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Imminent Imaging
By Chris Costanzo
With full-scale check imaging less than a year
away, the race is on to address sticky operational issues.
The imaging revolution in check processing has arrived,
but plans for how to deal with it are still in the making. That's a big
challenge, both for individual banks and the industry at large. On the
front end are technical issues, on the back end are potentially huge
cost-saves, and in the middle are the customers and employees whose cooperation
is vital in making the transition work.
The Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act,
or "Check 21," as it's popularly known, will allow banks to send checks
to each other without a paper trail beginning this October. In other
words, neither customers nor other banks need to receive a copy of
the cancelled check. In place of that paper, the clearing institution
can provide a "substitute check," or electronic image that contains
the same information as the original check.
Signed into law by President Bush last October,
the legislation doesn't mandate that financial institutions adopt imaging
technology. But most experts assume the industry as a whole will gradually
phase out paper checks, which could generate an estimated $2 billion
to $3 billion in annual cost savings once the process reaches maturity.
Getting to that happy state is the challenge.
Even though full implementation of Check 21 is months away, experiments
in exchanging images between banks have uncovered major complications,
particularly in the "Day Two" processing of exception items. And there
are concerns about the cost and quality of substitute checks.
Working as a group, banks must still decide
on technical standards so they can ensure the integrity and security
of what remains a fundamental bank service. And individually, they
need to make strategic decisions about whether to store images internally
or in shared archives. Another question: whether to truncate checks
in the back office, or invest in technology to remove the paper earlier
in the process, such as when checks are collected in the branches.
Further complicating matters, doing nothing
is also an option under Check 21. The legislation allows banks to hang
on to traditional paper-based processing methods, even as other institutions
move to full image capability.
But banks that hang back will likely regret
missing out on the cost savings of imaging, especially as check volumes
continue to decline, eroding economies of scale in the traditional
processing business. Latecomers will also be at a disadvantage vis-à-vis
banks that are already using expanded imaging capability to provide
innovative new services to consumers and corporate customers.
So for any bank that wants to remain a significant
player in financial payments, image technology is a must. The major
question, really, is how fast to move in light of a customer demand
that remains difficult to gauge.
Day Two Challenge
At its core, Check 21 lets a bank convert an
image of a check into a substitute check, or more awkwardly, an "image
replacement document." These substitute checks, which are basically
paper printouts of electronic items, help bridge the gap between institutions
that are fully image-enabled and those that keep processing paper the
old way.
Before Check 21, banks could only send check
images to other banks that had previously agreed (and were able) to
receive them. The new law says substitute checks are the legal equivalent
of the original, and it abolishes the paying bank's right to demand
presentment of the original paper check as a condition of payment.
Over time, it is expected that most banks will
equip themselves to receive images, eventually phasing out substitute
checks. Until then, substitutes may help bridge the gap to a fully
image-enabled check processing system.
Getting there, however, requires overcoming
one considerable technical obstacle: the lack of automation in what
is known as "Day Two processing activities." These involve the returns,
adjustments and exception items that generally are dealt with on the
second day of processing, after the bulk of good items have gone through.
Small Value Payments Co., a New York-based bank
consortium, has identified more than a dozen common Day Two back-office
functions. Every bank has a different way of handling these applications
and for the most part, their workflows are built around routines that
incorporate lots of paper and manual handling.
The problems caused by Day Two processing came
to light last February, when Charlotte-based Bank of America Corp.
and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., New York, ceased a check-image exchange
pilot. Since September 2002, the two banks had been exchanging a few
thousand images every night through Viewpointe Archive Services LLC
to learn more about the process.
These two original bank owners of Viewpointe,
which is an archive that stores images from multiple institutions,
had no problem executing the exchanges. The problem occurred when they
had to follow up with paper so that each bank could do its Day Two
processing. With paper still a crucial part of the process, it wasn't
long before the banks reached the point where exchanging images no
longer made economic sense.
