| Paper
to Pixels
By Kenneth Cline
Check 21 poses challenges for
large and small banks alike, yet the entire industry will
benefit from a swift transition from paper to electronic
processing.
"Fasten your seat belts" might be an
apt phrase when it comes to assessing Check 21's likely
impact on the banking industry. The legislation signed
by President Bush in October 2003 may not by itself constitute
a full-scale payments revolution, but it will certainly
help provoke major changes in the way banks process payments.
Technically speaking, the Check Clearing
for the 21st Century Act is rather limited in scope, only
requiring that financial institutions be prepared to process
image replacement documents, or IRDs, by Oct. 28, 2004.
But the expected repercussions of the legislation make
it a big deal indeed.
By hastening the proliferation of electronic
imaging, Check 21 places institutions in the position
of losing efficiency in their traditional paper-based
payment operations even as they incur new expenses for
imaging technology. Mitchell A. Christensen, executive
vice president for payment strategies at Wells Fargo &
Co., is bullish long-term, but believes that the paper-to-electronic
transition will pose a financial drag on institutions
over the next three years.
To overcome thorny technical issues,
intermediaries of all types and sizes will have to temper
their competitive instincts and work together closely,
especially on so-called "Day Two" processing issues involving
exceptions, corrections and overdrafts. Overall, the pace
of the transition from paper to electronics will be strongly
influenced by the degree of participation across the industry.
The good news is that substantial cost
savings are on the horizon, perhaps more than $2 billion
annually industry-wide, reflecting the efficiency of processing
electronic files versus paper checks. But attaining that
happy state will be expensive and challenging, as Banking
Strategies demonstrates in the following special
report.
Meeting the specific requirements of
the federal law has more to do with customer service than
technology. But how will institutions handle the larger
imaging revolution? That question has institutions convening
task forces and designating Check 21 "czars" to plot payments
strategies. Each intermediary will need to figure out
its role in a payments system likely to be increasingly
dominated by electronic transactions.
The more specific challenge is figuring
out the approach to imaging technology and its ancillary
issues, such as image exchange and archiving. In a recent
BAI online survey, large numbers of the 225 respondents
from financial institutions anticipated that Check 21
would drive their strategies in image exchange and archive,
check truncation, electronic check processing, remote
image capture at branches and remote image capture at
automated teller machines.
Cost Bubble
Although Check 21 is inevitably linked
with imaging in public discussion, the law itself is silent
on the issue of whether financial institutions should
adopt imaging technology. It only requires that they accept
IRDs, which are paper documents that include a copy of
the electronic image of a check.
Banks can decide for themselves whether
to accept the electronic image of the original check or
the IRD (which looks a lot like the original check). The
problem, however, is that IRDs represent 1) an intermediate
step to full imaging, and 2) an unsatisfactory intermediate
step, since they are not electronic.
One bank-owned technology consortium
estimates that mixing IRDs into the current paper check
processing system will boost per-unit costs to a range
of between seven and 11 cents. That exceeds the range
of between six cents and eight cents that it currently
costs to process paper alone. Full-image processing, by
contrast, would drive those per-unit costs to below four
cents.
Clearly, there is a powerful incentive
to move beyond IRDs toward full-fledged image processing.
And that's where things get complicated, and expensive.
While many major banks have already installed the technology
necessary to transform paper checks into electronic images,
some technical hurdles still must be overcome before they
can easily exchange those files between institutions.
One issue involves image quality. The
industry has yet to agree on standards, which raises liability
issues. What if one bank in the processing chain deems
the image quality of an electronic payment to be unacceptable?
How is the dispute resolved?
Another issue is Day Two processing,
which refers to the exception items, such as illegible
checks and overdrafts, that must be handled after the
"clean" checks have run through sorter-readers, typically
a day later. Since these items still have to be handled
manually, in a paper format, the cost benefits of imaging
on Day One are diminished.
Then there's the larger issue of declining
check volume, which inevitably drives up per-unit processing
costs. As Christensen explains in one of our articles,
this places banks "in a difficult situation, in that the
volume of checks is declining at the same time we're being
asked to invest capital and resources in re-tooling the
infrastructure."
Christensen says the paper-to-electronic
transition will turn into a net positive only when a critical
mass of banks has adopted imaging and new imaging-based
products are helping make up some of the revenue lost
from the decline in check processing. One respondent to
the BAI survey summed up the situation succinctly when
he predicted that Check 21 would lead to reduced costs
and improved efficiency "in the long run, but a cost bubble
in the short term."
Differing
Perspectives
Another key finding of our reporting
concerns the differing perspectives of large banks and
small banks regarding the opportunities and challenges
of Check 21. Large institutions, by and large, are better
prepared for the transition to electronic processing and
express a higher degree of optimism about its benefits.
This partly reflects the fact that
the largest banks have already made substantial investments
in imaging technology. Likewise, most have by now settled
on their image exchange and archiving strategies. So where
35% of respondents from banks with more than $5 billion
of assets in the BAI survey say they're "in the process
of implementing a strategy" for Check 21, only 19% of
respondents from smaller banks make that claim.
It's also significant that respondents
from large banks were more likely to anticipate benefits
from electronification, such as new product development
(84%), lower collection costs (69%) and improved customer
service (61%). The corresponding percentages for respondents
from banks with less than $5 billion of assets were 68%,
50% and 50%, respectively.
That's not to say that small banks
have nothing to gain from electronic processing. Like
their larger brethren, some expect to earn incremental
revenue by providing their customers with real-time access
to imaged statements. Atlanta's NetBank Inc. believes
that digitizing the deposits it receives at ATMs and the
checks sent from merchants will save several hundred thousand
dollars a year in processing costs, allowing it to shift
more of that work from outsourcers to its own employees.
Other small banks expect to participate in the digital
revolution by going in the opposite direction and outsourcing
their imaging activities.
Despite the differing approaches, banks
of all size share some common concerns. One is the need
to help their customers through the transition away from
paper checks. In the short term, Check 21 is as much about
customer handling as it is about technology. The millions
of people who are accustomed to receiving their cancelled
checks every month, as opposed to imaged statements, are
likely to be particularly put off by the appearance of
IRDs, even in a paper format.
So banks face an educational challenge,
and potentially a marketing opportunity as well Ñ
if they want to migrate their customers to electronic
transactions. The key to allaying customer fears and selling
them on the benefits of imaging is providing appropriate
training for bank employees. More than two-thirds of all
financial institution executives responding to the BAI
survey anticipated that Check 21 would affect customer
communications. "Customer and employee education will
be one of the biggest challenges to the industry," one
respondent predicted.
A final concern that cuts across all
asset size categories is the need for the industry to
harmonize its adoption of imaging technology. It does
no institution any good to get too far ahead of the crowd
because the benefits will be wasted. As Christensen says,
"A payment, by its very nature, creates an exchange of
value between two partners. If one partner isn't image-capable,
you're stuck dealing with the paper."
In that light, it's encouraging that
large banks have been working effectively through industry
organizations such as the Small Value Payments Co., Viewpointe
Archive Services LLC, the Financial Services Technology
Consortium, and the Electronic Check Clearing House Organization.
Smaller banks, meanwhile, are participating through their
technology vendors and the Federal Reserve. Everyone involved
with these various efforts seems to understand that electronic
processing is something that must be pursued on a cooperative
basis if individual institutions are ever to enjoy its
promised benefits.
Mr.
Cline is senior editor with Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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