| Saturation
Point?
By Bill Stoneman and Kenneth Cline
While many banks have announced
ambitious de novo branching plans, only a few are likely
to earn much of a return on their investment.
The branch is back, but will there be
room for everybody?
One of the distinguishing trends of
2002 in financial services was a plethora of announcements
from major banks of their plans to build new branches.
This trend, known as "de novo branching," marks
a clear divergence from the prevalent practice in the
previous decade of growing mostly through acquisitions
and then consolidating branches to squeeze out cost savings.
Now, institutions such as Bank of America
Corp. and Washington Mutual Inc. are talking about opening
hundreds of new branches in selected markets over the
next few years. Substantial expansions also have been
announced by Bank One Corp., Wachovia Corp., Fifth Third
Bancorp, Harris Bancorp, Commerce Bancorp Inc., TCF Financial
Corp., Colonial BancGroup Inc. and Hibernia Corp.
The rationale is clear: after a decade
of experimenting with alternative delivery channels, banks
have rediscovered the primacy of the branch. "Physical
distribution is still the most important channel for acquiring
customers. If you want to grow your business, retail stores
are essential," says Liam McGee, president of Bank
of America's national consumer bank in San Francisco.
Yet the de novo branching strategy is
also fraught with considerable challenges and risks. Branches
are expensive to build and generally require several years
of operation before attaining profitability on a standalone
basis. Even Commerce Bancorp, whose success story was
built around de novo branch expansion, has been flagged
by some analysts who worry about diminishing returns on
its enormous investments in brick-and-mortar capacity.
Furthermore, although most retail customers
center their banking relationships around the branch,
recent studies have tracked declining usage over time,
which leaves bankers with a smaller window of opportunity
to cross-sell other products to those customers.
The upshot is that only banks with finely
sharpened sales, service and marketing skills will have
a chance at achieving healthy returns on their de novo
expansion strategies. Institutions that can't distinguish
themselves in the marketplace may simply be saddling themselves
with additional overhead. And that danger could be magnified
in certain "hot" markets that have been targeted
by multiple de novo builders, such as Chicago and New
York City.
In Chicago, possibly the most extreme
case, seven banks have planned a total of 170 new branches
for this year alone, a number that balloons to 400 over
the next couple of years. Those new offices will have
to compete with the 2,110 branches already established
in the metro Chicago area. "You can't open up hundreds
of branches in Chicago and expect all of them to succeed,"
says Paul Miller, a thrift stock analyst with Friedman,
Billings, Ramsey Group Inc. in Arlington, Va. "Not
all of those institutions are going to be able to make
money."
To be sure, announcements don't always
translate into actual brick and mortar; some companies
may adjust their plans after re-assessing the competitive
environment. At the very least, however, the building
spree will test whether de novo branches really are a
cost-effective means for generating internal growth, as
many strategists hope.
It will further test whether "new-style"
branches offices that look more like retail stores
can do a better job of attracting customers than
more traditional designs. Players such as BofA and Wamu
have largely built their expansion programs around redesigned
branches. All in all, a lot of money is riding on the
de novo branching trend.
The Density
Debate
The conventional wisdom in the '90s
held that the United States was "over-branched,"
and the consolidation of expensive overlapping branch
networks was cited as a major rationale in countless regional
bank mergers. But has the banking industry over-corrected?
Even as executives reawaken to the importance
of the branch in anchoring customer relationships and
acquiring all-important deposits, they are emerging from
an era when population growth actually outstripped growth
in the total number of branches by a wide margin. The
U.S. population grew by 42 million people, or 19%, between
1987 and 2002. Yet the bank branch network grew by 1,703,
or only 2% in the same period.
There were 86,549 bank and thrift offices
around the country at mid-1992, according to the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. While that seems like a lot, the
number takes on a different light when measured against
population, which is 288 million. That amounts to one
branch for every 3,300 people. Compared with other developed
economies, the U.S. density doesn't appear excessive.
Although Hong Kong has just one branch for every 4,600
people and the United Kingdom one for every 4,000, according
to First Manhattan Consulting Group, the average branch
in France, Italy and Germany serves 2,300, 2,000 and 1,900
people respectively.
