Sponsored Content by J.P. Morgan Payments

How embedded banking helps retailers grow without compromise

Compromise is a fact of life. When you’re choosing where to eat with friends, splitting up household chores, or facing any number of other day-to-day decisions, it’s inevitable that you’ll end up making some trade-offs. 

But compromise shouldn’t be a fact of business. When you’re scaling up, you can’t compromise at the expense of your business, your customers, or your colleagues—even in the face of a digital landscape where competition has never been more fierce. That’s how a promising business ends up hurting itself instead of growing.

Of course, it’s not easy to hold firm when the ground is shifting beneath your feet. In just five years, McKinsey predicts that the integrated network economy could represent 33% of the world’s total sales output—a stark sign of how the accelerated digitalization of the payments experience is reshaping industries like retail and consumer goods. As this $100 trillion future comes into focus, the surging demand by clients for integrated experiences has put tremendous pressure on retail and consumer leaders to deliver on modernization all at once. Their customers want lower prices, easy transactions, and seamless experiences alongside full transparency, safety, and fraud protection on every single platform they are on and every marketplace where they make purchases. 

Without the right technologies, counsel and support, compromise might seem like a tempting fallback. Enter the world’s largest merchant acquirer: J.P. Morgan Payments. They are able to help businesses practically do it all through an unparalleled combination of world-class banking, financial services, and fintech solutions. By leveraging global infrastructure that moves nearly $10 trillion a day in more than 160 countries and 120 currencies, J.P. Morgan Payments clients use commerce and embedded banking solutions to scale today without losing sight of what will shape their business in the years to come.

“Clients need a partner who has global reach, who offers a network of financial products that not only move and accept payments but also facilitate payouts to third-party sellers, and who navigates regulations in a safe, secure way,” says Ryan Schmiedl, Managing Director, Global Head of Trust and Safety for J.P. Morgan Payments. “We’re in a really unique situation to meet these needs.”

 

Building marketplace APIs from A to Z

The rise of digital marketplaces illustrates what’s at stake as businesses evolve. If a company wants to create a marketplace or platform to facilitate commerce between buyers and sellers, they need an end-to-end payments solution that can handle frictionless money movement on a global scale, at low cost, while meeting all requirements for risk control and data management within a well-regulated infrastructure. Every element needs to work seamlessly with the rest, or else the marketplace may hit roadblocks as it expands.

Within a small pool of vendors that offer a full spectrum of solutions, J.P. Morgan Payments stands out. They offer the stability and resiliency of a bank alongside a breadth of rails, a broad portfolio of products, complete understanding of regulatory environments across regions and the ability to move money at speed and scale. As a result, the entire marketplace benefits from solutions that are built to grow. 

With an engineering mindset that translates their deep financial knowledge into a language that developers know best, J.P. Morgan Payments has streamlined essential processes like onboarding and account validation to facilitate money movement across these growing marketplaces. 

“The folks putting together these marketplaces are developers and engineers who want to test APIs in a sandbox,” Schmiedl explains. “We’re bringing together the stability and reach of J.P. Morgan to service the engineering needs of this particular market to create a seamless, frictionless experience.”

Improved trust and safety for the AI era

In such rapidly evolving times, mitigating fraud can feel like playing a high-stakes game of Whack-a-Mole. As customers seek faster payment options and bad actors develop more complex methods of fraud, merchants, platforms and marketplaces face new risks that call for adopting comprehensive trust and safety solutions. 

Yet again, compromise isn’t an option. Neither is searching for an impossible silver bullet that can solve all these challenges at once. Instead, Schmiedl says that businesses should implement multiple layers of protection across the entire customer journey, weaving together a trust and safety strategy that together is stronger than the sum of its parts. Fraudsters are constantly looking for paths of least resistance, such as historically vulnerable legacy points, which is why it’s invaluable to find a partner who can offer a full suite of solutions. 

