| Luring
Deposits
By Bill Stoneman
While financial institutions
can employ many strategies to gather deposits, success
depends on a long-term commitment to that business.
After years of neglect, deposits are
suddenly back in vogue in the banking industry. Banks
all across the country have launched aggressive campaigns
to boost their "core" deposits, which consist
of checking and savings accounts. But a debate is brewing
over the question of how best to go about it.
The product that has captured the most
attention in these campaigns is "free" checking,
or an account not requiring a monthly fee. Based on the
publicity free checking has generated, one might be tempted
to conclude this product is a panacea for all of an institution's
deposit-gathering needs. But experts say otherwise.
While free checking can indeed help
generate a favorable marketing buzz, sound deposit-acquisition
campaigns employ a plethora of other strategies, such
as improved service, extended hours, new branches and
targeted marketing. Account retention usually a
function of steady, reliable service over time
plays an equally important role. "Along with attracting
a lot of accounts, you also have to focus on retention
and service," says Jim Barri, executive vice president
and head of retail banking at Compass Bancshares Inc.,
Birmingham, Ala.
A recent study by BAI and First Manhattan
Consulting Group documented how spreads from core deposits
provide 40% of the revenues and almost two-thirds of the
profits associated with managing consumer assets. The
problem, for banks, is that they have been losing market
share of those assets, from 16% of a $12 trillion pie
in 1993 to 9% of a $23 trillion market in 1999. Many of
the funds once held in checking and savings accounts migrated
to investment products and money market mutual funds during
this period.
To be sure, some of that money is now
returning. In the wake of the nearly two year-old stock
market swoon, customers are fleeing to the safety of federally-insured
accounts. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. recently
reported that deposit growth outpaced loan growth for
four consecutive quarters, beginning with 2000's last
quarter. Yet bankers cannot count on this shift being
permanent. For that reason, a continuing focus on deposit
strategy is essential to provide institutions with a stable
base of low-cost deposits. Such long-term perseverance
will achieve far more than sporadically tapping the funds
market with short-term promotions.
"There really is no secret sauce,"
says William J. Black, managing director of Second Curve
Capital, a New York City-based hedge fund investing in
financial services stocks. Consistent deposit acquisition
"begins with managers who understand that core deposits
are inherently, enormously profitable."
Loss
Leader?
For now, free checking is unquestionably
the fashionable strategy for acquiring consumer deposits.
The tactic is used by institutions across the country,
including Seattle-based Washington Mutual Inc.; TCF Financial
Corp., Minneapolis; Fifth Third Bancorp in Cincinnati;
and Charter One Financial Corp., Cleveland.
The appeal is powerful for price-conscious
consumers. Why pay a monthly fee if you don't have to?
The calculation for banks is more complex.
They do, after all, incur a cost to acquire and then maintain
these accounts, so the loss of revenue must be made up
somewhere else, usually with other fees. Alternatively,
the product can be tolerated as a "loss leader"
if it brings in other business. "The key to truly
free checking is figuring out how you're going to make
money on the account after waiving the monthly service
charge," says Gordon Goetzmann, a vice president
at First Manhattan.
TCF, an $11.7 billion-asset thrift,
tries to replace the lost fee income. During a presentation
to investors last November, the company said it generates
$208 in fees annually per checking account. CEO William
Cooper says these revenues primarily stem from overdraft
fees, and also from client usage of non-proprietary automated
teller machines and fractions of each transaction rebated
by merchants on debit card payments.
Clearly, some banks are willing to tolerate
thin margins on free checking accounts as long as customers
occasionally purchase additional products or generate
a modicum of bounced-check and debit card fees. But for
others, the real value in free checking is that the word
"free" looks good on banners hung outside of
branches.
The game plan at these institutions
is to start explaining the benefits of an interest-paying
(and fee-based) account as soon as prospects come in the
door. At Charter One, for example, a significant number
of people attracted by the free checking promotion end
up in accounts with fees, according to Mark Grossi, executive
vice president and head of retail at the $37 billion-asset
thrift.
While such an approach may seem a bit
like "bait-and-switch," it's actually a form
of segmented marketing. Free checking promotions are typically
directed at the mass market cost-conscious people
who don't carry high balances. These small-balance accounts
may not, in the aggregate, actually add up to much.
In fact, a recent survey by Capital
Performance Group found that institutions aggressively
marketing free checking actually lagged other institutions
in growing total deposits. In a study that ranged between
June 1999 and June 2000, institutions offering free checking
did succeed in growing demand deposits by 2% even as their
rivals recorded a 2% decline. But the banks eschewing
free accounts posted the highest growth in total deposits
4%, versus only 1% for the free checking crowd.
Gary D. Stein, a partner in the Washington,
D.C.-based consulting firm, says banks need to buttress
their free-checking promotions with programs to attract
long-term money, i.e., funds held for savings. This requires
accounts that pay interest on those funds. Although high-balance
customers may be initially attracted by a free-checking
promotion, the institution can often help itself and the
customers by steering them toward interest-bearing products
that also provide a monthly fee for the bank.
For Charter One and Fifth Third, acquiring
these interest-bearing checking accounts is at least as
important as free-checking promotions in their overall
deposit strategy. Both institutions offer rates on these
accounts that are below those paid by money market mutual
funds but well above those of competing banks.
And they say moving toward money market
rates on large balances is essential, both to retain the
dwindling pool of high-balance customers, and to reclaim
others from brokerage and mutual fund accounts. "You
can't confuse the market and say, 'I'm offering an interest-bearing
checking account, here's 1%,'" says Wil Daly, Fifth
Third's chief marketing officer.
With 22% growth in demand deposit balances
from the third quarter of 2000 to the third quarter of
2001 and 23% growth in interest-bearing checking account
balances during the same period, the $70 billion-asset
Fifth Third is setting a pace that few others can match.
