| What
Can The DDA Lead To?
By Kenneth Cline
Payments experts set big-picture
issues aside and urge banks to focus on building value
for the deposit account.
The gradual shift from paper-based to
electronic transactions creates a host of new business
opportunities, but also raises a few fundamental questions:
How do financial institutions protect their customer relationships
as consumers gravitate toward real-time, electronic payment
forms increasingly provided by nonbanks? Who will have
the leverage in this new era of payments?
For insights and answers, Banking
Strategies turned to some of the top payments consultants.
The following Q&A presents the highlights of an animated
discussion that quickly centered on the critical role
of the demand deposit account (DDA) in a bank's payments
strategy. Rather than viewing their payments offerings
from a siloed perspective in which separate products are
valued for their individual revenue streams, banks were
encouraged to focus their resources on the functions that
serve to bind customers more tightly to the DDA.
"The ins and outs of payment settlement
systems are only relevant to a handful of large institutions
and industry associations," says Andrew M. Dresner, vice
president, First Manhattan Consulting Group. "The real
issue is the same as it's always been: how do you attract
and keep deposit customers?"
For Carl Rutstein, an officer with
Boston Consulting Group in Chicago, the key to growing
DDA-based revenues is to make more effective use of the
customer data that can be obtained from payment transactions.
"How do you use that transaction flow to attract deposits
and loans? To date, no one has really done that systematically
and effectively, in part because of technological issues,
but mostly due to organizational barriers."
The consultants discounted worries
that banks are in jeopardy of losing control over the
payments system per se, given that banks still make the
rules that govern the players, both bank and nonbank.
"Banks very much set the operating rules and determine
the playing field," says Tony Hayes, Boston-based managing
director for Dove Consulting.
Steve Ledford, president of Atlanta-based
Global Concepts Inc., pointed out that while banks no
longer dominate specific businesses within payments, such
as credit card-acquiring, "these are largely businesses
that banks chose to exit."
However, Steve Mott, principal of BetterBuyDesign
in Stamford, Conn., raised some concerns about banks losing
control over payments networks, particularly in the online
environment. On the Automated Clearing House network,
for example, "lots of things are being done that banks
don't have much control over, such as pricing and who
uses the system."
A major threat to banks in the online
payments arena comes from fraud. "Payment fraud is about
15 times higher in the online world than offline," says
Avivah Litan, a Rockville, Md.-based vice president and
research director for payments at Gartner Inc. Noting
that banks have little incentive to change that situation
as long as the liability burden rests on merchants, Litan
warns that continued "phishing" attacks and other forms
of electronic fraud "threatens the future of online transactions
like online banking, bill payment and shopping."
The following roundtable was convened
at BAI's TransPay 2004, where all six participated in
a panel discussion on the future of payments.
Banking Strategies:
Are banks losing control of the payments system, and is
this something individual institutions need to be concerned
about?
Litan:
I personally think that statement is really overblown.
I don't see anyone going into the payments system —
in terms of clearing and settlement — other than
banks, who are the only ones authorized to do it. Certainly,
we've seen the advent of value-added services and new
ways to move in and out of the banking system, but they
don't pose real threats to banks.
Dresner:
I'd agree. Over the last 15 years, we've had warning after
warning that companies like Quicken, CheckFree, Yodlee
and PayPal would disintermediate the banks. Yet none of
those companies currently threaten banks' fundamental
control over the payments system. They can play an important
role in the system, but banks still control the underlying
customer relationship.
Mott:
But I think the potential exists now, particularly in
the online environment, for banks to start losing control
over how their networks are being used. On the Automated
Clearing House network, for example, lots of things are
being done that banks don't have much control over, such
as pricing and who uses the system. Banks have associations
like NACHA to provide rules and policies, but in many
cases, the users have moved ahead of those policies.
As the world drives relentlessly to
real time, guaranteed payments, users will figure out
which banking network will help provide that. And if the
banks don't, the merchants will find a way to do it themselves.
Ledford:
When we say the banks are losing control over the payments
business, we have to ask: did they ever actually control
it? And to the extent it was control, was that necessarily
a good thing?
There are definitely bits of business
that the banks no longer dominate, credit card acquiring,
for example. But these are largely businesses that the
banks chose to exit.
In the future, you'll see both banks
and nonbanks becoming dominant in some elements of the
business, but it will be hard to tell the difference.
These players will become dominant players because the
more electronic you get, the more you can achieve economies
of scale. But I don't see it as a bank vs. nonbank issue.
Mott:
The underlying economics won't support the payments operations
of 9,000 banks. So you're going to have tremendous concentration
over time. If you're a $1 billion-asset bank with a small
portfolio of payment products, you've got to be worried
about what's happening to you. Those institutions don't
have any control.
