Artículos Relacionados con Banking

El Centro de Noticias de HTX ofrece los artículos más recientes y un análisis profundo sobre "Banking", cubriendo tendencias del mercado, actualizaciones de proyectos, desarrollos tecnológicos y políticas regulatorias en la industria de cripto.

ChatGPT Can Manage Your Money for You. Would You Trust It with Your Bank Account?

OpenAI has launched a personal finance tool for ChatGPT, currently in preview for US-based ChatGPT Pro users. This feature allows users to connect their bank and investment accounts (via Plaid, supporting over 12,000 institutions) directly to ChatGPT. It analyzes transactions, generates visual dashboards, and offers conversational financial advice—such as budgeting or planning for major purchases—based on the user's actual data. This move follows OpenAI's acquisitions of fintech startups Roi and Hiro Finance, signaling a strategic push into vertical "super assistant" applications, similar to its earlier health-focused feature. However, the launch has sparked significant privacy concerns. Critics question the safety of granting such sensitive financial access to an AI, especially amid ongoing lawsuits alleging OpenAI shared user chat data with third parties like Meta and Google. OpenAI emphasizes that ChatGPT only reads data (no transaction capabilities), deletes it within 30 days if disconnected, and offers opt-out options for model training. Yet, trust remains a major hurdle. The trend reflects a broader industry shift: AI companies like Anthropic and Perplexity are also targeting high-value, data-rich domains like finance and health. While technically promising, the tool operates in a regulatory gray area—it provides personalized guidance but disclaims formal financial advice or liability. Ultimately, OpenAI's challenge is convincing users to trust an AI with their most private financial information.

marsbitAyer 10:58

ChatGPT Can Manage Your Money for You. Would You Trust It with Your Bank Account?

marsbitAyer 10:58

Cross-Border Payment Giant Wise Lands on NASDAQ

Fintech company Wise has successfully listed its A-class shares on the Nasdaq stock exchange under the ticker "WSE," while maintaining its secondary listing on the London Stock Exchange. This move, more of a primary listing transfer to the US than a traditional IPO, reflects Wise's strategic shift to be closer to a key growth market, attract a broader investor base, and support its business evolution. Founded in London by two Estonians to solve personal pain points with costly and opaque international bank transfers, Wise initially grew as TransferWise by offering faster, cheaper, and more transparent currency exchange and cross-border payments. It has since expanded beyond a simple transfer tool into a comprehensive global financial services platform, offering multi-currency accounts, business services, debit cards, and the Wise Platform, which provides its infrastructure to banks and other institutions. Wise's latest fiscal year data highlights its scale: $243 billion in cross-border transaction volume, $39 billion in customer balances, and nearly 19 million customers. The company continues to emphasize its low average fee of 0.52% and fast transaction speeds, with 75% of payments arriving within 20 seconds. The Nasdaq listing aligns with Wise's ambitions in the US market, where it aims to grow its consumer and business user base and, critically, deepen partnerships with American banks through Wise Platform. To further strengthen its US operations, Wise is reportedly seeking a national trust bank charter and a Federal Reserve master account to gain more direct control over USD payment flows. The transition also involved corporate governance discussions, as the move was approved alongside an extension of its dual-class share structure, which grants founders enhanced voting rights. In summary, Wise's Nasdaq debut marks its transition from a disruptive money transfer startup into a major global payments network player. Its future growth will be tested on its ability to scale its platform business, execute its US strategy, and maintain profitability and governance standards under the scrutiny of public markets.

marsbitHace 2 días 01:18

Cross-Border Payment Giant Wise Lands on NASDAQ

marsbitHace 2 días 01:18

UBS Enters the Fray, 20 Swiss Banks Now Offer Crypto Trading, Covering 2.5 Million Accounts

Global wealth management giant UBS has entered the cryptocurrency market, offering Bitcoin and Ethereum trading to select private banking clients in Switzerland as of January 2026. This move is part of a broader trend in Switzerland, where approximately 20 banks now provide crypto services, collectively covering over 2.5 million accounts. Client data from Zurich Cantonal Bank (ZKB) challenges the stereotype of crypto being solely for the young, revealing that the average buyer is aged 30-50 and predominantly male. Notably, over 40% of these clients previously held no investment portfolio, indicating crypto is activating dormant capital. The business case is proving substantial. For several Swiss banks, crypto-related activities already contribute a significant and disproportionate share of profits, with unit economics often outperforming traditional banking services. This institutional adoption in Switzerland reflects a global trend, with a recent survey showing 73% of institutional investors planning to increase crypto allocations in 2026. Switzerland's early regulatory clarity through its DLT Act and established custody infrastructure have provided a foundation for this growth. However, upcoming challenges include the implementation of the OECD's Crypto Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) in 2027 and ongoing reforms by Swiss regulator FINMA. The final shape of these regulations will be crucial in determining whether Switzerland can maintain its leading position in the global banking crypto sector.

marsbit05/13 02:40

UBS Enters the Fray, 20 Swiss Banks Now Offer Crypto Trading, Covering 2.5 Million Accounts

marsbit05/13 02:40

活动图片