| Investing
in Imaging
By Chris Costanzo
While most large banks, at least,
are ready to implement Check 21, additional investments
are needed to reap all the benefits of electronic payments.
From a technology spending point of
view, Check 21 is mostly a non-event for the nation's
banks — as long as the discussion is confined to
implementing the law itself.
Interpreted more broadly, however, the
Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act could spark a
profound shift in the nation's payment system from paper-
to electronic-based transactions, entailing substantial
technology investments by financial institutions.
But first things first. When Check
21 goes into effect on Oct. 28, it will only require that
financial institutions be able to accept so-called "image
replacement documents," or IRDs, as "substitute" checks
and notify customers of their existence. Strictly speaking,
this does not translate into a tech spending boom.
Most notably for small institutions,
for example, there is no requirement to adopt electronic
imaging technology, although deposit intermediaries must
be able to process paper IRDs created by other institutions.
Most of the larger banks, meanwhile, have been preparing
for imaging for several years and have already installed
multi-million dollar image capture systems. "The investment's
been made, so our budget is actually going down," says
Thomas Rea, an executive vice president and manager of
transaction processing services at Minneapolis-based U.S.
Bancorp.
These near-term factors are reflected
in a yearend 2003 survey by ESP Consulting Inc. in Salisbury,
Md., which found that only 16% of banks, large and small,
expect to spend more on check processing this year than
they did in 2003. Thirty-five percent said spending will
remain unchanged, and 12% actually predicted a lower amount.
Thirty-six percent were unsure.
That's not to say banks won't have
to keep their checkbooks handy, as there are still some
important Check 21-related investment decisions looming.
While Check 21 itself doesn't require significant investment,
the implications of the law get to the heart of what the
future payments environment will look like and the role
individual institutions will play within that environment.
There is, for example, the effort by
some banks to electronify their "Day Two operations,"
which refers to the corrections, overdrafts and other
exception items needed when checks don't pass through
reader-sorters on the first go-around. Making these second-day
operations image-capable is not mandated by Check 21,
but it would help institutions move more quickly to displace
paper from the processing system. Likewise, installing
imaging equipment in the branches has nothing to do with
the legislation President Bush signed last October, but
it does promise to improve service and cut costs in the
long run by eliminating some back-office functions.
Viewed from that perspective, these
post-Check 21 decisions may fit more into the "required"
category. Anything that reduces the amount of paper in
the system will help financial institutions realize more
of the long-term benefits of electronification, estimated
at about $2.1 billion in annual savings industry-wide.
The catch is that no bank by itself,
no matter how image-capable, can benefit fully from that
process unless most of the industry goes along, or at
least links up with outsourcers who make those investments,
as many community banks are now doing. "You hate to spend
a lot of money on infrastructure and wait two to three
years while everyone catches up," says Mitchell A. Christensen,
executive vice president for payment strategies at Wells
Fargo & Co. "Yet, at the same time, it pays to move
forward."
Investment
Paths
With Check 21 imposing a clear-cut
deadline, most institutions are looking to achieve a basic
level of image-readiness by the time the law goes into
effect. Fifty-three percent of the nearly 500 banks surveyed
by ESP Consulting said they expect to participate in image
exchange by 2004. The study also noted, "The larger the
bank, the more likely it has moved into active preparation."
ESP president Leon Majors describes
the industry's push into imaging as "a cascading investment."
The first round — some of which began as long as
10 years ago — came when banks decided to image-enable
check capture sites and develop facilities to store the
images. The next wave will occur when banks begin installing
equipment to capture check images at outlying locations,
such as branches and automated teller machines.
Between these two waves — and
the current focus for many large banks — is the
preparation for image exchange and the image-enabling
of Day Two activities. These two initiatives "absolutely
go hand-in-hand," says Steven Ledford, president of Global
Concepts Inc. in Atlanta. "You can't do image exchange
if you don't have image-based exception and return item
processing. That's where most hard-dollar investment is
going right now."
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. exemplifies
this trend, having installed the cameras and equipment
required to capture images back in 1997 and 1998. Over
the next few years, the New York-based bank concentrated
on filling its archive with images and enabling access
to them from different parts of the bank, such as the
branches and call centers.
Next on the to-do list for Morgan Chase
is reengineering its second-day operations so these adjustments
and exceptions can be executed with images rather than
paper. "We need an image-based workflow in the back office,"
says Tom McGuire, a senior vice president and the enterprise
operations services executive. "That is where the vast
majority of institutions see the pressure to invest."
Detroit-based Comerica Inc., for example,
began investing in imaging about 10 years ago, ahead of
Morgan Chase. Yet, it is basically at the same juncture
now: upgrading the Day Two process. "We've never fully
image-enabled it," says Paul Obermeyer, a senior vice
president and the manager of operation services. "That's
where we're focusing a tremendous amount of energy."
A contrasting example comes from U.S.
Bancorp, which image-enabled its Day Two operations before
installing image-capture equipment in the larger processing
operation. "We did it backwards," Rea acknowledges, although
there were some unique circumstances.
Following its announced merger with
Firstar Corp. in October 2000, integrating dual check-processing
systems became a high priority at U.S. Bancorp. Simultaneously
tackling a massive imaging project would have posed "too
big a risk," Rea says, so the bank adopted imaging only
for the less critical Day Two operations.
