Tag Archive for: SA Financial Institutions

Victor Mupunga is a a research analyst at Old Mutual Wealth Private Client Securities.

The fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic will see the battle of the banks intensify, as both legacy and challenger financial institutions race to use tech innovation to gain a competitive advantage in 2020/2021.

To some extent, history may be repeating itself, as the financial pressure exerted by the pandemic forces bank management teams to pursue cost discipline while attempting to meet ever expanding customer expectations. 

As in 2008 following the global financial crisis, all banks will feel the pressure as a result of Covid-19.

They will be negatively impacted by the drop in the interest rates and declining business and consumer economic prospects. However, innovative banks that can harness their ability to use technology to cut costs and meet customers’ changing needs are likely to navigate the current crisis much better.

Banks already spend more than most industries on technology. 

Take the US for example where over the past few years, banks have been spending around $150 billion (R2.6 trillion) a year on technology.  The cost savings in doing so are significant – it costs Bank of America about $5 to process a cheque within a physical branch, $0.50 at an ATM and S$0.05 via a mobile app.

The Covid-19 pandemic may favour legacy banks with deep pockets and more substantial cash reserves to invest in technology.

Locally, each of the big four banks (FirstRand, Standard Bank, Absa and Nedbank have steadily increased their annual IT expenditure over the past five years, with IT now making up an average of 21 percent of total expenses versus the global average of 18.

While a portion of this expenditure is to maintain the banks’ current IT systems, a growing share is to better position them against the fierce competition that has emerged from challenger banks. 

On the other hand, analysts have predicted that the Covid-19 pandemic will change consumer behaviour in profound ways. 

Challenger banks have been known for their lean business models and agility to respond to customer needs.

While these banks don’t generally offer the full range of complex products provided by traditional incumbents, their ability to address consumers’ precise pain points has led to them rapidly gaining customers globally.

Despite the commendable exploits of legacy banks, there may be a limit to how much these financial institutions can do relative to new entrants.

The critical inhibitor is often their core banking technology infrastructure, which was built decades ago and tends to operate in product silos. Often, making core system overhauls, which are easy for challenger banks, is too risky, too expensive and almost impossible without any downtime. Because of this, most legacy banks will have to be content with gradual improvements to their clients’ digital experience.

However, the sheer number of challenger banks in the market also presents a problem for the sector. 

I would say that globally there are probably too many new banks coming into the market and there isn’t enough space for all of them, even before the pandemic unfolded.

A decade ago, global banks were solely focused on how they would recover from the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. Today, they compete against new entrants and need to innovate their legacy businesses to meet their customers’ ever-changing needs.

While reducing costs to streamline operations is always laudable, the old adage “you can’t cost-cut your way to prosperity” comes to mind.  Innovative banks that strategically position their business models to compete with both legacy and challenger bank will be the winners over the next decade.

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email info@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: [1], [2]. Image sources: [1], [2].

South Africa is ‘a marketplace without boundaries’, says PwC, and new niche players are limbering up to compete with the country’s top banks by offering digital, lower-cost financial services.

A slew of new banks and tech-based financial services are shaking up the industry in South Africa. New competitors to the so-called ‘big four’ – Standard Bank (#2), Absa Bank (#5), Nedbank (#7) and First National Bank (FNB, #14) – range from the stateowned Postbank to insurance group Discovery, TymeDigital (a venture by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Patrice Motsepe’s African Rainbow Capital) and former FNB chief executive Michael Jordaan’s Bank Zero.

These are joined by retailers (mobile money from Shoprite Money) and agricultural groups (Afgri, which bought Bank of Athens’ South African operations). Many of those firms would like to grow like Capitec (#44, see profile). It gave South Africa’s well-entrenched major banks a wake-up call by disrupting their long-held oligopoly as a leaner, meaner and faster-growing operation. But it took Capitec, which was launched in 2001, some years to become a major force in the industry.

A recent PwC report says the South African financial services industry is increasingly ‘a marketplace without boundaries’, where banks are being challenged ‘by digital solutions with lower-cost models’. It adds that the market share of the incumbents will likely be squeezed by innovative new entrants unless banks implement strategies ‘to remain relevant in the future banking market landscape’.

FNB has moved successfully to a more digital banking model, while other large banks are trying to follow suit. The new financial services models are not centred around becoming one of ‘big four’, whose services range from retail banking to commercial and investment banking with a plethora of additional services, from mortgage lending to large-scale merger and acquisition capability.

Wessel Badenhorst, an analyst in the financial services sector at 36ONE Asset Management, tells The Africa Report that it is important to keep in mind that most of the challenger banks offer limited product suites: “Most do not offer business banking or offer limited retail products, sometimes because regulatory hurdles prevent them from competing in these markets. TymeDigital, for example, offers only transactional banking, and comments from [insurer] Discovery suggest its bank will have limited lending products, at least initially.” So far, the big banks continue to brush off the threats and have weathered some difficult years.

PwC’s analysis indicates that they grew earnings 5.2% in 2017, although core earnings – operating income minus operating expenses – improved by only 3.6%. Earnings were helped by a 10.6% decline in the second half of the year in bad-debt charges.

Remarkable resilience

Credit growth remained muted ‘given elevated levels of political and economic uncertainty, low GDP growth and subdued levels of household and business confidence,’ PwC says. In addition, retail asset-led businesses including instalment sales and vehicle finance showed strain, while corporate credit demand declined.

The Reserve Bank said that total banking sector assets increased 5.7% year-onyear to more than R5tn ($378.8bn) at the end of 2017. The central bank added that the 12-month moving average operating profit growth rate decreased throughout 2017, mainly due to a decline in the growth of net interest income and an increase in operating expenses.

Investors jittery

Operations in the rest of Africa offer growth for some of the players, but generally earnings growth in the medium term is dependent on cost savings, says Mergence Investment Managers’ head of listed investments, Bradley Preston.

There is still nervousness among investors in South Africa, spurred by the downfall of some major companies, including Steinhoff.

For banks, President Cyril Ramaphosa’s announcement of land expropriation without compensation is another potential challenge. “How land expropriation is executed is obviously important to the banks as lenders against property and lenders in the agricultural sector,” Preston concludes.

To read the full report, click here.

 

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email marketing@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: [1], [2]. Image sources: [1], [2].