In the next few years, banks will need to get the basics right and at the same time reinvent themselves. On one hand, they need to be digital and AI-driven, low-cost, and efficient. On the other hand, they need to be visionary, go into new sectors, and create end-to-end customer journeys.
To create powerful customer journeys, banks can really own the customer relationship. This may enable them to understand clients’ needs and serve them more effectively, bringing higher margins and stronger customer attachment. For example, instead of just offering mortgages, banks could help buyers find a home, move in, and finance it. In payments, banks could offer coupons, e-gifting, online marketplaces, and location-based services. For business clients, banks could add a unified, finance- and payment-enabled platform that integrates services including administrative, tax, accounting, business intelligence, benchmarking, and B2B marketplaces. An ideal banking model might involve strategies from different geographies. In some areas of banking, the United States is more advanced, because it disintermediates more and does more securitization. In others, Europe is more advanced, digital, and efficient. The best American banks operate at a cost-to-asset ratio of 200 basis points, meaning they incur costs of two cents for every $1 of assets managed. The best European banks can operate at a cost-to-asset ratio of 70 to 80 basis points or even less. In Europe, the best banks do 70 to 80 percent of their sales digitally. Some European banks can approve a mortgage application within a day. At the best American banks, it still takes weeks to get a mortgage. Asian banks, especially Indian banks, are the stars of how to go beyond banking and discover new avenues and differentiate. They operate almost like tech companies in many ways.
A provocative vision for the bank of 2035 might be a platform of networks—essentially a holding company for a collection of businesses—including e-commerce, payments, consumer lending, real estate, and a truly personalized advisory business, moving beyond financial into insurance, healthcare, and other things. This could be a $1 trillion market cap bank. It would still do everything that banking is doing now—it would still be very heavily regulated and very stable—but it would be unbundled to create value. |