Digitization Emerging as the Key to Survival in Banking

  • Banking
  • 26.03.2019 07:48 am

With the momentum that has lifted the banking sector's performance over the first half of the decade slowing in all major markets, banks must leverage digital technology to battle disruption and stem the threat of disintermediation brought on by fast-moving, newer entrants—or pay the price in staying power and profitability, according to a new report by Boston Consulting Group (BCG). The report, Global Risk 2019: Creating a More Digital, Resilient Bankis being released today.                                                                   

This ninth annual survey of the health and performance of the banking industry by BCG examines global and regional profitability levels and how institutions can raise them, explores ongoing regulatory trends and how banks can navigate them, and examines how core risk and treasury functions must adapt both their operating models and their roles in the wider banking organization to be more efficient and effective.  

"As digitization opens the financial services ecosystem to new and niche players, we ex­pect to see fewer full-stack banks," says Gerold Grasshoff, the global leader of BCG's risk management segment and a coauthor of the report. "As the banking value chain breaks up, banks will get the opportunity to reposition themselves. They will likely pursue a mix of strategies, such as becoming platform leaders, being specialist providers, and promoting infra­structure-as-a-service offerings. The cost basis will also change, and banks will need to be leaner and more efficient if they are to compete ef­fectively against digitally mature peers and fintechs."

A Three-Speed World for Economic Profitability
According to the report, while banking remains profitable on an absolute basis, total economic profit (EP), which adjusts for risk and capital costs, softened again in 2017 (the last year for which year-end statistics are available). It was a second straight year of decline. Since reaching a global-av­erage high of 16 basis points in 2015, EP has slumped, falling to just 8 basis points in 2017. With that slide, average banking performance is now on a par with that of 2013, when the banking industry started to regain its footing after the global recession.

In Europe, banks have remained mired in negative growth, hemmed in by low inter­est rates and nonperforming loans. By contrast, banks in North America have bene­fited from increasing interest rates, although rising costs edged total EP down for the second straight year. In Asia-Pacific, banks experi­enced the third consecutive year of declining EP. Overall, banking remains a three-speed world in which European banks continue to struggle, North American and Asia-Pacificbanks strive to stay the course, and the developing markets of South America and the Middle East and Africa continue to show high profitability. Yet system­ic issues hound each region.

Setting the Regulatory Stage for the Future of Banking  
The report says that, for regulators, instilling trust in the strength and resiliency of financial markets has become a dominant focus. Banks must improve the quality and efficiency of regulatory compliance to meet their ongoing financial-stability, prudent-operations, and resolution obligations. Achieving this will require finding leaner and smarter ways to manage the high volume of regulatory revisions, as well as experimenting with new technologies and partnerships to drive down the cost of know-your-customer documentation and to improve anti-money-laundering processes. Keen to protect financial markets from future shocks, regulators are trying to anticipate the ways that technology will reshape the banking ecosystem and, with it, their own role in establishing guidance and ensuring consistent standards. Moreover, since 2009, banks worldwide have paid $372 billion in penalties. Regulators assessed $27 billion in penalties on European and North American banks in 2018, an increase of $5 billion from the year before. Mortgage-related misconduct in the US, money laundering and interbank-offered-rate-related market manipulation across regions are among the factors sparking regulatory ire. 

As Banks Digitize, So Must Risk and Treasury 
The report says that banks' risk and trea­sury functions will change in profound ways over the coming years. Both functions face a broader mandate with a larger slate of risks to manage, a growing need for integrated steering to protect banks' interests, and an equally growing need to make the most strategic use of banks' balance sheet resources. Delivering on this mandate will require risk and treasury to operate faster and more incisively, backed by real-time data, predic­tive analytics, and end-to-end automation. Risk and treasury functions that commit to "going digital" in these ways will become not only more efficient operators but also more effective strategic partners in delivering value to banks. 

 

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