Branch density varies rather dramatically
among specific U.S. markets, which is why expansionists
must be careful about where they place their bets. Los
Angeles, for example, has one branch for every 5,251 people,
while Pittsburgh has one for every 2,605, according to
First Manhattan. Obviously, demographics and economic
growth have to be considered in these analyses. But based
on the branch density tables, one might fairly conclude
there doesn't seem to be a lot of room for growth in places
like Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Washington D.C./Baltimore.
On the other hand, opportunity clearly exists in a number
of major metro markets.
Chicago and Atlanta, for example, are
about middle of the pack in branch density, and New York
ranks near the bottom. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc.
analyst Thomas J. Monaco, in a recent report, describes
New York City as ideally positioned for banking interlopers
due to its low branch density, the damage wrought to customer
relationships by past mergers and some current distractions
suffered by the two big incumbents, Citigroup Inc. and
J.P. Morgan & Chase Co. No wonder players such as
Wamu and Commerce Bancorp have targeted New York City
for aggressive branch expansions.
There is a question of timing, however,
given the sluggish state of the national economy and uncertainty
over the direction of interest rates. Banks have been
flooded with cheap deposits in the wake of the three-year
stock market slump. Will the new branches be able to keep
attracting deposits if that money flows back to the markets?
And how would that affect the expected payback on the
new facilities?
Bankers involved in these expansions
point out that they're being selective about where they
put their new branches; in most cases, they're targeting
markets that tend to grow faster than the national economy.
"Even in tough times, you've got to grow your revenue,
and we think this is a very good use of our capital,"
says McGee at BofA.
Retailing
Experience
Beyond perceived opportunity in selected
markets, there's another reason banking institutions have
become so keen on building new branches it may
be critical to their prospects for future growth.
While bankers certainly haven't sworn
off acquisitions, they do recognize that mergers do little
to generate internal growth and in some cases actually
harm it by alienating customers. Consolidations have also
saddled acquirers with a grab bag of mismatched branches
that don't communicate a common branding message. Meanwhile,
electronic channels such as online, wireless and telephone
banking have done little to attract new customers, although
they do contribute to customer retention.
Turning to the branch, bankers see continuing
customer loyalty. Studies show that customers continue
to use branches even after opening an account in person
and then re-directing some of their activities online.
A 2001 survey by the American Bankers Association, for
example, found that 90% of bank customers use a branch,
at least occasionally, in any three-month period, while
51% use it often. Last year, a Synergistics Research Corp.
survey found 80% of consumers overall visiting bank branches
to perform routine activities.
Thus, when companies such as Harris
Bank look to grow their retail business, branches still
top the list of options, despite recent experiments with
wireless banking. Harris Bank, the U.S. subsidiary of
the Bank of Montreal, expects to grow its network of 145
branches in the Chicago market by 50 over the next four
years, with most new branches placed in faster-growing
outer suburbs. "We want to be in places where our
customers need us to be," says Paula Labno-Hintz,
senior vice president for branch distribution.
Despite the industry's newfound enthusiasm
for branches, however, there is also a recognition that
today's facilities can't look like those built in previous
decades because of the changing market. Although customers
have not substituted electronic channels for branches,
they are using electronics more as a complement to brick
and mortar.
The Synergistics study highlights this
trend by showing a gradual decline since 1995 in the frequency
of visits customers are making to their branch, from an
average 4.4 visits per month to 2.9 last year. The Atlanta-based
research company concludes that banks need to maximize
the opportunities for face-to-face sales contacts at their
branches, particularly for younger customers who may be
looking for financial guidance.
Many institutions are trying to do precisely
that. Wamu's new "Occasio" branches, for example,
feature coffee bars and couches designed to get customers
to relax in pleasant surroundings and (hopefully) contemplate
additional product purchases. Something similar is about
to emerge from BofA, which plans to open 550 new branches
during the next three years, expanding its current network
of 4,200 locations by about 13%.
While the size of BofA's program is
certainly eye-catching, the design and configuration of
the new buildings are equally significant. There are two
basic design templates: an enhanced "traditional"
branch and an "express" office geared to quick
transactions. Since the express branch is designed primarily
for office parks it contains only a few tellers,
some self-service equipment and a video-conferencing room
most of the new branches will use the traditional
template.
There are no prototypes of this new
branch yet available for inspection, since construction
won't commence until mid-year. But some of the amenities
to be included can be seen at the experimental branches
BofA has been building in the Atlanta region. These include
a host station, or kiosk, at the entrance where customers
are greeted; conference rooms rather than desks for personal
consultations; an investment-oriented reading area with
financial news broadcasts; and television monitors above
the teller line showing CNN.
