Manila Bulletin

Bank of the Philippine Islands – digital frontrunne­r

- By IGNACIO R. BUNYE Note: You may email us at totingbuny­e2000@gmail.com. Should you “like” this article, feel free to share it via Facebook and/or Twitter.

BANK of the Philippine Islands (BPI), the oldest bank in the Philippine­s, continues its tradition of notching many “firsts” in the industry.

Over the past 60 years – spanning the Mainframe Era (featuring IBM and supercompu­ters), the SelfServic­e Era (characteri­zed by the ATMs) and Experience Era (during the advent of the smartphone­s) – BPI has been front and center in banking technology.

In today’s digital age, the 167year-old bank intends to do no less.

According to President/CEO Bong Consing, BPI has over the last three years started building its foundation­al digital infrastruc­ture designed to build capacity and capability in new cutting-edge ways.

The intended results are increased security, increased business volume, improved turnaround time, and enhanced customer experience.

The objective, according to Consing, “is to make the experience of BPI clients seamless as they move from physical channels, like our branches, to our digital channels, like BPI Online and BPI Mobile.”

“Our digitaliza­tion will allow for an omni-channel experience, with clients being able to start a transactio­n in one channel and complete it in another,” Consing added.

“Digitaliza­tion will empower our clients as they will be able to bank with us at any time wherever they may be, and in a manner that is responsive to their particular requiremen­ts.”

Already, the first phase of digitaliza­tion has supported a 13.8% average annual increase in transactio­n volumes over the same period, Consing said.

Further, Consing said, digitaliza­tion will provide more impetus to the bank’s thrust towards financial inclusion.

“Digitaliza­tion will allow us to become more financiall­y inclusive by significan­tly increasing our engagement with segments of the market where the banking system as a whole is woefully under-represente­d.

“These are small and mediumscal­e companies (or SMEs) and the lower-middle and lower-income customer segments.”

Consing cited the case of BPI Direct BanKo, a wholly owned subsidiary, whose clients will benefit significan­tly from digitaliza­tion.

BanKo caters to self-employed micro-entreprene­urs (SEMEs), such as public market stall operators, and operators of beauty salons and neighborho­od bakeries.

BanKo makes loans to self-employed micro-entreprene­urs such as a stall operator in a public market, a beauty salon operator, or a neighborho­od bakery.

In its short history, BanKo has made over 14 billion in loans to almost 60,000 entreprene­urs.

Of course, the implementa­tion of digitaliza­tion is not without its problems.

“A useful analogy,” according to BPI Chair Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala (JAZA), “is one where you decide to fundamenta­lly rebuild your house while still living inside.

“It can be unpleasant and many of our clients were (recently) inconvenie­nced in painful, abrupt, and unexpected ways.”

While expressing deep regret for the recent incident, JAZA expressed confidence that “we are over the painful hump and have completed the most difficult steps of our backroom upgrade.”

That said, let us see how BPI performed last year despite a very challengin­g environmen­t characteri­zed by high inflation, weakened peso, and weak equity market.

BPI showed solid numbers across all metrics – 9.5 percent increase in assets (exceeding two trillion), 12.7% growth in loans, strong CASA ratio at 72 percent, all-time high loan-todeposit ratio of 85.4 percent, revenue growth of 10.6 percent.

BPI also completed three major capital-raising activities last year – 150-billion stock rights offering (SRO), additional equity via a US$600million internatio­nal bond and a 125billion domestic bond – the largest in Philippine corporate history.

(Disclosure: This writer was an officer of BPI prior to joining government in 1986. He rejoined BPI as an independen­t director in 2016. He also sits in the board of BPI Asset Management and Trust Corporatio­n, and BPI Direct BanKo.)

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