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Ready or Not
By Kenneth Cline
Large banks are expected to be the readiest for
Check 21's implementation date. But even they are bracing for their greatest
challenge in managing a multiple-format — original paper, IRD and
image — processing environment.
In their rush to implement Check
21, bankers may be leaving themselves exposed to potentially serious
problems, such as fraud, technical glitches and irate customers.
Most banks probably will be
able to handle the minimum requirements of the Check Clearing for the
21st Century Act, which President Bush signed last year and which is
scheduled to be implemented on October 28.
But concern is mounting that
some aspects of the process, the production and handling of image replacement
documents (IRDs), for example, may prove troublesome.
Lou Riehl, senior vice president of J.P. Morgan & Chase
Co. at the time of a recent Banking Strategies interview and chairman
of the New York-based Financial Services Technology Consortium (FSTC),
goes so far as to warn of "catastrophic losses" should actual data disappear
in the shift from paper-based to electronic processing. "I don't think
we've had the time to ask, 'What can go wrong?' We're just rushing helter-skelter
to get it implemented," Riehl said during a roundtable discussion following
a large bank Check 21 presentation at BAI's TransPay 2004 conference
in mid-May.
The other Check 21 experts on the panel were less
alarmist, but agreed that Congress had set the bar high for the industry
by mandating implementation in just one year. Standards on IRDs are still
evolving, for example. Noting the heightened danger of fraud, PNC Financial
Services Corp. vice president Regis Reinersmann pointed out that "the
substitute check, or IRD, will lose the security features of the original
check."
Bank employees also need to be trained to deal with
Check 21-related issues. Matt Calman, a senior vice president and process
engineering executive at Bank of America Corp., commented on the challenges
of preparing bank employees for properly re-crediting customer accounts
in the event of erroneous image transactions.
Customer reaction was another concern. At this point,
nobody knows how customers will respond when IRDs start showing up in
their statement envelopes. That has "has added another degree of complexity
and uncertainty to this rapidly changing environment," said Steve Anderson,
a vice president at BB&T Corp., Winston-Salem, N.C.
Banking Strategies:
Is the industry going to be ready for Check 21 on October 28?
Calman: If by that
you mean being compliant with regulations and ready for the minimum processing
requirements, yes. Institutions will be ready to process IRDs, for example.
There's also been a lot of work preparing for expedited re-credit processes
and customer education.
Reinersmann: I agree
and I would add that banks are anxiously awaiting the Federal Reserve's
final ruling on the regulation, which will provide final processing requirements
and possibly some revision to the customer disclosure language. Banks
need that to finalize all their plans to implement Check 21.
Anderson: I agree
that the banks will be ready, since the minimum requirements are very
manageable. However, it is going to take some work on the part of the
banks to handle some of the challenges.
Calman: The challenges
include preparing bank employees for properly handling expedited re-credit
claims from consumers for erroneous image transactions. Customer contact
employees need to be trained on the details of the Act's expedited re-credit
provisions and how to apply their bank's processes to solve the customer's
problem.
Riehl: I actually
don't think the industry is well prepared for Check 21. When I look back
at the amount of work that went into the introduction of Regulation CC,
which had to do with expedited funds availability, there was more preparation
than I'm seeing here. I think it's because the industry had a longer
time to wrestle with Reg CC issues.
A lot of work has been done on Check 21. But given
the amount of time we had, I don't think we've had the time to ask, "What
can go wrong?" We're just rushing helter- skelter to get it implemented.
I recently gave a presentation to community bankers
in New Jersey titled, "Be Careful What You Ask For, You Just Might Get
It." The banks asked the government for help in creating a more effective,
efficient payments process. They gave us the Check 21 legislation and
now we have to respond very, very quickly.
Reinersmann: There
are similarities between Check 21 and Regulation CC, which was implemented
in two phases over a couple of years. Check 21 can be considered phase
one of the transition to an image-exchange environment.
Banking Strategies:
What are the major issues that you and your institutions worry about?
What could go wrong after October 28?
Reinersmann: Part
of the industry's concern involves fraud. The substitute check, or IRD,
will lose the security features of the original check. Coupled with the
fact that the IRDs will be black and white only, this adds more complexity
to banks' exceptions review process.
In today's environment, some institutions have clerks
manually handling the original paper check. In the Check 21 world, we'll
need to adapt our review process accordingly.
Banks converting paper checks to IRDs also need to
determine how long to hold the original paper check. Neither the regulation
nor the industry will likely establish mandatory guidelines. As a result,
each bank sending images of checks will need to develop its own policy
for holding the original checks prior to destruction. In addition, procedures
will be required to locate the check, if necessary.
