Subscribe
Logo
Logo
  • Topics Icon Topics
    • AI Icon AI
    • Banking Icon Banking
    • Blockchain/DeFi Icon Blockchain/DeFi
    • Embedded Finance Icon Embedded Finance
    • Fraud/Identity Icon Fraud/Identity
    • Investing Icon Investing
    • Lending Icon Lending
    • Payments Icon Payments
    • Regulation Icon Regulation
    • Startups Icon Startups
  • Podcasts Icon Podcasts
  • Products Icon Products
    • Webinars Icon Webinars
    • White Papers Icon White Papers
  • TechWire Icon TechWire
  • Search
  • Subscribe
Reading
Open banking, neobanks and Apple: The path forward
ShareTweet
Home
Fintech
Open banking, neobanks and Apple: The path forward

Open banking, neobanks and Apple: The path forward

Tony Zerucha·
Fintech
·Jul. 5, 2023·5 min read

The combination of increasing customer expectations and the emergence of neobanks and open banking makes this an exciting period for fintech, Mobiquity’s VP of digital banking Peter-Jan Van de Venn, said.

Mobiquity mainly works with retail and SME banks, which makes sense, Van de Venn said. Digitization first came to retail because you need scale to automate. It progresses to SME banking from there. Van de Venn sees growing demand in wealth management. While corporate banking is behind retail, it’s catching up.

Your role model isn’t another bank

When planning a digital strategy, smart banks don’t look at their peers because that’s not where the market is headed, Van de Venn explained. They’re looking at Apple and Uber, who are miles ahead.

Van de Venn explained this is related to “experience relativity”, where people’s top experiences across all sectors become their expectation for everyone. If your Uber app can tell you to watch when opening your door because you’re in a bike lane, why can’t your bank offer a more intuitive experience?

“Banks have to realize that they don’t just compete on a product level with other banks,” Van de Venn said. “They compete on an experience level with these types of companies. That’s what consumers also expect from the bank, the digital experience that they see in their daily lives. Digital is so much a part of everybody’s life.”

Where neobanks have fallen short

Neobanks threaten banks. Unencumbered by legacy technology (and the same level of regulation), neobanks have lower costs. That much is true.

But a funny thing has happened over the last decade. In 2015, there was talk of replacing the banks. That hasn’t happened; in fact, it’s the opposite.

Peter-Jan De Venn of Mobiquity
Peter-Jan De Venn said that instead dying off, banks have grown in number and ceded very little territory to fintechs.

“Everybody said banks will be gone in 10 years,” Van de Venn said. “We have seen that the number of banks has only increased. Many customers stay with their bank.”

Van de Venn was recently at a conference where a speaker asked the audience if they had closed a bank account. Few did. How many opened a neobank account? Many hands shot up.

Often folks open a neobank account or two, but many do so for specific purposes. They keep their core business with their long-time bank. Van de Venn uses Revolut for virtual cards when he doesn’t trust a retailer’s payment method. Convenient for him but not profitable for the neobank.

Van de Venn sees that as an ominous cloud over the neobanking industry. Their model gets a foot in the door, but 95% aren’t profitable. Investors are starting to ask what comes next.

How Apple is doing it better and neobanks can (possibly) keep up

Look to Apple, which is getting into finance, but in a different way from neobanks, he cautioned. Banks have three building blocks: liability management, distributed access to consumer services, and their tech stack. Apple brings the distribution, with Goldman Sachs doing the rest (for now).

“This is more promising because you combine the strengths of two companies,” Van de Venn explained. “Apple has distribution power and the customer experience. It is straightforward to offer buy now, pay later these days.

“For merchants to accept Apple Pay, they don’t have to do anything. It’s automatic. So you have an extreme distribution power that Goldman Sachs uses here, and that’s a perfect combination.”

The significant advantage for neobanks is that they can innovate faster than incumbents. The latter have legacy technology, with some also having a legacy mindset. They should be emulating the Revoluts only when there is a good business case while avoiding attractive features that do not deliver revenue.

“There should be a business case, and you optimize between desirability, feasibility and viability,” Van de Venn explained. “That’s how you develop a roadmap for the longer term.

“I think some of those neobanks have been focusing on the desirability part too much, which is for consumers a greeting but for the bank itself and the business case, not for the longer term.”

He added that neobanks, by necessity, move away from their original model. Low subscription fees have been upped. Cash withdrawals now cost. Those early, low-yield transaction-based products have been joined by more lucrative lending and investment options. All the while, incumbents’ market shares have barely budged.

Open banking’s path forward

Based in Europe, Van de Venn has first-hand experience with open banking. Good use cases include permissioned access to bank accounts so banks can share data with third parties, initiating payment on behalf of the customer to third parties, and aggregating information from multiple banks into a complete overview of a customer’s financial picture.

