August 2024: Top five payments stories of the month
August has seen a number of notable developments in the payments sector. Here, we run through five of the top payment stories from August, featuring Apple, JP Morgan Payments, Payoneer and more.
Apple set to open up access to NFC tech to third-party app developers
Apple has announced it will soon grant third-party app developers in a number of locations access to its near-field communication (NFC) contactless payment technology.
The company says that starting with iOS 18.1, developers in the US, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, and the UK will be able to offer in-app contactless transactions “from within their own apps on iPhone, separate from Apple Pay and Apple Wallet”, by leveraging its NFC technology and the Secure Element (SE) chip, which safely stores sensitive information on the device.
Following the release of the iOS 18.1 update, supported transactions will include in-store payments, closed-loop transit, corporate badges, car keys, event tickets, home and hotel keys, student IDs, and merchant loyalty and rewards cards. Apple also announced that support for government IDs is planned for the future.
JP Morgan Payments expands in-store biometric payments throughout US with PopID
JP Morgan Payments is to deploy in-store biometric payment technology among select pilot merchants in the US, through its newly expanded partnership with California-based facial recognition solutions provider PopID.
The checkout solution enables shoppers to authenticate payments using the unique features of their face, without the need to present a physical card or digital wallet.
The process is powered by PopID, a majority-owned subsidiary of Cali Group which handles enrolment for the solution, while JP Morgan Payments manages payment processing.
The pair first debuted the solution in March last year among brick-and-mortar retailers in the US, with South Florida Motorsports – the organiser of the Formula 1 Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix – being one of the first notable takers.
Mondu lands new EMI licence to fuel European expansion
Mondu Financial Services BV (Mondu BV), the Dutch entity of German B2B paytech Mondu incorporated in 2022, has been granted an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) licence from De Nederlandsche Bank (DNB) in the Netherlands.
The firm says that the new licence can be passported across the EU to help expedite its expansion and will facilitate the introduction of “complementary payment services” like credit cards and e-wallets. The fintech currently operates solutions including buy now, pay later (BNPL) and digital trade accounts across six countries in Europe.
Mondu BV, which has been initially focused on B2B merchants and marketplaces in the Netherlands, will now offer regulated payment services both in the Netherlands and on a cross-border basis into the company’s current markets of Germany, Austria, Belgium, Switzerland, and France, excluding only the UK.
Payoneer acquires payroll start-up Skuad in Singapore for $61m
US-based paytech Payoneer has acquired Skuad, a global workforce and payroll management start-up based in Singapore, for $61 million in cash.
Payoneer says the deal, carried out on 5 August, also includes “up to an additional $20 million of future payments in cash and equity” that are contingent upon Skuad achieving “certain performance and tenure milestones”.
Launched in 2019, the Skuad platform seeks to simplify hiring, onboarding, payroll and talent management processes for SMBs. It currently operates in 160 countries worldwide with support for 100 currencies.
Payoneer now intends to integrate Skuad’s payroll and contract management offerings into its own solutions, which currently include online money transfer and cross-border payment services for businesses and entrepreneurs across 190 countries.
Bank of England launches discussion paper on “ambitious agenda” for UK’s payments landscape
The Bank of England is seeking feedback on its “ambitious agenda” for the UK’s payments landscape through a newly published discussion paper.
The paper seeks to identify the means necessary to strike a balance between the rapid pace of payment innovation against the central bank’s monetary and financial stability objectives.
With this, the central bank’s latest publication highlights several key focus points relating to the rate of innovation.
Chief among these is the financial stability risks posed by the continued detachment of financial markets from central bank money and the parallel rise of private forms of digital money, such as tokenised deposits and stablecoins.
The Bank of England has so far sought to mitigate these risks through the advent of the Digital Securities Sandbox, for which a consultation was launched in April.