Increasingly, the backbone of these solutions is AI/ML technology. Breakthrough applications of AI/ML, neural networks and deep learning have enabled new techniques to improve trust and safety—not just for detecting fraudulent new accounts, analyzing transactions to minimize risk, and identifying anomalous behavior or events within the ecosystem, but also instantly pinpointing fraud and calculating risk at any given point in time.

“Clients demand simple, fast digital interactions, so you need to minimize the impact you’re having on legitimate activity,” Schmiedl says. “If something gets caught, automation makes it as simple as possible for clients to prove their legitimacy—and you can still determine the appropriate level of friction based on risk, which is really important not only today, but also tomorrow.”

The use of this technology isn’t entirely new, of course: For years, businesses have deployed ML-based risk scores to detect fake or synthetic identities, user impersonation, account takeovers, improper or fraudulent payments, stolen credit cards, money laundering, and criminal networks. But improved algorithms and modeling techniques suggest that embedded banking and commerce is at the dawn of a powerful new era for fraud prevention.

Schmiedl stressed the need for further innovation and more sophisticated applications across the customer journey, from ML-based models that predict new threat patterns, to biometrics and device-based behavior monitoring that reduce friction during onboarding and payment, to deep learning innovations that help spot deep fakes. All of these innovations will help pave the way to the future of embedded banking and commerce—and do so without compromise.

“The goal is not only to service customers, but to do so in a very controlled, safe way as we continue to build a modern payments business,” Schmiedl says. “That will be extremely important as we continue to proliferate the digitalization of our economy.”

CTA: Discover how J.P. Morgan Payments is building the future.


This article is presented by TC Brand Studio. This is paid content, TechCrunch editorial was not involved in the development of this article. Reach out to learn more about partnering with TC Brand Studio.

More TechCrunch

According to a recent Dealroom report on the Spanish tech ecosystem, the combined enterprise value of Spanish startups surpassed €100 billion in 2023. In the latest confirmation of this upward trend, Madrid-based…

Spain’s exposure to climate change helps Madrid-based VC, Seaya, close €300M climate-tech fund

Forestay, an emerging VC based out of Geneva, Switzerland has been busy. This week it closed its second fund, Forestay Capital II, at a hard cap of $220 million. The…

Forestay, Europe’s newest $220M growth-stage VC fund, will focus on AI

Threads, Meta’s alternative to Twitter, just celebrated its first birthday. After launching on July 5 last year, the social network has reached 175 million monthly active users — that’s a…

A year later, what Threads could learn from other social networks

J2 Ventures, a firm led mostly by the U.S. military veterans, announced on Thursday that it has raised a $150 million second fund. The Boston-based firm invests in startups whose…

J2 Ventures, focused on military healthcare, grabs $150M for its second fund

HealthEquity said in an 8-K filing with the SEC that it detected “anomalous behavior by a personal use device belonging to a business partner.”

HealthEquity says data breach is an ‘isolated incident’

Roll20 said that on June 29 it had detected that a “bad actor” gained access to an account on the company’s administrative website for one hour.

Roll20, an online tabletop role-playing game platform, discloses data breach

Fisker has a willing buyer for its remaining inventory of all-electric Ocean SUVs, and has asked the Delaware Bankruptcy Court judge overseeing its Chapter 11 case to approve the sale.…

Fisker asks bankruptcy court to sell its EVs at average of $14,000 each

Teddy Solomon just moved to a new house in Palo Alto, so he turned to the Stanford community on Fizz to furnish his room. “Every time I show up to…

Fizz, the anonymous Gen Z social app, adds a marketplace for college students

With increasing competition for what is, essentially, still a small number of hard tech and deep tech deals, Sidney Scott realized it would be a challenge for smaller funds like…

Why deep tech VC Driving Forces is shutting down

A guide to turn off reactions on your iPhone and Mac so you don’t get surprised by effects during work video calls.

