Open Finance could deliver higher lending and more effective financial advice, new report shows

Over a quarter of SMEs whose loan applications had been referred for manual underwriting, and who risked missing out on credit, could be given access to finance had Open Finance been in place.

Related topics:  Finance News,  Commercial
Rozi Jones | Editor, Barcadia Media Limited
1st March 2024
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"The prize on offer from getting Open Finance right is enormous. For consumers and SMEs, it means more control of your finances and easier access to more affordable credit."
- Ezechi Britton, CEO of CFIT

The Centre for Finance, Innovation and Technology (CFIT) has published a new report setting out the full potential of Open Finance to deliver direct benefits for UK consumers and businesses.

The findings show how better data-sharing can provide improved access to credit for companies and swifter, more effective financial advice for consumers.

A CFIT-led coalition of more than 60 partners – including Citizens Advice, Experian, EY, the FCA, FDATA, HSBC, IBM, Iwoca, KPMG, Lloyds Banking Group, Mastercard, Monzo, Revolut and various regional association and industry bodies – worked together to develop new solutions unblocking barriers to secure data-sharing across the financial services industry.

Alongside a strategy for the future of Open Finance, which allows consumers and SMEs to access and share a wider range of their financial data, CFIT today publishes two ‘proofs of concept’ developed by the coalition that show the full potential of this technology:

• A dashboard produced with Citizens Advice has shown how enhanced data-sharing could provide tailored financial advice to 40% more consumers facing financial difficulties and distress – supporting an extra 150,000 people annually. The proof of concept sets out how Citizens Advice clients could choose to seamlessly share financial data with the charity, freeing advisers from lengthy data collection and analysis, and giving them more time to offer advice.

• A successful pilot with HSBC UK showed that Open Finance could deliver more lending to SMEs. It demonstrated that accessing new datasets and auto-populating business loan applications can lead to a significant boost in lending decisions. The exercise suggested that over a quarter of businesses in a sample of SMEs whose loan applications had been referred for manual underwriting, and who risked missing out on credit, could be given access to finance, had Open Finance been in place. The work – which used synthetic data and profiles of SMEs based on HSBC business customers – also showed that embracing Open Finance could lead to a fall in the number of businesses that give up on applications before they are complete.

These proofs of concept will now be released to the UK fintech and financial services industry to be built into fully fledged prototypes.

Other recommendations within the Coalition’s report include:

• Setting up a taskforce to build on the Coalition’s work in prioritising other ways that Open Finance can deliver better outcomes for businesses and consumers beyond credit. Other potential use cases identified include retirement and pensions, savings and investments, Digital ID and cash flow management.

• The development of a viable commercial model to incentivise businesses to securely share financial data, echoing JROC’s work on design principles for a future entity and the recently published Future of Payments Review.

Ezechi Britton, CEO of CFIT, said: “The prize on offer from getting Open Finance right is enormous. For consumers and SMEs, it means more control of your finances and easier access to more affordable credit. For the fintech sector, it is an opportunity for the UK to set global standards and drive growth worldwide. And it dovetails perfectly with the Government’s wider ambition to build a Smart Data economy.

"We would like to thank our coalition partners for their outstanding work so far. Having definitively proven the business case for Open Finance, we’re now looking forward to working with government and industry on furthering the case for unlocking the necessary datasets, scaling the proofs of concept developed by the Coalition, exploring use cases beyond credit and identifying the commercial model and future framework that will encourage secure data-sharing across financial services as we embrace Open Finance.”

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