EBA Clearing

EBA Clearing is a provider of pan-European payment infrastructure with headquarters in Paris. It is wholly owned by its member banks.[1]

Its initial mission consisted in the operation of the clearing and settlement system for single euro transactions of high value EURO1, which the Euro Banking Association (EBA) had transferred to EBA Clearing for the launch of the system in 1999. Besides EURO1, EBA Clearing also owns and operates STEP1, a payment system for single euro payments for small and medium-sized banks, and STEP2, a Pan-European Automated Clearing House (PE-ACH) for euro retail payments. In March 2013, EBA CLEARING launched MyBank, an e-authorisation solution for online payments, which is geared at facilitating the growth of e-commerce across Europe.[2]

The organisation is based in Paris and has representative offices in Brussels, Frankfurt and Milan.

History

It was separated out of the Euro Banking Association in June 1998 and launched as a company owned by 52 member banks.

Payment systems

EURO1

EURO1 is a RTGS-equivalent large-value payment system on a multilateral net basis, for single euro transactions of high priority and urgency, and primarily of large amount. EURO1 is owned and operated by EBA CLEARING. It is open to banks that have a registered address or branch in the European Union and fulfil a number of additional requirements. On average, EURO1 processes more than 250,000 payments per day, with an overall value of almost €210 billion. Today, the service counts 62 participants and 48 sub-participants. EURO1 is subject to German law (current account principle/single obligation structure) and is based on a messaging and IT infrastructure provided by SWIFT.

STEP1

Since 2000, EBA CLEARING has been offering a payment service named STEP1 for small and medium-sized banks for single euro payments of high priority and urgency. It processes close to 20,000 transactions on a daily basis. STEP1 counts 79 Participants and 24 Sub-Participants, mostly consisting of small or medium-sized banks. The technical infrastructure is the same as that of the EURO1 system, both use the messaging and IT infrastructure of SWIFT.

STEP2

STEP2 was put into operation in 2003 with Italian payment system provider SIA S.p.A. It processes mass payments in euro. STEP2 is a Pan-European Automated Clearing House (PE-ACH). This means that it complies with the principles set by the European Payments Council (EPC) for a PE-ACH Compliant Clearing and Settlement System.

From the beginning of Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) on 28 January 2008, STEP2 has been offering SEPA Credit Transfer processing services across the 33 SEPA countries through its SEPA Credit Transfer (SCT) Service. Since 2 November 2009, the transposition date of the Payment Services Directive, EBA CLEARING has been processing SEPA Direct Debits with its STEP2 SDD Core and STEP2 SEPA Direct Debit ("Business to Business") Services. Through its SEPA Credit Transfer and Direct Debit offerings, STEP2 provides banks across Europe with one channel through which they can send and receive their SEPA Credit Transfers and SEPA Direct Debits. The STEP2 platform reaches nearly 100 percent of all banks that have signed the SCT and SDD Scheme Adherence Agreements of the European Payments Council (EPC).

MyBank

MyBank is a pan-European e-authorisation solution for online payments that was launched in March 2013 by EBA CLEARING. The solution enables customers across Europe to pay for their online purchases via their regular online or mobile banking environment without having to disclose confidential data to the merchant or other third parties. The solution can be used for authorising SEPA Credit Transfers; it will support the creation of SDD mandates by 2014. At a later stage, MyBank may also be used for transactions in currencies other than euro or for e-identity services.

References

  1. "EBA CLEARING: a short company profile". EBA Clearing. July 2013.
  2. "About EBA Clearing". EBA Clearing. Retrieved June 20, 2014.

External links

www.ebaclearing.eu

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