http://www.wsj.com/articles/wells-fargo-hopes-new-pact-will-break-logjam-with-finance-sites-1465291804
As part of the bank's new strategy, Wells Fargo small-business
customers will no longer need to share their bank passwords when logging
into Xero's website. Instead, customers will be directed to a Wells
Fargo secure server where they can select the account information they
want shared.
Wells Fargo's servers and Xero's servers will use a unique token to
complete the information transfer without the password being shared, the
companies said.
...
Last fall, big banks including J.P.
Morgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo
temporarily limited the flow of information to some websites and mobile
applications that aggregate consumer financial data.
Banks' concerns stem from customers sharing bank passwords with the
personal-finance sites. Once the sites have access to the passwords,
they frequently seek new information from the banks' sites, often
without the customer being involved.
Popular finance sites such as Mint, owned by Intuit Inc., and Quicken
Inc. use bank information such as account balances to give their users
an up-to-date personal financial snapshot.
Quicken and Xero, meanwhile, perform a similar service for small
businesses, tracking payments, tax filings and accounts across one or
more financial institutions.
The frequent requests however have created problems for banks. J.P.
Morgan Chief Executive James Dimon wrote in his annual shareholder
letter in April that customers allowing payment companies, aggregators,
financial planners and others access to their bank account information
"warrants special attention."
He said J.P. Morgan analyzed many of the contracts these third
parties use and found more information is taken than the third party
needs to do its job.
"We simply are asking third parties to limit themselves to what they
need in order to serve the customer and to let the customer know exactly
what information is being used and why and how," Mr. Dimon wrote.
Other financial firms have warned their customers off giving their
usernames and passwords to such sites, saying such sharing could lead to
cybersecurity threats. Banks also said the frequent requests for
account information had slowed down their websites.
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