Calgary Herald

Big banks target South Africa’s youth with hip hop and bumper home loans

- EMMA RUMNEY

JOHANNESBU­RG South Africa’s biggest banks are betting cut-price accounts, big mortgages and offers on everything from Adidas backpacks to Xboxes will help them win over the youth market, which many overlooked until it was targeted by a host of startup rivals.

An aging client base and competitio­n from old and new, tech-savvy rivals with lower-cost offerings have forced the big four banks to drop their fees and invest in propositio­ns that especially appeal to upwardly mobile youth.

Absa Bank is considerin­g offering first-time buyers a mortgage worth more than the value of their home, while Firstrand will launch a no- or low- monthly fee account for students.

They join Standard Bank and Nedbank in weighing more mortgage risk or accepting lower fee revenues in order to attract younger customers.

All four are being thrashed in the youth market by rival Capitec Bank, which serves around 45 per cent of the 15- to 24-yearold market and over 40 per cent of 25-34 year-olds, according to an estimate of the banks’ market shares based on a 2017 Publisher Audience Management Survey (PAMS) provided to Reuters by market research firm Eighty20.

Newer lenders like Tymebank are also threatenin­g to lure even more young customers with feefree, app-based banking.

Executives at Absa and Firstrand said that while not especially profitable, the youth market is key to the sustainabi­lity of their customer bases.

“It’s not about the numbers per se but it’s about finding the right customers that are upwardly mobile and attractive in terms of the strategy,” said Christoph Nieuwoudt, head of consumer banking at Firstrand’s retail unit, First National Bank (FNB).

The lender had previously left a “huge gap” in the student market but wanted to make a comeback, he continued. FNB said its new student offering would combine a digital account, bundled mobile data, deals on third-party products and services and either low or no monthly fees.

Analysts said the banks appeared to be waking up to the fact that a number of their customer bases are skewed toward older age brackets, and if they do not start attracting younger clients again they would have to wrestle them away from rivals later or quickly lose relevance.

“The same thought process seems to be playing out at all the big banks,” Ilan Stermer, banks analyst at Renaissanc­e Capital, said.

Based on responses to the PAMS survey, which asked participan­ts which banks they had an account or card with, around 34 per cent of Absa’s customer base is 50 years old or older, compared with 24 per cent at FNB, 25 per cent at Standard Bank and 26 per cent at Nedbank.

Absa, which already offers a lowfee student account, is planning to launch a mortgage product aimed at customers in their early- to mid20s in the third quarter, Geoff Lee, managing executive of home loans in its retail unit, said.

As part of this it could offer — with strict criteria — mortgages worth more than the house itself to cover transactio­n costs. Standard Bank, which started offering an account aimed at 16-23 year olds and combining banking and “lifestyle” offers last year, has also recently started offering mortgages worth 104 per cent of a house’s value to certain first-time buyers.

The moves follow Nedbank’s April launch of a digital, zero monthly fee account aimed at under 25s, promoted by a local rapper, and offering career help, DJ and photograph­er bookings, and deals on everything from fashion and technology to ride-hailing.

For years, the big banks have struggled to grow lending in a weak economy with high levels of household debt. But with players like Tymebank growing fast — it acquired 400,000 customers in four months — executives said the youth market was too important to pass up.

“You can’t have a customer base that dies on you,” said Cowyk Fox, managing executive of everyday banking at Absa, adding that the youth market is growing fast and has better opportunit­ies two decades after the end of apartheid.

 ?? SIPHIWE SIBEKO/REUTERS ?? FNB and other major banks in South Africa view the youth market as key to the sustainabi­lity of their customer bases.
SIPHIWE SIBEKO/REUTERS FNB and other major banks in South Africa view the youth market as key to the sustainabi­lity of their customer bases.

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