| Profitability
Under Pressure
By Somesh Khanna, David Schoeman
and Jack Stephenson
Arresting the decline in checking
account profitability requires a multi-faceted response
from banks and the sooner, the better.
Consumer checking
has long been the anchor of profitability for retail banks,
with the average demand deposit account contributing from
$80 to $120 of profit annually for many institutions.
No wonder banks have strived in recent years to boost
retail checking accounts, including offering a plethora
of "free checking" accounts and embarking on
ambitious branch redesign/expansion programs.
Over the next five years, though, the
outlook for this core product is not encouraging. Customers
are shifting funds to lower-margin products, such as money
market accounts and short-term certificates of deposits,
squeezing overall deposit income. Account-servicing costs
are also rising despite an increase in low-cost channels.
And the gradual shift from checks to electronic forms
of payment creates uncertainty over revenue streams and
puts paper-based revenues at risk.
In the short term, a rise in interest
rates potentially the next step following a prolonged
period of rate lowering by the Federal Reserve
could offset these trends. Additionally, banks may recoup
some lost profits through the sale of other products,
such as investments and savings accounts.
In the long run, however, there is little
doubt that the economics of checking accounts are under
siege, potentially reducing the profitability of the average
account by as much as 20% to 30% at some institutions.
To avoid this grim scenario, top managers need to begin
planning their responses now.
One tempting response is to slash costs
by taking actions such as closing branches and consolidating
operations centers. Another is to raise fees. But these
short-term approaches could leave full-service banks vulnerable
to community banks and focused nonbanks that compete on
price and service.
A better approach is to design a multifaceted
program that incorporates three fundamental themes: customer
segmentation; behavioral incentives; and a comprehensive
review of operations spending.
Specifically, banks need to craft their
strategies for products, marketing and sales around discrete
customer segments. The rationale is to link product pricing
and features to the underlying economic drivers for each
of these segments. More creative product bundling and
tiered offers can help this effort.
Realigning customer incentives means
encouraging the most profitable behaviors, such as patronizing
electronic delivery channels and products such as debit
cards, while discouraging unprofitable behaviors, such
as frequent trips to the branch for routine transactions.
Rather than taking a predominantly punitive approach,
which has misfired at some institutions, the emphasis
should be on rewards, such as prepaid phone cards and
frequent flyer miles.
Finally, strategists need to assess
whether their spending on payments processing, customer
servicing and other operations is aligned with projected
transaction volumes. This requires a bank-wide review
of operational spending, with two aims: reducing costs
and developing a comprehensive, multi-year plan to deal
with the migration from paper to electronic transactions.
Thus equipped, executives can make better-informed investment
decisions and rationalize their deposit-taking infrastructure
as check volumes decline.
Balances
Under Attack
Demand deposits are critical to banks
from several perspectives. In addition to serving as a
major profit source, DDAs form the hub for customer transactions,
offering a host of relationship-building and cross-selling
opportunities. Processing retail checks also provides
substantial fee and interest income for a bank's wholesale
cash management business.
Unfortunately for banks, DDA balances
are under attack. Consider that from 1995 to 2001, total
bank deposits held by U.S. consumers grew by 4% per year.
However, because Americans continued their two decade-long
trend of shifting assets toward higher-yielding, lower-margin
investment and deposit products, consumer checking balances
during this period declined by 7% percent a year, according
to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
To be sure, this trend appeared to reverse
more recently when consumer nervousness about the economy
and the stock market caused a "flight to safety,"
providing banks with a substantial lift in checking and
non-checking balances. Many bankers view this windfall
as an anomaly, however, and anticipate that balance erosion
will resume once the economy rebounds.
Of deeper concern, especially to the
big full-service banks, are the aggressive sales and marketing
campaigns by a variety of new local and national competitors.
Brokerages, asset management firms and banks serving the
affluent are all targeting the coveted high-balance customers.
Their offers include high-yielding money market accounts
with unrestricted check-writing and automated teller machine
privileges, linked investment accounts with sweep capabilities,
and checking and savings accounts paying high interest
rates. Among the nonbanks, for example, both Merrill Lynch
& Co. and Charles Schwab & Co. are aggressively
courting high-balance customers with their own federally
insured accounts.
Losing these affluent customers has
a disproportionate effect on bank profits. While such
customers may comprise only about 15% of an institution's
accounts, they have historically contributed as much as
60% of retail DDA profits.
