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The Clearing House’s RTP real-time network faces U.S. competition for the first time now that the Federal Reserve launched FedNow this month. The rivalry is spooling up, but the battle of titans will play out in coming months.

Just days after FedNow went live on July 20, RTP put out a press release touting a 500 million payments milestone reached this month. It also bragged that 150,000 U.S. businesses have used RTP and that three million consumers use RTP on a monthly basis via other channels. 

The competition between RTP and FedNow could spur more adoption of instant payments in the U.S., a country that has lagged other nations in rolling out the speedier option for conducting commerce. While the privately-held RTP, which is owned by a pack of the world’s biggest banks through The Clearing House, has been in operation since November 2017, real-time payments account for only about one percent of U.S. transactions. The Fed is counting on FedNow to boost usage, particularly by smaller banks and credit unions.

In an interview this month, Rusiru Gunasena, who is senior vice president of products and strategy for RTP at The Clearing House, emphasized RTP’s first-mover advantage. RTP has developed its “safety and soundness” through experience over the past nearly six years, and now operates a system with a solid track record of handling issues that can crop up, such as fraud and abuse, he said. RTP’s governance and rules have also gained credibility over that period, he explained. 

Gunasena noted that 353 banks and credit unions already use RTP and that they include 50 of the biggest payments originators in the country. RTP also works with 20 technology provider partners to deliver services, TCH said in the release. Overall, RTP reaches 70% of U.S. financial institution accounts, and that makes it the “turn-key” option in the real-time race, Gunasena contended.

The Clearing House executive took a shot at FedNow by noting that it had fewer banks, credit unions, providers and other organizations on board when it launched this month than it originally projected.

Will FedNow and RTP be interoperable?

In differentiating RTP from FedNow, Gunasena also stressed that FedNow had taken a different approach in the message coding that accompanies its transactions than had RTP and also with respect to disclosures about its technology choices, such as in coding and cloud services.

The Clearing House was “disappointed that the (FedNow) messaging specs were not more closely aligned” with those of RTP, TCH spokesperson Greg MacSweeney said during the interview. The other major difference between the systems is that RTP settles its payments through the New York Federal Reserve bank while FedNow settles them through the Fed’s master accounts with banks.

That disappointment stems from the fact that such differences will make it more difficult for RTP and FedNow to be interoperable in the future, said Gunasena, who estimated that possibility is 10, or more, years away. “There’s a lot of work both networks will need to do if they have to talk to each other,” he explained.

Such interoperability should be an objective for fostering U.S. real-time payments, said Georgetown University Professor Jim Angel, who previously served on the Faster Payments Task Force that weighed such issues. Instead, Angel suspects the U.S. will have two real-time rails for the foreseeable future, he said in an interview last week.

Despite RTP’s stated gains, real-time payments nationwide only accounted for 1.2% of all payments in the U.S. last year, according to a worldwide report this year from service provider ACI Worldwide. That usage falls short of other countries such as India and Brazil, some of which have mandated use of real-time systems. In any case, FedNow offers an opportunity for the U.S. to play catch-up, perhaps with the benefit of two competing options.

FedNow, like RTP, is a payment rail for banks, and those financial institutions and their fintech partners, in turn, create ways in which services for businesses and consumers can be built on top of the rails.

So far, one of the biggest use cases playing out on RTP is the faster payment of workers via earned wage access providers, such as DailyPay. That on-demand pay provider, which offers workers an opportunity to be paid before the end of a typical pay cycle, has signed up multiple banks for such services on RTP’s rails. 

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