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Silicon Valley firms like Apple and Lending Club are happy to partner with banks so long as they get to be the face of customer interactions. But banks may not easily give up that ground.
June 19 -
The prepaid phone carrier, which is teaming with a mobile banking startup called Wipit, believes that its large retail footprint in low-income neighborhoods offers an opportunity to challenge check cashers and prepaid card issuers.
June 23 -
Fifth Third Bancorp in Cincinnati will close or sell about 100 branches=, or about 7% of its total branch network.
June 22
As U.S. bankers fear
First National Bank, the republic's third-largest bank by assets, began offering cellphone service to its direct-deposit accountholders last month. Customers who buy the bank-branded
"We bring new customers into our ecosystem and keep existing customers within the ecosystem," said Ravesh Ramlakan, CEO of FNB Connect, the unit that offers the mobile service.
The offering, unheard-of from a bank in the U.S., aims to give customers another disincentive to leave FNB, beyond the usual hassles of changing banks (such as updating direct deposits).
"While we switch customers from other banks, we have to retain our customers," Ramlakan said. "The more we link them to other products we have, the more that helps with stickiness. We try and do things that the other banks don't have."
The bank's incursion into the telecom business inverts the situation in the U.S., where traditional financial institutions are preoccupied with threats from nonbank providers.
"That is the biggest risk that banks have to worry about right now," says Daniel Van Dyke, a research specialist at Javelin. "Not only how they differentiate against one another but how they keep nonbank technology providers at bay as these providers seek to move into the traditional banking space."
Indeed, U.S. crossovers have tended to run from telecommunications to banking, not the other way around. Sprint and its Boost Mobile subsidiary
Prospects for an FNB-style offering in the U.S. may be slim for the time being.
FNB, based in Johannesburg, was already in the business of selling broadband connections and smartphones. The bank has sold roughly 285,000 devices since 2011, along with more than 100,000 cellphone contracts.
Its move to launch a virtual mobile network began three years ago, when the bank set out to refresh its offering, which included free messages and calls over the Internet for users of its mobile banking app, the ability to send money and airtime, and to
As the bank saw it, a mobile network made sense in part because two million people were already coming to the bank each month to top up airtime and data.
"We started migrating customers out of branches onto those electronic channels by using [the ability to] check balances, prepaid airtime and other value-adds as a hook," explains Ramlakan.
Nearly every one of FNB's customers has a mobile device. More than 4 million of FNB's 7 million customers have registered for mobile banking. Another million each have registered for its banking app or bank online. Ramlakan notes that middle-income customers with children can have as many as eight or nine SIMs in the household.
There's precedent for FNB's move in other parts of the world.
Market conditions in the U.S. may favor similar combinations. As in much of the world, a larger share of the population has a
"I think you can't necessarily say that because it worked in market A it's going to work in market B," said Gareth Lodge, a senior analyst in the banking group at Celent. But "I think perhaps there are some interesting times coming ahead in the U.S. where there are some opportunities, both for banks and also for mobile operators."
The mobile industry may offer lessons for banks about customers' expectations. "The mobile industry has introduced consumers to platforms that change as frequently as every year," said Lodge. "Consumers are used to a pace of change that the banking system has been unused to having to respond to let alone figure out having to respond."
Part of the discrepancy stems from the evolution of the two industries. In the 1970s, when banks formed the Society of Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, its messaging system "was the leading edge of technology in any sector," says Lodge. But a change to one field in that system can affect thousands of companies and financial institutions. "You've got to take an entire nation with you as well. That's why compromises have been made. You've got to work to the lowest common denominator"
Though FNB's network
FNB also has recruited employees from the telecommunications industry. "The focus on being digital is the way to the future and what everybody wants," said Ramlakan. "Nobody wants to go to a branch anymore for anything."
Brian Browdie is a freelance writer in New York.