54 results related to "*"
This time, it’s not optional. On July 1, 2020, the ACH Contact Registry opens for business. Unlike the existing voluntary contact database, participation is mandatory. A new Nacha Operating Rule requires all financial institutions using the ACH Network …
Afinis Interoperability Standards said it has released three new APIs to assist corporate customers of financial institutions with accessing and reviewing their own financial transaction data to better help them with cash management analysis and informed …
Fraud keeps changing. As it does, participants in the payments system need to understand and adapt to emerging fraud scenarios and develop counterstrategies to help protect their customers and themselves. Nacha’s previous risk management strategies for …
Payroll impersonation and redirection fraud is a fact of life today, but there’s a new way to help fight it. As part of its ongoing commitment to help protect against fraud, Nacha worked with payroll providers, Receiving Depository Financial Institutions …
Nacha is requesting industry feedback on a set of Rules proposals and other concepts collectively referred to as “Meaningful Modernization.” The deadline has now been extended to May 1, 2020. Learn more about it on our Rules page …
Even before the first phase of Same Day ACH was implemented nearly five years ago in September 2016, Nacha’s Risk Management Advisory Group (RMAG) had been evaluating potential risk increases and decreases due to Same Day ACH. Were the doom and gloom …
Any database is only as good as the information it contains, and the ACH Contact Registry is no exception. Although enforcement of the Registry Rule doesn’t begin until Aug. 1, Nacha is already making spot-checks for data quality. The Rule requires that …
Your dentist likely isn’t shy about telling you to floss more. And Nacha’s latest campaign with the American Dental Association (ADA) isn’t shy about encouraging dentists to switch to fully electronic claim payments. “Dental practices are leaving a lot of …
Once scammers get a victim’s money, they’re far from done. They often need to move the money—and they’re not going to do it themselves. That’s where they employ the help of others—some knowingly, but many not: money mules. “A money mule is someone who …