| Sizing
Up Souped-Up ATMs
By Bill Stoneman
They talk, they connect to the
Internet, they can sell stamps. But ROI question precedes
spending on mandated upgrades and new powers.
The ATM as we know it has proven itself
to possess a singular power: it's an effective cash dispenser.
By virtue of its value to customers, there seems to be
no debate that the ATM is a critical delivery channel.
What is up for discussion, however, is whether the ATM
can and should be empowered to deliver more than fixed
sums of cash. And, to put a finer point on the question:
Should and will banks support a bulked up ATM flexing
a $50,000 price tag?
Banks are under pressure to upgrade
their ATM networks. Fraud protection, legal and operating
system issues are forcing institutions large and small
to either put new technology into existing machines or
buy the next generation of ATMs. New ATMs offer robust
functionality including the imaging of checks, transmitting
of personalized marketing messages and even the sale of
movie tickets. The ATM could, in effect, become a more
diverse delivery channel.
But, this is not an easy issue for
banks seeking to find a direct return on investment. Usage
per machine has plummeted in the last few years, dramatically
weakening the direct financial return from ATM networks.
Ultimately, an individual institution's decision to upgrade/revamp
or outsource its machines altogether may depend upon whether
it can see beyond the upfront cost of new machines to
revenue-generating or cost-saving opportunities.
Pressing
Decisions
The most immediate need facing ATM
owners is the debit card network requirement for strengthening
encryption of the personal identification numbers used
at ATMs. In industry jargon, this is known as "Triple
DES" (Triple Data Encryption Standard), referring to three
layers of data encryption standards. Though some older
machines cannot be retrofitted with Triple DES, most can
with the installation of a new keypad and relatively inexpensive
software for an estimated cost of $1,000 per ATM on relatively
new machines.
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At the same time, regulations under
the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) require ATM
owners to make their machines accessible to the blind.
A federal agency, the Access Board, issued guidelines
in July that eventually will require voice guidance systems
on most new machines. Bankers estimate the cost of installing
voice guidance systems, where possible, at anywhere from
$2,000 to $9,000. (Representatives of NCR Corp. and Diebold
Inc., the leading ATM manufacturers, decline to provide
prices of their products or upgrades.)
Then there's IBM's intention to stop
supporting its OS/2 system, on which most ATMs run. This
provides an incentive, although not a requirement, for
financial institutions to switch to Microsoft Corp.'s
Windows technology. More important is the range of functionality
that comes with Internet-based communications, which are
easier with Windows. Check imaging, disseminating marketing
messages and even non-financial products sales would require
this new functionality that many experts believe is in
the future for ATMs.
The question: Is a complete upgrade
indicated now or are banks better off settling for a partial
and cheaper revamp, realizing that it that may need re-doing
in another year or two? Millions ride on that decision,
since the choice that costs less initially is likely to
be more expensive in the long run.
The age of an institution's machines
also needs to be considered. Michele Mullee, a senior
vice president for ATM channel management with Cleveland-based
KeyCorp, notes that machines up to about four years old
won't require significant upgrades to meet the Triple
DES and ADA requirements. But machines seven years and
older are likely to need replacing, even though they're
otherwise working fine. KeyCorp, typical of most banks,
has a mixed fleet, with some machines more than 10 years
old.
Declining
Usage
Historically, the main role of ATMs
was to provide customers with a convenient way to get
cash. To some extent, they were also seen as tools for
shifting customer traffic out of branches and thereby
reducing branch costs. "Banks never even thought about
having ATMs make money," says Tony Hayes, a managing director
of Boston-based Dove Consulting Group Inc.
That view began to change in 1996,
when ATM network operators lifted their ban on machine
owners imposing surcharges on transactions. Previously,
only the financial institution holding a customer's account
could charge for ATM access.
Perceiving an opportunity to generate
revenue from ATM usage, banks and independent operators
alike started installing additional machines at a frenzied
pace in the late 1990s. The total number of ATMs in the
U.S. exploded from 187,000 in 1998 to 371,000 last year,
according to Dove Consulting. Total usage, estimated by
Dove at 11 billion transactions last year, grew over the
same period, but at a much slower pace — and there-in
lies the problem. As charted by Dove, the average monthly
usage of bank-owned, on-premises ATMs dropped from 4,603
transactions in 1998 to 3,404 last year. The drop-off
was even steeper at off-premises locations.
