Open Banking Fintech Tink Introduces Risk Engine, Unlocking Instant Payment Experiences

Tink, the firm focused on open banking, has launched ‘Risk Signals’ – a rules-based risk engine that unlocks instant payment experiences across Europe, while minimizing risk.

In some European markets, bank transfers “can take up to three days to settle depending on the scheme, with a chance that the funds never arrive.”

Consumers don’t want to wait “for their order to be confirmed, to access a service, or for their account to be funded.”

This leaves businesses in a bind. Offer an instant experience and absorb “the risk, or hold off until the payment is settled and potentially lose the customer.”

The arrival of Tink’s Risk Signals means businesses “no longer need to compromise between a quick checkout and reducing risk. This newly launched product feature allows transactions to be assessed in seconds while the payer progresses through the payment, adding minimal friction to the user experience.”

Risk Signals uses account, balance and transaction data “shared under a valid consent by the payer to make more accurate risk decisions to minimise fraud.”

These risk checks occur seamlessly “in the background at checkout. Based on Tink’s pan-European bank connectivity, Risk Signals enables a secure, fast and high-converting payment method, particularly in markets without real-time settlements.”

Risk Signals consists of a suite of risk checks which Tink can customise per bank and market.

This includes:

  • Live balances: Verify a user’s ability to pay with real-time balance information including overdraft, credit lines, and pre-booked orders.
  • Transaction history: Assess fraud risk based on recent transactions, and previous non-settled payments.
  • Velocity checks: Flag suspicious transaction activity.

Tink is launching Risk Signals across Europe, initially “in Germany, with one of the world’s largest PSPs, Adyen, already using the service. On average, Risk Signals takes just one week to fully implement for Tink customers.”

There is no integration needed “from the customer.”

The product feature is simply “configured by Tink as a service and then active, making it extremely easy to onboard customers.”

Dirk Jan Meijers, Payment Partnerships Lead Europe at Adyen commented:

“With Risk Signals, Tink is enhancing the open banking payment landscape, particularly in important markets like Germany. By leveraging the real-time risk analysis during payment processes, Adyen can offer a payment option that not only ensures security and reliability but also aligns perfectly with both merchants’ and shoppers’ expectations.”

Tom Pope, SVP of Payments and Platforms at Tink added:

“Risk Signals is an ideal fit for businesses looking to offer a secure and fast payment method especially in markets without real-time settlement – like Germany. With Tink’s Risk Signals, you no longer need to compromise between a fast checkout and reducing risk. Already in use by PSPs like Adyen, Risk Signals uses account, balance, and transaction data shared under valid consent by the payer to prevent fraud which simultaneously contributes to providing a brilliant experience for both merchants and consumers.”

As noted in the update, Tink is the firm focused on open banking, “enabling banks, fintechs and merchants to build data-driven financial services. Whether that’s making account-to-account payments, onboarding new customers, making better credit decisions or creating money management tools.”

A wholly owned subsidiary of Visa, Tink has over 6,000 connections to banks with the ability to reach hundreds of millions of people across 18 markets.”

Since its creation in 2012, Tink has powered “the pioneers of open banking and now serves some of the world’s largest financial institutions, taking processes that are filled with friction and replacing them with seamless experiences that eliminate complexity for consumers.”



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