
New platform promises faster, more transparent international transfers as financial institutions modernize global payment services
Banks in Hong Kong are gaining access to new cross-border payment capabilities through Mastercard Move, a platform designed to modernize how financial institutions send and receive money internationally.
The technology allows banks to process cross-border transactions in near real time while improving transparency and predictability for businesses and financial institutions moving funds between countries.
The system is designed to address long-standing challenges in international payments, where transfers have often been slow, costly and difficult to track.
Mastercard said the solution enables banks to handle commercial cross-border payments around the clock while providing greater visibility into transaction status and settlement outcomes.
The platform also allows financial institutions to manage liquidity more efficiently and reduce counterparty risk in complex global payment flows.
The initiative is part of Mastercard’s broader effort to expand its global money movement network, known as Mastercard Move, which enables funds to be transferred across more than two hundred countries and territories and in more than one hundred fifty currencies.
The network reaches billions of endpoints and a vast majority of the world’s banked population, providing infrastructure for both consumer transfers and commercial payments.
For Hong Kong’s banking sector, the development reflects growing demand for faster and more reliable cross-border transactions as companies expand international trade and supply chains across Asia and beyond.
Cross-border payment volumes have been rising steadily as businesses and investors operate across multiple markets, increasing pressure on financial institutions to modernize legacy payment systems.
Industry specialists say that traditional international transfers have often relied on complex correspondent banking networks that can create delays and limited visibility for customers.
By integrating new payment technologies with existing messaging systems used by banks, platforms such as Mastercard Move aim to reduce those inefficiencies without requiring financial institutions to rebuild their infrastructure from the ground up.
The modernization effort comes as financial centers across Asia compete to strengthen their roles in global financial services.
Hong Kong’s position as a major banking and trade hub makes efficient international payment infrastructure particularly important for companies operating across the region.
Analysts say continued innovation in digital payment networks is likely to reshape the global remittance and commercial payments landscape, as banks adopt new tools that allow money to move faster, more securely and with greater transparency across borders.
The technology allows banks to process cross-border transactions in near real time while improving transparency and predictability for businesses and financial institutions moving funds between countries.
The system is designed to address long-standing challenges in international payments, where transfers have often been slow, costly and difficult to track.
Mastercard said the solution enables banks to handle commercial cross-border payments around the clock while providing greater visibility into transaction status and settlement outcomes.
The platform also allows financial institutions to manage liquidity more efficiently and reduce counterparty risk in complex global payment flows.
The initiative is part of Mastercard’s broader effort to expand its global money movement network, known as Mastercard Move, which enables funds to be transferred across more than two hundred countries and territories and in more than one hundred fifty currencies.
The network reaches billions of endpoints and a vast majority of the world’s banked population, providing infrastructure for both consumer transfers and commercial payments.
For Hong Kong’s banking sector, the development reflects growing demand for faster and more reliable cross-border transactions as companies expand international trade and supply chains across Asia and beyond.
Cross-border payment volumes have been rising steadily as businesses and investors operate across multiple markets, increasing pressure on financial institutions to modernize legacy payment systems.
Industry specialists say that traditional international transfers have often relied on complex correspondent banking networks that can create delays and limited visibility for customers.
By integrating new payment technologies with existing messaging systems used by banks, platforms such as Mastercard Move aim to reduce those inefficiencies without requiring financial institutions to rebuild their infrastructure from the ground up.
The modernization effort comes as financial centers across Asia compete to strengthen their roles in global financial services.
Hong Kong’s position as a major banking and trade hub makes efficient international payment infrastructure particularly important for companies operating across the region.
Analysts say continued innovation in digital payment networks is likely to reshape the global remittance and commercial payments landscape, as banks adopt new tools that allow money to move faster, more securely and with greater transparency across borders.




































