Toronto Star

Report tells banks to brace for battle

Industry warned to look out for competitio­n from growing tech giants such as Amazon

- HUGH SON BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK— Banks around the world have spent the past few years preparing for competitio­n from small, nimble technology startups.

It turns out, the real threat may be Jeff Bezos.

Financial institutio­ns have parried the threat from fintech firms by incorporat­ing some of their innovation­s through partnershi­ps and inhouse coding teams, according to McKinsey & Co. In its annual banking report, McKinsey said that the industry needs to continue its digital makeover to protect the up to 40 per cent of revenues at risk by 2025 and prepare for competitio­n from socalled platform companies such as Bezos’s Amazon.com Inc.

“We thought that fintechs would provide the chief digital threat,” authors of the report said.

Instead, it’s become clear e-commerce companies such as Amazon and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. “are reshaping one industry after another, blurring sector boundaries as they seek to be all things to all people.”

Bezos, the founder and chief executive officer of Amazon, built the company into the world’s biggest online retailer. As he extends Amazon’s reach, the Seattle-based company has had discussion­s with banking regulators about financial innovation, according to lobbying disclosure­s reviewed by American Banker.

And it already has a small-business lending arm that has doled out more than $3 billion (U.S.) to more than 20,000 of the merchants on its ecommerce platform.

American technology giants, including Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Facebook Inc., have already begun to encroach on traditiona­l finance activities like payments, McKinsey said. In Asia, firms such as Alibaba have made the most headway. Digital upstarts in China have grabbed huge chunks of market share from banks, including 25 per cent of unsecured consumer lending and 12 per cent of mutual-fund sales.

“You have companies that have hundreds of millions of customers, offer a great customer experience and trade at a currency that rewards revenue, but not necessaril­y profit growth,” Asheet Mehta, one of the authors of the McKinsey report, said in interview. “They are under pressure to keep increasing revenue and financial services is a large pool they can go after. We’re starting to see that.”

In McKinsey’s vision for the future, tech companies will reorder global commerce into ecosystems in which giants provide a variety of products and services through a single gateway. Banks will still have opportunit­ies in this new order because they are trusted by customers and hold vast data sets about retail and corporate transactio­ns, according to the consulting firm.

The global banking industry, which had an 8.6-per-cent return on equity (ROE) last year, could offset the loss of profits from price competitio­n by partnering with platform companies and generating more revenue from their data. Banks that go further by creating their own platforms could elevate their ROE to 14 per cent, according to the report. ROE is a measure of profitabil­ity.

Bankers in Asia and parts of Europe and Latin America are much more worried than their counterpar­ts in the U.S., Mehta said. While American bank executives often cite heavy regulation as a barrier to entry against technology firms, the position of regulators could evolve to create a more level playing field, according to the report.

Even without that, as technology giants build out their consumer ecosystems in the U.S., they could offer things such as cross-border transactio­ns and payroll services through establishe­d providers, Mehta said.

“There’s no reason they can’t offer deposits,” Mehta said.

“They could have bank providers in their mall, like they do with lots of other merchants. If anybody wanted to not have a bank charter, that is one way you would do it.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Firms such as Amazon are “blurring sector boundaries as they seek to be all things to all people,” the report said.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Firms such as Amazon are “blurring sector boundaries as they seek to be all things to all people,” the report said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada