For years, the payments industry has been on a seemingly unstoppable path toward global harmonisation, integration and alignment. The most recent poster child of this trend was the shift to the ISO 20022 messaging standard, which promised to unlock interoperability and seamless value movement across borders.
That somewhat utopian vision has now collided with reality. Geopolitical tensions, national security priorities, and rapid technological innovation have seen fragmentation – not harmonisation – emerge as the defining feature shaping the modern payments ecosystem.
About a year ago, I wrote the article “Wero: The EU’s Ambition to Rattle Credit Card Behemoths,” which explored Europe’s drive to strengthen domestic payment sovereignty through initiatives like the European Payments Initiative (EPI). This trend has not only continued, but accelerated across various payment ecosystems worldwide as countries seek to have greater control over their financial infrastructures.
While the proliferation of payment systems brings benefits such as greater competition and increased customer choice, it inevitably adds layers of complexity for regional and global banks that must support both legacy and emerging rails across multiple jurisdictions.
By charting developments in the underlying rails and models across different payment types – such as account-to-account (A2A), in-store, cross-border, and digital assets – it is clear how fragmentation is already reshaping how money is moved:
Considering these ongoing developments, it is clear that we are entering an era of interconnected but sovereign networks. This will not be a passing phase and, as noted in a recent industry report, “what was once a pursuit of universal efficiency has become a competition among various market systems, each with its own philosophies, capabilities, and constraints.”
Given the rate of innovation and change we are seeing, it is unclear how this fragmentation will ultimately play out and what the end-state will be. What we do know is that multiple infrastructures – both old and new – will co-exist for the foreseeable future.
This presents a massive strategic and operational challenge for banks. Supporting these parallel systems stands to drives up costs, operational risks, and compliance burdens. It also renders the previous pace of change untenable, and it is no longer feasible (if it ever was) to take years to bring a new payment rail online.
The answer to addressing this increased fragmentation lies in consolidation.
It is no longer feasible to develop and maintain individual end-to -end processing engines for different payment types. But by rethinking the payments processing value chain and moving towards a single flexible infrastructure capable of supporting any payment, anytime, anywhere, banks are empowered to safely and easily support new payment types, clearing and settlement methods, markets and use-cases as they emerge.
By designing for divergence, and not against it, banks have the opportunity lead payments forward.