Hayes:
It all depends on how we define control. If we define
control in terms of who the players are, I would agree
banks are losing control. If we define it as who's establishing
the rules by which everyone plays, then I think banks
still very much set the operating rules and determine
the playing field.
Rutstein:
To the extent that payments all revolve around the demand
deposit account, and the DDA is something banks alone
have access to, banks aren't in danger of losing control.
They can always claw back pieces that they have outsourced
if it's strategically important.
For example, CheckFree Corp. had a
dominant share of the online billpay market. But large
banks are now starting to pull that back in-house. When
something begins to erode the economics or competitiveness
of bank DDAs, banks will start to exert control.
Dresner:
That's happening with PIN debit networks as well. Now
that First Data Corp. controls STAR via the Concord acquisition,
some banks are transitioning to industry-controlled networks.
Rutstein:
That's a great example. Big banks would rather work with
Visa than First Data for this strategically important,
DDA-related transaction. It's mostly economics, but the
banks also see First Data as a competitive threat. Wells
Fargo & Co., U.S. Bancorp and others have re-issued
Interlink cards.
Litan:
PayPal comes to mind too. PayPal is acquiring merchants
that banks don't want to acquire. And as soon as banks
decide they want to acquire those merchants, they'll come
up with the rates to accomplish that.
As Tony said, it really depends on
the definition of control. My definition is: who sets
the rules? In the end, banks have the last word.
Ledford:
Some of the most profitable areas of the payments business,
like balances and fees, are still controlled by banks.
For the typical bank that doesn't want to become a category
killer in payments, this is a good deal — you get
the account balances and fees and the relationships associated
with the account, and somebody else is willing to do the
hard transactions work for almost no margin.
Banking Strategies:
How do you see the Check Clearing for the 21st Century
Act (Check 21) law impacting various segments of the industry?
Ledford:
The most enthusiastic supporters of image-based clearing
are very often the small banks. It's because they can
do it. It's real easy for them. And since they don't like
clearing checks, they want to get on with imaging so they
can make money at what they do best, which is lending
to small businesses and consumers.
Hayes:
When discussing Check 21, most people just focus on the
check side of the equation: when and where to image the
paper? But Check 21 will impact the payments world more
broadly.
Check imaging at ATMs will transform
this channel, allowing more ATMs to accept deposits, since
they no longer need a daily pickup by an armored courier,
and it will create new businesses around check cashing.
Also, when consumers write a check at the store and it's
handed back to them, they'll soon stop writing checks
and move to card-based payments. So ironically, by making
check processing more efficient, we may accelerate the
demise of checks!
Litan:
Check 21 can level the playing field across participants
in check processing applications, and commoditize bank
services along the way.
For example, it can shift more power
to the corporations, the enterprises and the retailers.
When corporations start imaging their own checks, they
no longer have to pick their bank based on location and
proximity.
Dresner:
Proximity is a key issue. Every other time in this industry
that transactions have moved from paper to electronics,
we've ended up with a massive concentration among a handful
of big banks or nonbanks. The same thing will happen when
check processing becomes fully electronic because the
need to be physically close to where the checks are presented
will disappear.
I don't think check imaging levels
the playing field in the sense that smaller banks can
now compete for big national accounts. On the other hand,
I don't think that's particularly relevant to a small
bank. As long as the costs go down, they're thrilled.
They're only interested in the DDA balances in their communities;
everything else is cost to them.
Ledford:
Small banks, for the most part, don't see themselves as
being in the payments business. Payments are sort of a
background service they must provide to keep their customers
happy. They want the DDA balances, the lending relationships.
Mott:
But all this technology and change means small banks are
going to have to work harder to manage that DDA in the
future, because consumers want more flexibility, more
ways to do things, with the DDA.
Dresner:
I'm not sure of that. If you look at what small banks
are using as their technology base, it's all off-the-shelf
software and generic outsourcers. All the money that the
big banks have invested in Internet technology has not
resulted in any material shift in share toward them. In
fact, our research shows that small banks have actually
been gaining share in consumer core deposits.
Being the leaders in deploying that
technology brings, at best, a temporary increase in market
share. Vendors eventually match it and it's available
to all the small banks to keep them competitive.
Ledford:
One of the things we've discovered in some of our research
is that payments are very personal. People have preferences,
often for no rational reason. And very few banks do a
good job of satisfying all those preferences. That plays
to a niche strategy, which small banks are very good at.
Rutstein:
That's a good point. It's important to remember what Check
21 is and is not. It doesn't mandate image capture or
exchange; all banks have to do is accept the image replacement
document (IRD), which fits into existing IBM sorting machines.
