91天堂原創

Has The Metaverse Run Out Of Gas? Not For Banks And Payment Firms, Sources Say

September 15, 2023
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Despite media reports that interest in the metaverse is waning, banks and payments firms are still engaged as the nascent sector moves on from its "hype phase".

Despite media reports that interest in the metaverse is waning, banks and payments firms are still engaged as the nascent sector moves on from its "hype phase".



This month, the聽 report by Mobiquity found that fewer C-suite bankers are engaging with metaverse technologies, but the number of those who are is still significant.



In the UK in 2022, 56 percent of C-suite bankers said they were 鈥渆ngaged鈥 with metaverse technologies, but in 2023 this number has fallen to 38 percent.



Following the publication of Mobiquity鈥檚 report, several media outlets claimed that this finding points to the beginning of the end for the metaverse.



Finextra, for example, said the concept has 鈥渇ailed to gain traction鈥 and that the financial services sector 鈥渉as begun to move away鈥 from it.



However, looking at the wider concept of the metaverse and ongoing industry initiatives, including by PayPal and the card brands, the metaverse still seems to offer an untapped opportunity for banks and payment firms alike.



As 91天堂原創 heard from one expert, the metaverse is a far more 鈥渓ayered ecosystem鈥 than the media tends to portray, and reports of its death are often greatly exaggerated.



鈥淭he metaverse is largely misunderstood as only an augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) experience,鈥 said Surabhi Gawde, web3 and metaverse lead at management consultancy Capgemini Invent.



鈥淏ut the metaverse is really a stack of multiple layers of experience, discovery, creator economy, spatial computing, decentralisation, device interfaces and infrastructure鈥.



Financial institutions in the UK 鈥渦nderstand this and are building the right way鈥, Gawde added, 鈥渁lthough slowly and steadily鈥.



Businesses and the metaverse potential聽



Although media outlets have reported in the past year that investment in the metaverse has 鈥溾, ongoing projects by several large market players suggest there may be further potential in the new ecosystem.



鈥淭he capability to transact objects of any value in the metaverse is in itself a business pie,鈥 said Gawde, pointing out that Visa, Mastercard and PayPal are already offering a variety of metaverse on-ramp services.



鈥淰isa and Mastercard have been consistently building the rails, depth of knowledge, products and services for their new role in Web3, crypto-enabled assets and eventually metaverse.鈥



Meanwhile, bankers in the UK 鈥渁re yet to grab a piece of the pie鈥, said Gawde.



If financial institutions focus 鈥渙nly on AR/VR, then they are only exploring devices for virtual experiences, not the entire piece, not the entire tech stack with partnerships, and not the entire business pie that鈥檚 relevant to banking鈥, she said.



Over the past 18 months, several large banks, including HSBC, Citi and Deutsche Bank, have launched new projects related to the metaverse.



HSBC has already聽 a metaverse fund for clients to invest in, and聽 the creation of software for 鈥渇acilitating secure payment transactions by electronic means in the metaverse and other virtual worlds鈥.



In addition, the bank is exploring fraud prevention, identity verification, virtual credit cards, NFTs, NFT-backed media, banking and business transactions in the metaverse.



Citi UK is聽 in the development of the Regulated Liability Network (RLN), a platform for the exchange of tokenised deposits and other forms of tokenised digital money.



鈥淭hese examples imply that financial institutions do understand what their role is and what services they should build first to be able to thrive in virtual worlds to make money,鈥 said Gawde.



鈥淚t is not simply about avatars, NFT drops, virtual lands or AR/VR devices when it comes to financial institutions.鈥



For a banker or payment processor, 鈥渢he question of where the real money lies is something that these hype reports may be unable to gauge or bring forth yet鈥.



In the UK, it is聽 that about 7 percent of people have used some form of service in the metaverse, and the total size of the UK鈥檚 metaverse market will reach 拢1.85bn in 2023.



This includes the total value of spending on app purchases, advertising spending, and consumer spending on apps, games, items, and products, as well as hardware items such as headsets and glasses.




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