Column Will Help Open Banking To Scale New Heights – GTM360 Blog (2024)

Fintechs have gestured for years that they will disrupt traditional banks with their shiny apps. When asked uncomfortable questions about banking charters, finsurgents have brushed off those questions with the offhand remark that a charter is commodity.

Apart from some of those trash-talking fintechs, nobody got disrupted. Not surprising because a charter is a moat, not a commodity.

Enter COLUMN, the first fintech that acknowledges this reality. (Apart from a few neobanks like Varo who got this and spent big bucks to get a banking license.)

Billing itself as a “developer infrastructure bank”, Column is the only nationally chartered bank built to enable developers and builders to create new financial products with the backing of a banking license.

Founded by PLAID’s ex-co founder William Hockey and his wife Annie Hockey, the new San Francisco-based fintech acquired Northern California National Bank, a bank based out of Chico, California. It’s now in the process of ripping out NCNB’s legacy tech and replacing it with a modern core and other applications. It will then sponsor fintechs, who can offer financial products on top of an FDIC-insured bank. (Since it has a banking license, Column is technically a bank but, because of its pedigree, I’ll call it a fintech in this post.)

Put another way, Column is a provider of BaaS (Banking As A Service). Just that it comes to BaaS from the fintech side rather than the more traditional side of banks. For reference, leading bank BaaS providers include:

  1. Bancorp Bank and Stride Bank, who power the checking accounts underlying Chime, the largest neobank in USA (Chime does not have a banking charter)
  2. Starling Bank and ClearBank in UK.
  3. RBL Bank and State Bank of Mauritius, who power the BNPL cards of slice and UNI in India.

"Credit Cards issued by fintech firms such as Slice & Uni are not necessarily credit cards, but prepaid cards with a
credit line" ~ https://t.co/kTwfrSBjON via @etprime_com.

Maybe it's only me but "prepaid card with line of credit" sounds like an oxymoron.

— Ketharaman Swaminathan (@s_ketharaman) May 11, 2022

On a side note, COLUMN goes beyond Google Plex. The now defunct product from Alphabet Inc. provided a shiny new app and fancy branding to random banks but did nothing to upgrade their legacy application landscape. More details in RIP Google Plex – But Big Tech Can Still Disrupt Big Banks.

By acquiring a functioning bank with a charter, Column acknowledges the role of a banking license in powering open banking and open finance apps.

By ripping out the existing IT at the acquired bank NCNB, Column also appreciates the constraints of legacy technologies in bank-fintech partnerships. The Wall Street Journal article titledPlaid Co-Founder Takes Aim at Rickety Banking Tech gives a good flavor of the challenges posed by legacy tech in banks:

…every big fintech company has to rely on bank partners for regulated tasks such as holding customers’ deposits and issuing debit cards. Giants including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Bank of America Corp. aren’t normally interested in that business (of providing banking services to fintechs). So even the flashiest app makers usually depend on community banks in faraway places to do their financial grunt work. Startups don’t love the current arrangement. Community banks tend to outsource their own technology to old-school software vendors, whose digital offerings are limited and whose fees are often high. Mr. Hockey heard gripes from Plaid customers over the years about the retrograde tech they encountered at the tiny depository institutions that were willing to work with them.

By replacing the legacy tech at NCNB with a modern fintech stack, Column overcomes these constraints.

If it executes well on its mission, Column will take Open Banking and Open Finance to another level.

Of course, there’s more to open banking / open finance than just a banking charter and cutting-edge technology.

Chief among the other success drivers of Column’s foray into empowering fintechs are state licensing, capital adequacy, and so on. These regulations will shape the number and nature of fintechs to whom Column can provide banking services, as well as the volumes they can process via Column. Also, as WSJ warns, Column can face the regulator’s wrath for the shenanigans of the fintechs it sponsors.

Column’s business model carries risks. Banks have been fined for the bad behavior at companies they sponsor. In November, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said the agency was stepping up its focus on banks that provide services to large fintech companies.

However, as a rare example of a fintech that truly gets the essence of bank-fintech partnership, I’m quite sure that Column will be able to overcome these hurdles as it goes along – either by leveraging regulatory gap or otherwise.

