[stock-market-ticker symbols="FB;BABA;AMZN;AXP;AAPL;DBD;EEFT;GTO.AS;ING.PA;MA;MGI;NPSNY;NCR;PYPL;005930.KS;SQ;HO.PA;V;WDI.DE;WU;WP" width="100%" palette="financial-light"]

Open Banking entered the rental market

3 martie 2020

The UK-based tenant referencing company Keysafe has inked a partnership with Salt Edge, a leader in offering Open Banking solutions, to securely access tenants’ bank data without the need to acquire its own PSD2 licence.

„Open Banking entered the rental market, with landlords now accepting tenants based on automatically aggregated bank data rather than traditional checks.”, according to a Salt Edge press release.

Keysafe provides a comprehensive tenant referencing service to both private landlords and letting agents in the UK, including ID authentication and expert verification of references. Recently, Keysafe changed the service provider and switched to Salt Edge to gain access to tenants’ bank accounts via Open Banking channels and verify their financial situation. 

Salt Edge Partner Program enables Keysafe to access bank data in a compliant way without the hurdles of getting its own AISP licence. Keysafe can now verify the tenants’ financial situation by connecting to their banks in different countries, including the UK, France, the US, Australia, Hong Kong, New Zealand, and many more.

Partner Program incorporates technology for transactions categorisation and merchant identification, enriching the bank data by taking unclear and cluttered transactions and turning them into meaningful insights. With Salt Edge services, the verification process is essentially instant, helping to reduce average response time from 36 hours to approximately 4 minutes. 

Usage of bank data aggregation also increases the approval chances, since Keysafe’s service allows an applicant to select many forms of income for landlords to consider and the financial situation is presented fully, with a 360-degree view. Since the process is digitized and no additional documentation such as bank statements and payslips is required, the verification is smoother and completely nonintrusive for tenants.

“We’re delighted to be able to partner with Salt Edge. This is a new generation of tenant vetting, made possible by the way that Salt Edge harnesses the technical potential of Open Banking. Retaining our position as the most reliable tenant vetting organisation for Letting Agents and  landlords is of paramount importance. This partnership allows us to do just that while at the same time driving the industry forward to provide faster and more accurate results,” commented Gareth Fowler, Managing Director at Keysafe.

“Open Banking is about simplifying access to data to replace obsolete processes with better digital experiences. So making all the finances simpler is the ultimate goal of Salt Edge, and we are very proud that our Partner Program helps people in different sectors, this time – landlords and tenants.” said Jason O’Shaughnessy, SVP of Sales at Salt Edge.

Salt Edge is a financial API platform with PSD2 and open banking solutions. The company has two main vectors of activity: enabling third parties to get access to bank channels via a unified gateway, and developing the technology necessary for banks to become compliant with the directive’s requirements. Salt Edge, who is ISO 27001 certified and AISP licensed under PSD2, is integrated with 5100+ financial institutions in 70+ countries.

Adauga comentariu

Noutăți
Cifra/Declaratia zilei

Anders Olofsson – former Head of Payments Finastra

Banking 4.0 – „how was the experience for you”

So many people are coming here to Bucharest, people that I see and interact on linkedin and now I get the change to meet them in person. It was like being to the Football World Cup but this was the World Cup on linkedin in payments and open banking.”

Many more interesting quotes in the video below:

Sondaj

In 23 septembrie 2019, BNR a anuntat infiintarea unui Fintech Innovation Hub pentru a sustine inovatia in domeniul serviciilor financiare si de plata. In acest sens, care credeti ca ar trebui sa fie urmatorul pas al bancii centrale?