Connect your fintech

If you are facing months of boring integration development to connect your fintech to Currency Cloud, then this simple guide will help you fast track so you can get on with more exciting product development on the front end.

All you have to do is request one simple API from Integrated Finance which then takes care of your Currency Cloud connection. What’s more, it also keeps the connection up to date if Currency Cloud changes its API when live.

But the benefits don’t stop there. You can also quickly connect other vendors to the Integrated Finance Hub alongside Currency Cloud such as Railsbank.

Known as IF CONNECT there are no upfront development costs, just one monthly “pay as you grow” fee which also makes it the ideal solution for start-ups and those financing product development projects.

So, when we quickly connect you to Currency Cloud you get all the services you expect very quickly:

  • Access Wholesales FX Rates
  • Client Safeguarded Accounts
  • Local UK payment schemes
  • Local European payment schemes
  • SWIFT
  • and more…

For more guidance on connecting to Currency Cloud easily, request a simple and quick no obligation demo by getting in touch today. We love showing developers the simplicity of our solution.

Railsbank

If you are a financial service provider and want to make a new connection to Railsbank quickly, the new platform IF CONNECT can help easily automate your integration. What’s more, if you are using other vendors such as Barclays, ClearBank, or CurrencyCloud, you can also connect to them easily and use all the systems together, seamlessly.

This platform does the hard work for you, so you don’t need to, with one simple API for Railsbank and more. 

Connect once, and for all

When you Connect Railsbank to any one of the multiple finance systems it is compatible with, it will automate the process in one quick and easy way. By connecting Railsbank alongside other vendors and your front-end platform, you can then perform several actions that you’d expect including:

  • Accessing Wholesales Foreign Exchange Rates
  • Issuing bank accounts to your customers
  • Multi-Jurisdictional Licence
  • Compliance-as-a-Service

The best way to connect Railsbank with Fintech

IF CONNECT only needs to be connected once, and it will keep all your systems up-to-date even if banks change their API. By effortlessly introducing new payment providers to your platform, for example integrating Barclays Bank, CurrencyCloud or Clear Bank, or any other FinTech, it turns it into the ultimate SAAS banking solution for you and your customers.

In fact, you avoid high upfront development fees and then pay as you grow on a monthly basis.

How to connect to Railsbank easily along with multiple vendors

All the systems are connected seamlessly to one hub (IF CONNECT), easily connecting several banks, apps and financial compliance tools including AML, KYC or KYB.

The application also keeps the connection to Railsbank and other systems up to date, even if the bank changes their API (which happens frequently).

Fast track fintech product development

Using IF CONNECT as the hub, you can also easily grow your product offering by quickly introducing new payment providers that match your specific needs. You can add Barclays Bank very easily for example.

We take the hard development work out of making the connection to Railsbank and others, so you can focus on your own product development.

What’s more, if you also need a modern front office customer portal, IF CORE may be the ideal SAAS banking platform for you – with connections built in.

Request a demo by getting in touch today.

Fintech infrastructure

Modern customer-facing financial services are all built on a stack of third-party vendors. That stack typically looks something like the below, featuring market infrastructure, bank transactions, card transactions and data access:

The driving force behind the modern financial service stack is the unbundling of banking services, with each product and service on a level of the stack now delivered by a single firm. This compares historically to a single firm delivering services on every level of the stack directly to the customers.

The benefits businesses get from unbundled banking include: better products at much more visible prices and availability to a wider audience, particularly at the lower end of business size where high fixed costs are more of a blocker to get started.

The downside to the new stack is the need to build and maintain multiple financial integrations on each level depending on what service a firm provides to customers. That comes with upfront development costs, as well as the opportunity cost of not having developers focus 100% on the core offering.

