ChRReducing Check Processing
Costs with Check 21 and and electronic check conversion
“Checks no
longer accepted.” The signs are appearing
more often on the doors of many small
businesses. Faced with the choice between
customer satisfaction, the risk (and cost)
of accepting bad checks, and the long
clearance time for traditional paper checks,
many small retailers have simply chosen to
forego accepting checks. But this puts them
at a competitive disadvantage to larger
retail businesses.
However, the information
in this document may dramatically change how retailers
think of checks. You may be ready to post a sign stating
“We happily accept checks here!”
With Check 21 and
electronic check processing it is now possible to
process all checks electronically using electronic check
payment, check 21, and check image replacement. We’ll
explain what some of these terms mean and help reveal
the major benefits you can gain from this technology.
This includes reduced check fraud, improved return check
collection, simplified handling and processing (less
room for error or fraud), and improved customer service.
(See the “Benefits of Check Conversion” section for a
complete list.)
Traditional Payment
Method
In the traditional cash
scenario, tender accepted at the Point of
Sale
(POS) is picked up once or twice a shift, then balanced in the
store, then deposited. Once the
cash reaches the bank it is counted, validated,
deposited, and made available for the retailer to
transfer back to its main account. Checks, on the other
hand, go to a central processing area within the bank.
There they are bundled, processed through a machine, and
micro-encoded with the amount of the check in the bottom
right-hand corner, at the end of the check’s existing
MICR (magnetic ink character recognition) line. Then
they are processed through a machine that reads the MICR
line and makes a microfiche of the check itself. The
checks are then re-bundled and sent to the Federal
Reserve Bank, typically by airplane. The Federal Reserve
processes the checks by breaking apart the bundles,
re-bundling them by bank, and sending them back to their
originating banks. The originating banks then process
them and charge their consumer’s accounts. Depending on
geography, this can take five to seven days.
In the meantime, the
merchant has no access to that money; the check is
handled by many different entities, pictured, bundled,
encoded, and shipped many times over. This method is
understandably expensive. The objective of the Check 21
legislation was to reduce systematic risk associated
with physical check movement and to provide a mechanism
to reduce the costs associated with check payment
processing.
Electronic Check Payment Method
In the check conversion scenario, checks accepted
at the POS are scanned with the electronic images of the
checks sent to the bank. The check images are then
validated and sent electronically to print sites near
your customer’s banks. The check images are printed on
secure watermarked paper. On day two the substitute
checks are presented to your customers’ banks and the
deposit is available in your account. This method
reduces the five to seven day float period mentioned
above to 24 to 48 hours.
What is Check 21?
The Federal Reserve Board
worked with Congress on the Check Clearing for the 21st
Century Act, commonly known as Check 21, which became
effective October 28, 2004. Check 21 uses a new
negotiable instrument called a substitute check, which
is the legal equivalent of an original check. A
substitute check is a paper reproduction of an original
check that contains an image of the front and back of
the original check and is suitable for automated
processing, just as the original check is. Check 21
allows depository institutions to convert original
checks, process check information electronically, and
deliver substitute checks to depository institutions if
they require paper checks.
In this scenario the paper check is
captured and converted into a digital image (a
representation of all or part of an original check or substitute check.) A
Financial Institute, the reconverting bank, uses the digital image to create a
substitute check, which is a paper reproduction of the original check. Below is
an example of a personal size check that has been converted to a substitute
check for forward collection process
Automated Clearing House (ACH) Network
In addition to a digitized
version, a check can also be converted to an electronic
transaction and then processed through the Automated
Clearing House (ACH) Network.
The ACH Network is a
highly reliable and efficient nationwide batch-oriented
electronic funds transfer system governed by the NACHA
OPERATING RULES, which provide for the interbank
clearing of electronic payments for participating
depository financial institutions. The Federal Reserve
and Electronic Payments Network act as ACH Operators,
central clearing facilities through which financial
institutions transmit or receive ACH entries.
Checks are most often
converted for use as ACH transactions by two methods:
Accounts receivable check conversion (ARC) and Point of
Sale, also referred to as Point of Presentment (POP). In
both of these scenarios the paper check is converted to
an ACH electronic payment.
Here is how it works:
1.
Paper check is tendered for payment.
2.
Using a MICR scanner, payee scans MICR data from
check.
3.
Payee adds payment amount and name of payee.
4.
Payee transmits data through the ACH Network to
debit the customer’s account.
In ARC, the check is
destroyed after conversion. In POP, the check is
returned to the check writer at the time of payment.
There’s an important
distinction between check conversion and check imaging.
When a check is turned into an image, the transaction
remains subject to check law. When a check is converted
to an ACH debit, the rules of the National Automated
Clearing House Association apply. Check conversion was
developed to provide benefits such as efficiency and
additional consumer protection to the nation’s payment
system by handling cost-effective electronic
transactions (faster collection and return of payments),
while allowing customers the option of continuing to
write checks.
