Cyber 2022 Predictions About Open Banking


Open banking will push banking institutions to increase cloud and application security

The following 2022 open banking predictions by Prakash Sinha, Radware’s technology evangelist and senior director of corporate marketing, were originally published on VMblog.com, December 22, 2021.

In 2022, open banking will continue to gain market traction and acceptance in the U.S. as traditional banks and financial institutions compete on customer satisfaction and digital relevance.

Unlike traditional banking where all customer data is controlled by the parent bank, in open banking, customer data is securely exposed to third-party providers via application programming interfaces (APIs) when consent is provided by the customer. The sharing of that data promises to deliver innovative new services and spur competition. However, it also creates a broader threat surface that must be protected against cyber abuse and malice.

Predictions

Mobile banking coupled with a savvy generation of consumers who use fintech applications, like Venmo and Zelle, will drive the growth of open banking products.

These apps, which are built on open banking APIs, will trigger traditional financial institutions to streamline their processes to support digital onboarding and offer innovative mobile financial services.

The benefits of open banking for consumers are clear. It empowers consumers to take control of their finances, making it easier to shop around for competitive financial products and services. Rather than contacting each lender individually for information, consumers can give a fintech lending application temporary permission to audit their financial history and risk profile. In return they get faster, personalized, and competitive quotes from lenders – and simply, a much easier way to compare product offerings and make more-informed decisions.

Mergers and acquisitions will become even more common.

Traditional financial institutions will realize increasing competition from neo banks and nimble fintechs. Acquisitions will become an even more important strategy for innovating and staying relevant.

Open banking will drive new revenue streams for fintechs and traditional financial institutions that engage.

Many traditional institutions will be forced to re-think their existing product portfolio and align with the highly competitive open market. Currently, the cost of credit or debit transactions and mortgages are determined by a small group of large traditional vendors. New entrants and payment platforms are emerging in financial services to disintermediate the existing cost profile by using open banking APIs.

Open banking regulations will push banks and financial institutions to open customer data to fintechs through APIs and increase investments in cloud and application security.

Open banking regulations require that banks make valuable data available via APIs. To secure and scale the APIs to handle more users and transactions as well as provide access to third parties, traditional financial institutions will invest in cloud deployments, application and infrastructure security, and scalability.

[Like this post? Subscribe now to get the latest Radware content in your inbox weekly plus exclusive access to Radware’s Premium Content.]

Prakash Sinha

Prakash Sinha is a technology executive and evangelist for Radware and brings over 29 years of experience in strategy, product management, product marketing and engineering. Prakash has been a part of executive teams of four software and network infrastructure startups, all of which were acquired. Before Radware, Prakash led product management for Citrix NetScaler and was instrumental in introducing multi-tenant and virtualized NetScaler product lines to market. Prior to Citrix, Prakash held leadership positions in architecture, engineering, and product management at leading technology companies such as Cisco, Informatica, and Tandem Computers. Prakash holds a Bachelor in Electrical Engineering from BIT, Mesra and an MBA from Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley.

Contact Radware Sales

Our experts will answer your questions, assess your needs, and help you understand which products are best for your business.

Already a Customer?

We’re ready to help, whether you need support, additional services, or answers to your questions about our products and solutions.

Locations
Get Answers Now from KnowledgeBase
Get Free Online Product Training
Engage with Radware Technical Support
Join the Radware Customer Program

CyberPedia

An Online Encyclopedia Of Cyberattack and Cybersecurity Terms

CyberPedia
What is WAF?
What is DDoS?
Bot Detection
ARP Spoofing

Get Social

Connect with experts and join the conversation about Radware technologies.

Blog
Security Research Center