Out of the new financial stack three business models have emerged to help businesses building financial services products:

  1. Unregulated BaaS Providers: these Fintech’s offer banking infrastructure APIs to customers and partner with a few banks or Fintech’s (usually 1-4) on the back end. Examples include Bankable, Marqeta & Swan
  2. Regulated Banks and Fintech’s Offering BaaS APIs: this includes both legacy (e.g., Citi, Goldman), digital-first banks (e.g., Clearbank, Cross River) and larger Fintech (Railsbank, Currency Cloud, Nium) offering APIs through BaaS platforms.
  3. Unregulated API Routing Layers Offering Financial Infrastructure API Marketplaces. (e.g Integrated Finance, Bond). A financial service routing layer offers access to a large ecosystem of banks and Fintechs (all of the providers in 1 & 2 above), giving customers much more choice over who to partner with and vastly reduce the risk associated with dependency on a single provider, should they go down.

We may be biased, but we think the third model (API routing layers) gives some major advantages to businesses building financial service products in the modern world.

Integrated Finance is an API routing layer for financial services. Our platform enables you to programmatically access multiple financial service vendors via a single API, removing costly upfront integrations and significantly reducing the often hidden ongoing costs of maintaining those integrations.

Get in touch to find out more.

API routing layer -Advantages of using an API routing layer

Modern customer-facing financial services are all built on a stack of third-party vendors, with three core business models emerging – unregulated BaaS providers, regulated banks and fintechs offering BaaS APIs or unregulated API routing layers.

We might be biased, but with the help of Integrated Finance, we think the API first, developer friendly routing layer model gives some major advantages to businesses building financial service products and here’s why.

Building and maintaining multiple providers

As the new financial services technical stack emerged so too has a plethora of suppliers that focus on each specific layer. With many fintech vendors looking very much like enterprise sales organisations,  identifying subtle differences in services providers can be hard for customers without specific background knowledge. Time then is wasted on selecting the wrong vendor, getting a commercial agreement and integrating. The huge opportunity cost for a business is not working on your core offering.

Beyond the distraction of building your core I.P another distinct challenge is that whilst each supplier does more or less the same thing, the way you interact with these vendors varies greatly. The data required to post and receive information for account generation, FX, and regionally specific payments has no unified standard. There is no open banking API for this stuff.

Simplifying difficult to do, legacy financial integrations

Anyone who has tried to connect to a bank running on legacy systems will know what a pain it can be, both from the customer and bank’s perspective. For customers, legacy connection methods are difficult to implement without specialist help because of sparse information in the large code repositories.

Banks and legacy bank integration firms have been slow to externalise their knowledge, making it harder for developers from outside financial services to find useful help without paying and third parties to do the integration on your behalf. 

Integrated Finance builds and maintains difficult, legacy integrations and transforms them into a simple to use modern API. Crucially, banks will continue to play an integral role in our ecosystem, providing a modern wrap-around for their own legacy integration methods.

Focus on your core offering, unleash your developers

Let’s face it, financial service integrations are not cool. They are also probably not your core customer offering. During the initial stages of getting a product working, integrations might seem important but as a business scales they soon lose their allure.

It’s a problem we see again and again, choosing whether the team’s responsibility is to look after non-core integrations, when there are super cool (and urgent) core customer features to build. So it gets neglected and responsibility falls through the cracks. Then disaster strikes, one of the vendors changes their APIs and your whole system goes down and the CEO shouts at you.

API routing layers solve this problem, allowing your development team to focus on your core offering and not needing to worry about maintaining uncool financial plumbing. Our platform attaches a SAAS fee to the unsexy task of building and maintaining integrations to your financial service providers. Overall organisational cost is lower than having your developers distracted and focusing on non-core features.

Advantages for product teams

Using a routing layer gives a product team access the functionality of a company with significantly larger resources. Built in redundancy where you can easily route traffic to multiple providers or add and subtract vendors quickly and easily. The API routing layers enable fast growing products to quickly achieve the right cost, speed, reliability, or experience optimisation for your business.

Leveling the playing field. Turning high fixed cost financial infrastructure into a pay-as-you-grow subscription

Financial service companies of every size can now, either early in their development or as they scale, add massive optionality and coverage to their product offering via our API routing layer. Our customers are able to enable similar impact and feature depth as much larger and better funded competitors at scale.

