$450 trillion per year, facilitated in 150 currencies across 60 countries and more than 100 payment systems across the globe. That’s roughly $1.23 trillion per day.
The Charlotte-based bank employs a client-centric, relationship-driven strategy to its payments business, Marc Monaco, head of Global Payments Solutions at
“Increasingly, as geopolitical events unfold, whether that be implications of COVID in terms of shifting supply chains, or whether it be
Of course, artificial intelligence plays a role there, and has manifested itself in products specifically designed to help corporations manage uncertainty in the market.
To that end,
It offers a product called Intelligent Receivables, which uses artificial intelligence and advanced data capture technology to bring together payment information and associated remittance details from electronic and paper-based channels. That product is posting “double-digit-plus growth,” Monaco said.
It also offers clients Cash Pro Chat with Erica, a service that integrates with the bank’s chat bot, Erica; CashPro Forecasting, a machine learning and predictive analytics tool that automatically generates forecasts and continues to refine those forecasts based on a company’s actual cash flows; and Guaranteed FX Rates, another AI-powered service that allows clients to lock in foreign transaction rates for up to one year.
Traditionally,
“Their credit card business has consistently been moving down the list of top credit card issuers for almost a decade now. Their overall strategy is to be full service for their clients, including payments, but [the bank has] not taken a product-specific approach,” he said. “They have never really chosen to be a differentiator on product as much as the overall relationship.”
But
Today, GPS is critical to the bank’s operations, Monaco said, supporting all eight lines of business at the bank, including retail, preferred, wealth management, private banking, commercial banking, business banking and corporate and investment banking.
“Our position as the second largest bank in North America, gives us a unique franchise to support our clients as they migrate outside the U.S.,” Monaco said. “We are a gateway for our clients both to go out and to come in.”
GPS’s overall strategy is to create robust payments and working capital management solutions for those clients, so that those clients bring their transactional banking – and liquidity – to the bank.
“We’re kind of in the deposits business with a bunch of solutions, some of which generate a lot of revenue in terms of transaction revenue, some of which cost us money. But this is about relationships,” Monaco said.
The international space has been a growth driver for the bank’s payments business, Morano said. “We have and continue to hit records in our international volumes, both from a deposit, from a revenue, [and] from a transaction standpoint,” he said.
But it’s not international for international sake, Monaco said. “It’s client driven. Payments is usually the lead product as companies either expand outside or come inside the U.S., because it facilitates the commerce that they’re doing. We’re supporting them with a set of solutions that help them make their business processes more efficient. And increasingly those are payment solutions that are both global and local.”
Demand for globalized payment solutions has been increasing, Andrew Brigart, a partner at Venable Banking and Financial Services, told American Banker.
“In a more globalized, digital economy – where it’s easier than ever for merchants to sell internationally, and companies have locations and are buying and selling services internationally – there’s a real need for faster, more efficient payment options. That’s what a lot of people are trying to solve,” he said.
It can be difficult to get merchant processing relationships in every country that a company operates in, Brigart said. “Merchants are looking for service providers that can support those services.”
“We’re very much focused on what I call practical innovation that’s focused on a client’s needs and solving business problems that improve a process or an outcome for them,” Monaco said. “What we’re trying to do is be the bridge between the future and help solve the current problems.”
Looking ahead,
“There is always more demand for projects amongst the team than we have money. And we invest hundreds of millions of dollars in this space,” Monaco said. “