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Singapore’s SMBs seek better FinTech solutions amid economic crisis

By Puja Sharma

March 23, 2023

  • B2B Cross Border Payments
  • B2B Payment Solutions
  • Business
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Cross-border payment, Singapore–Around 41% of cross-border organizations globally believe business expansion is essential to offset the challenges of inflation, high-interest rates and market volatility.
— Over 76% of businesses pay $10+ transaction fees on cross-border payments and 38% of businesses experience 5+ day B2B payment delays.
–About 49% of businesses in Singapore experience 5 to 10-day delays in sending or receiving payments, and 14% face 10 to 15-day delays.
–Global organizations believe that international business expansion is imperative to ease their current trading concerns.

In Singapore, 48% believe better FinTech solutions and faster settlements/payments can help solve these issues and are needed to grow their businesses. That’s according to a new study released by global fintech-as-a-service partner Rapyd, which shows that a sizeable contingent of cross-border businesses are looking to double down on their growth ambitions as the best remedy for the economic headwinds facing them, despite mixed levels of business optimism.

Rapyd’s 2023 State of B2B Cross-Border Payments report shows that businesses are divided on how they view the year ahead. 43% expressed concern about the current state of business versus 57% that claimed not to be concerned. Half of the global businesses cited inflation as their biggest worry, followed by increasing interest rates (46%) and market volatility (35%).

Cross-border trading issues such as currency fluctuations (32%) and import/export challenges (30%) are also featured prominently in the list of key business concerns, with 35% of businesses calling for better fintech solutions to improve the transparency, speed, and cost of payments. In Singapore, the top two concerns cited are increase in interest rates (53%) and a reduction in incoming work/business (43%).

Familiar payments challenges curb growth

Rapyd surveyed financial decision-makers in 715 medium-to-large cross-border businesses across seven global markets: Brazil, Canada, Germany, Mexico, Singapore, the UK, and the US. According to respondents, speed, cost, and efficiency continue to be the backbone of cross-border operations and expansion. Current cross-border payment shortcomings – specifically high transaction fees and payment delays – inhibit growth by eating into revenues, harming cash flow, and making it harder for businesses to plan their finances.

Source: Rapyd 2023 State of B2B Cross-Border Payments

The study found that 76% of businesses are burdened by excessive transaction fees of $10 or more on cross-border payments to suppliers, partners, distributors, employees, and contractors, including 25% of businesses that reported typical cross-border transaction fees of $25-50, and 15% which claimed to be paying fees of $50+ dollars.

Similarly, more than two in five (42%) cross-border businesses paid between 0.25% to 1% in foreign exchange (FX) fees when carrying out cross-border transactions, with a further quarter of the businesses paying even higher FX fees of between 1%-3% or more.

And businesses aren’t faring any better when it comes to payment speed. 38% of respondents experienced delays of five days or more when sending or receiving cross-border payments to other businesses, with businesses in Germany and Singapore reporting the longest delays. 49% of businesses in Singapore face delays between 5 to 10 days, with 14% facing delays of 10 to 15 days.

Globally, businesses recognise the need to overhaul legacy cross-border payment processes and see technology as essential to this transition. 35% of financial decision-makers believe that better fintech solutions will ease their current concerns, and more than 6 in 10 businesses (61%) have made payment systems digitisation a top priority, while another third have already automated their payments systems.

Garðar Stefánsson, General Manager of Rapyd Collect, said, “Our report shows businesses all over the world battling hard against adversity. They are doing everything in their power to reach new markets and open up new revenue streams, but they’re constantly set back by the complexity and cost of trading in other countries – losing huge sums and vast amounts of time on cross-border transactions. The bigger their operations get, the more these costs rise. It’s an unacceptable situation at a time when so many advanced economies are struggling to grow.”

“FinTechs have a tremendous opportunity to help cross-border businesses with their expansion ambitions by providing faster and more cost-effective payment solutions, as well as creating innovative new approaches that simplify the way these systems operate,” Stefánsson added.

“Ultimately, no business should have to take on the complexity of B2B payments by themselves when they’re going for growth – that’s why trusted FinTech partners are critical. It’s time for FinTech to step up to the plate and build bolder, better payments solutions that make cross-border trading seamless and straightforward.”

Key highlights:

  • When asked what is specifically concerning their organization, the top concerns for Singapore businesses are increase in interest rates (53%) and a reduction in incoming work/business (43%).
  • When asked what would ease their concerns, Singapore businesses cited that better fintech solutions (48%) and faster settlements/payments (45%) are the top solutions to combat the negative effects of inflation, growing interest rates, and increased volatility.
  • 49% of Singapore businesses report payment delays of 5 to 10 days. 14% report delays between 10 to 15 days.
  • 67% of Singapore businesses cite digitizing payments as a main priority, with 24% of businesses already automated their payments systems.

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