What’s next for China’s booming fintech sector?
The fast and furious growth of the country’s Internet finance industry will inevitably slow. Companies need to begin positioning themselves for sustainable success.
McKinsey Insights & Publications
The fast and furious growth of the country’s Internet finance industry will inevitably slow. Companies need to begin positioning themselves for sustainable success.
McKinsey Insights & Publications
The R3 CEV #blockchain consortium has a new member that’s not like the others. Last week, Toyota Financial Services announced it has joined R3’s consortium to explore distributed and shared ledger tech for potential applications in #auto financing. TFS is the first captive to collaborate with the more than 50 ofRead More
Bank Innovation
The introduction of new technologies has facilitated new consumer and customer behaviors. These new behaviors have facilitated the adoption of new technologies. The resulting virtuous circle has ushered a period of rapid change which has profoundly change one industry after another. Industry incumbents have had to face a new reality where vertical integration, a fancy word for “owning the entire value chain” has turned into a liability. Indeed, the virtuous circle I mention has allowed new competitors to deliver value at one point of the value chain, without owning the entire value chain. Take the media and entertainment industries as an example. It used to be that “content was king” and “pipes were dumb”. Based on these heuristics Hollywood studios ruled over an entire value chain and were comfortable living in a world where the only thing they needed to do was to deliver their content to movie theaters. This is no longer true. Even though original content still rules, pipes are not dumb anymore. Pipes are actually smart, and that are built on top of platform strategies. Content is important, but so is how you create content, how you deliver it, with what and to whom, how you measure how it is delivered, plus the balkanization of communities of users make it eminently more difficult for a vertically integrated entertainment business to remain at the top of the food chain without profound changes. Witness the rise of Netflix, Amazon with their different value propositions around entertainment content and compare to how the main Hollywood studios are armed for the future.
The financial services industry in general, and the #banking industry in particular are now faced with the same tectonic changes other industries have faced. For #banks, this is an even more perilous exercise as most of them have never faced a breakdown of their value chain in the past and have enjoyed “near” monopoly in their geographies thanks to accommodating regulatory frameworks.
For simplicity’s sake, I break down a bank’s business into four layers (borrowing from a Boston Consulting Group framework):
Yesterday’s bank owned each layer. Clients dutifully visited their branches or relationship managers to consume products created by their bank which were delivered by the infrastructure owned by the same bank.
To the extent that banks faced competition it was from another bank which also owned its entire vertical stack end to end, which was operating in the same geography. Oligarch banks ruled.
Today’s bank is under threat at each layer of its stack instead which makes for a much more complex competitive landscape.
First, clients spend more time somewhere else than with a bank. We all know the relative decline of branches. Not only are retail consumers not visiting their branches as much as they used to, but they are also increasingly spending time in completely different ecosystems than in the past; communities where a local bank relationship manager has little leverage if any. These ecosystems are called Facebook, Google, Amazon, WhatsApp, Snapchat, Instagram, Pinterest. (Even though such change is not as pronounced with SME and enterprise clients, there is also change with these segments.) Second clients are used to a different customer experience based on the service they are getting from these digital communities, thereby making bank web apps and mobile apps always play catch up. In other words, clients are moving banks, and bank customer interfaces are under threat. Third, products are under threat although we have to nuance this statement and look at lending separate from the rest. Let’s look at the rest first. Accounts are being loosened from the tight grip of Mr Banker – PSD2 in Europe, the open bank initiative in the UK will take care of that – allowing, under consent, third party access to account data and meta data. Payments is experiencing the highest level of competition given it has the lowest barrier to entry, either from #fintech startups endogenous to the industry, new entrants exogenous to the industry (Amazon, Apple, Google, Facebook) or grown up startups (PayPal). Brokerage and Investments are prone to the same opening to multi-competition. This leaves us with lending which I believe should be analyzed completely differently than the rest because no one will ever be able to come up with a “zero marginal cost” lending product. Indeed, the cost of borrowing is comprised of the bank’s cost of borrowing and a margin to compensate for risk and provide adequate profit. That cost will never scale to zero or near zero. This, in my view is the main reason why lending will never experience an “Uber” moment where banks will be completely disintermediated – further, think of the unintended negative consequences of a massively large lender for example – whereas the main cost of the “rest” is that of delivery and marginal cost of delivery can and should be driven down to near zero. Fourth, infrastructure is where there has been to date the least disruption and competition, notably around core banking systems and CRM, even though #blockchain #technology holds the promise of much change in asset servicing.
To date the overwhelming number of competitors attacking the above layers have not been successful. Fintech startups focused on investments (#robo advisory), brokerage, lending have not reached escape velocity and acquired meaningful market share to the detriment of banks. Some pundits believe it is because banks have much more defensible business models (regulation, licenses…). Although I do agree most startups have failed so far, I also know not to discount the entrepreneur/startup threat over the long run on the basis of a failed first wave. I am actually paranoid for banks as the overwhelming types of strategies banks have put in place to deal with change are in my opinion either inadequate or short term focused.
Indeed, banks have focused on revenue optimization strategies (pricing, cross selling, upselling, margins) or cost reduction strategies (layoffs, better hardware, better software) by applying concepts (digital banking, API banking, mobile banking, cognitive banking) on existing business models. To the exception of a few banks who recently started working on a platform strategy – which forces them to address the competition they are will face at each of the four layers – all other banks are still in a “vertical integration” paradigm. This will change – the market will force that change, some banks will adapt, other competitors will rise to the challenge.
