The embedded finance market is expected to grow to tenfold its 2020-value by 2025 – just three years from now. The term has been generating buzz and changing the financial services landscape by improving access and lowering costs. But it’s not quite as new as many people think. Long before the term was even coined, Ukheshe’s Eclipse API made it possible for SMEs to offer their clients financial services. Today, their offering has grown exponentially to become a market leader in emerging markets.
Anton Coertzen, CCO, says one of the needs the company identified was for an SMME focused digital platform in 2018 to improve and address financial inclusion in South Africa. “Banks are increasingly relying on fintechs to help provide innovative solutions to their customers and overcome the challenges of legacy systems which can delay bringing new technology to the market scale. We saw the need for a platform that could not only provide innovative solutions at a quicker development rate but through a single integration – which was not common at that stage.”
Eclipse was then born. “Ukheshe’s unique API provided embedded finance before the term existed, offering non-financial companies ways to integrate payments, transactions, transfers and other digital solutions into their businesses in a seamless way, without the associated development and compliance costs,” he says.
Today, Eclipse is far ahead of the competition. It provides the opportunity for customers to easily integrate and plug and play into any one of the many Eclipse solutions that can be implemented across several different channels. In addition, once customers integrate into Eclipse, the sky’s the limit and additional functionality can be added at a later stage.
This is exactly what makes embedded finance such a game-changer, says Coertzen. “It reduces barriers to entry for various products and services. Embedded finance allows for greater collaboration and partnerships and that, in turn, grows the economy or opens up opportunities to embed financial products into multiple different markets. Until recently, if a business wanted to offer financial services, they had to create a fintech division within their organisation or register as an FSP. The entire process is lengthy and requires a huge amount of investment to build. Embedded finance infrastructure hugely reduces that entry barrier to offer financial services.”
The embedded finance market is expected to exceed USD$7 trillion in the next ten years, making it worth double the combined value of the world’s top 30 banks today. The demand for integrated experiences is one of the most significant trends driving the embedded finance market forward. “Customers are flocking towards multi-product ecosystems. They want seamless experiences and the ability to do everything on a single platform, safely – from accessing, managing and storing their money to transacting and offering their own clients the ability to do the same. It is, quite simply, revolutionising the financial services industry,” says Coertzen.
Eclipse provides exactly that – embedded finance that has the customer at the heart of every solution, at lower costs and with less hassle, all through a single platform. Many APIs only provide one set of APIs per fintech proposition, whereas Eclipse provides a number of RESTful APIs. “Our clients only have to integrate once and can then access a number of services and build their offering to their own clients from there, broadening their proposition where and when they need to. This allows them to start small and scale very quickly,” says Coertzen.
“This opens up new revenue opportunities to users such as the ability to capitalise on cross-selling opportunities in various markets, digital KYC and onboarding, and the opportunity to access issuing and acquiring services such as physical and virtual cards, QR and VAS – all within a single integration and location,” he adds.
“Embedded finance may be a new buzzword to some, but the benefits are already tangible – it makes true financial inclusion a reality.”