Hayes expects ATM usage to do nothing
but continue to drop. As consumers make increasing use
of debit cards, he says, they use less cash. And consumers
who want cash increasingly get it at the same time that
they use their debit card to make a purchase. Also, consumers
have become savvier about avoiding surcharges and now
make a point of withdrawing cash at machines owned by
their own bank.
"The fee income bonanza created by surcharging
has been competed away and, despite the widespread belief
to the contrary, most banks and credit unions now lose
money on their ATMs, even with surcharge income," Hayes
wrote in Dove's 2004 ATM Deployer Study, published in
May. According to the report, operators lose $260 a month
at each on-premise ATM and $242 a month at each off-premise
machine.
In such an environment of diminished
revenue expectations for ATMs, and significant costs to
meet marketplace and regulatory mandates, some bankers
are at a loss to demonstrate a return on their heightened
investment. "I don't think we could advertise that our
Triple DES is better than your Triple DES," says Edward
A. Kennedy, senior vice president for operations with
First Commonwealth Financial Corp., Indiana, Penn.
Uncertain
Deadlines
Positioning the ATM for the future
essentially means moving to Windows and wiring the machines
for Internet-protocol communications, though not necessarily
actually connecting machines to the Internet. With Windows
and Internet communications, it's much easier to start
taking deposits without envelopes, capturing images of
checks and transmitting Image Replacement Documents (IRDs)
to the bank's back office for processing, which could
reduce the cost of servicing ATMs and handling checks
deposited in them. This technology also facilitates hooking
the ATM network into a bank's customer relationship management
system and disseminating different marketing messages
to different users.
PNC Financial Services Group Inc. recently
began using a tool that Windows and Internet-protocol
communications make possible on about 200 of its machines.
Offered by the Star electronic funds transfer network
and called Content Manager, this tool allows information
to be transmitted to machines electronically, obviating
the need to send programming technicians to each machine.
PNC and the convenience store chains in Louisville and
Philadelphia that host its machines display brief advertisements
on the screens before transactions are initiated and while
the transaction is being processed, says Shelly Chandler,
vice president for self-service banking with the Pittsburgh-based
bank. Since it previously took as long as two weeks to
load a new message at all of the bank's retail partners'
stores, the merchants did not update campaigns as frequently
as they'll be able to now.
Some relatively new ATMs use computers
that can run Windows. In many cases, however, moving to
Windows can't be done without a significantly more expensive
decision to replace the computer inside. Totally replacing
existing machines with Windows-based units may cost between
$25,000 and $35,000 per ATM. Add in image capture capability
and the cost could rise to $50,000.
Assuming a decision is made to upgrade,
machine availability may be a hitch. Banks across the
country are calling on the manufacturers for upgrades
and new machines at the same time as one another. "The
challenge is going to be that the suppliers don't have
the equipment for all the upgrades," says Key's Mullee.
Banks that move too slowly could find
themselves out of compliance when they finally decide
to act because manufacturers will be hard pressed to keep
up with the demand at that point, says Timothy Hoyle,
chief operating officer of IRB Consulting Group Inc. in
Millsboro, Del.
Return
on Investment?
So, how are institutions faring at
parsing their way through the decision-making process?
Consultant Hoyle says "the smaller
institutions are sitting back and waiting," based on his
experience advising community banks. NCR and Diebold representatives
report that larger banks are generally taking a more comprehensive
approach to security, disabilities law, operating system
and enhanced functionality issues, resulting in major
replacement programs.
Chicago-based Bank One Corp., for example,
had announced plans last fall shortly before its acquisition
by J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., to either upgrade or replace
its entire network of 4,000 machines in just three years.
Similarly, National City Corp. of Cleveland has announced
a $30 million, 30-month program to upgrade its network
of 1,580 ATMs, including the replacement of more than
1,000. All of these ATMs will have voice guidance systems
at the end of the upgrade.
KeyCorp, which owns 2,200 ATMs, has
decided to convert to Windows-based machines, but on a
relatively slow timetable. It upgraded 36 ATMs and replaced
28 in 2003, and expects to upgrade or replace 200 this
year, then roughly triple that pace in 2005 and 2006,
still leaving it a long way from the finish line.
