> Yes you can send money very quickly with SEPA, but that's not the settlement time. The money can still be reversed
From a banking perspective, the money is settled in 10 seconds, at least with TIPS (the ECB’s platform; the ACH clear it, but the end-user behavior is the same).
Reversal (known as a recall in the standards) requires consent of the beneficiary.
> It will depend on the consent of the Beneficiary whether to turn back the Funds to the Originator.
SCT Inst Scheme Rulebook § 4.3.2.3 [0].
Of course, if you are talking about fraud, yes: banks may answer positively to a recall, without contacting the beneficiary, when the beneficiary is a fraudster. Indeed, local laws often require that of banks, and therefore the standards define a dedicated protocol for that.
When you break the law, many legal protections no longer apply.
There are many cases where asking the beneficiary is not necessary, fraud is only one of them.
And to clarify, it's not really "fraud", it's "claim by the originator that a fraud occurred". Which is a very different thing, and which matters immensely in practice.
There are three cases. Fraud is one, the two others are banking mistakes. First, when the bank sends the funds twice by accident. Second, when the bank was not meant to send the funds.
In both of those cases, the beneficiary bank is not even required to send the funds back. It can require consent from the beneficiary (which is its client, after all) if it wants.
Yet in both cases, the beneficiary is not even meant to receive the funds.
Fraud works the same way: unless local law requires it, the beneficiary bank is not required to send the funds back, and can rely on beneficiary consent.
From a banking perspective, the money is settled in 10 seconds, at least with TIPS (the ECB’s platform; the ACH clear it, but the end-user behavior is the same).
Reversal (known as a recall in the standards) requires consent of the beneficiary.