Mitchell Christensen, an executive vice president
of payment strategies at San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co.,
foresees "a lot of heavy lifting" to prepare for Day Two image processing. "It's
much easier to capture an image and send it out, versus receiving an
image and dealing with it in your Day Two operations. We're not there
yet."
Archive Strategy
Efforts are underway to resolve this issue.
After taking stock of its pilot results, Viewpointe decided to offer
Day Two processing services on an outsourced basis. The services will
be integrated into Viewpointe's archive, which will let participating
banks avoid hefty capital investments and achieve results more quickly.
Viewpointe chairman and CEO John G. Lettko says "a handful" of the
company's archive customers have expressed interest in using the service.
Other banks are automating their Day Two processing
on their own. Paul Obermeyer, a senior vice president and the manager
of operation services at Comerica Inc. in Detroit, identifies exception
item processing as probably the biggest task Comerica faces as it prepares
for the advent of Check 21. Comerica expects to have that capability
built sometime this year. Cleveland-based KeyCorp, meanwhile, is hustling
to meet an ambitious timetable of automating its Day Two operations
by the first or second quarter.
"It's not a risk-free project by any means," says
David J. Harris, a vice president and division manager for item workflow
and archive systems at KeyCorp. Harris was referring to the fact that
KeyCorp's ability to process Day Two images electronically is in some
respects dependent upon the image readiness of other banks.
Another key Check 21 operational issue is whether
to store check images internally or in a database with multiple banks.
The advantage of a shared archive, such as Viewpointe's, is that images
do not need to be moved from bank to bank in order to be exchanged.
Rather, they can be stored once and then accessed by any other member
of the archive as the need arises, say because of a fraud-related inquiry
or a customer request.
According to Lettko, outside consultants have
concluded that two banks sharing images through Viewpointe would spend
about half as much on image exchange as two banks with internal archives,
reflecting lower telecommunication and storage costs.
But opinions on this vary. Comerica, an early
pioneer in imaging technology, believes a proprietary archive works
best. "Our customers still need large amounts of items delivered to
them at discrete points in time," Obermeyer says, citing the example
of a customer who receives images in bulk at 8:30 a.m. every morning.
With a shared archive, Obermeyer says, there's
too much complexity involved in searching for items across the country
to fulfill such customer needs. Plus, there's the risk of receiving
a poor quality image. "It's not a practical alternative for banks wanting
to provide their own certified quality images."
Atlanta-based SunTrust Banks Inc., which is
both an equity partner in and customer of Viewpointe, detects no such
problems meeting customer requests using an external archive. "Service
level metrics have been excellent," says senior vice president Lou
Tiller, adding that archive customers can ensure performance through
service agreements with vendors such as Viewpointe.
Substitute Checks
While banks remain divided over key aspects
of getting prepared for Check 21, they are almost universally agreed
that substitute checks are a bit scary. It is not clear, for example,
how much it will cost to create these paper printouts of images, whether
they will be of sufficient quality, and what effect they will have
on operations. Tiller sums up the attitude of many bankers when he
says, "We would prefer to use them no more than what is absolutely
necessary."
In fact, Check 21 does not obligate banks to
use substitute checks. An image-enabled bank sending a check to an
institution not capable of receiving images would probably simply choose
to continue sending paper, rather than send an image to a nearby location
and print out a substitute check.
KeyCorp, for example, plans to avoid creating
substitute checks to pass back to corporate or retail customers, says
Allyn Pytel, the senior vice president of media and output management.
Instead, customers will be able to select from a range of choices:
have their checks truncated, kept by the bank, or presented in imaged
format on their statements. Sixty percent of KeyCorp's customers already
receive truncated statements.
The only substitute checks that Comerica plans
to produce are for return items. In general, substitute checks "are
largely going to evolve into a very narrowly defined market," Obermeyer
says. That's because the cost of producing them has not proven to be
any less expensive than traditional paper, he says.