Also on the attack are focused commercial
banks that are trying to grow deposit share rapidly by
targeting mass-market consumers. These institutions are
heavily promoting free checking products with either zero
or minimal balance requirements to customers with low
balances (less than $1,500). They are able to make money
on this once-unprofitable segment by imposing hefty fees
for overdrawing. Customers rarely consider these fees
when opening an account, and the low-balance segment has
a much higher frequency of non-sufficient funds incidents
than others.
Community banks and thrifts make up
a third major attacker group, touting their personalized
customer service and management teams that are active
participants in local community life. While these banks
possess a much simpler product set than their big full-service
competitors, they can offer significantly more competitive
rates, thanks to their leaner cost structures. Recently
these banks have been very successful in growing share
in many local markets.
One likely result of all this competition
is that deposit balances will be spread across more institutions,
lowering the average account size, especially within the
high-balance segment. The overall net interest margin
is also likely to decline as banks resort to price competition.
Another major threat to DDA income is
posed by account servicing costs, which are rising faster
than revenue. With the advent of ATMs, call centers and
the Internet, customers now have more ways to interact
with their bank. Each new channel has generated dramatic
increases in transaction volume without a compensating
reduction in old infrastructure.
Thus, despite the success of some banks
in reducing per-transaction costs by moving servicing
interactions from branches to lower-cost channels, our
analysis suggests that total account servicing costs will
rise 5% to 8% over the next three to five years. This
is occurring because total transaction volume driven
by a proliferation of customer transactions, transaction
types and associated infrastructure has increased
by 25% over the past five years.
Electronic
Migration
The shift from paper to electronic transactions
constitutes the third big threat to DDA profitability.
Customers are making fundamental changes in their payment
behavior writing fewer checks and making greater
use of debit card transactions, electronic bill payments
and pre-authorized debits. Volumes in some item-processing
shops are falling by 3% a year. At the same time, cash
management businesses are seeing some erosion in their
paper-based services to retail merchants, including lockbox,
cash letter and other deposit categories.
Thanks to rising transaction fees paid
by retail merchants, debit revenues from the average checking
account could grow by as much as $10 to $15 over the next
five years. However, there is considerable uncertainty
with regard to future debit fee levels, primarily because
of the ongoing legal battle between card-issuing banks
and retailers over how much retailers should be assessed
for the two different types of debit transactions. Depending
on the outcome of this litigation, a typical bank's fees
per checking account could vary by $12 a year, plus or
minus.
The direction of processing costs is
also a question. While electronic transactions could lower
costs over time, processing costs will likely rise in
the near term. Unit costs could rise quickly if banks
fail to shrink their back-office operations and remove
fixed costs in line with the anticipated declines in check
volume. At the same time, debit card and automated clearinghouse
operations will need to be upgraded to accommodate likely
volume spikes, along with new product features such as
debit card rewards programs and ACH information reformatting
the latter being required for check "truncation,"
or electronification, by retailers and billers.
Meanwhile, a number of paper-based revenue
sources will likely decline. On the retail side, for example,
there will be fewer checkbooks and per-item charges, and
reduced float. On the wholesale side, there will be falling
retail lockbox revenues, disbursements and merchant check-handling
fees.
A more reliable source of revenue in
the future will probably be "non-shopped," or
non-marketed, fees. These are charges consumers rarely
consider when opening an account. They include NSF penalties
and fees for obtaining help from a person on the phone
rather than an automated call center. NSF income is expected
to continue to climb as checking balances fall and the
number of electronic transactions rises because customers
will have more ways to overdraw ever-smaller accounts.
Some banks will continue to raise non-shopped
fees, but they should do so with care. This income, and
even entire customer relationships, may be at risk if
customers begin to resist the fees significantly.
U-Shaped
Curve
All these trends have fundamentally
altered the profit curve associated with checking accounts.
Five years ago, checking profits were tied tightly to
customer account balance levels the higher the
balance, the more profitable the customer. Increasingly,
banks see a U-shaped profit curve emerging, with low-
and high-balance customers holding up the two sides. That's
because profits from low-balance customers have risen,
thanks to increasing fee income, while profits from medium-balance
customers and, to a lesser extent, high-balance
customers have been hurt by declining interest
income.
The net impact on DDA profitability
will vary greatly by institution, which means no single
strategy will suffice in overcoming these challenges.
There are, however, three major themes that should be
considered by all institutions in formulating an effective
response: customer segmentation, behavioral incentives
and a comprehensive review of operations spending.
Tailoring product pricing and features
to better match the economic drivers of each customer
segment is important because marketing the wrong product
to a given customer can substantially reduce profitability.
