| E-Brokerage's
Integration Challenge
By John R. Engen
Banks hope an online blend of
banking and brokerage will help them crack the investment
market, but synergies are elusive. Will they stay the
course?
Wells Fargo & Co.'s Web site is
applauded as one of the industry's best, with features
and functionality that allow customers to pay bills, transfer
funds and even apply for loans. But what really excites
senior vice president Shelley Freeman is the icon in the
lower left corner of the screen, which connects to Wells
Trade, the San Francisco-based company's e-brokerage unit.
Clicking on this icon transports the
customer into a world of $29.95 per-transaction stock
trades and a full menu of price quotes, news and information
that could soon rival the offerings of E*Trade Group or
Charles Schwab & Co. An added client convenience is the
ability to transfer money directly from a Wells bank account
into investments. "Customers want one place where
they can manage their entire financial picture as seamlessly
as possible," asserts Freeman, who manages Internet
investment services at Wells. "If we can put it all
together in an integrated way, that's customer nirvana."
Such is the dream of many bankers. But
behind the scenes, integrating banking and brokerage services
in a truly synergistic manner is fraught with operational
and organizational difficulties. As Wells demonstrates,
Internet technology does make possible an integrated offering.
Being federally-insured depositories, however, banks are
burdened with some unique privacy and legal concerns.
Limitations on sharing information between banking and
brokerage units force institutions to erect costly technical
and organizational firewalls. That hinders effective cross-selling
between the two units.
Perhaps even more daunting, banks are
latecomers to the e-brokerage party. Nonbank companies
such as Schwab, E*Trade and Fidelity Investments are already
dominant in the market and continue to improve their technology
and products at a blistering pace. Few banks can muster
the level of investment and managerial commitment required
to catch up.
But for banks that are up to the challenge,
the rewards of mastering e-brokerage can be substantial.
Such capabilities can pay off in stronger customer relationships,
particularly among the more affluent segments. Many bankers
and experts believe that as the various sectors of financial
services gradually converge, customers will gravitate
to providers who can blend banking and brokerage into
one compelling value proposition.
If banks don't capture that business,
their nonbank competitors certainly will by offering
bank products. "The long-term customer-attrition
risk faced by banks on the Internet is enormous,"
says John Weisel, partner and head of the financial services
practice at Andersen Consulting. "The e-brokerage
players are only going to get better and better."
To compete in e-brokerage, banks must
beef up their systems to handle the higher volumes generated
by Internet trading. They must integrate banking and brokerage
offerings in ways that simplify things for the customer,
and also improve their marketing efforts. And to pull
this off, banks will need to develop entrepreneurial cultures
that foster rapid innovation. "Banks will have to
implement at a faster pace," says Weisel, who is
based in New York.
A shift in strategic orientation will
also be required, and this perhaps is the hardest part.
Many institutions tend to regard e-brokerage as an add-on
service, so they delegate decision-making to product managers
who are narrowly focused on the performance of their own
units. Until banks transcend this traditional product-silo
thinking and organize their businesses around customer
segments with management and incentive structures
to match they will find e-brokerage to be tough
going, no matter how technically adept they might be.
Given the level of company-wide orchestration
needed for optimal performance, e-brokerage "has
to be recognized as a top priority at the highest levels
of the bank," says consultant Octavio Marenzi, chief
executive of Celent Communications, Cambridge, Mass.
Two-Front
War
Banking's rush to e-brokerage is part
of a long-running campaign to offset the flow of deposits
into alternative investments. According to the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp., bank deposits made up only 30%
of households' liquid assets at the end of 1998, versus
38% eight years earlier. By contrast, the level of equity,
bond and mutual fund holdings has soared. Banks want to
manage more of those instruments themselves, instead of
letting all the business go to nonbank organizations such
as brokerage houses and mutual fund companies.
"Today's customers have a definite
equity mindset when it comes to savings," says Michael
Bastian, CEO and president of Action Direct, the brokerage
unit of Toronto-based Royal Bank of Canada. "If banks
want a greater share of wallet, they need a brokerage
offering that is sufficiently attractive to encourage
customers to consolidate their financial accounts with
them."
Increasingly, that entails going online.
