| Twilight
of Empire
By Sean Ryan
A challenging economy may impede
the largest verticallyintegrated banks, but smaller
rivals can use their agility and sales cultures to leap
ahead.
A turning point is looming for the
banking industry, and newlyformed titans likely
will be the ones most affected. After nearly a decade
of low inflation and interest rates, robust economic growth
and soaring stock valuations, the good times are likely
to top out this year, leaving institutions with an even
tougher revenue growth challenge.
The implications are not good for the
banks that rode the crests of spectacular M&A and technology
spending waves to become giant conglomerates in the 1990s.
This might seem counter-intuitive, given
all of the hoopla about big-bank diversification and economies
of scale. But smaller, nimbler competitors are likely
to have a better shot at revenue growth. The reason? Some
of them used this recent holiday from the business cycle
to fundamentally change the way they do business. They
are now using data mining techniques to deliver useful
customer information to front-line personnel. Those employees,
equipped with proper training and rational incentives,
in turn are able to sell more products and improve relationships
with customers. Such banks are well positioned to sustain
strong earnings gains in a more adverse economic environment.
Viewed from another angle, the robust
economy of the last decade masked the weaknesses of the
very largest institutions. Mega-banks talked a good game
on data mining, crossselling and customer relationship
management. But many remained mired in the status quo,
pursuing productcentric strategies with bloated
cost structures. Their real strategic emphasis was capitalizing
on strong trading multiples to gobble up competitors in
stock-swap transactions. But some have reached the point
where the price paid in weakened managerial controls has
exceeded whatever gains were achieved in cost efficiencies.
These weaknesses will become more evident
in an era when managers must move quickly and nimbly to
meet the changing needs of their customers. Even in the
current benign economic environment, mega-banks find it
increasingly difficult to sustain growth rates. Their
short-term options are unappetizing: either accept slower
growth; or sustain growth by taking on greater risk; or
weave an illusion of steady growth through accounting
wizardry.
Longer-term, the large banks do have
some remedies, if only they have the will to pursue them.
Most fundamentally, they must cut through the hype surrounding
information technology and product development and pay
dramatically more attention to human resources management.
Underscoring the point, many banks known for their technological
savvy saw their earnings (and stock prices) deflate during
1999. Meanwhile, earnings and valuations generally have
remained strong for banks whose commitment to employees
runs deep.
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Consider the example of First Tennessee
National Corp. Under CEO Ralph Horn, the Memphis-based
banking company instituted a formal program to measure
employee satisfaction and diagnose areas of dissatisfaction.
Improving worker morale and slowing turnover have been
critical in First Tennessee's rising market share, sustained
performance, and, ultimately, premium stock valuation.
Two additional points worth noting are that First Tennessee
has done this at a modest size (under $20 billion in assets),
and without wrenching mega-mergers that can distract both
management and employees.
With 2000 marking the transition into
a very different banking environment from what we saw
in the '90s, the successful competitors will be those
that cultivate a motivated and skilled workforce and stay
focused on serving customers.
Race
for Size
It's almost as if big banks merged their
way into a state of competitive disadvantage. That raises
questions about how the industry came to its current state
of consolidation.
A lot of it has to do with market conditions.
During the halcyon 1990s, most banks rebounded from the
early-decade recession to attain unprecedented levels
of profitability. Disquieting questions about revenue
growth still surrounded many institutions. But favorable
conditions lifted the profitability of most banking companies,
and investors did not sharply differentiate among management
teams. Inefficient, poorly-run banks were accorded trading
multiples that approached those of the industry's top
operators, and this stock market phenomenon created dangerous
realworld distortions. Takeover bidding was generally
won by the biggest, dumbest suitors exceedingly
aggressive banks willing to water down the interests of
their shareholders and commanding the largest bases over
which to spread acquisition-related dilution.
