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  • user 10:13 pm on March 1, 2017 Permalink | Reply
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    Three Steps to Adopt Artificial Intelligence in Banks and Insurance 

     

    Today, there is incredible interest in anything that is even remotely related to (AI). AI is dominating the conversation on a variety of levels. Philosophers and thinkers are debating the moral implications and risks for human kind of a world where intelligent machines are ubiquitous. In the media, it seems that a new movie or TV series on AI is launched every month. Academic papers on the topic are receiving attention from far beyond the scope of the usual research audience. In the meantime, businesses are facing much more short-term and concrete decisions about what to do with AI, where to invest first and how to measure the return of these investments.

    In this post, I will try to define a framework for how to structure decisions about AI adoption. To do so, I will focus on a sector that for different reasons is an early adopter: Banking and .

    As with any innovation, it is very important that established organizations focus first on selected “easy wins” or incremental change instead of disruptive change. This is a solid approach for several reasons. It gives you the chance to take advantage of some concrete benefits in the short term, which helps mitigate internal resistance, and it provides a view of the innovation’s full potential.

    For these reasons, using AI to increase automation for certain operative tasks is a great way to start.

    The daily operations of Banking and Insurance companies contain a number of repetitive, human error-prone processes that make them a perfect target for initial adoption of AI. Here, you have the added advantage that, even if you decide to start small and with only partial automation, the ROI could be staggering because these are typically high-consumption processes in terms of resources and costs.

    Let’s consider some processes that are common to both industries that fit these requirements. Customer care and e-form extraction (reusing data taken from electronic forms), or banking-specific processes such as mortgage approval (moving data from different documents into a central repository to do calculations) or fraud detection (tracking account activities, communications, connections etc.) are processes that are ripe for automation. In insurance, this includes processes such as claims management, new policy quotes, or the technical due diligence required for a new commercial policy.

    In processes like customer care automation or claims management, you can achieve significant savings even if you limit the scope to partial automation. In addition, the standardization often brings improvements for “soft” metrics like customer satisfaction. Each manager knows how many resources are dedicated to these tasks, so the potential ROI would be easy to calculate. A collateral benefit is that resources and people freed from these activities can be assigned to higher value tasks, such as sales-related activities that focus on growing the top line.

    Once the organization has experimented with the initial adoption of AI by focusing on high ROI initiatives linked to incremental improvement, it’s time to focus on the areas that can bring the most strategic value. This is what AI was made to do.

    The MIT Sloan Management Review recently published an article where they try to get at the core of what AI can really provide. They compared AI to the advent of the computer. The authors make the case that, even if the computer brought drastic change to basically everything, the real transformative element was the improvement in calculation.

    For AI, the elements that will bring about real change are scalability and cheap prediction power. Once automation is out of the way, these are the areas where organizations should start focusing.

    Banking and Insurance companies could make a smooth transition to AI-enabled predictions by starting to leverage data made available by the automated processes. For example, a side result of customer care automation is an increased set of analytics about your customer. Frequency of communications, the topics discussed, customer reactions to the marketing message, etc. are quantitative and qualitative data that can help in creating (again through AI and machine learning algorithms) models to predict customer behavior such as propensity to churn or to buy, to promote with peers, etc. Similar benefits can be achieved with processes such as claims management or technical due diligence for new policies.

    Organizations that have gone through the initial steps of adoption will be ready for the third more disruptive step. Let’s go back to the computer example from the MIT article. The majority of people who were in awe of the computer completely ignored or dismissed the larger impact that this speed and precision in calculation would have on us in the future via the  internet, e-commerce and free video phone calls.

    With AI, we are at the same stage of computers in the 70s. The most disruptive effect for organizations will be in the appearance of new business models, especially in the most traditional sectors (just as retail and telecommunications were among the core sectors disrupted by the evolution of computers).

    Going back to our focus on Banking and Insurance, while these organizations are going to be busy going through the first two steps in AI adoption, it is important to not forget about the big changes that are coming. For example: What will autonomous driving do to insurance? What would highly accurate algorithmic predictions of movements in the financial market (for example considering unstructured data like news, social feeds, etc. in addition to stock price fluctuations) do to ? What will perfect weather forecasts do to banks and insurance companies? No matter how advanced a company is in adopting automation or in experimenting with prediction, not paying attention to these next aspects of AI will be a death sentence for any business.

