Banking-as-a-service (BaaS) could revolutionize the financial landscape in Southeast Asia, bringing previously unimagined benefits to customers and businesses alike.
Oliver Wyman estimates BaaS technology can help financial institutions to reduce customer acquisition costs from between $100 to $200 to between $5 and $35. While recent Finastra research shows 85 percent of senior executives are already implementing BaaS solutions, or planning to within the next year to 18 months.
If you’re new to the idea of BaaS, here’s what it means.
Finastra’s research identified several growth opportunities for BaaS in the coming years, such as point-of-sale financing for merchants and consumers, embedded lending for small businesses, and treasury and foreign exchange services. Businesses looking to tap new customer segments or expand to new markets can all benefit from BaaS.
→ Talk to us today to start your BaaS journey
A report from fintech consultancy 11:FS suggests BaaS can yield myriad benefits for both businesses and the consumers they serve. For example, companies can deliver financial services right at the point of need, instead of leaving their customers to figure it out for themselves.
More major brands in Europe, the US and Asia have begun to adopt BaaS products, to own more of the customer experience beyond their core product focus. For example:
Now is the time for more of Asia’s brands to realize similar benefits too.
Our vision for BaaS is one where software companies and marketplaces can offer seamless experiences to their customers and clients, while minimizing the burdens and costs of compliance and development.
We aim to shorten a path to new revenue streams and markets for banks, fintech startups, and independent software vendors, by helping companies embed solutions for payments, card issuing, and lending. At the same time, we recognize banks or software companies may not need to embed every acquiring, issuing, or lending service a BaaS provider enables.
For example, a non-bank lender may want to only embed underwriting-as-a-service. A global marketplace platform may want to instantly onboard new merchants across various geographies and utilize “compliance as a service” set of modules, to compliantly drive a greater share of transaction revenue. And that same marketplace may choose to embed lending as a service capabilities in the countries where working capital solutions would be most useful and profitable. We have recognized this at Opn, by providing customers with the flexibility to choose and configure only the services they need.
BaaS may have remained nascent in Southeast Asia until quite recently. But there are several ways C-suite leaders, developers, and consultants can gauge whether it’s a good fit for their business’s challenges. Consider the following questions:
If you answered yes to one or more of these questions, then it’s possible BaaS products may be a good fit.
Opn has been in the financial technology business for a decade. In that time, we have been building new payment features and capabilities, onboarding merchants, and providing them with the financial services they need. We have a deep understanding of the rules and regulations in each Southeast Asian market.
→ Talk to us today to start your BaaS journey