Another factor driving the race for
bigness was a growing emphasis on conglomeration. Managers
were eager to develop new business lines, and they capitalized
on weakening regulatory restrictions to buy their way
into a variety of businesses, including brokerage, insurance,
mutual funds and subprime consumer finance. Imbued with
a faith that technology had solved the problems that bedeviled
the conglomerates of the 1960s and 1970s, and often afflicted
with plain old hubris, many of these institutions embraced
vertical integration enthusiastically, attempting both
to manufacture and distribute the full gamut of financial
products and services.
Technology worship further emboldened
the empirebuilders, who thought computer information
systems could simultaneously enable them to manage much
larger enterprises while improving customer service, even
in the face of massive layoffs and merger-related dislocations.
The technical aspects of information profiles,
ratios, trends and statistical probabilities seemed
to take precedence over employee and customer relationships.
Propelled by these forces, big banks
gained unquestioned dominance of the industry. At midyear
1999, bank holding companies having more than $20 billion
of assets controlled 77% of all industry assets, employed
70% of the workers and controlled 78% of the purchasing
power, as measured by non-interest expenses during the first
half of the year. All of those resources were in the hands
of just 43 institutions, which accounted for only 2.7% of
the companies (all figures are based on top-tier consolidated
bank holding company regulatory data published by SNL Securities
LC, Charlottesville, Va.). In
fact, the industry's top-heaviness could become even more
pronounced in the near term. The recent elimination of
Glass-Steagall restrictions on cross-sector financial
mergers, along with the prospective elimination of poolingofinterests
accounting by yearend, will create a temporary "window
of opportunity" for aggressive acquirers. Insurance
now represents fresh territory for commercial banks, broadening
the range of potential deals. And the regulatory approval
of recent big in-market bank mergers has pushed the antitrust
envelope farther than would have seemed possible only
a few years ago.
Size does not translate into strategic
vindication, however. One way or another, the coming year
is likely to provide further compelling evidence of the
irrelevance of scale to banking success.
Conventional wisdom holds that banks
can lower unit costs and lift profitability by running
more volume through their largely fixedcost systems.
This is wrong. A mountain of academic research and empirical
evidence illustrates that skill, not scale, determines
success in banking. Though economies of scale do exist,
they are largely exhausted at low thresholds perhaps
a few billion dollars of assets. Beyond this size, diseconomies
begin to creep in and management is put under increasing
strain.
Bureaucratic inertia, particularly,
is a direct function of size, as senior management becomes
ever more removed from customers and frontline employees.
In such an environment, even the most promising initiatives
can fizzle. Energy can dissipate while waiting for various
parts of the organization to buy-in. Business mixes also
grow increasingly complex, taxing management's ability
to understand each unit's activities.
High
Water Mark?
Technologyrelated rationales for
size appear similarly suspect. We commonly hear the refrain
that banks must grow in order to afford the technology
investments needed to remain competitive. While this is
true in a handful of individual business lines, it rings
hollow at the company-wide level. Twenty years ago, the
ability to afford mainframe computing power may have separated
haves from havenots. Thanks to advances in microchip
technology, today's marginal cost of computing power is
effectively zero. Banks of every size can afford more
computing power than they can effectively deploy.
In too many cases, the greater sums
that larger banks generally spend on technology projects
engender waste, not competitive advantage. In an environment
in which two-thirds of banks can't discern the impact
of their spending on customer relationship management
systems, larger IT outlays often end up effectively going
down the drain. Even when breakthroughs are produced,
resulting competitive advantages tend to subside quickly
as competitors eagerly replicate them. At their worst
moments, big technology spenders merely create benefits
for their competitors by functioning as industry beta
sites.
New technology is also cited as an instrument
of management control by empire-building banks. "This
time is different," they say, meaning that IT gives
them the ability to manage larger, more complex enterprises.
But advances in IT, real as they are, have not been matched
by a reduction in the possibility of human error.
Today's bankers are no better able to
master multiple crafts than their 1960s predecessors.
The unusually long economic expansion of the last 16 years,
marred by only one recession to cull uneconomic firms,
disguised that truth. It has permitted market participants
to indulge in the conceit that only they, at this moment
in history, are free from folly and able to see the future
clearly. In reality, the risk exposure of many banks is
increasing in lockstep with their degree of vertical integration,
steadily lowering the threshold of economic dislocation
required to knock them on their backs.