How to turn off those silly video call reactions on iPhone and Mac

Amazon has decided to discontinue its Astro for Business device, a security robot for small- and medium-sized businesses, just seven months after launch.  In an email sent to customers and…

Amazon retires its Astro for Business security robot after only 7 months

Hiya, folks, and welcome to TechCrunch’s regular AI newsletter. This week in AI, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down “Chevron deference,” a 40-year-old ruling on federal agencies’ power that required…

This Week in AI: With Chevron’s demise, AI regulation seems dead in the water

Noplace had already gone viral ahead of its public launch because of its feature that allows users to express themselves by customizing the colors of their profile.

noplace, a mashup of Twitter and Myspace for Gen Z, hits No. 1 on the App Store

Cloudflare analyzed AI bot and crawler traffic to fine-tune automatic bot detection models.

Cloudflare launches a tool to combat AI bots

Twilio says “threat actors were able to identify” phone numbers of people who use the two-factor app Authy.

Twilio says hackers identified cell phone numbers of two-factor app Authy users

The news brings closure to more than two years of volleying back and forth between some of the biggest names in additive manufacturing.

Nano Dimension is buying Desktop Metal

Planning to attend TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 with your team? Maximize your team-building time and your company’s impact across the entire conference when you bring your team. Groups of 4 to…

Groups save big at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

As more music streaming apps and creation tools emerge to compete for users’ attention, social music-sharing app Popster is getting two new features to grow its user base: an AI…

Music video-sharing app Popster uses generative AI and lets artists remix videos

Meta’s Threads now has more than 175 million monthly active users, Mark Zuckerberg announced on Wednesday. The announcement comes two days away from Threads’ first anniversary. Zuckerberg revealed back in…

Threads nears its one-year anniversary with more than 175M monthly active users

Cartken and its diminutive sidewalk delivery robots first rolled into the world with a narrow charter: carrying everything from burritos and bento boxes to pizza and pad thai that last…

From burritos to biotech: How robotics startup Cartken found its AV niche

Ashwin Nandakumar and Ashwin Jainarayanan were working on their doctorates at adjacent departments in Oxford, but they didn’t know each other. Nandakumar, who was studying oncology, one day stumbled across…

Granza Bio grabs $7M seed from Felicis and YC to advance delivery of cancer treatments

LG has acquired an 80% stake in Athom, a Dutch smart home company and maker of the Homey smart home hub. According to LG’s announcement, it will purchase the remaining…

LG acquires smart home platform Athom to bring third-party connectivity to its ThinQ ecosytem

CoinDCX, India’s leading cryptocurrency exchange, is expanding internationally through the acquisition of BitOasis, a digital asset platform in the Middle East and North Africa, the companies said Wednesday. The Bengaluru-based…

CoinDCX acquires BitOasis in international expansion push

Collaborative document features are being made available inside Proton Drive, further extending the company’s trademark pitch of robust security.

In a major update, Proton adds privacy-safe document collaboration to Drive, its freemium E2EE cloud storage service

Telegram launched a digital currency called Stars for in-app use last month. Now, the company is expanding its use cases to paid content. The chat app is also allowing channels…

Telegram lets creators share paid content to channels

For the past couple of years, innovation has been accelerating in new materials development. And a new French startup called Altrove plans to play a role in this innovation cycle.…

Altrove uses AI models and lab automation to create new materials

The Indian social media platform Koo, which positioned itself as a competitor to Elon Musk’s X, is ceasing operations after its last-resort acquisition talks with Dailyhunt collapsed. Despite securing over…

Indian social network Koo is shutting down as buyout talks collapse

Apiday leverages AI to save time for its customers. But like legacy consultants, it also offers human expertise.

Europe is still serious about ESG, and Apiday is helping companies comply

Google totally dodges the question of how much energy is AI is using — perhaps because the answer is “way more than we’d care to say.”

Google’s environmental report pointedly avoids AI’s actual energy cost

SpaceX’s ambitious plans to launch its Starship mega-rocket up to 44 times per year from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center are causing a stir among some of its competitors. Late last…

SpaceX wants to launch up to 120 times a year from Florida — and competitors aren’t happy about it