    AI adoption will be about competitive strength first and business sustainability later. As some of the early adopters of this , Banking and Insurance companies must ensure that they have a strategic framework in place to support the full cycle of these changes. If they drive this adoption through smart, incremental and forward-looking tasks they have a good chance of obtaining both short and long term gains.


     
  • user 7:51 am on March 1, 2017 Permalink | Reply
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    Using blockchain to improve data management in the public sector 

    It’s not just for financial institutions; government agencies can use this digital ledger to protect trusted records and simplify interactions with citizens.
    McKinsey Insights & Publications

     
  • user 7:51 am on March 1, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , technology,   

    Using blockchain to improve data management in the public sector 

    It’s not just for financial institutions; government agencies can use this digital ledger to protect trusted records and simplify interactions with citizens.
    McKinsey Insights & Publications

     
  • user 12:19 pm on February 28, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , , , technology, USAA’s   

    Design Lab Will Fuel USAA’s AI, UX Efforts, Exec Says 

    Labs – focus units tasked to tackle specific technologies and ideas – have been growing in popularity among lately. Most established banks already have “innovation labs” – which focus on identifying trends and partnerships – in place, and many test distributed ledger applications in “ labs.” USAA  took a different route: the [&;]
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 am on February 20, 2017 Permalink | Reply
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    Banks Build a New Standard for Cross-Border With SWIFT (And Not Blockchain) 

    Cross-border payments are getting an update—but are keeping in the blockchain labs. Instead of distributed ledger , banks like Citi, Wells Fargo, and BBVA, are looking to projects like &;s global payments innovation service &; or gpi &8212; which went live today, following its January launch. “If [theRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 12:18 pm on February 17, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Leap, , technology,   

    Visa, IBM Partnership Is a Leap Forward for Cashless 

    Behold, the rise of IoT—plus, the rise of the economy? , the payment processor responsible for over half of the world’s electronic transactions, will be integrating its credit card tokenization with Watson’s Internet of Things network. Watson is the crown jewel of IBM’s work in artificial intelligence, forRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 9:30 am on February 9, 2017 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , Pipeline, , , technology   

    BMO’s Innovation Pipeline Includes Smart Branches, Roboadvisory, and Blockchain 

    BMO Bank has been “heavily” investing in its architecture for the past five years. The bank reached a &;major milestone&; at the end of 2016, according to David Gordon, the bank’s U.S. chief technology and operations officer. “That’s in terms of all the tech capabilities we have built, which willRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 1:56 pm on February 7, 2017 Permalink | Reply
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    INV Fintech Launches New Monthly Podcast 

    INV , the sister accelerator to this site, is pleased to announce its inaugural episode of INV Unfiltered &; a new series, which will cover current trends and intriguing topics in financial and beyond. The accelerator, in its continued effort to help fintech startups strive for greatness, will focus theRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 10:00 am on February 6, 2017 Permalink | Reply
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    Will the API Economy breed a Credit Card/ACH hybrid after PSD2? 

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAklAAAAJDQ4Y2FkOWEwLTkzYjYtNDI1Mi1iMDVlLTE1MmYyZTAzMDJmMg

    is creating a new distinct species for retail digital payments in the EU. Shared by account servicing and third party payment initiators, there will be a customer-triggered Credit Transfer for transferring funds from a customer’s account to that of the Merchant providing the goods or services. Upon receipt of payment, the merchant ships the goods/releases the service. By relying on bank security, this method of payment is hard for fraudsters to replay elsewhere, the speed is moving to “immediate,” and there is an irrevocable payment to the merchant. Unlike a credit card, the method does not offer any repudiation mechanism and does not facilitate reversals or refunds. This new species will only live in the EU. Much of the underpinnings for PSD2 comes from the SEPA elements of the Economic and Monetary Union project in the EU.

    This newly bred species faces entrenched competition from a dominant older Card species that has ruled the consumer payments Savannah globally for over 50 years. The DNA of this species is from the US. There are US firms in leading positions globally in the main elements of the payment card value chain. US-born VISA and Mastercard as Card Schemes are effectively the franchisors of the card payment ecosystem.

    Although banks across the globe issue payment cards to customers, the highest volume issuers are typically US banks. Issuers introduce consumers into the card payments ecosystem, under license from the card payment schemes. Acquirers are responsible for capturing the POS transactions and submitting these transactions to the card scheme for authorisation. If the consumer has the funds or the credit, this process leads to the merchant receiving the value of the goods or services sold. There is also an extensive and distinctive value chain supporting Merchants.  Acquiring Processors provide sub-supply for Acquirers, and US firms are global leaders in this activity. There is a deep sub-supply value chain for Acquirers, with US expertise often to the forefront. The Point of Sale (POS) or Gateway providers offer hardware and software services for the secure capture of payment card details. POS or Gateway providers often innovate in adjacent categories to card payments such as retail inventory management and cash register software. US-led investment is also to the forefront in this area.