Riehl: I'm concerned
about a potential failure of the technology infrastructure. We're doing
everything we can to build it tight and build it redundant. But in a
physical world, you have a physical thing to rely on. When something
fails in an electronic world, it leaves no trace.
In this case, you will have massive electronic records
being introduced into the collection process. What happens if those transactions
never get to their end destination, the infrastructure fails to recognize
that fact, and the people who introduced those electronic transactions
destroyed the paper records? There could be catastrophic losses.
Banking Strategies:
Bankers seem to be taking a strong dislike to IRDs, in part because they're
seen as only a halfway step to full imaging. What's your stance on IRDs?
Riehl: We think IRDs
are a double-edged sword: good for the collecting bank, but problematic
for the paying bank.
From the collecting bank's perspective, we know that
not every bank is going to accept electronics. However, by using IRDs
for certain high-dollar items, a collecting bank can transmit an electronic
record of the check to a correspondent local of the paying bank that
doesn't accept electronics. The correspondent can then print and present
an IRD to the paying bank on behalf of the collecting bank. As a collecting
bank, we like that.
But no bank is just a collecting bank; it's a paying
bank as well. And we just know that these IRDs are going to be produced
in environments that lack the tight controls you see with check printers
today. You're going to have thousands of banks printing IRDs in little
back offices and introducing them into the collection process.
As a big paying bank, we're going to get a lot of
those IRDs and a lot of them will have to be rejected.
Banking Strategies:
Don't you have standards for printing IRDs?
Calman: Yes, there
are ANSI X9 standards, which govern the format, paper and printing specifications
of IRDs. But the question is adherence to those standards. We expect
to receive some poor quality IRDs initially and, like Lou, we expect
to reject some. Sending them back to the re-converting bank is the only
way to raise the standards, in practice.
Reinersmann: Although
there are standards for printing IRDs, the question that needs to be
answered over time is: what is the appropriate quality for the image?
To date, the industry hasn't developed a methodology to measure quality.
Banking Strategies:
Check 21 is, of course, only a first step on the road to full imaging.
What will determine how fast the industry moves down that road?
Calman: There are
several levers governing adoption, like short-term cost structures, total
clearing costs and customer acceptance. Most important is mutual readiness
and the network effect of more and more banks joining the image exchange
space. There may be situations, as well, where paper will continue to
hold a cost advantage over image clearing for some time.
Banking Strategies:
Where would you see that, specifically?
Calman: Local exchanges.
If two banks have operations centers that are two miles away from each
other, they may find it cheaper to truck those checks between them for
some period of time.
Riehl: We're definitely
wrestling with that issue in New York, where you have a lot of banks
close together. But at the same time, we're wrestling with the total
cost of ownership, of weighing a single-thread process against a multi-thread
process.
On the surface, it might appear less expensive to
continue trucking the checks. But what's the additional cost of having
two different workflows in your back office? We're trying to figure that
out.
Reinersmann: One
angle that needs to be considered, from an incoming perspective, is the
source of items. For example, what portion of the work do you receive
from local vs. non-local banks? If a bank's local Federal Reserve operations
center is negatively affected by the Fed's consolidation, you get later
delivery of paper checks for the traditional in-clearing operation.
However, accepting image files of checks will provide
the receiving banks the ability to process in-clearing items earlier
and more efficiently.
Anderson: Right now,
banks have three formats to consider: original paper, IRDs and images.
It's during this period that banks will face their greatest challenge
in managing the efficiencies of check processing. This multi-thread environment,
as Lou put it, is likely to be the most painful for banks as we transition
from processing paper checks to processing images.
Calman: Banks are
making strategic choices today to accept perhaps a higher clearing cost,
or a thin marginal clearing cost, in order to promote a higher adoption
of imaging and squeeze paper to a lower proportion of total payments.
Anderson: At the
end of the day, banks won't benefit unless the industry is willing to
cooperate.
Banking Strategies:
The large banks seem to be cooperating, but the smaller institutions
have been less involved in planning for Check 21. Is the industry moving
toward a bifurcated response, with the large banks adopting imaging and
the small ones staying with paper?
Riehl: I don't think
so. The community banks have a lot of turnkey image-enabling systems
to choose from. Many of them are image-enabled already, so they've made
the big upfront investment. For them, getting into image exchange will
require only a small incremental investment.
The banks that are image-enabled are going to enjoy
a significant cost advantage over the ones that aren't, which will push
the others into it. So I think you'll see a rapid adoption at the community
bank level. They'll either go to an aggregator, who will do it all for
them, or they'll buy one of these turnkey systems, which work very efficiently
for a community bank.
