SWIFT May Not Exist In Five Years, According To Mastercard
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The CEO of MasterCard, Michael Miebach, stated at a conference the other day that SWIFT might no longer exist in the next five years.
Miebach was part of a panel on central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) at the World Economic Forum (WEF) but, as Shashank Bhardwaj writes on Forbes, once the panel was over a Mastercard spokesperson downplayed Miebach’s statement in an email:
“Let us clarify the intent of the on-stage comment, as it’s not as simple as a yes or no answer. Michael was simply reinforcing what SWIFT has previously said – their operations continue to evolve. Its current form will not be the same in the future. They are adding more functionality and moving past just being a messaging system.”
Whoops. Did Miebach make a gaff or what? After all, in five years’ time, MasterCard and Visa might not be around. The keyword is might. We don’t need SWIFT, MasterCard, or Visa in the days today of cryptocurrencies and P2P payments. But that statement is naïve because you have to have critical mass and, in all three cases, these networks not only have critical mass but also density, volume, value, history, trust, and network effects.
Therefore, they may appear to be easy targets for new payments firms, but they are not disappearing in the next few years. In fact, in the case of SWIFT, I’ve heard this statement for over 25 years, and they’re still here.
The real challenge is innovation. I got pushback from SWIFT after I blogged they weren’t innovating enough, but I wrote that with serious intent as I hadn’t seen enough innovation.
In particular, I’ve had a running debate with Nick Kerigan, Head of Innovation at SWIFT about this. He came out with a statement in April saying that CBDCs ‘could be a major force’ in the near future.*
I dissed him a bit for saying could all the time and not saying will. His response was that SWIFT is trialing the ability for banks to trade CBDCs across borders using SWIFT, but it’s experimental at this stage. Of course, it is. Everything CBDC is an experiment right now but, in five years, it will not be. It’s not a could, it’s a will.
Meantime, it’s easy to take a pop at Visa and MasterCard for not innovating enough, but then they’ve both been acquiring FinTech wings over the past few years. Visa has acquired firms like Tink, Earthport, and Currency Cloud; MasterCard has acquired firms like VocaLink, Finicity, Nets, and Asia.
Purely acquiring functionality is not the game, however. The game is creating an innovation refresh at the core. Equally, MasterCard and Visa are different from SWIFT, as they are public companies rather than cooperative networks.
Either way, the challenge is how to innovate and refresh to be digital at the core. How to create a payments business that looks as though it was born digital. The challenge is the same for all three and, if they fail, then all three might not exist in five years. That includes your business, Michael Miebach.