    Within all these moving parts, there are processes that are relatively unique to the card schemes, such as , rules, penalties, standards, procedures, brand guidelines, financial settlement platforms, security protocols, chargebacks, holds, stand-in processing, reserve accounts, minimum monthly payments, interest-free periods, etc.

    It is interesting to speculate about what Merchants would ask for if they could pick and choose their best possible combination of features from both species.  Here are a dozen simple and crude requests that a Merchant might make if they could define a hybrid payments collection service between ACH and Cards:

    1.      “If the customer pattern moves to bank-to-bank credit transfers after PSD2, as a Merchant I want to see the same share of my sales being funded by unsecured consumer credit as when I saw a Debit Card/Credit Card split. I want customers to have still the same opportunity to buy on credit if some or all of my product range is priced at high values. “

    2.      “Even if banks start to provide credit through unfunded bank accounts rather than card limits, I want my customers to have still the type of structured credit agreements that they liked with Cards, such as minimum monthly payments and interest-free periods. Ideally, they should get to choose the optional elements of their credit agreements.”

    3.      “I reluctantly accept that I have to carry the overhead of a trusted dispute resolution mechanism for higher value purchases. I want my provider to educate the customers properly on when this protection exists and when it does not exist. “

    4.      “I do not want any repudiation mechanism for the consumer for small value transactions. I have my statutory obligations built into my complaints and refund processes.”

    5.      “I want the low-value purchases made without credit paid to me immediately.”

    6.      “I want the simplicity and predictability of ACH pricing, not an array of fixed, variable, tiered and once-off card charges.”

    7.      “I do not want “holds” put on my money if the business is unexpectedly good compared to projections nor do I want to have money retained in “reserve accounts” in case of chargebacks. My bank should do all the due diligence on my activities, and that should be enough.”

    8.      “I do not want to store the digital credentials of my customers, and I do not want to have to comply with a “PCI” security standard that could bankrupt my business with fines and penalties. I am a retailer, not a professional cyber-security company or a bank.”

    9.      “If the customer is buying from me remotely on a mobile phone, I want minimal delays and friction but also strong customer authentication with the minimum of variation for transaction size and payment type. These security controls should be so elegantly designed that only thieves and fraudsters abandon transactions.”

    10.  “I want value-added services that come with my point-of-sale payment collection services, such as inventory management software, cash drawers, and an App Store, especially for retailers. I want these value added services to work with all payment types.”

    11.  “I want working capital finance opportunities that capture all my trading process delivered seamlessly to my business at POS. I don’t want offers of finance that are specifically confined to Cards traffic or some other specific payment mechanism ”

    12.  “I want payment schemes with great brands that are recognised globally and entice consumers from all locations, not just EU.”

    Producing a hybrid scheme of this agility and desirability is a very tall order, given that the most important suppliers tend to have their capital, infrastructure and knowledge tied up in one of the two models. The biggest EU banks that will handle most of the PSD2 payment initiation volumes are very mature organisations with monolithic software platforms. The major card processors and platforms are also large and mature organisations with monolithic software platforms. They also have very distinctive knowledge bases, focused on either Cards or ACH. They look out at the world from within this history, with a perspective of customer needs influenced by their current model.

    Given these rigidities, is a hybrid model that might delight Merchants a pipedream? Perhaps not, if the theoretical promise of the “ ” becomes a reality. The API Economy is a set of business models and channels based on secure access to functionality and exchange of data between businesses through Open APIs.   An Open API is a publicly available application programming interface. It provides third-party developers with programmatic access to a proprietary software application. APIs can also be used within businesses to clearly define automated methods of communication between various software components.

    API advocates make many claims about their usefulness. They argue that APIs lower barriers to entry for programmers. They make designing complementary programs easier and faster. Modular design, enabled by APIs, allow software designers to create, modify and remove components. Modularity combines the standardisation needed for high volume processes with customisation required for bespoke design. APIs also enable measuring and metering the third-parties that are accessing and using these resources.