But there are some instances in which a substitute
check makes economic sense, says consultant Steve Ledford, the president
of Atlanta-based Global Concepts Inc. Return items, for example, present
a good business case. Currently, a bank may spend 50 cents or more
to clear a return item through the Federal Reserve. It could avoid
that charge by instead printing out, for perhaps 15 cents, a substitute
check close to the recipient, Ledford says.
Salt Lake City-based Zions Bancorp. plans to
be an aggressive producer of substitute checks, according to executive
vice president Danne L. Buchanan. In addition to using substitute checks
in the return process, Zions will use them to clear checks from its
rural branches. Because these branches are so remote, Zions cannot
transport checks accepted after say, 2:30 p.m., and deliver them on
time to a central clearing place. So it holds items overnight, to transport
them the next day, which slows down the clearing process.
Under Check 21, Zions can send substitute checks,
instead of images, to any clearing sites that do not yet have imaging
capability. The bank avoids costly transportation hurdles by printing
images out at locations that are close to the processing centers. In
addition, it can reduce fees it pays to the Federal Reserve by moving
non-local items, which incur higher charges, to a local Fed by way
of substitute checks.
In Buchanan's view, substitute checks are an
inescapable part of the transition to full imaging. "We're not going
to flip a switch a year from now and be completely image-enabled on
all fronts," he says.
Zions is so convinced of the necessity for substitute
checks that in 1998 it created a subsidiary, NetDeposit Inc., to develop
products designed to help the industry make the transition from paper-
to image-based processing. The company's flagship product is its "decision
gateway" system, which automatically selects the most advantageous
clearing and settlement channel, whether it is the production of a
substitute check, an image transmission, or an automated clearinghouse
transaction.
So far, one large New York bank is using the
system, and a large bank in the Southeast is piloting it. Other banks
are in various degrees of negotiation to purchase the system, according
to Buchanan.
Branch Imaging
At the leading edge of imaging activity, some
banks are weighing the benefit of capturing check images far earlier
in the clearing process. Today, most banks send checks deposited in
branches to centralized sites, where they are then imaged for processing.
But transforming the checks into images as soon as they come into the
branches could provide a number of advantages.
Last fall, for example, Washington Mutual Inc.
began installing systems in some of its New Jersey branches that let
tellers scan checks into images. It plans to roll out the system to
all its branches by the end of this year.
Wamu executives expect major payoffs from providing
branch employees access to the images for research and customer service
purposes. The imaging system will also enable Wamu to immediately pounce
on fraudulent activity. Finally, the Seattle-based thrift will save
on transportation costs. Currently it picks up checks from its branches
several times a day. With the new system, it will be able to send images
throughout the day and have a single check pickup at the end of the
day.
Despite Wamu's enthusiasm, other banks question
the cost-effectiveness of branch-based imaging. SunTrust's Tiller cites
the "huge expense" of buying hardware and software for every branch,
and the cost of training all the tellers to use it. Indeed, some banks
considering this imaging option are motivated by the need to replace
aging teller systems.
Chicago-based Bank One Corp., for example, is
planning to add image capture capability in the branch as part of an
upgrade of its teller systems, anticipating that imaging will help
improve customer service. "We'll be able to provide information on
deposits right then and there at the teller line," says Tony Gerevics,
first vice president of float, transportation and ECP strategy.
Gerevics is not convinced, however, that a lot
of cost savings will come from eliminating the transportation of checks
from the branches, noting that banks still need to run internal mail
to branches at least once a day.
Beyond individual strategies, institutions need
to consider the industry's concerns in the imaging arena. Minimum quality
standards, for example, are vital to ensuring the integrity and security
of check processing in an image environment. SVPCo, the bank consortium,
is working to establish rules and standards that would impose order
in this area. For example, banks clearing images through SVPCo would
be required to warrant that those images are usable.
Despite the challenges, imaging offers long-term
advantages to those institutions that seize the opportunity. Says Buchanan, "It'll
be real exciting for the people who get it — and real scary for
the people who don't."
Ms. Costanzo is a freelance writer based
in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking Strategies,
published by BAI.
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