Should the U.S. suffer some unforeseen
economic shock, we anticipate that the current wave of
conglomerates will meet the same fate as their industrial
predecessors namely, dismemberment, either at the
hands of a management that sees the light, or activist
shareholders convinced that management never will.
This year, in fact, may represent the
high water mark for financial consolidation in this cycle.
Once this wave has passed, we can expect to see some divestitures,
possibly followed by a deconglomeration wave that
may dwarf that of the '80s. Thus the twilight of the age
of empire looms near. Already, the independence of three
of the nation's six largest banks First Union Corp.,
Charlotte; Chicago-based Bank One Corp., and New York's
J.P. Morgan & Co. Inc. looks increasingly tenuous.
We also should see the beginning of
turnover in the ranks of top banks. Superior operators
who just a few years ago were not even among the fifty
largest banks will displace some of today's leviathans.
Front-runners will include previously obscure names such
as BB&T Corp., Winston-Salem, N.C.; AmSouth Bancorp.,
Birmingham, Ala.; and Centura Banks Inc., Rocky Mount,
N.C. companies that have demonstrated the ability
to win market share, rather than a mere compulsion to
buy it.
The
Human Dimension
The major obstacle to success in banking
is not lack of scale or inadequate technology, but rather
the difficulty of building a sales culture. Banks historically
have focused on pleasing regulators, not customers or
shareholders. Most banks have only a primitive understanding
of their production and distribution costs, and the profitability
of products and customers. Without this information, even
the best management teams are flying blind. It's true
that new technology can help supply that information,
but that's only the ante to get in the game.
The real challenge, overlooked by too
many managers, has to do with human resources. It is not
enough to give employees advanced tools; they also must
be taught to use them. Then incentive compensation must
be revamped in a way that rewards employees for using
the tools effectively on the frontline. Only a small (but
growing) cohort of banks has shown success in this. As
their financial performance pulls away from the pack,
their stock valuations are following suit.
Asset management exemplifies the deficiencies
afflicting banks in their approach to human resources.
Rare is the bank that does not aspire to a more prominent
role in this business, lured by fee revenues and high
returns on equity. The trouble is, money flows from performance
in asset management, and high-performing people are expensive.
In fact, one key reason for high returns in this industry
is that capital primarily is used to cover heavy compensation
expenses for excellent personnel, rather than to support
balance sheet assets.
Unfortunately, banks frequently choke
on the operating costs of this business. In an attempt
to impose a more "disciplined" cost structure,
they often drive away some of their best investment managers.
Studies have shown that banks generally pay investment
professionals one-third less than mutual funds and brokerages.
Who, then, can be surprised that banks have failed to
grow their share of the asset management business outside
of acquisitions and trust conversions?
The future of banking belongs to those
institutions that can master the human resources issues.
However, this category is not likely to include most of
the vertically integrated empire builders, who are subject
to severe diseconomies of scale. Instead, the lead will
be taken by a small group of high-performing banks of
varying size who can harness the potential of data warehouses
to crosssell more effectively, boost customer profitability
and retention, and gain profitable market share. The stocks
of these banks will likely trade at higher multiples than
their larger rivals, allowing them to become the dominant
acquirers.
While some exemplary banks also were
active acquirers in the 1990s, there is a crucial difference
between them and the leviathans. Many of today's giants
put the cart before the horse, pursuing ambitious acquisitions
before developing strong sales and service cultures. Now,
precisely because of their massive scale, top banks have
much greater difficulty bringing about cultural shifts,
since bureaucratic inertia tends to increase geometrically
with size.
Banks that emphasized superior sales
and service skills, by contrast, first concentrated on
dominating the list of highperformers, and only
then sought to leverage their expertise over a larger
base of operations. Looking into the nottoodistant
future, it should prove much easier for the high performers
to match the giants' market capitalization than for the
giants to approach the high performers' skill levels.
Mr.
Ryan is president of Byrne, Ryan & Co. in New York
City.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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