" class="no-js "lang="en-US"> Minsait Fintech, Afterbanks, lands today in Mexico - Fintech Finance
Friday, March 29, 2024

Minsait Fintech, Afterbanks, lands today in Mexico

Afterbanks, the financial technology company that allows retrieving and aggregating data from different banks in real time through an API and initiating payments in an instantaneous and completely safe way in Europe and Latin America, lands today officially in Mexico.

Afterbanks, a subsidiary of Minsait, an Indra company, is endorsed by the most strict licenses in the financial industry at an european level, in technical, commercial and security matters to aggregate bank data and initiate payments, and simultaneously comply with the respective legislation, including the fintech law in Mexico.

“The Afterbanks’ arrival to Mexico supposes the advancement of Minsait in the bank aggregation business, the bank data intelligence and the innovation in the financial services in the open banking frame”, comments Óscar Díez, Managing Director of Indra Mexico. Afterbanks complements our capabilities and offer for the financial sector, securing the highest applicable benefits to the different use cases,” concludes Díez.

Afterbanks is specialized in bank aggregation and categorization from bank accounts, helping out this way to different financial entities to verify the ownership of the final user, to strengthen the risk management models, and in general to streamline their operations. Among their clients, there are digital lenders, banks, insurers and fintech startups.

“The leap to Mexico has been certainly a natural step given the presence of Minsait and Indra in Mexico; we see in Mexico a market highly attractive by the hundreds of credit institutions to whom we can help to digitize their processes, end-to-end,” expresses David Lozano, Afterbanks’ CEO.

Afterbanks has over 80 clients worldwide, premises in Mexico, Spain and the United Kingdom. Afterbanks offers current connections with over a hundred banks, including all those who operate in Spain, and those with the highest coverage in Mexico, among them: Citibanamex, BBVA-Bancomer, Scotiabank, Banco Santander, HSBC, Banco Azteca, BanCoppel and Banorte.

“This is the first step towards a deeper penetration in the Mexican and Latin American markets, where besides the bank data and non-data account aggregation such as utilities data, we plan on enabling invisible payments in a complete safe way as an alternative to the current systems,” concludes David Lozano.

  1. Marco Santos to Become CEO of GFT Technologies SE Read more
  2. PayPal Plans to Appoint Carmine Di Sibio to Board of Directors  Read more
  3. Yapily Named a Supplier on Crown Commercial Service’s Open Banking DPS Framework Read more
  4. allpay Appointed as Official Supplier on Crown Commercial Service’s Open Banking and Fund Administration & Disbursement Services Dynamic Purchasing Systems Read more
  5. Oliver Wyman Announces Mariya Rosberg as Americas Head of Banking and Financial Services Practice Read more