CONTRIBUTED ARTICLE: CITI
Naveed Sultan is Managing Director, Head of Global Transaction Services in Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) |
For those not directly involved in SEPA’s creation, there are two common misconceptions. Misconception 1: “Because SEPA concerns only euro payments, it is just a matter for Europeans”. Misconception 2: “Because it is merely a change to formats passed between banks, only bankers need to know about it”. Wrong in both cases: all firms that trade in and with Europe could be affected.
To understand the impact of SEPA in more detail, let’s take two types of business; the large multinational already doing business across Europe and the fast-growing company that’s increasingly looking at trading abroad.
Many multinationals with extensive operations in Europe are already centralizing and standardizing their payments, collections and liquidity management processes. But firms that have sought efficiencies through adoption of a single global ERP system—or centralized structures such as payment factories, in-house banks or shared service centers—have been compromised by the persistence of local payment practices. Payment factories still have to consolidate payment files from multiple local offices and shared service centers still need to maintain expertise in local payment practices. The question all multinationals should ask is: how much more efficient could our payment processes be under SEPA? As the single market takes shape and new sources of competition emerge, low operating costs will be increasingly critical. Cross-border trade is central to the SEPA vision; a uniform payment and collection process across Europe can remove the constraints that previously accompanied management of supply chain relationships, thereby enabling firms to source from the best suppliers regardless of where in Europe they are located.
For firms that conduct increasing volumes of business with Europe, SEPA offers a different kind of opportunity. When establishing operations in say, France, Germany and Spain, it has typically been necessary to establish banking relationships, open bank accounts and define best practice for payment and collections processes in all three countries—adding considerable cost and effort to the decision to expand into new markets. If businesses can operate out of a single account with one bank in any Member State, the costs of serving the European market are reduced considerably. While technology drove efficiencies in the physical supply chain to make it easier to reach remote markets, the development of common payment standards is now having the same impact on the financial supply chain. Automation and standardization lie at the heart of SEPA, enabling integration and interoperability with companies’ existing systems, for example by taking advantage of XML-based ISO 20022 message standards.
Although SEPA is key to doing business in Europe more easily, many questions remain. For example, SEPA payment
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As a global bank with a pan-European cash management network that offers clients a combination of both domestic and regional capabilities, Citi has been taking a leading role in the creation of SEPA. Our active engagement in the design and implementation of the new standards puts us in an ideal position to guide our clients through the many changes that SEPA will bring. We talk to customers every day about how their European business could be more efficient and streamlined. For example, making all euro payments out of a single account sounds like a great opportunity for cost savings, but this may not be the most effective alternative for many firms. Customer preferences, industry practices, plus legal and tax considerations, must all be analyzed before restructuring your payment and banking arrangements. Citi can help you identify and pursue the real opportunities in Europe and across the world, helping us all to reap the benefits of the new payments market.
Naveed Sultan is Head of Global Transactions Services (GTS)
for Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) responsible
for cash management, trade finance and services and
securities and fund services across the region.
Naveed Sultan