Van de Venn said one good use case for allowing access to third parties is for credit checks. Access to transactional data provides more insight into customer behavior than credit checks do.

Another is for investing. Rabobank’s Peaks tops up transaction amounts with the excess amount invested.

But there remains a healthy skepticism about open banking and data sharing. Van de Venn said the biggest reason is because it’s an all-or-nothing proposition.

“There is no granular access to data yet, but I would love to do that,” he said. “That option is not there yet. So that needs to mature.”

Has open banking fostered more competition? Van de Venn’s unsure. It has delivered more value-added service with the potential for more.

What will convince more people to embrace open banking? Is more education involved? Van de Venn said there will be more, but the biggest mover is simpler. Show them what’s in it for them and acknowledge friction, like connecting their accounts and renewing consent every three months.

Maybe a mortgage provider gives a lower rate in exchange for access to those accounts. The lender makes better-informed decisions, and the borrower saves money.

“Or if I use that payment initiation, for instance, to make a payment and I don’t have to pay transaction costs to buy something, then it would also benefit me,” Van de Venn concluded. “But that’s not (currently) the case.”

Also read:

Sustainability in financial services is progressing, but help needed
  • Tony Zerucha
    Tony Zerucha

    Tony is a long-time contributor in the fintech and alt-fi spaces. A two-time LendIt Journalist of the Year nominee and winner in 2018, Tony has written more than 2,000 original articles on the blockchain, peer-to-peer lending, crowdfunding, and emerging technologies over the past seven years. He has hosted panels at LendIt, the CfPA Summit, and DECENT's Unchained, a blockchain exposition in Hong Kong. Email Tony here.

    View all posts

Tags
Appledigital banking
Related

Rory O’Reilly, Co-Founder and CEO of Knot, on connecting cardholders to merchants

Nico Simko, Founder & CEO of Clair on a different approach to earned wage access

Anthony Sharett, President of Pathward, on how to do banking-as-a-service right

Nubank’s Credit Loan Strategy: How It Works

Popular Posts

Today:

  • Globe-money-symbolsOPINION: Why Brazil and India are leading the global digital shift through payment innovation Jun. 24, 2025
  • Email-AI-pieceAvatar CEOs Have Entered the Meeting Jun. 18, 2025
  • ai-work-nexusWalkMe Vets Declare War on SaaS Bloat with $10M Seed for Autonomous Agents Jun. 10, 2025
  • Stylizedhouse-with-EKGFintech x the One Big Beautiful Bill Jun. 26, 2025
  • WP UmbrellaTo Bank or Not to Bank: The ILC Question Jun. 5, 2025
  • Revised-AI-InvoiceAI Faces Skepticism. Startups Say: OK, Pay When it Works Jun. 25, 2025
  • Jon StonaTips from Airwallex x McLaren on Making the Best of a Fintech Sponsorship  Jun. 18, 2025
  • TechNexus The AI IssueThe AI Paradox Jun. 18, 2025
  • GreenliteAI-Alex-WillGreenlite AI is on a mission to revolutionize banking compliance Jun. 10, 2025
  • TechNexus The AI IssueMeeker’s AI Bombshell + The VC Betting on AI Reshaping The Physical World  Jun. 4, 2025

This month:

  • WP UmbrellaTo Bank or Not to Bank: The ILC Question Jun. 5, 2025
  • DanMurphy-FN-headshotCFPB’s Next Open Banking Battle Begins Jun. 3, 2025
  • GreenliteAI-Alex-WillGreenlite AI is on a mission to revolutionize banking compliance Jun. 10, 2025
  • Current stablecoin adoptionWhy Banks (and Fintechs) Need to Embrace Stablecoins Today Jun. 12, 2025
  • ai-work-nexusWalkMe Vets Declare War on SaaS Bloat with $10M Seed for Autonomous Agents Jun. 10, 2025
  • Ben Hemani, Founding Partner at Bison VenturesThe Risk and Reward of Betting Big on AI’s Next Frontier Jun. 4, 2025
  • Jon StonaTips from Airwallex x McLaren on Making the Best of a Fintech Sponsorship  Jun. 18, 2025
  • Ironclad State of AI ReportThe Economics of AI Trust Jun. 11, 2025
  • Fintech Nexus – Newsletter Creative (2)Building the Bot Workforce May. 28, 2025
  • VancouverWeb Summit Dispatch: Debate Rages Over AI Applications’ Human Impact  May. 28, 2025

  • About
  • Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
Subscribe
Copyright © 2025 Fintech Nexus
  • Topics
    • AI
    • Banking
    • Blockchain/DeFi
    • Embedded Finance
    • Fraud/Identity
    • Investing
    • Lending
    • Payments
    • Regulation
    • Startups
  • Podcasts
  • Products
    • Webinars
    • White Papers
  • TechWire
  • Contact Us
Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
lis digital banking USA Lending Club UK
See all results