Not since Square (now Block) am I so excited about a fintech as COLUMN.

Column Will Help Open Banking To Scale New Heights – GTM360 Blog (2024)

FAQs

What is the open banking rule of CFPB? ›

Primarily, the Proposed Rule would require data providers to make available to a consumer or an authorized third party, upon request, covered data in the data provider's control or possession concerning a covered consumer financial product or service that the consumer obtained from the data provider.

How open banking will change the banking landscape? ›

Open banking can give customers more control over their financial information and provide new services and applications. For nonfinancial companies, this shift means they are able to offer customized financial services to their customers, make more data-driven decisions, and innovate in payments and account management.

What is the status of open banking in the United States? ›

Open banking is approaching a major regulatory hurdle in the United States. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has proposed rules that would allow third parties to access financial data held at banks, with customer permission.

How does open banking help in building a resilient banking enterprise? ›

Open banking allows businesses to provide their account history to external lenders, or brokers, and get a quick loan decision without having to provide piles of paperwork. Reducing the amount of manual checks speeds up decision-making and can help open up access to credit.

Is open banking mandatory? ›

The number of banks and building societies that offer open banking is growing. At the moment, only the UK's nine largest banks and building societies are required to make your data available through open banking. Other smaller banks and building societies can choose to take part in open banking.

Who has to comply with open banking? ›

It's regulated – only apps and websites provided by firms which are regulated by the FCA or European equivalent can enrol in our Open Banking Directory. You're in charge – you choose when, and for how long, you give access to your data.

What is the future of open banking? ›

Future Open Banking will allow third-party companies to use and process a huge array of accumulated data using Big Data and machine-learning technologies. This will take it to a new level, thereby increasing the value of the service offered to users.

Is open banking a threat to banks? ›

Open banking has the potential to magnify the impact of breach and cybersecurity incidents when they happen, which could mean reputational risk and erosion of customer trust for the banks.

What does the future of open banking look like? ›

According to a recent report by Polaris Market Research, open banking is expected to reach a valuation of $128.12 billion by 2030. Additionally, Finastra's “Financial Services: State of the Nation Survey 2022” revealed that 56% of surveyed U.S. citizens indicated open banking as a “must have,” up from 45% in 2021.

What bank system is the only bank of issue in the United States? ›

The Federal Reserve System is the central bank and monetary authority of the United States. The Fed works to provide the country with a safe, flexible, and stable monetary and financial system.

Which bank has closed in us? ›

The FDIC said that Republic Bank was the first bank to fail in the United States since Citizens Bank in Sac City, Iowa, in November 2023. Republic First Bank is a separate entity from First Republic Bank, a San Francisco-based commercial bank that was closed in May 2023.

What is the major benefit of open banking? ›

With Open Banking, customers can access a wider range of financial products and services. They can take advantage of partnerships between financial institutions and fintech service providers to find solutions better suited to their needs, such as budget management, investments, loans, and insurance.

What is an example of open banking? ›

8 use cases of open banking that benefit customers

Making purchases on mobile devices, remittances, and currency conversions more convenient. Offerings of customized products. Personalization of banking services. Accessing multiple accounts from a single app to monitor your financial status and purchases.

What are the benefits of open banking? ›

Open banking enables customers to share their financial data with third party providers, to access a wider range of products and services. Helps customers save money on loans and mortgages. Improves financial inclusion by providing access to financial services to underserved populations.

What is open banking protocol? ›

Open banking refers to the use of APIs to share financial data and services with third parties. Third parties typically provide technology, a service or an app to the bank's customers that makes use of the shared financial data and services.

What is open banking and how does it work? ›

Open banking is a framework for you to share your financial data with financial technology companies of your choice. This is done using secure online channels. Financial technology companies (often called fintechs or fintech apps) provide online financial products or services.

What is the 1033 rule of the CFPB? ›

Section 1033 requires financial services providers to make available to consumers – and representatives acting on their behalf – certain information in those providers' control. This can include information like a consumer's transactions or the balance in their financial account.

What is open banking compliance? ›

Open Banking Compliance enforces banks and financial service providers to share their data and payment initiation capabilities with trusted third-party providers (TPPs) via secure application programming interfaces (APIs).

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