On a tactical level, there are many
ways to accomplish this product tailoring. Banks could,
for example, step up efforts to capture a greater share
of the total liquidity and investment balances of high-balance
customers, who are typically more affluent and profitable.
They could offer free financial planning services to identify
customers' needs, and then follow up with targeted products.
These might include account packages that explicitly link
deposit, credit and investment products. Institutions
could automatically enroll high-balance customers into
all three products, and offer aggressive incentives encouraging
them to activate all the accounts.
To ensure the sustained profitability
of each product, marketers might consider a tiered-offer
structure. For instance, they could limit the "sweep"
feature that transfers balances from brokerage accounts
into interest-bearing accounts only to those customers
who maintain certain minimum account balances. To back
up these new products, banks should also invest in sales
tools, incentives and training materials that are designed
specifically to build penetration of the affluent segment.
Product bundling can be effective for
medium-balance customers too, but not without sufficient
levels of balance consolidation, and the activation and
use of each product in the bundle. To that end, banks
should develop bundled accounts that are targeted to the
needs and desires of this group.
For instance, customers who activate
a savings account and a credit card linked to their checking
account, maintain specified average balances and use the
linked products regularly could receive a prepaid telephone
card, or some other reward. Additionally, banks could
offer customers with multiple active products immediate
access to their un-cleared funds, up to their credit card
limits, with overdrafts earmarked to the credit card lines.
Low-balance customers require a different
approach. A number of banks are profitably serving them
now with a combination of free checking and high fees
for non-sufficient funds. This product should be launched
with advertisements that emphasize its "no frills"
positioning. In addition, banks could cross-sell simple
credit products such as credit cards and unsecured loans.
Carrot and
Stick
An important component of any DDA strategy
is creating incentives that, while remaining true to the
priority of fulfilling needs, encourage customer behaviors
that benefit the institution while limiting those that
drain profitability. Online bill pay, for example, is
considered a desirable activity because while it may not
be profitable to the institution on a stand-alone basis,
it does bond customers more closely to the bank. It makes
sense, then, to provide incentives such as a "while-you-wait"
account setup to any customer who brings monthly bills
into a branch.
Customers can be offered a similar "carrot"
to use integrated voice response automated call systems
for basic servicing functions such as balance inquiries,
transaction details, and questions about ATM locations.
One simple tactic is to offer those using IVR an entry
into a monthly sweepstakes. If a "stick" is
also needed, institutions can impose fees on customers
who phone a call center more than, say, three times a
month.
To encourage customers to use signature-based
debit cards for as many transactions as possible
and avoid PIN debit banks can award prepaid phone
minutes or frequent flier miles to those who sign for
purchases. Banks should also arm employees with sales
training techniques, scripts and role-plays to encourage
signature-based debit use and to handle customer objections.
Improved training, in fact, should be
a component of marketing efforts across all customer segments.
In a general sense, this training should reward sales
staff for promoting account activation and retention and
higher balances. Employees can also be trained to drive
customers into specific products.
Meanwhile, in anticipation of the expected
shift from paper-based to electronic transactions, institutions
should undertake a comprehensive, bank-wide review of
payments processing, customer servicing and other operations.
This review should give institutions
new baseline transaction projections and a variety of
different market scenarios. In turn, institutions should
develop a multi-year paper-to-electronic migration plan
that covers all operating units, including technology.
This migration plan will allow a bank to "right size"
its infrastructure to accommodate projected transaction
volumes, based on a detailed understanding of fixed and
variable cost drivers for each operating unit. The plan
should identify functions that can be outsourced, and
determine whether the bank can better utilize shared industry-processing
utilities such as check clearinghouses.
As a second part of the operations review,
banks should assess ways to reduce their overall cost
structure using alternative techniques that go beyond
the traditional budgeting process. For instance, a number
of banks have garnered cost reductions of up to 30% by
using offshore vendors to handle select functions such
as the call center, account reconciliation and data entry.
For functions that remain in-house, banks should consider
leveraging process-improvement techniques from the manufacturing
sector such as "lean manufacturing," which takes
a fresh look at how key processes are performed and focuses
on finding and eliminating sources of waste within those
processes.
Some combination of these various measures
should help banks arrest the decline in their consumer
deposit profitability and position them to capture emerging
pockets of opportunity.
Mr. Khanna
is an associate principal, Mr. Schoeman a principal and
Mr. Stephenson a director with McKinsey & Co. in New
York.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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