Get in touch to find out more about Integrated Finance.

connect your internal systems -Free Connectivity in Fintech White Paper

There are many things you need to consider before you start building a transactional banking fintech service. For example, do you know how to keep integrations up to date? Have you thought about how to safeguard your clients’ money as well as your own? Did you know there were FX cut-off times?   

In our latest free white paper download, titled ‘How to Build a Transactional Banking Fintech Service’, we look at the various points you need to know before you start. 

Download now to learn more.

Free Transactional Banking Fintech Service White Paper 

This white paper is a guide and glossary containing the things you need to know in order to build and maintain a transactional banking fintech service.  

We have listed the terms, products and processes you need to be familiar with and explained them clearly in individual, bite-sized sections, because it is so important to know your stuff. 

Download our Transactional Banking Fintech Service White Paper now to learn more.  

Download

Free White Paper on Fintech Connectivity



Making financial infrastructure connections? We can help! 

If financial infrastructure is your thing, Integrated Finance can help. We build, implement, and maintain disparate financial integrations, so that your developers can get on with building the products and solutions that delight your customers. 

Let us help you save time, and implement a new, simplified way of doing things in fintech. 

Get in touch to discuss how we can help.

There are several different types of integrations that financial service providers use to allow you to connect your internal systems to theirs. And there are many ways that you can use these connections to automate your messaging, instructions and reporting. However, there has been a recent explosion of APIs in Fintech.

So, what is an API? And can they really transform financial services for the better?

We explore this and much more in our latest White Paper. Download now.

Download

Free White Paper on Fintech Connectivity



Or read on to learn more.

APIs – The Basics

An Application Programming Interface (API) is a computing interface which defines interactions between multiple software intermediaries. It defines the kind of calls or requests that can be made, how to make them, the data formats that should be used and the conventions to follow.

APIs are flexible. They can be entirely custom, specific to a component, or can be designed based on an industry-standard to ensure interoperability.  

How APIs are used in finance

Most financial services APIs are currently custom architected, but industry standardisation is underway driven by not-for-profit collectives such as the Banking Industry Architecture Network (BIAN) or the regulators in relevant jurisdictions (PSD2 being an example of a more mature one). 

APIs are transforming financial services for the better, but progress has only just begun and that’s why you’ll often hear the phrase “Fintech is only 1% finished”. But it’s possible that APIs will end up eating financial services as we know them today, allowing for a revolution in both what we consume, and how we consume it.

APIs and the Xaas

APIs have also helped to spring up their own industry discipline type, the XaaS (As a Service). Particularly, Banking-as-a-service, where firms build a technology layer over traditional financial service products and expose the functionality in a more intuitive and accessible fashion.

This XaaS connective layer is transforming the industry from hard to connect and stand-alone services into public APIs. They are easy to talk to and open up a whole new world of possibility in terms of real-time interactions with financial service providers.

Specialist service providers emerge

The traditional financial services stack, usually soldered together within a large bank, has been unbundled into separate products with one or a few specialist firm/s hyper-focussing, on amplifying the specific product or service. Customers can access these firms via customer portal or app and via each firm’s own public APIs.

What the addition of public APIs is allowing these specialists to achieve is their own version of the sellotaping together of products and services and to create a mashup of a banking stack. The difference now is that you can pick the best in class provider of each service to combine, and those providers are generally open for any business to consume from start-up to enterprise.

What are Open Banking APIs?

Open Banking APIs were mandated by the European parliament to ‘promote the development and use of innovative online and mobile payments’. PSD2 requires all banks and PSPs to offer ‘open’ APIs. The open in this case means access by third parties to certain information the bank holds about an account holder (for example spending history) and to perform certain things on the account holder’s behalf such as initiating payments.

Open Banking APIs currently have limited use cases. If you imagine the financial services stack as an iceberg, Open Banking is the bit bobbing above the surface. Navigating the complex sea of financial services requires a much deeper understanding of technologies old and new. To offer the full tide of banking solutions, one must embrace a whole host of disparate and custom APIs (and other connection methods) that exist underneath the waterline. It is these integrations that will allow access to the heavy lifting financial operations that may go on to create greater industry innovation.