    Both Banking and Card Processing specialists are in mature industries with many monolithic systems and divisional organisational structures. All mature industries face a range of challenges adapting to Open APIs. They will have to modify performance management and measurement systems. They have complicated and expensive investments to make to develop modular software with a microservices architecture. Open APIs are entirely different to own-brand products in mature industries. The monetisation goals for Open APIs will have to reconcile with the goals of own-brand products. Mature industries with very established patterns of pursuing profits at divisional level might struggle to see where they will capture value from Open APIs. Older businesses that were not born in the networked economy can be excessively focused on the downside risk of data travelling out to third-parties.

    By definition, all of the service domains required for the market to assemble the Merchants wish list for “the ideal hybrid ACH/Card scheme” must already exist. In general, these services are locked inside the software architecture of the respective service providers, either banks or major card specialists.  These service domains have Machine to Machine and Human to Machine interactions.  Machine to Machine interactions has content suitable for data fields that can be passed between applications. The level of detail in the interactions influence the potential for Open APIs. These interactions contain identifiers and depictions that can be explicitly mapped to a data structure. The standard of detail is very high. Human to Machine interaction includes structured forms of information that are completed by a person during a service exchange. The API Economy has the potential to capture the Human input through more applications and more convenient applications.

    In crude conclusion, notwithstanding the difficulties for mature firms in changing their business models, Open APIs could revolutionise how data and services are distributed. Given the regulatory intervention, the Card specialists in particular seem to have an incentive to make some or all of their characteristic and value adding service domains available to all models, whether there are 3 or 4 parties involved in a scheme. It could be a 2-model world with tighter margins, so they need to profit from both models. If the reality of the API Economy matches the theory, we could see some hybrid species in the future.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/api-economy-breed-credit-cardach-hybrid-after-psd2-paul-rohan” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Paul Rohan”] is Author, “PSD2 in Plain English” at Rohan Consulting Services Ltd.

     
  • user 6:00 am on February 6, 2017 Permalink | Reply
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    The Crocodile in the Yangtze – The MoneyGram Acquisition 

    AAEAAQAAAAAAAAp3AAAAJDAzMWViNWYyLWU0OTAtNGI4Ni04YjY5LThjMmYzNTNlNGJlZQ

    Deep Blue Sea

    Jack Ma, the founder of Alibaba Group, was famously cautious about competing head-to-head with the world’s largest player eBay: “eBay is a shark in the ocean. We are a crocodile in the Yangtze River. If we fight in the ocean, we will lose. But if we fight in the river, we will win,” he said.

    On January 27 the crocodile finally swam out of the confines of the river and into the open seas of global finance. Ant Financial, Alibaba’s financial services arm, the “PayPal of China”, and the world’s largest financial firm, agreed to acquire , which along with Western Union, is one of the two “big” global money transfer operators (MTOs) for a price that represents a 11.5% premium over its share price and assumption of MoneyGram’s nearly 1-billion-dollar debt.

    Size Matters

    The has massive potential for the Alibaba Group. In one fell swoop it positions Ant Financial as a global player capable of handling multichannel payments over a network that reaches out to the far corners of the world spanning 200 countries and 350K agents. Well entrenched in China, Ant Financial, will now be able to offer payments and related financial services on a global basis. Only Western Union has as expansive a reach as MoneyGram. Other large MTO’s have wide agent presence too but they tend to be more geographically specialised than the big 2.

    Remittances

    Remittances, funds sent to family and friends by migrant workers, are still heavily cash based. Over the past few years, innovative online players have developed disruptive business models via the internet and mobile channels to play in the $700 billion plus market for remittances. But the old fashioned cash-based remittance industry continues to be at the heart of the money flows and relies on agent networks (for cash pay-in and pay-outs).

    Though MoneyGram also serves over online and mobile channels, the new players have developed fast, user friendly, digital services that are more intuitive and easier to use. Companies such as Xoom (acquired by PayPal), focus on a few corridors but provide a better more efficient service. Remity and WorldRemit have achieved significant early success. Other disruptors such as Transferwise and Azimo have promise but are still relatively small.

    So, Ant Financial through MoneyGram will have the ability to transfer funds electronically from one end of the earth to the other – for customers who have bank accounts or payment cards – but also, through its agent network, equally well for customers who prefer to deal in cash.

    Challenges Ahead

    In addition to having a wide payment network, the most valuable core assets of an MTO are its anti-money laundering procedures and controls embedded in the entity’s processes, platforms, and above all, its people and culture. Money laundering is a perennial headache for MTOs who are fined heavily not only for helping illegal flow of funds, wittingly or unwittingly, but for simply for having lax AML controls.

