Gulf News

US banks poised to battle online rivals for deposits

SINCE THE FED RAISED RATES IN 2006, THE INDUSTRY LANDSCAPE HAS CHANGED RADICALLY

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The big brick-and-mortar banks in the US are bracing themselves for a fresh assault from rapidly growing online lenders, as an imminent interest rate rise from the Federal Reserve intensifie­s a war for deposits.

The big retail banks such as JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America have been eagerly anticipati­ng the advent of higher rates, as loans and other assets with floating rates instantly offer more income. But at a conference in New York, executives appeared wary of the effects on the other side of their balanceshe­ets, suggesting that depositors could be lured away by better rates elsewhere.

Since the Fed last raised rates in 2006, the banking landscape in the US has changed radically, with speciality finance outfits such as Ally Financial, American Express and Discover Financial Services converting to bank holding companies in the wake of the crisis to access the Fed’s support programmes.

Lower cost structures allow these new banks to offer significan­tly higher rates on deposits — a spread that could widen, once the Fed pulls the trigger and the newcomers compete more aggressive­ly for funds.

“If rates finally go [up], it’s going to be the headline on every newspaper for two weeks running,” said William Demchak, chairman and chief executive of PNC Financial Services, a top-five bank by deposits in nine states across the US, at the New York conference, which was put together by Goldman Sachs.

Margins

“It’s going to wake up consumers [to say], ‘I should be doing something about something. I don’t know what it is yet, but I’m going to figure it out.’”

Seven

years

of

near

rockbottom rates have eaten into the traditiona­l banks’ margins, forcing them to cut staff and shut branches. Once rates begin to pick up, the banks are counting on earning a bigger margin between what they pay for funding and what they charge to lend, on the assumption that they can hold off from offering higher rates to depositors.

One senior executive at a top US bank said that deposit rates are already much higher at internet lenders, but people do not move because “there is real value in having a safe, convenient, nationwide checking system.”

But once the rate cycle begins in earnest, “dragging feet” on giving depositors a better deal could be costly, said Bill Carcache, an analyst at Nomura. He notes that the top eight internet banks have increased their combined deposits from $102 billion (Dh374 billion) in the first quarter of 2009 to $247

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