Other types of connections

APIs are not the only option. There remains three other popular and incumbent ways to connect to financial service providers.

To find out more about these, and explore which approach could work best for you, download our free White Paper: Connectivity in Fintech

Need simpler Fintech integrations?

Integrated Finance helps build, expand and manage financial infrastructures, quickly, easily and at a low cost. The company launched in October 2020 with the introduction of both IF CONNECT and IF CORE, the first time that any business has focused on simplifying the integration process in the Fintech market.

Get in touch to discuss how we can help.

white-paper-download

If you’re in Fintech, you’ll no doubt have heard a lot about Virtual Accounts in recent years. But, do you really know what they are and what they are for?

How about why they are so popular?

And do you know how you can build them? And whether it will be a worthwhile investment for the future?

We’ve had so many discussions around these questions (and more!), that we have put together a Fintech White Paper compiling our thoughts, and its available to download now for free.

Free Fintech White Paper on Virtual Accounts

The White Paper is written by Daniel Cronin, co-founder of Integrated Finance, who previously ran an E-money firm in London and has extensive experience in the Fintech sector.

It looks at their origins, their use, their context in the modern Fintech landscape and thoughts on their future.

It covers all the most frequently asked questions about Virtual Accounts, such as:

  • What are Virtual Accounts?
  • What do Virtual Accounts do?
  • Why are they here?
  • Who are they for?
  • What’s virtual about them?
  • What is the difference between virtual and bank accounts?
  • Why does Fintech love Virtual Accounts?
  • Why do so few banks offer Virtual Accounts?
  • Does it matter what tech I use if I want to build them?
  • Where and how can I get them?
  • What do banks and regulators think about Virtual Accounts?
  • What does the future hold for them?
  • And more….

Even within the finance sector, few are aware of the wide range of uses for Virtual Accounts and many assume that they are unnecessary in banking, with niche value. However, we believe they have a very important role to play and offer significant benefits.

Download the Virtual Accounts white paper now to learn more.

Download Now

Fintech White Paper on Virtual Accounts



An easy, integrated approach to financial infrastructures

Integrated Finance helps build, expand and manage financial infrastructures, quickly, easily and at a low cost. The company launched in October 2020 with the introduction of both IF CONNECT and IF CORE, the first time that any business has focused on simplifying the integration process in the Fintech market.

Get in touch to discuss how we can help.

One of Fintech’s more in-vogue products of the last five years is Virtual Accounts. Virtual Accounts go by a lot of different terms, vIBANS, virtual ledgers, named accounts, sub-accounts, ZBAs and quite a few more.

But why are they needed? And what do you need to know about them?

Read on or download our latest White Paper to find out.

Why are Virtual Accounts needed?

Like most inventions, virtual accounts were built with a specific use in mind. The use case being to help businesses reduce errors in payments and referencing, and the pain caused by said errors! Virtual accounts were designed to give businesses some simple benefits. Namely:

  • To reduce (or rationalise if you are a treasurer) the number of bank accounts you had to maintain
  • To simplify cash management and reconciliation
  • And to provide the same level of control and reporting as traditional accounts

Problems with Virtual Accounts

Let me give you a real-life example of only one of the numerous times it has happened to a business.

The following happened to a previous venture of one of our co-founders. The company was growing quickly and in need of some office supplies. Most staff preferred to use Mac instead of Microsoft, so an order was placed for around 10 MacBooks.

As a Fintech player, the company tended to maintain a lot of balances with partner Fintechs. CurrencyCloud was one such partner, and for operational convenience, settled its outstanding bill with Apple through a CurrencyCloud account. The payment instructions were entered, and the Apple corporate account reference number was (correctly) applied, and off the payment went. 

CurrencyCloud generated a proof of payment document later that day just for certainty and that should have been the end of it. However, a few weeks later an email was received from Apple.

“Funds not received, please pay asap”

Our co-founder called them up and explained the funds had absolutely been sent, told them the date and the amount to the penny.

