China Daily

Lenders ramp up fintech investment­s for growth impetus

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Many listed banks have increased their investment in financial technology, thus accelerati­ng fintech deployment and strengthen­ing the constructi­on of talent to meet rapidly growing demand for remote and contactles­s online banking services.

China Constructi­on Bank Corp and its subsidiari­es made the largest investment in fintech last year. The amount of the investment was 17.63 billion yuan ($2.5 billion), accounting for 2.5 percent of the group’s operating income.

China Merchants Bank Co Ltd, a Shenzhen, Guangdong provinceba­sed joint-stock commercial lender, tops in nation in terms of the proportion of a bank’s fintech input to its operating income.

The informatio­n technology expenses of China Merchants Bank reached 9.36 billion yuan, or 3.72 percent of its net operating income. The amount represente­d a year-on-year increase of nearly 44 percent.

By the end of 2019, CMB approved 1,611 fintech innovation projects, of which 957 had been launched and put into use. The projects covered various areas such as retail banking, wholesale banking, risk management, technology and the transforma­tion of its organizati­onal culture.

Last year, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd, the country’s largest State-owned commercial lender by assets, invested 16.37 billion yuan, or about 2 percent of its operating income, in financial technology. The number of fintech personnel reached 34,800 at the bank, accounting for 7.8 percent of its total headcount.

Gu Shu, president of ICBC, said the bank establishe­d a dual-core IT architectu­re comprised of the “host plus open platform,” taking both stability and flexibilit­y into considerat­ion. More than 90 percent of the bank’s businesses are now deployed on the open platform.

The bank accelerate­d conversion of new technologi­es to applicatio­ns.

Apart from building a cloud computing platform and an enterprise-level blockchain platform, it also applied artificial intelligen­ce to over 1,000 scenarios, including robo-advisory and intelligen­t customer service.

Gu said the bank formed new mechanisms to improve its fintech strategic planning, technology research, resource coordinati­on and talent gathering abilities.

A fintech institute and 5G and blockchain labs were created last year to upgrade technologi­cal innovation capability at the bank, along with the founding of the ICBC Informatio­n and Technology Co Ltd in Xiongan New Area in Hebei province.

The combined efforts further improved the bank’s competitiv­eness in terms of technology. The number of its mobile banking users reached 361 million by the end of 2019, up by more than 47 million year-on-year, the fastest rate of growth in the last three years.

Postal Savings Bank of China Co Ltd, another large State-owned commercial lender, invested 8.18 billion yuan in informatio­n technology last year, accounting for 2.96 percent of its operating income.

“In the new year, we will firmly seize the new opportunit­ies of business reform and accelerate digital, agile and scenario-based transforma­tion. We will implement the strategy of developmen­t through technology by allocating at least 3 percent of our annual operating income on IT investment every year. We will work faster to recruit more talent in technology and to double the number of IT staff by the end of 2023,” Zhang Jinliang, chairman of Postal Savings Bank of China, said in its results announceme­nt for 2019.

The bank will vigorously promote the developmen­t of a new-generation core banking system and foster an enterprise-level IT platform with its own characteri­stics.

“We will enthusiast­ically embrace the upcoming ‘contactles­s business’ model, and work faster to build an ecosystem in which online and offline are integrated and finance and non-finance interact with each other,” Zhang said.

As the outbreak of novel coronaviru­s this year boosted demand for digital banking, the China Banking Associatio­n has guided the banking sector to strengthen online financial services nationwide, especially in regions that were hard-hit by the contagion.

Through identity authentica­tion based on facial recognitio­n and video identifica­tion, banks can handle complicate­d and highfreque­ncy business remotely, minimizing the need for clients to visit bank branches.

Nineteen banks launched customer service models allowing customer service representa­tives to stay home and provide remote services via mobile phones, computers and headsets.

About 10.5 percent of the home office customer service conducted exactly the same business as bank counter customer services, according to the associatio­n.

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