Last year's fourth quarter saw the opening of 1.8 million
new e-brokerage accounts, according to Stephen C. Franco,
an analyst for U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray. Online trading
volumes rose a record 55% from the previous quarter, while
customer assets in such accounts grew by 35%, to $900
billion. By 2003, Franco predicts, some 25 million Americans
will trade online, nearly double today's total.
To accommodate this growing market,
most of the nation's large banks and more and more
small ones are hustling to form an e-brokerage
operation. The strategies vary. Some, such as FleetBoston
Financial Corp. and First Union Corp., have leveraged
recent brokerage acquisitions. Others, including Wells,
are building in-house capabilities. Many smaller institutions
have chosen to partner with ostensible enemies, such as
Ameritrade Holding Corp. subsidiary Amerivest, to offer
e-brokerage services on an outsourced basis.
None of these U.S. banks has yet to
make a dent in the market share tables. Canada's T-D Waterhouse,
owned by Toronto-Dominion Bank, ranks fourth with 1.3
million accounts. That compares with Fidelity's 3.5 million
accounts, 3.3 million at Schwab, and 1.8 million at E*Trade,
according to U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray. FleetBoston's
Quick & Reilly unit has only 86,000 accounts, by contrast,
and Mellon Financial Corp.'s Dreyfus subsidiary, 44,000.
Testifying to the tremendous distance the market leaders
have established against the rest of the pack, the top
five e-brokerages executed 70% of all online trades last
year.
Banks, then, have their work cut out
for them if they ever hope to break into the upper tiers
of a business where costly technical skills and branding
initiatives define the winners. At the same time, they
are forced to fight a two-front war against nonbank competitors
who are muscling into their markets. Both E*Trade and
Schwab have recently acquired banking units (Telebanc
Financial Corp. and U.S. Trust Corp. respectively) while
credit card giant American Express Co. offers banking
products to its online customers. Even old-style brokerage
Merrill Lynch & Co. has embraced the Internet and is now
selling federally-insured cash management accounts.
The good news in all this is that banks
still enjoy some competitive advantages, such as their
far-flung branch networks. Surveys consistently find that
online customers prefer a physical access point to complement
the virtual delivery channel. Consumers also place far
more trust in banks than other financial services providers
and view transactional accounts as the foundation of their
financial lives.
Gomez Advisors Inc. predicts the number
of people who perform a transaction at least once a month
via a bank Web site will mushroom to 31.8 million by the
end of 2003, up from just 5.9 million today. Based on
survey results, 45.5% of those so-called "active
Web bankers" would prefer to consolidate their financial
activities with a bank, compared with 13% who favor consolidating
with a brokerage. "If banks go about it the right
way, they can gain some serious market share," says
Chris Musto, senior financial services analyst for Lincoln,
Mass.-based Gomez.
Seamless
Experience
Bankers hope that a blended online package
of banking and investment services is just the sort of
"killer app" that will win customers. Such a
combination, they note, is facilitated by last year's
financial modernization legislation and the continuing
development of the Internet as a mass-market technology.
The sheer increase in Web traffic overall
should boost customer contacts at bank sites. But getting
those customers to consolidate their banking and brokerage
accounts with a single institution requires a seamless
online experience. William Veeneman, a senior vice president
and manager of online services for U.S. Bancorp, Minneapolis,
envisions an offering that enables customers to log-on
once, at their bank site, and manage their entire financial
lives from there. Such an offering would include balance
statements of both brokerage and banking accounts, total
net worth statements, easy transfers between bank and
brokerage accounts, and financial calculators that download
existing customer information.
As U.S. bank managers attempt to build
such systems, they might look to Canada, which razed the
walls between banking and other financial services in
1987. Royal Bank's Action Direct was launched in 1993
as a bank-linked discount brokerage and went online in
January 1998. Since then, Bastian says, customers and
account balances have soared, as have overall visits to
the company's Web site. Eighty percent of Action Direct's
400,000 customers also hold bank accounts, and 20% of
all brokerage transactions involve a transfer from a customer's
bank account. Most encouragingly, Action Direct itself
now turns a profit.
Bankers must be clear about the numerous
risks lurking in e-brokerage, however, and temper their
expectations with reality. Despite the Action Direct example,
consultant Weisel doubts that banks will ever make much
money directly from e-brokerage because the service is
quickly becoming commoditized. Instead, he argues, banks
should establish as their primary goal the generation
of traffic for their overall Web operations.