But the fact that U.S. Bancorp met
all its business case targets for the second-day processing
is an encouraging sign for the rest of the industry. And
along the way, Rea says, the bank was able to reduce the
number of back-office processing sites, generating cost
savings and efficiency gains.
Imaging
Lite
Wells Fargo, another relative latecomer
to check imaging, is forging its own path to electronification,
a kind of "imaging lite." In an effort to spend as little
money as possible on equipment for capturing images, the
San Francisco-based bank plans to buy check images as
it needs them from other banks that have already captured
them. "There's no precedent for this," Christensen says.
Wells Fargo will still need to scan
images of the checks it collects in its branches. But
it plans to purchase images of its "in-clearings" —
the on-us items it receives from other institutions —
from organizations that handle many check images, such
as the Federal Reserve Bank and Charlotte, N.C.-based
Viewpointe Archive Services LLC. "It's almost like outsourcing
some of our image capture," Christensen says. "The nice
thing about images is that once someone captures them,
they're very transportable. What's the point of us capturing
them again?"
To some extent, Wells Fargo has created
a hedge against the possibility that image exchange fails
to take off industry-wide. In that event, Christensen
says, the bank would simply "unglue" its agreements to
purchase images, without having spent a lot of money on
its own equipment.
In fact, Majors at ESP warns against
assuming the entire industry will be fully image-enabled
in the near future. Throngs of banks are simply waiting
to see how image exchange pans out for the early adopters,
he says. "They're waiting for the furor to subside, to
see how it really works, so they can make intelligent
decisions on what to do."
This is reflected in the responses
of 225 financial institution executives to a recent BAI online survey. When asked to describe their company's
Check 21 readiness, 40% of the respondents said they were
still evaluating their options; another 17% were "in the
process of just learning about Check 21." Only a fourth
said they were actually implementing a strategy.
Majors suspects it could take as long
as 10 years for full-image capability to reach most banks.
The big banks, of course, are aiming to take full advantage
of the law by Oct. 28. But the progress of the industry
depends on what happens in the subsequent 18 months, he
says. "If the benefits are proven, then it's a must-have
and everyone will sign up. If not, the process will drag
on."
The economics are compelling. Facing
huge volume declines in paper checks, industry experts
believe banks must find ways to save $2 billion by 2007,
just to keep their current per-check processing costs
from rising.
According to an analysis from Viewpointe,
banks that do no imaging and are forced to use IRDs could
see their unit processing costs rise to as high as between
seven cents and 11 cents, compared with the current range
of between six cents and eight cents for processing paper
checks only. By contrast, full image processing for both
Day One and Day Two would reduce per-unit costs to less
than four cents.
And those benefits increase as more
banks participate. A typical bank that image-enables its
second-day processes could save between $1 million to
$2 million annually, Viewpointe estimates. When that bank
shares images within Viewpointe, those savings could triple
to between $3 million to $6 million a year. And when a
Viewpointe bank begins exchanging images with just five
organizations outside the consortium, total annual cost
savings could reach $17 million to $24 million per bank,
the company says.
Business
Case Challenge
Having pretty much nailed down the
basics of image capture, and with pilot projects on image
exchange in the works, the nation's large banks are looking
past the Oct. 28 deadline to issues such as image quality
and the potential for installing image equipment in branches
and ATMs.
In today's mostly-paper processing
environment, each bank that handles a paper check captures
an image and stores it. If there's a problem with the
quality of an image, a bank can call a number of other
institutions to see their copy. With image exchange, there
are fewer such fallbacks; the image may be captured only
once, by the truncating bank. For the other banks in the
processing chain, "you're going to be putting an image
on your statement, going to your customer, that someone
else captured," says Hank Farrar, the president of New
York-based Small Value Payments Co., a bank-owned provider
of payments services.
Attached to that issue are questions
of liability. In today's world, a bank is liable for a
check until it is delivered to the next bank. Who's responsible
for the electronic image at each stage in the electronic
clearing process?
To help avoid disputes, bankers are
looking at image-quality software that helps guarantee
that their institutions send each other high-quality images.
They're also investing in research to help them determine
acceptable levels of quality. For example, SVPCo has just
wrapped up a joint study with the Federal Reserve and
the Financial Services Technology Consortium to examine
the difference in quality between images that are black
and white, and those that are in shades of gray, according
to Farrar.
The question of whether to equip branches
with the ability to capture images, as opposed to handling
that function in central locations, also has attracted
a lot of interest. For one thing, banks could save on
transportation costs by reducing the number of courier
runs they make to their branches. Instead of picking up
checks several times a day, for example, they could send
images throughout the day. Branch personnel also would
have access to the images for customer service purposes
and be able to act more quickly to thwart potential fraud.
According ESP's late 2003 study, fewer
than one-sixth of banks are currently able to scan images
in their branches, and these are mostly the largest ones.
But one-third of banks say they plan to begin branch image
capture within two years.
While many banks are intrigued by the
possibility of creating an electronic stream of checks
as early in the process as possible, there are many unknowns,
the biggest of which is whether it would pay off. The
cost of installing image-capture equipment at each teller
station, or even at each branch back office, is not insignificant.
Plus, there are the telecommunications costs of transmitting
all those images around.
Whether fewer courier runs and greater
access to images would really make up the difference is
a question that has not yet been answered. "The business
case around that is a challenge for all banks," says Rea
of U.S. Bancorp.
Ms.
Costanzo is a freelance writer in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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