Check conversion was
developed to speed collection and return of payments,
while allowing customers the option of continuing to
write checks.
Trends in Electronic
Payments
On April 15, 2005, The
Electronics Payments Association announced that more
than 12 billion automated clearing house (ACH) payments
occurred in 2004. The 20% increase over 2003 is mostly
attributed to ARC – the accounts receivable check
conversion application supplying 54% of all ACH
transactions. In its 3-year lifespan, ARC reached 1.2
billion payments--the fastest growing payments
application to surpass the 1-billion threshold in the
ACH Network’s 33-year history.
Future of Check
Conversion
A 2004 Federal Reserve Payment Study confirmed
that electronic payment transactions in the
United States
exceeded check payments for the first time. The
number of electronic payment transactions totaled 44.5 billion in 2003, while
the number of checks paid totaled 36.7 billion, according to studies done by
The Depository Institutions Payments Study and The Electronic
Payment Instruments Study.
According to Richard
Oliver, senior vice president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of
Atlanta
and the Federal Reserve Bank’s product manager
for retail payments, “The balance has shifted from check
writing to electronic payments, and we expect this trend
to continue. Indeed, at current growth rates, credit
cards and debit cards will both surpass checks in terms
of total annual transactions in 2007. Such rapid change
presents opportunities and challenges for an industry
traditionally geared toward paper-based payments.”
In a report published by Celent,
The Future of Check Processing in the US
, (
www.celent.com
) Celent projected that paper check processing will nearly
disappear in the
US
by the end of the decade. Image exchange of transit checks
will grow from more than 14 percent in 2005 to 61
percent by 2007. By 2010, more than 93 percent of
transit items will be image exchanged.
Among other key findings,
Celent expects the total volume of checks presented to
amount to 38 billion this year and to gradually slide
down to 24 billion by 2010.
Writing checks may be on
the decline, but it will still be a long time before
people stop writing checks. However, as more and more
banks and merchants become aware of the advantages of
check conversion, processing checks electronically will
likely grow dramatically.
Benefits of Check
Conversion
According to a white paper
done by IVI Checkmate,
1999 Electronic Check Conversion
, there are four main benefits for retailers who incorporate check
conversion: reduced check fraud, improved returned check
collection, simplified funds management and improved
customer service. Key points for each benefit follow:
Reduced Check Fraud
ü
When a retailer uses electronic check conversion
(ECC), negative file data is updated within 48 hours of
settlement, reducing the retailer’s exposure to check
losses. Paper checks take 5 to 7 days to update.
ü
Using ECC, banks can eliminate the
consolidation, sorting, and proofing of paper checks,
thus saving time and cost. This lower cost is passed to
the retailer.
ü
Because negative file information is updated
within 48 hours, the number of negative checks passed is
greatly reduced.
Improved Returned
Check Collection
ü
Electronic check conversion streamlines
collection activities by eliminating paper check
handling and re-depositing of paper checks.
ü
Eliminating paper checks allows for quicker
access to customer accounts for re-presentment (up to 4
days sooner than paper checks).
ü
During the ECC collection process, the retailer
gains an extra presentment into the customer’s account
that would have not been available if paper checks were
written by the consumer. With the additional
re-presentment chances of collecting on the check are
greatly improved.
Simplified Funds
Management
ü
Electronic check conversion reduces the time it
takes for retailers to submit checks to the host
processor, thus checks are cleared within 24 to 48
hours.
ü
By eliminating the expense of handling and
encoding checks as well as the reduced number of
non-sufficient funds (NSF) checks, the bank is
positioned to reduce its fees to the retailer.
ü
Paper checks need to be counted and the value of
the checks needs to be calculated. ECC computes check
totals electronically and makes the deposit
automatically. Bad checks are automatically re-submitted
saving the retailer time and cost.
ü
It takes an average 7 days to notify a retailer of
a returned check. ECC reduces that time frame to 48
hours when checks are identified in accordance with
Automated Clearing House (ACH) regulations.
ü
Electronic check conversion allows check funds
to be consolidated upon initial deposit into the
merchant’s bank account of choice.
Improved Customer
Service
ü
Although customers are required to sign
authorization forms during the first occurrence,
retailers find it is 30% faster to serve a customer
using ECC than without.
ü
The cashier does not need to count and recount
checks with ECC, thus the process of “end of day”
closeout is simpler and faster.
How
Can
Cougar
Mountain
Software Help?
Cougar
Mountain
Software has been in the business of providing
businesses with powerful accounting, nonprofit
accounting and point of sale software solutions for more
than 23 years.
Cougar
Mountain
’s quest for innovative technology, enhanced business practices, and
commitment to customer service contributes to the
development of award-winning, flexible, and powerful
products.
For more information on
how Cougar Mountain Software Support can help companies save
money and increase efficiency through electronic check
processing – and how easily such processing can be
implemented – please contact Cougar Mountain Software Support,
www.cougarmtnsupport.com
.