The payments landscape is going to radically transform in the next decade. Driven by the SARB’s Payments Ecosystem Modernisation (PEM) programme, the AI revolution, and growing digital demand, we are at a tipping point for financial institutions. Our comprehensive new Report confirms a singular, unavoidable truth: Bank leaders need to prepare their infrastructure now, or they will be left behind.
For bank CIOs, relying on siloed, batch-based legacy models is no longer a sustainable option; it is a direct path to irrelevance. Massively increasing transaction volumes, coupled with the growing expectations for always-on offerings and seamless digital experiences, means modernisation is not optional.
Our latest Report, South Africa’s Payments Future: How Bank Leaders Can Define the Next Generation of Payments, defines four strategic focus areas that will set banks up for success:
The time when payments could be managed simply as a cost centre is over. This shift involves looking beyond transaction processing and leveraging payments as the entry point for consumers. Future winners will be exploring the opportunities presented by expanded digital footprints, reduced cash reliance, data monetisation, and innovative value-added services.
As transaction volumes surge and the global standard ISO 20022 becomes universal, the historical distinctions between domestic, cross-border, high-value, and low-value payments are collapsing. The most critical infrastructure investment is moving all processing onto a single, real-time, multi-rail engine. This platform must be scalable, API-driven, and designed for exponential growth.
Decisive technological leadership will separate the winners from the rest. Falling behind on any of the key technology enablers will severely weaken your competitiveness:
The shift to an always-on, instant payment world means a heightened level of risk. Cybersecurity is now, unequivocally, a board-level financial stability topic. Banks must empower their fraud detection capabilities using AI-driven profiling and multi-modal biometrics to build greater resilience. Simultaneously, survival depends on hyper-efficiency. Automating core, non-differentiating operations such as compliance checks, dispute resolution, and exception handling is essential to free up valuable human and financial capital, allowing your teams to focus on innovation and growth.
The choices made over the next few years will irrevocably determine who leads South African payments in 2030 and who falls irreversibly behind. Download our latest research report, South Africa's Payments Future, to inform your strategy.