The business case for Check 21 really
lies in lower transportation costs for paper checks, since
the customer proposition is suspect and the economics
are very light. But that only represents about a 1% improvement
in DDA profitability. So I think, in general, that Check
21 is a big distraction and a lot to do about nothing.
Dresner:
The last time we looked at it, item processing at a typical
regional bank was about 4% of noninterest expense. So
if you cut that by a third, you haven't gained a massive
advantage in your ability to re-price, especially since
all your competitors have just got the same savings in
their infrastructure costs. Basically, the benefits will
go to the consumers, not the banks.
Rutstein:
In absolute terms, it's real money. But relative to a
top 20 bank's economics or even the economics on the DDA,
it's not that significant. You can't turn that into higher
interest rates or premiums to get customers to shift share.
Litan:
Twenty years from now, when we look back at Check 21,
I don't think we'll see it as a great thing for the banking
industry. It reminds me of the breakup of the AT&T
monopoly, which was good for consumers but not for the
phone companies.
Check 21 will be really good for corporations
and retail customers because of pricing pressure, more
choice and increased competition. But in the end, it will
probably be a bad thing for the banking industry.
Ledford:
I think it's going to be very good for the banks that
take advantage of it. That's really the key.
Litan:
Yes, there will be a few winners.
Banking Strategies:
Beyond Check 21, what other forces at work out there do
you see having the greatest impact on the payments business?
Hayes:
Right now, debit is the big growth category. It has been
growing at over 20% per year, and will likely continue
to grow at that rate.
The battle between the two debit products,
PIN and signature, continues in terms of differential
pricing and acceptance. But we're also seeing a lot of
convergence there. The speed of settlement is converging
between the two products, as are acceptance and price.
Additionally, a lot of innovation in the payments world
is with debit-like products, such as prepaid cards, payroll
and money transfer cards.
From a bank point of view, many institutions
are developing and implementing payment strategies to
convert their customers from writing checks to using debit
cards. This converts a cost into revenue. We'll see more
movement to real-time, electronic payments that tie back
to a transaction account. And invariably that transaction
account will be managed by a bank or credit union.
Dresner:
The one thing I might disagree with is that the banks
won't necessarily dominate some of those stored-value
product areas. With payroll cards in particular, the battle
is not over. Banks are trying to issue them, but they
tend to be limited by geography when it comes to serving
the big national employers. Some of the payroll companies
could easily dominate, if they ever get their act together.
A number of nonbank players are targeting that market
and other stored-value niche markets that the banks have
just ignored to this point.
Hayes:
Gift card is obviously dominated by retailers, and probably
will remain so.
Banking Strategies:
So how do the economics of this affect the banks?
Rutstein:
In the migration from paper to electronics, it's not the
cost side that's important, it's how institutions leverage
their payments business to get a wealth of information
from their customers to grow the revenue side. How do
you use that transaction flow to attract deposits and
loans? To date, no one has really done that systematically
and effectively, in part because of technological issues,
but mostly due to organizational barriers.
The banks that leverage that powerful
transaction flow will have a lot of interesting things
coming out of payments beyond just trying to lower costs.
Ledford:
Picking up on what Carl just said, I think financial institutions
are going to start thinking about payments as more of
a business and using the disciplines that have been used
in other businesses, like understanding your customers.
That means actually trying to give customers something
they want as opposed to trying to figure out how to get
customers to take what you offer. That kind of thinking
is new in the payments business.
Dresner:
With the exception of credit cards, there is a distinction
that one needs to make, however, between expecting payments
to generate material profits on a stand-alone basis vs.
treating them as just one component of an overall value
proposition, typically on a DDA account.
The typical returns on most variations
of payment products are modest when compared to the total
revenue of banks. For example, if you get the DDA account,
that's worth about $220 a year to you. Even if the payment
product itself is marginally profitable, or underwater
to a degree, it may be worthwhile if you can have an impact
on your account acquisition or retention.
Litan:
When considering the future of the payments business,
I look at the retail world very differently from the corporate
world.
On the retail side, sellers are offering
choice for payments and really driving change in the payments
market, not consumers. The Wal-Mart suit shows how retailers
are frustrated by the high rates and the monopolistic
approach of the credit card associations. You'll see the
credit card rates go down and the debit card rates go
up and everything's going to converge and get commoditized.
The other thing I see happening in
retail payments is a de-coupling of authorization and
authentication of customers from guarantee and settlement
of the payment. Money moves in the most efficient way
and that will be de-coupled from how you authenticate
a customer and authorize a payment and guarantee it.
In the B2B world, I think the payment
is almost irrelevant. The key issues are purchasing, price
breaks and the time value of money. It's not about how
you make the payment, which is the least important part.