Such growth allows Fifth Third to be less competitive
in its certificate of deposit promotions. By replacing
CD balances with checking balances, even those paying
near money market rates, the company actually reduces
the average interest rate paid on deposits, according
to Daly.
Free checking and checking with high
interest rates, however, are just part of a successful
deposit strategy, Daly adds. Other factors on his list
include a good branch network, an aggressive sales culture
and competitive products.
Fifth Third's sales culture is particularly
aggressive. Regional executives are under heavy pressure
to meet ambitious deposit sales goals, so they set demanding
targets for branch managers. The regional executives then
get weekly reports showing exactly how they're faring
compared with one another. And George A. Schaefer Jr.,
the company's president and CEO, isn't shy about commenting
on their performance, according to Daly. "George
will send a little note out saying, 'Is this really the
best you can do?'"
Convenience
Sells
Given the drawbacks of free checking,
institutions have little incentive to offer the product
unless they are pursuing mass-market business. But that
doesn't mean these banks can't attract deposits. Long
Island's North Fork Bancorp Inc., for example, gets most
of its funds from small-business customers.
Carolyn Drexel, executive vice president
and head of retail at North Fork, says the $16 billion-asset
institution has been opportunistic in courting small businesses,
which often keep high balances on deposit. The bank has
leveraged former thrift branches that it acquired by bringing
commercial services to them for the first time.
It has even moved into Manhattan, where
the dominant banks focus on large corporate and mass consumer
business. North Fork acquired one branch in New York City
in the mid-1990s and then opened eight more de novo offices
there over the next several years. The purchase of Commercial
Bank of New York brought 11 more offices last November.
North Fork depends on its branch managers,
private bankers and other branch-based relationship officers
to drum up business by networking with business owners
and referral sources. Rather than pitching the best price
in town, these officers emphasize responsiveness and service.
New relationships are as likely to start
with loans as deposits, Drexel adds. "If we're going
to approve a loan we're going to ask for the full banking
relationship." By mid-year 2001, North Fork had posted
five-year compound annual growth of 35% in demand deposits
and 29% in total deposit balances.
Unlike North Fork, TCF is interested
in the mass market and does offer free checking. As at
North Fork, however, branch expansion plays a prominent
role in its deposit strategy. From the beginning of 1999
through August 2001, the thrift opened 79 branches, including
74 in supermarkets, and all of them are open 12 hours
a day, seven days a week. CEO Cooper says such convenience
outweighs everything else in two-career households when
consumers decide where to do their banking. "Every
holiday, I open more new accounts than on any other day
of the year," he says.
Total deposits at TCF rose a modest
3% in the 12-month period ended Sept. 30, 2001. But that
total reflects a 7.8% decline in time deposit balances,
and a shift to more profitable checking and money-market
accounts.
Long hours and de novo branches are
likewise behind extraordinary deposit growth at Cherry
Hill, N.J.-based Commerce Bancorp. Total deposits grew
33% from the third quarter of 2000 to the third quarter
of 2001 at the $10.4 billion-asset institution.
While the bank does offer a near-free
checking account one that requires a balance of
$100 after the first year to avoid a monthly fee
Commerce doesn't put this product front and center in
its marketing campaign. "It's more of a low-hassle
service offer at Commerce, as opposed to a best-deal-in-the-market
offer," says Capital Performance's Stein.
Service
Strategy
Techniques for account acquisition may
get all the attention, but account retention is just as
important an issue for retail bankers. Institutions can
always go into the market and raise funds on a short-term
basis, usually with rate promotions. But the real key
to maintaining a stable deposit base is keeping those
accounts for a prolonged period of time.
For most institutions, this comes down
to an issue of service the day-in, day-out process
of keeping customers satisfied. "It's about a relationship,"
says Sherief Meleis, a director with Novantas, a New York
City-based consulting firm. "It's about people down
at the branch who know my business."
The benefits of good service include
stemming attrition and attracting larger deposit balances
as customers consolidate their business, which can pave
the way for cross-selling additional products, says Compass
Bancshares' Barri.
Compass, which has $22 billion of assets,
began a serious effort to upgrade service about two years
ago. "Mystery shoppers" now visit and telephone
branches. Additionally, the bank mails questionnaires
to customers, asking them for information about recent
experiences. Barri says this initiative has slowed customer
turnover and increased the proportion of multi-product
customers.
Other banks have reached a similar conclusion
as Compass that satisfied customers account for
deposit growth as much as showy sales promotions. Beverly
Hills, Calif.-based City National Corp., for example,
has racked up a 19% compound annual deposit growth over
a five-year period extending through mid-2001.
Its secret? Offering private and small-business
banking services in a more personalized context than its
competitors, according to George H. Benter Jr., president
and chief operating officer of the $10 billion-asset institution.
"A lot of people come to us," Benter says, "because
they are frustrated at other banks that they can't find
someone to deal with face to face."
As the examples of TCF, North Fork,
Commerce and City National seem to suggest, small may
be better when it comes to deposit generation. While banks
across the spectrum have struggled with lackluster deposit
growth, it's particularly difficult to find large banks
that have shown significant internal deposit growth. The
picture, however, is somewhat brighter at mid-sized banks
and still more positive at small banks, according to statistics
compiled by Novantas.
Since small banks typically don't have
strong sales cultures, Meleis says, the most likely explanation
is that smaller institutions do a better job of retaining
established customers, who in turn bring in more business
over time. Larger banks, by contrast, tend to alienate
their customers with indifferent service and excessive
fees. Even though the large banks can't become small,"
Meleis says, "they need to recreate the small-bank
feeling."
Mr. Stoneman is
a freelance writer based in Albany, N.Y.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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