Home
Your Account

Footer

Proud partner of
International Media Partner
    HomeTMI AwardsDirectoryPodcastBlogVideosNews

Categories

    BankingCash & Liquidity ManagementCentralisationCountry & Regional FocusCrypto & DeFiCSR & ESGData AnalyticsForeign ExchangeFraud & Cyber Risk
    My Life in TreasuryPeople in FocusRegulation & StandardsRisk ManagementTax, Accounting & LegalTrade FinanceTreasury Strategy & TransformationTreasury Technology

Quick Links

Privacy PolicyTerms and ConditionsContact Us

  • Join over 20,000 treasurers and follow us on LinkedIn.
©2025 P4Publishing Limited All rights reserved. Registered in England & Wales No. 5838515
  1. News
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. New ISO20002 Guide Aims to Invigorate Migration Projects

New ISO20002 Guide Aims to Invigorate Migration Projects

Published: September 25, 2020

Deutsche Bank has released the third instalment in its “Guide to ISO 20022 migration” series, which offers an update on the industry shift to the de facto global standard for financial messaging: ISO 20022. The paper comes at a critical time for the ISO 20022 migration, with a number of changes to existing timelines and strategies from SWIFT and the world’s major market infrastructures having been announced this year.

The paper explores the latest developments, including SWIFT’s year-long postponement of the migration in the correspondent banking space. The decision meets industry calls for a delay and also provides ample time to build the new central Transaction Management Platform (TMP) – a core feature of SWIFT’s new strategy that will allow the industry to move away from point-to-point messaging and towards central transaction processing.

It also details the wave of action that has been seen by market infrastructures around the world – with many, including the ECB, EBA CLEARING and the Bank of England, announcing revised migration approaches.

“Now more than ever, with shifting timelines and strained resources, it is vital that banks and corporates alike do not view the ISO 20022 migration as just another project that can be put on the back burner,” says Christian Westerhaus, Head of Cash Products, Cash Management, Deutsche Bank. “The delays in the correspondent banking space, and across several market infrastructures, should not be seen as an opportunity for banks to take their foot off the pedal. The journey to ISO 20022 is still moving ahead at speed – and internal projects need to reflect this.”

Tags:Deutsche Bank
Article Last Updated: November 26, 2020

Latest News

  • 4 December 2025

    Barmag Selects Surecomp’s RIVO for AI-Powered Digital Trade Finance

  • 27 November 2025

    FIS Powers German Auto Bank’s Digital Transformation, Accelerating Deposit Growth

  • 20 November 2025

    BBVA Adds Surecomp’s RIVO to its Digital Offering to Drive Trade Finance Transformation

  • 20 November 2025

    Contours of New Trade Map Coming into Focus as Asia for Asia Gains Momentum

All News