the latter is moving from the PhoenixEFE core system supplied by Finastra (formerly D+H).

“The banks selected CSI to implement core banking technology, combined with additional digital banking services, to provide a full suite of integrated solutions to enhance productivity within and outside of the branch,” the vendor states.

Aaron Dorn, chairman, president and CEO of Studio Bank (the bank is waiting for the go-ahead from the regulators to launch), says CSI is “the right fintech partner to design a mobile and online experience that aligns with our unique in-branch experience”.

Abcul searches for new CEO as Mark Lyonette moves on

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Mark Lyonette is leaving Abcul

The Association of British Credit Unions Limited (Abcul) is looking for a new leader as the incumbent chief executive of 20 years is leaving the company.

Lyonette will become new CEO of the National Pharmacy Association once he leaves Abcul in May this year.

Meanwhile, Abcul has kicked off the search for a replacement. The position comes with a circa £70,000 annual salary and is based at Abcul’s head office in Manchester.

“While a significant function of the role is outward looking, it is important the successful candidate also understands the importance of being present and visible in the office,” the company says.

The closing date for applications in 28 February 2018 (you can apply here).

Under Lyonette’s leadership, Abcul says it more than quadrupled its membership and its assets under management (AUM) grew by nearly 900%. Around 200 UK credit unions are Abcul members.

But Lyonette also presided over a far from successful project to modernise Abcul’s technology and operations.

The project, known as Model Credit Union, was part of a broader Credit Union Expansion Project (CUEP), initiated by the UK government back in 2014.

The overall programme was valued at £38 million, with the technology portion believed to be around £8 million.

Abcul’s dedicated subsidiary, Cornerstone Mutual Services, was carrying out the work. The plan was to bring together a range of facilities, including a new core banking system and a new mobile app – both provided by Fiserv – and migrate Abcul’s members onto this new shared platform.

Around 35 credit unions signed for the new platform but just three managed to go live. The venture came to a grinding halt last year, as reported exclusively by FinTech Futures.

The fate of Cornerstone is yet to be unveiled, with rumours on the market that it is being disbanded. Abcul told FinTech Futures that Cornerstone is not being liquidated, but no further details are yet available.

Stanbic Bank in core banking system upgrade with Validata

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Validata gains new client in Africa

Validata has gained a new taker in Africa for its quality assurance software. This is understood to be Stanbic Bank in Kenya.

Stanbic Bank is upgrading its core banking system, Temenos’ T24.

The bank issued a request for proposal (RFP) earlier this year looking for an automation test solution to improve the quality of its testing processes.

According to Validata, the RFP process included an “exhaustive” proof of concept, where the tech vendor “successfully met all of the bank’s requirements”, beating other contenders, including HPE and IBM, to the deal.

Validata states it was selected “for its ability to add value throughout the automated lifecycle process, from requirements management to testing, defect management, release automation and reporting”.

Vaios Vaitsis, CEO and founder of Validata, is confident his company’s DevTestOps solutions for Temenos substantially reduce production defects compared to other solutions, as well as reduce testing times and the deployment of software corrections by half and with fewer resources.

KBC in group-wide tech renovation project with Temenos

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Belgium-based banking group KBC is undergoing a major technology modernisation enterprise wide, with Temenos as the main tech supplier.

Temenos is already supplying its flagship T24 core banking system to KBC in Ireland and says the two parties have built “a good relationship”.

The banking group is on a “progressive renovation” journey of its international operations and is working with Temenos to roll out the new core banking platform across multiple geographies.

KBC core markets

 

As part of its group strategy, KBC will set up an open architecture IT package as core banking system for its international markets unit. It will also create a common competency centre, BE@T.

There will be one centrally managed infrastructure and all countries will gradually migrate to the agreed target architecture. However, dedicated programmes will be run by the country managers.

All T24 modules will be upgraded at least every three years – the bank will apply the “stay together” (enabling sharing) and “stay current” (latest developments) approach.

There will be no internal T24 development or customisations of the core system’s modules, unless agreed by the bank’s design board.

Also, KBC says it aims to improve the applications it offers its clients – a one-stop-shop offering – via co-creation/partnerships with fintechs and other value chain players.

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