The idea here is to emulate top retailers
such as Nordstrom and Starbucks, whose "destination"
stores attract customers to browse and buy with a combination
of distinctive design and top-notch service. McGee sees
the sales-and-service component as critical. To improve
that part of its retail effort, BofA has been putting
all of its employees through a training program called
Bank of America Spirit, developed with the help of the
Walt Disney Co.
"Our job now is to create a far
superior service experience and to have more of a retailer's
mindset," says McGee, the top retail executive. "You
can't have great sustained sales results without superior
service."
Costly Deposits?
New-style branches may indeed promote
some additional cross-selling. But will they really do
much to attract new customers? Compared with people who
shop for clothes or latte, bank customers are notoriously
hard to budge; once they've set up a checking account
with one institution, they are reluctant to take on the
hassle of moving it to a competitor. Deposits, in other
words, are very sticky and few banks are able to move
the needle much in terms of wresting market share from
competitors.
Another challenge is balancing revenue
growth expectations with the enormous cost of building
physical capacity.
One institution that appears to be meeting
those challenges is New Jersey's Commerce Bancorp, which
probably has the purest track record of de novo branching
in the nation since it doesn't muddy its financial profile
with acquisitions. Commerce follows a classic retailing
strategy of using its "stores" to build brand
recognition. All of its branches are based on a cookie-cutter
design, featuring common floor plans; an easily recognized
logo; well-lit, uncluttered interiors; free coin-counting
machines; and lavish, responsive service. By building
these offices at a furious pace (40 in 2002) across New
Jersey and into Pennsylvania and New York, the Cherry
Hill, N.J.-based company has been able to grow its deposits
at an off-the-charts rate of 25% a year.
Commerce chief executive Vernon W. Hill
2d has grown so confident in his branching strategy that
he has taken it into the heart of metro New York, where
the average branch costs about three times what it does
in suburban New Jersey. Commerce plans to expand its existing
network of 18 offices in New York to 400 over the next
ten years.
Analyst Tom Brown, who is skeptical
of de novo branching in general, cites Commerce as one
of the few banks that can pull this off. "If any
bank can build new branches successfully, it's Commerce,"
says Brown, president of Second Curve Capital, a New York
City-based hedge fund that specializes in financial stocks.
Yet, while Commerce has been undeniably
successful in growing deposits, some analysts are posing
the question: at what cost? Although Commerce pays below-market
rates for deposits, its high overhead ratio makes those
deposits actually rather expensive; the company's annual
investment in branch premises has exceeded its net income
in recent years, according to Keefe, Bruyette's Monaco.
He questions whether the branch building program can be
sustained, given that Commerce has to build ever more
branches to generate the revenue gains investors have
come to expect. Already, deposit growth is showing signs
of slowing.
"It's the equivalent of being on
a treadmill," Monaco says. "Ultimately, you're
going to get tired and hit a wall."
Commerce's Hill disputes Monaco's analysis,
but the debate is complicated by the fact that he and
Monaco use different financial assumptions. Still, other
analysts, such as Robert Lacoursiere at Lehman Brothers,
also see deposit growth and profitability trending south
at Commerce. This should throw up a warning flag for other
would-be branch expanders: there is no free lunch here.
De novo facilities, even when accompanied by the most
skillful retailing strategies, carry significant costs
that may possibly outweigh whatever gains are achieved.
Brown estimates that a 350-branch institution
opening 75 new facilities over five years could lose $30
million during that period after accounting for all the
expenses and the typical three-year payback. He says most
banks are "too optimistic" about the growth
prospects at new branches because they are assuming that
the inflow of deposits the industry has seen in the last
three years will continue.
Clearly, some of the planned de novo
branches will succeed. But with so many banks pursuing
roughly the same strategy in the same markets, there will
also likely be some significant losses. It would not be
surprising to see a number of institutions pull in their
horns a couple of years down the road in the wake of a
bruising battle for market share.
"The branching done by better and
more effective players is going to drive some of the smaller
and less effective players to the wall," predicts
Peter Carroll, a consultant with Oliver, Wyman & Co.
in New York.
Mr. Stoneman
is a freelance writer based in Albany, N.Y.; Mr. Cline
is senior editor of Banking Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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