The reality is that established online
trading firms possess a three- to five-year head start
in terms of building a branded e-brokerage presence on
the Web. These nonbanks have also made more progress in
solving the technological problems involved with online
trading. Finally, their corporate cultures are better
suited to the brokerage world, which moves at a much faster
speed than traditional banking. It's likely that nonbanks
will do a better job at marketing banking products on
the Web than banks will do at selling brokerage, investment
or insurance products.
Firewalls
For one thing, brokerage firms don't
have to worry about some of the privacy and legal issues
that bedevil banks. For example, federally-insured depository
institutions must post lengthy disclosure statements about
what is and is not guaranteed by the FDIC.
To avoid running afoul of the various
restrictions on sharing customer information and tying
banking and brokerage operations, banks have had to construct
costly technical and organizational firewalls between
the two sides of the house. Bank-owned e-brokerages, for
instance, must have separate management teams. The units
must also pay fair market prices for any service provided
by the parent company no freebies or discounts
allowed, according to Ronald Glancz, a partner and chairman
of the financial services group at law firm Venable, Baetjer,
Howard & Civiletti, Washington, D.C.
Such restrictions, while ostensibly
customer-friendly, limit the ability of banks to offer
the kind of seamless service they envision. What good
is a financial services supermarket if you can't use loss-leader
pricing in one category to entice customers to buy products
in another area? Eager to avoid regulatory and legal tripwires,
most banks are reluctant to allow customers to view their
banking and brokerage accounts via a single logon. Those
customers first have to log-on to the bank site and then
click a button to log-on separately to the e-brokerage
site. "We're still looking for more regulatory direction,"
says Veeneman at U.S. Bancorp.
Pulling together customer data in a
manner that respects legal requirements and customer privacy
sensitivities is considered by most bankers to be their
toughest hurdle in e-brokerage. "Presenting an integrated
picture to customers sounds very simple, but it's a huge,
complex challenge," says Neal Wolfson, head of Internet
banking for FleetBoston. "We're drawing data from
many sources while trying to deal with security and all
the other things going on behind the scenes."
Another operational hurdle is managing
the extra demand on already-overtaxed systems. Separate
customer service operations, manned by licensed securities
experts, must be built and maintained for e-brokerage.
And while a typical Internet banking customer might visit
a site once a week to make a payment or check balances,
many online investors log-on hourly to get quotes, research,
news and other information. If the system goes down for
even a few hours during a market sell-off, a bank could
be sued. "The brokerage piece is very dynamic,"
Bastian says. "Bankers have to understand the frequency
of use and other requirements of investors, and scale
their operations with brokerage volume in mind."
Many banks claim significant progress
in building their e-brokerage units. But Marenzi says
the industry continues to experience trouble on numerous
fronts, including systems architecture, vendor selection
and management oversight. Meanwhile, the pace of customer
adoption has been frustratingly slow, given the investments
made.
FleetBoston, for example, reportedly
spent tens of millions of dollars linking Internet banking
customers to its Quick & Reilly e-brokerage site. The
combined offering, which was launched in November, boasts
a single logon (one of the few that does) and enables
customers to view both their banking and brokerage balances
on the same page. While the site is lauded by analysts
as a cutting-edge example of banks' potential in the e-brokerage
arena, only 5,000 bank customers were actually using Quick
& Reilly as of last February.
With time, however, e-brokerage operations
could prove rewarding for at least a few banks. Perhaps
a dozen of the top 100 banks will successfully adapt their
organizations and product offerings to the online world,
predicts Marenzi, who adds, "It's a massive opportunity
for banks to finally get into a business that has been
stealing their best customers for years."
Another law of nature is that big companies
can't get excited about small opportunities. It's not
that their managers are bad. It's just that for a $40
billion company, for example, achieving 10% growth requires
that it find $4 billion of new business next year. This
causes managers of large organizations to either dismiss
or overly pressurize innovations, most of which appeal
only to small markets at the outset. If a company is committed
to renewing itself, it must approach innovation within
the proper context. Rather than a cure for short-term
earnings problems, innovation is the long-term means of
gaining footholds in new markets and should be
nurtured as such.
Mr.
Engen is a freelance writer based in Minneapolis.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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