Tag Archives: Banking

Mobile Banking Predicted to Grow 65% Annually in Latin America

According to a recent report by Deloitte re-released by the Latin American Federation of Banks (Felaban), banking by mobile devices is predicted to grow up to 65% annually over the next two years. They also predict that by 2015, the total mobile banking platform will reach up to 140 million people on the continent. These are huge numbers, and if they’re correct, will help bolt Latin America to the forefront of mobile banking user adaption, and usage.

 

This isn’t the first study to make such a claim, with many believing that mobile money will have a major impact, transforming Latin America in the coming years. The region still has high numbers of both unbanked, and underbanked people, and access to mobile money devices has the potential to change how people in the region do business, especially in rural areas.  According to Guillermo Moreano, VP of Operations and Technology at the International Bank of Ecuador, this has “a great business potential for Latin American banks,” citing that traditional forms of banking, such as checks and large cash transactions will become a thing of the past.

 

Last year (2012) the penetration rate of mobile banking in the US was at 24.3%, with the age range of the likely user between 19-23. While this number puts them in the lead for now, it won’t be long until one of Latin America’s big mobile countries surpasses them. Brazil currently has the largest amount of mobile users on the continent at 200 million, followed closely by Mexico and Argentina, with 91 and 52 million respectively, according to Deloitte. With high cellular usage rates, and fast-growing smartphone adaption, converting mobile users into mobile bankers may happen sooner than later.

Crisis Economics: Why Spain Needs Latin America

Why Spain Needs Latin America in 2013

Gone are the days of a new currency, and prosperous Euro-laden excitement. Gone are the days of heavy spending, and domestic growth potential. For Spain, the harsh lessons of economic misappropriation and stifling debt are a tough pill to swallow, but an all-too-common one these days for the Western European nation. With national debt and unemployment staggering the Spanish market, the country’s top companies have had to look elsewhere to build their profits and maintain steady growth. That “elsewhere”, for the most part, has been in Latin America.

With emerging markets growing at a steady pace in many countries in the region, Spanish companies have had success in selling their products and services, as well as expanding and growing their businesses in Latin America. All the while in Spain, struggling to stay afloat. While this type of Spanish success in the Americas isn’t necessarily a new thing, it holds a new kind of relevance considering the economic situation back home. The two industries that we see to be making the most out of these emerging Latin American markets appear to be Telecom and Banking.

Which Spanish Companies are Succeeding?

Companies like Telefonica S.A., Grupo Santander, and BBVA have all made significant impacts to their businesses by expanding in Latin American markets. By taking advantage of a common language, and having sewn their business roots early on, these companies have solidified a stronghold in many local markets. For example, Telefonica’s Latin American mobile brand, Movistar, which operates in 14 countries in the region, continues to grow, even as its Spanish counterpart shrinks. Companies such as Grupo Santander and BBVA have likewise made an impression through expansion in the region, operating in 5 (Santander) and 6 (BBVA) countries respectively, with current plans for further expansion in the near future.

How This Affects the Spanish Economy

While the issue of the Spanish debt crisis is far too complex to break down here, it’s safe to say that Spain’s biggest companies, from top to bottom, are feeling the pressure. This is why maintaining, and even expanding a strong market in Latin America is tantamount to staying alive financially as a whole. Latin Americans have more purchasing power than ever before, and are also investing in an unprecedented way. That means big business for companies like Telefonica, Santander, and BBVA. While this doesn’t exactly trickle down to the average Spanish worker, it does keep these businesses’ heads above water for the time being. Though it may be bittersweet, that’s still good news for the Spanish economy overall.

To get the best, most concise information available on Latin American businesses, and inside contacts with the biggest companies, contact us today. We connect you with the top decision makers in a variety of industries, including all three companies listed in this article. Check out our site for more info, and take a test run to see exactly what Latin Target has to offer.

Contactless Payments Trial Begins in Mexico City

VeriFone Systems has announced that it is providing the merchant payment solutions to support a contactless payment trial in Mexico City by the Mexican bank Banamex.

Banamex is implementing a full-scale contactless payment deployment. In the first phase, several thousand VeriFone contactless-enabled card acceptance systems will be deployed to 1,900 merchants in the Mexico City metropolitan area. The bank is also issuing 100,000 contactless credit and debit cards.

The bank will deploy the VeriFone VX 520 to merchants who use traditional standalone countertop systems, and the VX 820 advance PIN pad to larger retailers that integrate payment systems to electronic cash register systems.

By end of 2012, the bank expects to have issued 1 million contactless cards and to have deployed 12,000 payment acceptance systems. For purchases of less than 250 pesos (approx. US$15), contactless payments wont require a signature by the customer.

Get access to Banamex and other Banks in Mexico with Latin Target.

What is Latin Target? Find out at www.latintarget.com