REGISTER NOW for our educational seminar on Faster Payments and SEPA
June 12th 2008, Reading

what is SEPA?

The Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) is a European Commission (EC) and European Payments Council (EPC) initiative that plans to remove the barriers to movement of cross-border electronic Euro payments. As a result of this initiative, the high costs presently associated with cross-border transfers will be brought into alignment with the costs of performing internal domestic electronic transfers.

The Payment Services Directive (PSD) from the EC is enabling the the legal framework to licence banks and payment service providers, and allow them to introduce European-wide payment initiatives for credit transfers, certain debit and credit card payments, pan-European Direct Debits or regular payments via Credit Cards. This new legal framework was adopted by the European Parliament on 25th April 2007. There will now be a transition period as each country adopts the directive into national laws by 1st November 2009 at the latest.

The initial introduction of SEPA compliant cross-border schemes is planned to begin on 28 January 2008 with the introduction of the SEPA Credit Transfer, with the deadline for compliance currently set at 31 December 2010. The delay in the introduction of the legal framework is likely to lead to the delay of SEPA Direct Debits which might not be launched until late 2009.

what is a SEPA Credit Transfer (SCT)?

The SCT is a cross-border non-urgent euro payment scheme. It allows transfer payments to be made between any SEPA country, including euro payments withing the UK. Once the bank receives the instruction from the payer, the person being paid will receive the monies within 3 working days.

what is a SEPA Direct Debit (SDD)?

The SDD scheme available late 2009 onwards will enable Direct Debit originators to collect euro payments on any of the SEPA countries, including their own domestic DD using a single Direct Debit service rather than having to use the country specific Direct Debit Services that currently exist.

how will SEPA work?

For Euro payments, there will be a range of options available to organisations, including:
  • through their banks
  • directly to SEPA compliant Clearing Settlement Mechanisms (CSMs)
  • through a SWIFT Closed User Group
  • through Web based secure products
  • via the European Credit and Debit Card networks
At present, it seems unlikely that there will be a single Pan-European Automated Clearing House (PE-ACH) for processing all the Euro transactions. More likely, we will see several SEPA compliant regional ACHs (Automated Clearing Houses or Clearing Settlement Mechanisms - such as the Dutch / German / Italian - Equens and the UK's VocaLink (which is working in partnership with the Swedish ACH)) which will operate alongside the Euro Banking Association (EBA) purpose built PE-ACH. (STEP 2)

In addition, banks will have bilateral file exchange arrangements in place with partner banks to handle particular concentrations. These 'super CSMs' will have competitive advantages in terms of pricing, efficiency and additional functionality, such as direct corporate access.

what will SEPA mean for you?

The impact on UK internal domestic payments (such as Direct Credits and Direct Debits) will be limited while the UK continues to trade in Pounds Sterling, with payments continuing to be submitted via Bacstel-IP to VocaLink.

However, the main attraction for UK based organisations is the ability to make cheaper, and in time faster, payments in Euros. This will prove useful for transactions such as Supplier Payments and Pension and Salary payments into the Euro countries, or for companies wishing to collect Direct Debits centrally in Euros, such as insurance premiums, credit card repayments, mobile phone bills, and magazine subscriptions.

European payments now and in the future

The use of Bank Identification Codes (BICs) and International Bank Account Numbers (IBANs) are mandatory for Euro cross-border payments. Banks are able to reject payments from corporate organisations that do not include valid BIC and IBAN data. This, together with the associated rising costs and penalties of submitting payments with incorrect BIC and IBAN data, necessitates the need for validation at an early stage of the funds transfer process.

Albany's eVERIFY solution performs fast, accurate BIC and IBAN validation at the touch of a button, significantly reducing error rates, meaning fewer bank charges and faster completion of funds transfers.

Albany and SEPA

Albany is working with all the key organisations currently involved in the SEPA initiative. As a SWIFT Solution Partner, an Associate of the EBA (Euro Banking Association) and a member of the Bacs Affiliates Interest Group, we are well placed to help drive forward this scheme. We are also working closely with APACS, VocaLink, VISA, MasterCard, Equens, and EACHA together with all the major UK Banks and some of the major European banks, on issues relating to SEPA.

Albany is committed to ensuring that we are able to meet the ongoing needs of our customers now the SEPA initiative has been introduced.

Click here to keep up to date with the latest SEPA news…

Call now to speak to one of our consultants on 01420 547650 or email info@albany.co.uk