Banks allocate just 35% of their information-technology budgets to innovation, while fintechs spend more than 70%, McKinsey said.
Business
Standard :
More than half of the world’s
banks are too weak to survive a downturn, according to a survey
from consultancy McKinsey & Co.
A
majority of banks globally may not be economically viable because
their returns on equity aren’t keeping pace with costs, McKinsey
said in its annual review of the industry released Monday. It urged
firms to take steps such as developing technology, farming out
operations and bulking up through mergers ahead of a potential
economic slowdown.
“We
believe we’re in the late economic cycle and banks need to make
bold moves now because they are not in great shape,” Kausik
Rajgopal, a senior partner at McKinsey, said in an interview. “In
the late cycle, nobody can afford to rest on their laurels.”
The
decade since the global financial crisis has seen a wave of
innovation in financial services, bringing new competitors from
fintech startups to giants like Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s
Google. Banks have pondered whether to compete with, partner with or
acquire some of these newcomers. Some established firms have sought
to rebrand as technology companies, in part to attract hard-to-get
talent.
McKinsey,
whose clients are some of the biggest corporations in the world,
consults on topics ranging from strategy and technology to mergers &
acquisitions, outsourcing and stock offerings. In its report, the
firm said banks risk “becoming footnotes to history” as new
entrants change consumer behavior. Most recent attempts by banks to
boost efficiency have been “business-as-usual,” it said.
Banks
allocate just 35% of their information-technology budgets to
innovation, while fintechs spend more than 70%, McKinsey said.
Combined with regulatory factors lowering the barrier to entry --
like open banking and looser requirements for startups -- the
environment is increasingly conducive for newer firms to take share
from banks.
The
report points to Amazon.com Inc. in the U.S. and Ping An in China as
examples of technology firms that are capturing financial-services
customers. To make matters worse for the old guard, the new players
tend to go after the business areas that create the highest returns
at banks -- credit cards, for example.
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