“We do not have a record of that on our system”

The proof of payment and the MT103 was emailed to them.

“We do not have a record of that on our system”

He assured them that payment has been sent and requested to speak to a manager. After about a week he spoke to a manager and went through the same process, explaining that a payment had been made on X date for X amount and with XXX reference. Could you please check for those details only? Their response….

“Why?”

“Because I think you are simply looking at our corporate account record rather than checking your bank statement.”

“We don’t have access to our bank statement, we are the customer service team”

On and on this went until eventually our co-founder realised that Apple, being Apple, probably have a corporate account for 75% of the entire UK corporate market. So, it was time for a change of tack.

“I know you can’t talk to me about other customers, but if you could please check your system to see if you have a customer called CurrencyCloud and if you do I am confident you will find that you have received a payment on X date for X amount and with XXX reference. Moreover, that will not be their corporate reference, it will be ours”

“I cannot comment on other customer information, but I will revert and get back to you.”

“CurrencyCloud”, he continued, “are a Payment Service Provider, and the very nature of their business is that they send payments on behalf of other companies. Doubtless they will have an account with Apple too and what has likely happened is the accounts receivable team saw the sender name as CurrencyCloud, never bothered to check the reference and simply applied it to their account.”

In a week an Apple Manager called back. It went like this:

“I can neither confirm nor deny that we received a payment from CurrencyCloud but if you do have a relationship with them, please get them to write on letter headed paper a message to confirm you are their client and that payment of X on X with XXX reference was intentional and meant for X company.”

After another week this was resolved and finally the credit was applied to the account (doubtless causing CurrencyCloud some of their own reconciliation issues later).

The process took six weeks from beginning to end to resolve. On man-hours alone, it probably cost both the company and Apple the same amount as the initial purchase to resolve. Going through layers of management and approvals and pulling in three businesses distracting them from their core activities.

And all the above because of a single error caused by a manual process that relied entirely on an arbitrary reference.

The Benefits of Virtual Accounts

Now just imagine if Apple had the technology (which doubtless they could implement) to give every single customer their own unique virtual account number. In most countries the standard digit count for an account number is 8 meaning apple could offer 100,000,000 million unique account numbers (per routing/sort code).

This would enable a system where each Apple customer no longer uses a superficial reference number when making a payment, instead they simply pay (in the same normal way) to the account number presented on the invoice.

This removes any possibility for a misallocation of funds. This removes any uncertainty around purpose of payment or identity of sender. It removes the need for manual intervention and fund tracing. For Apple, it empowers them to know if a customer has paid, simply by checking whether the virtual account they have for the customer in question has had any funds pass through it. And this is a very important detail.

Virtual Accounts allow funds to pass through them. They are conduits for fund transmission. It wouldn’t be very helpful if Apple had to go and check millions of virtual accounts every day, and then transfer the funds to a central operational account. The benefits of reconciliation would be dwarfed by the cost of operation. But to be able to have millions of payments everyday collected in separate unique virtual accounts and to have those payments automatically land in a house account – now that is powerful.

With this kind of technology, Apple (or anyone for that matter) could dramatically reduce the cost of running an AR team. It could also drastically improve customer service and user experience, cutting down on invoice cycles and disputes. It would, at a stroke, remove 90% of the manual errors that create the need for heavily resourced and non-revenue generating bureaucratic environments.

Had virtual accounts been deployed, the issue described above would never have happened. It wouldn’t matter what reference was put on. It wouldn’t have mattered that CurrencyCloud made the payment on our behalf. All that would have mattered was the amount of money and the virtual account number that was on the invoice.

As powerful a solution as the above is – that’s not what’s driving their adoption in Fintech. There is something much less marginal at play.

To find out what, download our free White Paper: Virtual Accounts – A Fintech Love Affair.

Need simpler Fintech integrations?

Integrated Finance helps build, expand and manage financial infrastructures, quickly, easily and at a low cost. The company launched in October 2020 with the introduction of both IF CONNECT and IF CORE, the first time that any business has focused on simplifying the integration process in the Fintech market.

Get in touch to discuss how we can help.