And so banks will become less important in that whole
value chain because they're not managing the information.
Ledford:
On the B2B side, change in payments occurs not because
somebody comes up with a better way of making a payment,
but rather because somebody comes up with a new way of
buying. If folks start buying things online, they will
use payments that are appropriate to that.
Rutstein:
You'll find bigger and bigger banks in the B2B space not
worrying so much about the direct P&L of the payments
piece, but instead trying to get the loans and deposits
and other parts of the financial supply chain of their
corporate customers, like payables and receivables services,
where they'll make a lot of money. Costs of providing
payment services are falling and competition will move
these services to commodity pricing in highly fixed-cost
businesses. So the only real economics play is to use
payments to grow the relationship, not as a stand-alone,
high-margin revenue source.
Dresner:
Payroll cards provide a good example of that. Some of
the nonbank vendors say they have trouble competing with
the banks on the big accounts because the banks want the
cash management relationships. Payroll cards are just
one additional service banks can use to tie the customer
to a long-term relationship. It's very hard as a nonbank
to make a return on those big accounts when you're competing
against that kind of value proposition.
Mott:
One size surely doesn't fit all anymore. And I think the
corollary to that is you can't just do an isolated piece
of value; it's got to be an integrated piece of value
to really resonate with the changing needs of buyers and
sellers.
Banking Strategies:
One downside of electronic payments is more and newer
ways to commit fraud. How serious a threat is fraud in
this arena?
Hayes:
The risk on paper checks far exceeds anything in the electronic
world. As we move to more electronic transactions, with
more ability to authenticate customers and verify funds
in real time, the incidence of fraud on a percentage basis
will actually decline, rather than increase.
Ledford:
Fraud has always been an issue in payments, but we come
up with ways of dealing with it. Remember back in the
late 1980s and early 1990s when we were getting close
to 20 basis points of fraud on credit cards? We found
some very effective ways of dealing with it.
Mott:
The adage in the payments business has always been, manage
your risk to less than 2% of problems with whatever transactional
system you have and you'll probably make some money. But
as the technology change accelerates and the fraudsters
take advantage of that, you do have to work harder to
keep the risk under 2%.
Litan:
I would agree that the banks have physical world fraud
under control, except in the new account area. Payment
fraud is about 15 times higher in the online world than
offline, but the banks, frankly, are not that incented
to fix it as long as they don't have direct liability
for it.
The responsibility for solving fraud
in the online world is decentralized across thousands
and thousands of merchants. And because of the way the
rules are set up, at least until "Verified by Visa" and
similar programs take hold, fraud can even bring in revenue
for credit card issuers. They have no liability; if a
merchant reports more fraud, the issuers simply jack up
the fees.
But something has got to be done soon
with widespread electronic storage of consumer bank account
numbers and the threats imposed by hackers stealing this
data, sometimes using innocent-looking e-mail communications
with customers. We just did a survey that said 57 million
Americans, and that's probably understating it, have received
an e-mail phishing attack, and over 90% of those attacks
arrived in the past year. That's undermining the credibility
of the communications channels, so it threatens the future
of online transactions like online banking, bill payment
and shopping.
Banking
Strategies: What advice would you give to bankers
to help them negotiate through this new world of electronic
payments?
Rutstein:
First, figure out your payments economics and the business
case to leverage the information. Second, be very careful
about pushing the decision-making down too low in the
organization, where people can't see the ramifications
across the various silos. A very big bank can easily have
people doing things which may be good for their own silo
but bad for the overall institution.
Third, concentrate on where you make
money and have a sustainable competitive edge. And finally,
focus on using the payments business to actually grow
deposits, loans and other profitable product areas. Use
the fact that you're inside the transaction to know your
customer better and present them with something that actually
releases value and gets them to consolidate their wallet.
Dresner:
Except for a handful of players who compete on scale,
the real issue is creating value propositions for the
deposit account. The ins and outs of payment settlement
systems are only relevant to a handful of large institutions
and industry associations.
The real issue is the same as it's
always been: how do you attract and keep deposit customers?
Hayes:
I agree. Viewing payment systems as products is too one-dimensional.
They're actually access vehicles to the DDA.
Litan:
The information age is well upon us, and we're seeing
a power shift to the customer.
Ledford:
I've seen a lot of bad decisions made because of bad information,
either bad information about where you really do make
money, or bad information about what your customers will
and will not buy. You really have to dig for the good
information.
Mott:
To survive and thrive in the transition to a digital lifestyle,
financial institutions should focus more on what their
customers want them to do instead of what they're comfortable
doing.
Mr.
Cline is senior editor of Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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