The European institutions have missed an opportunity to contribute to a truly innovative, competitive and secure European market for payment services. The impact of this complex law is difficult to foresee. It is more than likely that this agreement provides yesterday’s solutions for tomorrow’s problems.
	After  two  years  of  discussions  the  final  text  agreed  by  the  three  institutions reflects  multiple political compromises on many key points, including the security of user credentials, distribution of  liability  between service  providers and exemptions.
	A fragile balance has been sought between sometimes conflicting objectives such as innovation, user security, market integration, data protection and competition. The final agreement broadly reflects political ambitions to see a bigger role played by non-bank service providers.
	The EBF  believes this agreement will be to the detriment of European consumers and the necessary protection of their bank accounts. The PSD2 framework is already partly obsolete and above all harmful as it requires the sharing of bank access codes with non-bank providers. PSD2 will force banks to grant third parties access to client accounts so that these third parties can provide their services via the banks’ infrastructure.
	It remains unclear to what extent security for both banks and consumers will be impacted by such access.  The new directive makes banks potentially liable for possible irregularities or external attacks when consumers use third-party services.
	The EBF  regrets that the European institutions have not opted for a global framework that would have allowed  third  parties to  offer  their  services  to European  citizens  whilst  maintaining  the highest level of security when accessing payment accounts.
	Press release
      
      
      
      
        © EBF
     
      
      
      
      
      
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