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Fed Wants Paychecks to Hit Bank Accounts in a Flash

The Fed this week is expected to launch its long-awaited FedNow system, which is intended to allow bill payments, paychecks and other common consumer or business transfers to be available quickly and around the clock, officials said.

That is a change from the existing, slower system that is closed on weekends and can at times take several days before consumers can access their funds. Last year those older rails handled 30 billion payments, valued at close to $73 trillion. The Fed’s system will compete with a real-time payments network built and launched by big banks in 2017, which processes a much smaller volume of payments.

While FedNow would theoretically give consumers access to their money immediately, only 57 out of thousands of banks and financial institutions are participating from the start, the Fed said in June. Officials have said it could take a couple of years before the system gains more-widespread adoption and its capabilities are more fleshed out.

“It’s not going to be a big bang,” said Craig Ramsey, head of real-time payments at ACI Worldwide, a payments-software company.

For millions of Americans, getting a payment immediately compared with in a day or two is crucial. An entire section of the financial-services industry fills the time gaps in today’s payment system, including payday lenders and check-cashing stores. They effectively offer bridge loans at high interest rates that prevent even more expensive utility shutoffs and overdraft fees.

Peer-to-peer platforms such as Venmo appear to transfer money quickly between consumers, but they typically still operate on a slower payment system, which means the actual transfers into a consumers’ bank accounts can take days. Instant payments are available on these platforms, albeit at a fee.

Fed officials said the new system—a behind-the-scenes network that consumers wouldn’t interact with directly—could help individuals who aren’t on a regular payroll, such as gig workers, get faster access to their wages. It could also help the federal government more quickly disburse emergency support payments.

FedNow “will enable all the banks—any bank in the United States, not just the big ones—to offer instantly available funds in real-time payments to their customers,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell told House lawmakers in March. “That’s a great thing.”

At present, the electronic banking system in the U.S. relies on Automated Clearing House payments to move funds from one financial institution to another. The ACH system, which started in the 1970s, is only available during normal business hours and typically provides overnight transactions, so Monday’s payments show up in bank accounts on Tuesday. It also increasingly offers same-day payment transfers.

The real-time payments network owned by the largest banks lets customers get their money nearly instantly. That system now reaches about two-thirds of checking accounts, though many smaller banks and credit unions aren’t part of it, and not all payments at the bigger banks go through it. That system processed 58 million transactions for a total of $29 billion in the second quarter. That is up from 41 million transactions and $18 billion in payments a year earlier.

While other countries including Mexico and Brazil have set up near-instant systems, and some have mandated them, the Fed proceeded slowly. The project has been under discussion for more than eight years.

Aaron Klein, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, said Fed delays have cost consumers hundreds of billions in overdraft fees, check-cashing fees and late fees.

And the new system could still sputter, he said, because the Fed isn’t requiring banks to provide consumers access to their money faster. There is a risk that FedNow “will fail to gain traction and the Fed will read into that a lack of demand for fast payments,” he added.

Banks on either end of a transaction must be part of FedNow to use it. The system won’t be able to interact with the big banks’ network, at least at first. The Fed has said such interoperability is a goal.

Another limitation: At least some of the system’s “early adopters” will only receive, and not send, FedNow payments, according to people familiar with the system’s launch.

Big banks, which spent more than $1 billion on their own system, had waged a lobbying effort to stop the Fed from developing FedNow. The prospect of a competing Fed system inadvertently delayed the spread of faster payments, industry officials have said. The Fed last month named some big banks including Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase among its early adopters.

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