I view all these bank moves as incremental evolutionary steps, good enough to compete another day, not good enough to reinvent banking drastically. A digital bank – and there are many startup digital banks in the UK for example – is still vertically integrated, even though it holds the promise of being a “better” bank.
Incumbents will have to choose how they want to compete going forward. Below are some of the potential options available:
I have to make several additional comments to tie loose ends.
If the above vision comes to fruition and we do see a segmentation of banking, I fully expect the regulatory and licensing landscape to change. In other words, we will see a new regulatory approach where different types of banking licenses will be issued based on the business model and its implicit and explicit risks to the market and to clients/consumers. Just to give one example, an Interface Bank as an AI powered Virtual Assistant may have to meet certain licensing requirements around providing financial advice to its clients but may not need to comply with lending requirements. To be clear, some fintech startups competing or providing services at each layer level may not require the same type of banking licensing as the Banks that will operate at each layer level.
Further, competition at each layer level forces one to think platform strategy which results in either developing and implementing one’s own platform strategy or becoming one of the building blocks of someone else’s platform strategy. There is no escaping platform strategies.
Additionally, layer specialization, other than with Lending, and I repeat myself here, can deliver very strong network effects enabled buy near zero marginal cost of delivery. This I believe will be in and of itself a revolutionary paradigm for banking.
Finally, the bank that will successfully partner and integrate with ecosystems of users, regardless of the approach taken, will stand a higher chance of success than trying to create their own new communities or continue with existing ones. Like it or not, social networks are here to stay and will take on a greater importance in our lives going forward.
Trying to craft a roadmap for the above vision is tricky. We are in the early innings of platform strategies or API/marketplace strategies for banks and much remains to be done – no one has declared a BaaS for example. I venture that we shall see increased activity along these vectors in the #next 5 years – the actions of Facebook, Google, Amazon, Apple, Alibaba (and Snapchat, Instagram, WhatsApp, WeChat….) will make that absolutely inevitable. Incumbents may also naturally gravitate towards a few of the six options I laid out above &8211; either as a result of further divestitures, acquisitions or mergers &8211; leaving space for new entrants (large tech companies, fintech startups). In other words, the industry is large enough to see various participants succeed and avoid a banks lose, new entrants wine scenario, or vice versa.
Last parting thought. I strongly believe the above also applies to the insurance industry &8211; with the appropriate tweaks.
#London – the most competitive #financial centre in the world &8211; has a thriving #Fintech community. It is nearly unbelievable that how many fintech events are set to take place in London this year. According to EventBrite, there are more than 50 fintech events in London from now until the end of #2016. There will be conferences, workshops, summits, seminars, forums and networking events about fintech segmentations such as #blockchain, insurtech, banking, lending, payments, as well as about startups and entrepreneurships. The main purpose of these events is to enhance the dialog between established multi-nationals, innovation firms, disruptive start-ups, government, media and investors.
One of the notable events coming up this June & July is the London Fintech #Week 2016 from July 15-22. Fintech Week is the world’s largest Fintech-focused festival, and this is the 3rd year it is organised. London Fintech Week 2016 comprises a series of conferences, workshops, hackathons, meetups and drinks receptions.
Special Offer: Sign up now with code FTSW to get 15% discount for ticket registration!
Fintech Week London 2016 &8211; Agenda
This year Fintech Week will start with a Blockchain Hackarthon Weekend, followed by 4 days of conferences focusing on important Fintech sectors such as Money and Payments, Capital Markets, Insurance Innovation, Security and Data and so on. Every conference day will also feature a small number of exhibitors. The 5th day is dedicated to workshops run by our partners. Every evening there will be an official meetup, networking event, or drinks reception taking place in various locations across the City of London and Canary Wharf.
Apart from running a number of conferences, hackathons, meetups and private events, Fintech Week London 2016 also plays match-maker to enterprise corporations and innovative start-ups. The event also helps design and enhance innovation and transformation programmes. Their team members come from diverse backgrounds so they’ve layered a transformation consulting offering on top of their events and world class network.
Join Fintech Week London 2016 now to get inspired, learn something, meet new clients, partners, developers, investors and #find value for your business. Investors will also benefit from having hundreds of startups all in one place.
Special Offer For Fintechnews Switzerland: Sign up now with code FTSW to get 15% discount for ticket registration!
*Another upcoming fintech event in London is FinCoder &8211; a conference tailored especially for Fintech technologist, developers and coders.
Fintech developers are changing the face of the financial #services industry. Discover new opportunities, ways to tackle challenges and the latest trends in financial services #technology. The #next billion pound Fintech firm could be in the room.
Special Offer: Sign up now with code FTSW to get 20% discount for ticket registration!
The post What’s the next big thing in Financial Services Technology? – Find out at London Fintech Week 2016 appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.
#Consumer #Banking is fundamentally about lending and non-bank lending (whether called AltFi, Marketplace Lending or P2P Lending) is already a mature market. Consumer Banking has taken 73% of #Fintech investment to date (vs only 10% each for Asset Management) and Insurance) and has had the first IPOs and the first big blow ups. Now we…Read more #Kreditech and the #next #generation of Consumer Banking
Bank Innovation
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