    Large fines can cripple companies. In 2012 MoneyGram was handed a penalty for $100 million in the United States because, as Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer described, “MoneyGram knowingly turned a blind eye to scam artists and money launderers who used the company to perpetrate fraudulent schemes targeting the elderly and other vulnerable victims.”

    Of-course MTOs are not alone in finding themselves penalised for aiding and abetting illegal money flows. The fines in those cases have been much larger. HSBC and Standard Chartered were fined billions of dollars for their part in money laundering and for not doing enough to root out and report such activities.

    Analysts have indicated that such risks represent the biggest hurdle to the acquisition of remittance behemoths like MoneyGram by potential large investors and puts their business viability into question as a big event triggering another big fine could cripple a company financially or cause it to be shut down by the regulators. This is true. But it is not specific to MoneyGram. In fact, big companies like MoneyGram are better positioned than smaller rivals to make “critical mass investments” in such controls.

    Ant Financial has the financial muscle to ensure MoneyGram’s AML controls evolve and ensure that it stays clear of trouble. But it will require continuous investment and a significant culture change not just in MoneyGram but also in its new parent, Ant Financial – a culture of transparency and regulatory compliance.

    Alibaba’s marketplace businesses have been warned a number of times for not doing enough to prevent sellers from hawking fake products. But its response has been dismissive. Jack Ma’s famous remark implying that some fakes are better than the real products has been taken to illustrate the casual attitude the group has towards ethical best practices. This attitude should not extend to global money flows. The risks are much higher.

    Ant Financial has other perception issues to face as well. For example, it is still recovering from the trouble in China over Cosun, a phone maker which defaulted on $166 million worth of bonds which were sold over Ant’s financial marketplace.

    Trump Trouble

    A new problem threatening to impede industry growth is the Trump victory in the United States and the Trump administration’s aggressive stance on migration which ultimately could have a negative impact on global remittance flows. The Trump administration with its protectionist rhetoric and anti-Chinese sentiments may even try to block the deal. The deal may be viewed under the “Exon-Florio” Amendment, the “touchstone law that lets the president block foreign acquisitions that threaten national security.” The New York Times quotes a 2009 case when a Chinese company was stopped from buying a gold mine in the United States because the mine was too near a military base and reminds its readers that the Chinese telecommunications equipment giant, Huawei was repeatedly blocked from acquiring American companies because of its ties with the Chinese military / government.

    In recognition of the uncertainty, Ant Financial has reportedly agreed to pay MoneyGram $17.5 million if the deal gets blocked by a US security review.

    Strong Core Business Prospects

    The group is likely to do everything in its power to grow the remittance business especially targeting the significant remittance in-flows to China and also aiming to capture the “informal” remittances that flow through unregistered private networks and have continued to operate under the radar for decades. It can expand and consolidate the network in developing markets. Today, half of the total global money remittance flows take place between developing countries. As China expands its global influence, constructing ports on the Arabian Sea and building infrastructure in far flung African markets, MoneyGram will provide a payment infrastructure that keeps pace with the needs of this expanding footprint.

    The Real Benefits

    The future focus of Ant Financial, however, is not likely to be on remittances alone but on payments that support online and mobile ecommerce through the Alipay brand. Ant Financial now also offers a whole host of financial services to Chinese consumers and online retailers such as personal consumer loans and small business finance. It has also ventured abroad cautiously through investments such as its $ 680 million injection in paytm, India’s popular payment service widely used for ecommerce in the country. The main inhibitor to online payments in developing markets is buyers’ preference for cash payments on delivery due to a hesitation to use cards online or because of lack of trust that the goods received will be damaged or not up to standard. MoneyGram’s vast cash in/out network will enable consumers to pay cash if they cannot pay online and also act as pick up points for goods ordered online. It will also provide the infrastructure to make Alipay become the payment instrument of choice for global ecommerce payments particularly in emerging markets where ecommerce has not taken off yet or where cash is still used to pay for goods ordered over the internet.

    Open Seas

    MoneyGram will provide Ant Financial global reach for remittances and for ecommerce and all other types of payments. And, if all goes well and there are no issues with the United states authorities, Ant Financial will also be able to provide financial services in the US.

    But it is clear that the crocodile that was afraid to battle the shark has now ventured out and has already evolved and adapted itself to the new environment and ready to compete in the open seas.

    (Image: Fine Art America)


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/sameezafar/” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Samee Zafar”] is Director at Edgar, Dunn & Company

     
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