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  • Tuesday, November 26, 2013

    NACHA proposes ACH rule changes

    NACHA − The Electronic Payments Association seeks input from the payments industry about how to improve the automated clearing house (ACH) network. NACHA, which oversees the ACH, issued two complementary proposals designed to collectively enhance the network by reducing the number of unauthorized ACH transactions and allowing the association to better police ACH rule violators.

    The first proposal, titled "ACH Network Risk and Enforcement," addresses the problem of "outlier" organizations that originate money transfers for consumers that disproportionately result in insufficient funds notices, called "exceptions." Such aborted money transfers clog the ACH network and are an expense largely shouldered by the financial institutions (FIs) that receive bad money transfer requests and must return them. By amending the ACH rules, NACHA seeks the authority to bring enforcement actions against those violators.

    The second proposal, "Improving ACH Network Quality," would establish economic incentives, or disincentives as the case may be, for FIs to tighten up the policies of money transfer originators, such as check cashing stores that utilize those FIs to offer money transfer services to consumers.

    NACHA's argument: if an FI that facilitates a money transfer, called an Originating Depository Financial Institution (ODFI), had to pay a fee when an exception occurs, it would have a financial incentive to reduce exceptions by providing more oversight over third-party money transfer providers.

    "Taken together, these proposed rules will contribute to a holistic, interconnected approach to strengthening ACH network payments," NACHA said. "Both approaches are intended to protect the safety, security and integrity of ACH network payments and the consumers, governments, businesses and financial institutions who move their money via ACH."

    Risk and enforcement

    NACHA said the first proposed rule would reduce exceptions by strengthening risk controls. For example, implementing thresholds on the return rate of exceptions would "cause ODFIs to focus on reducing the number of returns and thereby reducing the number of risky transactions entering the ACH network," NACHA stated. The specific changes sought by NACHA include:

    Additionally, NACHA wants the authority to initiate enforcement proceedings for potential violations of the rules. "Unauthorized transactions within the ACH network have a particularly pernicious effect on ACH network integrity, creating significant reputational issues for RDFIs [Receiving Depository Financial Institutions] and the ACH network as a whole," NACHA said.

    Network quality

    NACHA noted that the second proposed rule would institute fees under the following conditions:

    "For each of these incentives, the fee would be paid by the ODFI and passed through to the RDFI to partially offset the RDFI's cost for exception processing and customer service," NACHA said.

    Issues with outliers

    NACHA said that even among third-party money transfer providers that are deemed high risk because they deal with low income consumers, outliers exist that have confusing money transfer policies, and those policies result in high levels of exceptions due to insufficient funds. NACHA added that, at those outliers, consumers may not even "understand that s/he was authorizing an ACH transaction."

    Of additional concern to NACHA are high-risk providers that deliberately circumvent ACH rules to submit, as if for the first time, returned money transfer requests. A rule called Reinitiation allows exceptions to be resubmitted under certain limited circumstances.

    NACHA said it has "reason to believe that some high-risk originators may ignore or attempt to evade the requirements of the Reinitiation Rule, including by changing content in various fields to make an entry appear to be a new entry, rather than a reinitiation."

    NACHA's executive summary of its proposed rule changes can be accessed at www.nacha.org/sites/default/files/files/ACH_Rules/2013%20RFC/ACH%20Network%20Risk%20and%20Enforcement%20Topics%20-%20Rule%20Proposal%20Description%20-%20November%2011%202013.pdf . Industry stakeholders have until Jan. 13, 2014, to comment on the proposals.

    Editorial Note:

    Whether you want to upgrade your POS offerings, find a payment gateway partner, bone up on fintech regs or PCI requirements, find an upcoming trade show, read about faster payments, or discover the latest innovations in merchant acquiring, The Green Sheet is the resource for you. Since 1983, we've helped empower and connect payments professionals, starting with the merchant level salespeople who bring tailored payment acceptance and digital commerce tools, along with a host of other business services to merchants across the globe. The Green Sheet Inc. is also a proud affiliate of Bankcard Life, a premier community that provides industry-leading training and resources for payment professionals.

    Notice to readers: These are archived articles. Contact information, links and other details may be out of date. We regret any inconvenience.

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