KeyCorp executives hope to deliver
customized marketing messages via their ATMs, using the
same customer relationship management tools that drive
direct mail campaigns and product prompts on the telephone
and online. The bank, which has $86 billion in assets,
might present awareness messages to non-customers who
use its machines, Mullee says. An additional possibility
is providing check cashing services for non customers
to gain some fee income.
But KeyCorp's expectations for these
possible ventures are modest. While the marketing outreach
is theoretically attractive, for example, banks have to
be careful of a potential customer backlash. When asked
what KeyCorp would do if customers become annoyed by ATM
marketing messages, Mullee says the bank would halt the
practice if necessary.
The pace of upgrades also depends on
whether banks see only costs or potential benefits along
with the costs. First Commonwealth executives, for example,
focus on the cost side of the financial equation when
it comes to upgrading ATM capabilities. "It is a cost
of doing retail business," says Kennedy, adding that he
does not believe there is great value in the enhanced
capabilities that ATM manufacturers are offering.
First Commonwealth is in the process
of upgrading its 107 ATMs to Triple DES. The $6.3 billion-asset
bank plans to spend $350,000 replacing 17 ATMs that it
picked up in May, when it acquired GA Financial Inc.,
the parent of Great American Federal, in Whitehall, Penn.
And it expects to spend an additional $1 million meeting
the Triple DES requirements on 90 other machines over
the next 18 months, with a mix of hardware and software
upgrades.
Kennedy is uncertain, however, when
First Commonwealth will add voice guidance systems to
those machines. Like many bank executives, he's waiting
to see the final version of the new ADA regulations.
Cash is
King?
By contrast, Webster Financial Corp. executives have more faith in the potential advantages
of leaping ahead to the next generation of ATM technology.
Waterbury, Conn.-based Webster, which has $17 billion
in assets, plans to spend more than $11 million over five
or six years, beginning this year, to replace all of its
266 machines with new Windows-based ATMs that can accept
coin and currency deposits without an envelope as well
as capture an image of a check and convert it into a digital
document.
Webster hopes that customers will be
more willing to deposit cash or checks when they get a
receipt for exactly what they put into the machine. While
imaging technology will add about $25,000 to the cost
of a new machine, vice president for electronic delivery
Stephen F. Russell estimates the bank should be able to
save $8,000 annually in armored car costs per machine,
by picking up deposits once a week, rather than every
day. That means that armored car savings alone would pay
for the imaging capability in three years, he says. The
payback will likely be faster, says Russell, since the
bank would no longer need a central deposit department
supporting its ATMs. And the payback could be faster still
if other banks move to accept imaging technology.
Detroit-based Comerica Inc. expects
to meet the Triple DES requirement by the end of this
year, through a mix of upgrades and replacements. Installation
of new machines will move Comerica toward a Windows-based
network. But senior vice president for retail operations
Michael Lawson says he's in no rush to abandon OS/2. Voice
guidance systems will be installed with some of the upgrades
and included in the replacements, Lawson says, but won't
be activated until the ADA requirement is known.
These ATM capital investment plans
are being formulated without the benefit of a crystal
ball, let alone certainty about the role of the ATM in
the future. Cash withdrawals have accounted for more than
three-quarters of all ATM transactions over many years,
according to Dove research. Deposits accounted for just
8% of transactions in 2003, balance inquiries 11%, and
account-to-account transfers 2%, Dove reports.
There is some evidence, in a recent
survey conducted by Synergistics Research Corp. in Atlanta,
that consumers would buy postage stamps, event tickets,
transit tickets and pre-paid cards as well as renew their
drivers' licenses at ATMs. They'd also likely pay a fee
for such services, says William McCracken, Synergistics'
chief executive officer. A full 63% of survey respondents
in the younger age bracket, 18 to 34 years old, said they'd
be interested in advanced functionality.
Still, many in the industry remain
doubtful that ATMs will ever prove useful for anything
more than dispensing cash. There is the concern about
marketing messages slowing down transactions, for example.
McCracken acknowledges that even the consumer who expresses
an interest in advanced ATM functionality cannot be counted
on to wait patiently in line behind someone who is doing
business more complicated than getting a quick $100.
"Cash withdrawal really dominates the
transaction volume at ATMs," says Comerica's Lawson. "That's
really their role as far as customers are concerned."
Mr.
Stoneman is a freelance writer based in Albany, N.Y.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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