Additionally, many community banks already have moved
away from sending customers' original checks back with their statements.
They're giving them imaged statements instead. That will make it much
easier to gain customer acceptance.
Calman: The question
is how long that transition period is going to take. We're all trying
to guess what the other guy is going to do — how quickly others
will adopt imaging. For some period of time, it will be possible to hold
out and not make a decision. As long as you're in basic compliance with
Check 21, you can take your time with optional capabilities like image
exchange.
If you're a community bank positioned as a small,
local provider that knows its customers, you might try to assure your
customers that there is no impact from Check 21, that they'll get their
original checks back.
Riehl: That's a fallacy.
I've heard a lot of banks say they'll guarantee customers they'll get
their original checks back. But you can't do that. The collecting bank
always has the option of sending an IRD rather than the original check.
That's completely under the control of the collecting bank.
Calman: And those
IRDs are not going to be in color and they're not going to fit into a
shoebox like paper checks.
Banking Strategies:
So the bottom line is, the consumer will be impacted, one way or another?
Calman: Yes. That's
why consumer education was made part of the Check 21 legislation. Whether
through their own paid items or through returned deposit items, every
customer stands the chance of seeing an IRD.
Reinersmann: Consumers
who receive checks in their monthly statements will begin to see IRDs
and will undoubtedly ask questions of branch and/or call center personnel.
It's extremely important for banks to provide Check 21 education internally
to their employees and prepare them for customer questions.
Banking Strategies:
Do all of you feel your institutions are on top of that disclosure issue?
Calman: It's fair
to say we're all planning for consumer education.
Riehl: We've started
the work with our lawyers about the minimum compliant language and we're
waiting for the Fed to give us more guidance. We've spent a lot of time
working with all the lines of business to tailor the message to different
customer segments.
Banking Strategies:
Are you also working with your product specialists and marketing people
on new products?
Anderson: It's necessary
for all the banks to work very closely with the product folks because
they dictate our future. If we're not able to influence their thinking
and break down silos that may exist, we'll never reach the end game.
Getting the buy-in from the client is the only way to be successful in
taking advantage of the opportunities provided through Check 21 and image
exchange.
It all boils down to providing the products and services
that the client wants, and that may not be easy in this environment.
Reinersmann: Whenever
regulatory or technology changes are occurring in the industry, it's
important for both operations and product/marketing people to work hand
in hand to develop the best product set for our customers. Check 21 and
image are just the latest examples of that partnership.
Calman: At Bank of
America, we try to put customer feedback into the requirements, and then
translate the requirements into solutions.
The early work on Check 21 was sponsored by the operations
and technology division because of the cost advantage it brings. But
very quickly, we brought the operations and products people together
to create platforms that satisfy customer needs.
Anderson: You also
need to develop products that can be operationally supported. You don't
want to design changes that work against the efficiencies you're trying
to achieve. Conversely, we can't change the way we process checks if
the changes work against the needs of our clients.
The good news is that with all the changes in the
payments environment, there seems to be an evolution occurring where
you have more business lines crossing boundaries and working together
on payments-related issues.
Calman: I think we'll
see long lasting benefits as a result of the cooperation that's been
occurring. Our engineers are thinking more like customers, and our product
leaders are thinking more about the operational and technological implications
of their strategies.
Banking Strategies:
All of you have been working on Check 21 for a long time. What were the
major surprises for you? What did you not expect?
Anderson: For us,
the surprise has been the amount of misinformation that exists. It's
a challenge enough to educate your clients and your employees about Check
21 without having to deal with the fact that people have been misinformed.
It's added another degree of complexity and uncertainty to this rapidly
changing environment.
Riehl: The initial
consumer resistance to Check 21 surprised me as well.
Anderson: Don't you
think it's because they don't really understand it?
Riehl: I think that's
part of it. But there are also consumer activists out there encouraging
consumers to resist this. Consumers then resist without thinking about
how this ultimately makes the banks more efficient, which in turn helps
consumers.
Reinersmann: The
misinformation only makes it all that much more important for banks to
proactively educate their customers on Check 21.
Calman: It
has dawned on me that we have an industry of vendors, internal technologists,
organizations and process groups that have evolved around continuous
improvement. The skill set that's required to drive continuous improvement
is quite different from the skill set that's needed to design and build
a new infrastructure from scratch.
So adjusting the mindsets of all the people
involved in this has been a lot more difficult than I expected. Compared
to the evolutionary transition we're accustomed to, this is discontinuous
change.
Mr. Cline is senior editor of Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking Strategies,
published by BAI.
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