For decades, moving money across borders meant one thing: the correspondent banking network.
A payment leaving a business in one country hopped from its bank to an intermediary, sometimes two or three (or more), before landing in the beneficiary’s account abroad.
The model worked – but it was built for an era when international payments were the preserve of large corporates and the occasional high-value transfer, not for a world in which a ten-person company sells into a dozen markets before lunch.
That mismatch is now driving one of the less heralded shifts in financial services: the unbundling of cross-border payments. The monolithic, bank-led process is being broken into its component parts and rebuilt around what internationally active businesses actually need – speed, transparency and predictability.
The correspondent chain has three structural weaknesses, and they compound.
Each intermediary in the chain can deduct a fee, and those deductions are often unknown at the point of sending. Money arrives short, reconciliation becomes guesswork, and the true cost only emerges after the fact.
Conversions in the traditional model are typically settled at a rate that already carries a markup over the interbank mid-market rate. Because the cost is baked into the rate rather than shown as a line item, it stays invisible – and, across hundreds of transactions a year, material.
Multi-hop routing introduces delays measured in days, and in the gap between initiation and settlement, exchange rates move. For a business trying to forecast cash flow, that uncertainty is its own kind of cost.
None of this was a problem the banks set out to create. It is simply what happens when infrastructure designed for a small number of large flows is asked to serve a large number of smaller ones.
The emerging model doesn’t so much fix correspondent banking as route around it, and it rests on a few building blocks.
There is a temptation to read this as money movement simply leaving the regulated banking system. It isn’t – or at least, it shouldn’t be. As businesses entrust funds to non-bank platforms, the questions of safeguarding and supervision become more central, not less.
The ones that matter are practical. Are client funds held in segregated accounts at regulated institutions, fully separate from the platform’s own balance sheet? Is the provider subject to recognised supervision and to anti-money-laundering obligations?
A modern cross-border platform should be able to answer both plainly. Swiss platforms such as SwissFx, for instance, bring payments, multi-currency accounts and FX risk management together under a single roof while operating within an established regulatory framework and holding client funds in segregated accounts – a reminder that the unbundling of the process needn’t mean the unbundling of safeguards.
The direction of travel is convergence.
Payments, currency exchange and FX risk management are increasingly arriving as one integrated layer rather than three separate ones bolted together. For the businesses using them, the ambition is simple to state and historically hard to deliver: international payments that feel as routine as domestic ones, with costs known in advance and cash flows that can actually be forecast.
Correspondent banking will not disappear; it remains the backbone for a great deal of global value transfer. But for the long tail of internationally active businesses it was never quite built to serve, the quiet rewiring is well under way – and the expectations it is setting are unlikely to be unset.
The post Beyond Correspondent Banking: The Quiet Rewiring of Cross-Border Payments appeared first on FF News | Fintech Finance.

